Sunday, August 31, 2014

Shifting Paradigms: Unsteady Ground


I will admit that at times I am jealous, tired, sad, and resentful and when I get these feelings, or emotions, they tend to cluster together and feel overwhelming. I know that they will pass, but I also wonder what they are trying to tell me? How do I sit with these feelings and not just want to stay in bed and cry? Who in the wide world of sports wants to know that I’m suffering in this way? My children definitely don’t, and my friends, well, they usually come to me with their issues. I know though, that I’m not alone. In the New York Times Bestseller, “Are You My Mother?”, writer Alison Bechdel shares poignantly about her own envy saying, “I was suffering at this time from nearly unbearable spasms of professional envy.” I feel this way when I read about women like Arianna Huffington publishing yet another book. And I tell myself, “This is the old paradigm, this is the paradigm that says there is not enough, or that if Huffington has so much, there is none left over for you, if Huffington is espousing mindfulness, why should you bother.” And in this paradigm, “How” I ask myself “can I compete?”

In my new paradigm, I know that there is no need to compete. This doesn’t sit with the research I’ve found that says women drop out of competition even when they are worthy of the task. Do we compete then, or not compete? Or do we trust the universe? Is it masculine power to compete? Femine power to trust? For me, in my understanding of trusting the universe, I don’t have to compete, I just have to show up and the universe will usher me into the next place in my life. I am trying to make sense of some of this with my own therapist, who has been really helpful, but I’m not sure he understands the different paradigm I’m trying to shift into. We can call this “laws of attraction”, “abundance”, or whatever this is, where all of our emotions are good, and we learn from them, and we trust in abundance rather than lack. I feel very alone lately in my trying to make sense of this.   

In Bechdel’s story, she is seeing her own therapist, who replies, “All this makes me think that in your own family there wasn’t enough room under one roof for several geniuses.” And that is sort of how I feel, only, it’s not just in my own family, it’s in the world, and it’s also the fear that perhaps I’m not really a genius at all, just a want-to-be writer, just a little girl who didn’t have a voice growing up, who wants to be heard. I don’t actually even want to be a genius--whatever that is, as much as I want to have a place of belonging, which is a more accurate description of what was missing for me growing up. There was no-one in my family even aware of what it might mean to be intellectual, to be curious, to have a desire for more of life; and so, in my bookishness I felt odd and alone. My middle daughter Erin, put it sweetly once, when she said I was like Roald Dahl’s Matilda

I worry, too, about what I write about. As my daughter, Kathleen is writing her own memoir, she is writing about her disconnect from me, and I wonder, is my focusing on my own lack in my growing up just continuing to show up? I had hoped to have provided a place for my daughters where I felt no place as a child, and maybe in my own striving to not be my mother, I still was my mother. This makes me feel so hopeless. Yet, I also know, that whatever it takes for my daughter to make sense of her own life, I want for her. 

Maybe I’m the one who wonders if there is room for lots of people to have their voice, to have their emotions, to have their genius. Often, I struggle with playing down who I am, what I’ve done, what I know, maybe believing that I need to let others share and shine. I wonder, as my daughter writes, if I still need to write, want to write? Can I just pass on the torch or is my voice still valid? She tells me that when wisdom comes it is not us, that we need to get out of the way; but I want to own my wisdom, I felt so much of wisdom was forbidden to me as a child, forbidden to me as a woman, that the wisdom I feel I have is hardwon, and to say it comes from some universal good feels like all I've done will be taken away from me, yet a part of me believes she is right, too. As I want to normalize and understand all of our humaness, all of our emotions, I struggle with what emotions are ok to share only with loved ones, and which to share with the world. I was brought up that way. There were always so many secrets, so many things to keep private, so many things that were hidden away that the burden of it all became too heavy. Finally, the door that these things were behind became unhinged, and it all fell out onto the floor, into the light of day. Here I am, so imperfect, yet so willing to keep trying, to keep loving, to keep showing up, without trying. As my paradigm shifts, do I recognize my own voice? 

As my paradigm shifts can I allow Huffington to be who she is without comparing myself, can I read the unparalleled genius of Bechdel and still feel like I too want to contribute? Can I let my daughter's voice tell of all of our struggles to love each other and still feel loved? I want to believe it can be so. 

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Very Small Vacation Part II: Simple Twist of Fate


So on my small weekend vacation up North, I never did get my ass on a horse. Instead, I twisted and sprained my ankle. Nearly right away, nearly as soon as I got there. A simple twist of fate, perhaps. I simply was stepping out the door to go get some groceries for the weekend, and didn’t notice the small step right outside the front door of my sister-in-law’s home. So other things happened. Later that day, I did take a boat ride, walked down the hill to the lake, very gingerly, and pressed forward in spite of the pain, but the next day, when riding was scheduled, my ankle was much too swollen, so my nephew drove me around the Alexandria lakes area while the rest of the family went riding. 

Strangely, my sister-in-law was worried I would sue her over the fall. This was really weird to me, since I’d never even have thought of it if she hadn’t brought it up, at least a couple of times. But this reminded me that my whole family has issues around trust. This is sad. This was the part of the vacation that worried me, wondering if I could feel safe enough to relax around my extended family. Wondering how to listen to the stories and not feel overwhelmed. Like hearing from my niece that she held it against my mom that my brother never really liked Christmas; all because of the infamous Christmas when my mom pulled down the Christmas tree in a rage at us kids. She wondered if I’d remembered that Christmas. Of course I did, how would you forget that? I don't even remember how old I was, maybe 6 or 8, and my mom simply had a meltdown, and yelled that if it was so much fun to wreck things, she'd do it too. She pulled over the Christmas tree and started throwing things. It was terrifying and all of us we were trying so hard to tell her we were sorry. My mom wanted so badly to have a picture perfect life, which, of course was impossible with 8 kids. I grew up with this horrible thought that we kids wrecked my mom's life. It was odd to have this very private memory shared. 

It was also a little odd (and touching) that my sister-in-law keeps the radio on in the garage constantly, to remind her of my brother. It is on an ‘oldies’ station, that he always listened to. I came to understand that we all grieve and remember in our own ways. I also came away with understanding how having fun can be interwoven with other thoughts and emotions. In my family, my mother was very judging of people having fun, so having fun for me became an exercise in telling myself it was ok to have fun. I had to untangle emotions and values and beliefs that were prohibiting me from relaxing, especially with my family. It’s really hard to have fun when you don’t feel safe. 

Yet, all in all, it was a good getaway. My oldest and youngest daughters were able to spend time together in a way they never had; my grandson Max, swam across the entire lake with one of his cousins, and had an awesome time fishing, swimming and boating. I came away with a great bottle of wine from Carlos Creek Winery. My sister-in-law and her family could share their memories of my brother with someone who knew him well, who shared his family stories, no matter how bitter. I was able to somehow put to rest the regret I’d felt, when he was dying, that I hadn’t trusted my brother enough to take him up on his offer, when he was alive, to bring my kids and grandkids up to go boating and fishing.

Maybe next year I'll get on a horse. 

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Broken Agreements


How do we decide which agreement to keep and which to break? I realize now, that for a really long time, I measured myself, and therefore others, I’m sure, too, on how they kept their agreements with credit card companies. Did you make your monthly payment? Check. On time? Check. This makes you a good citizen, successful, right? Not that I haven’t know plenty of people who have had problems paying bills on time, off and on, I’ve been one of them. But since my divorce (an agreement to stay married which I didn’t keep); I’ve been patting myself on the back around fiscal issues, even though I’ve struggled with them. I’ve still not recovered from the loss of my equity in my home, another agreement, a social one, that homes don’t lose value, that was broken not by me, but by others. 

So, who gets to decide what to abide by, what not to abide by, and why? As I walked around Lake Harriet today, I saw two guys walking 18 dogs between them. It was pretty amazing actually, how they’d get all the dogs to stop and wait while just one of the dogs had to, you know, drop something. A jogger smiled and said to another, “I’d like that job.” And it made me think, that wow, I like my job, and it also made me wonder, what if, when children are young, we told them, “You get to do whatever you want to do with your life and the universe will support you. It’s that easy.” Because really, and truly, it is that easy. But we make it hard. We tell kids all the time that life is hard, and school sucks, but we had to do it, and work is just a part of life, and paying bills, and making agreements and pretty soon this kid is all caught up in anxiety, just like we are. 

I am deciding now which agreements to make and break and keep, and even wondering why we have to make agreements and commitments and why can’t we just do what we want, all the time? Seriously, all the time. Because you know what, that is what we do. We make agreements with ourself to stay bitter, we make agreements to stay small, we make agreements not to ‘rock the boat.’ We make bitter, crazy, agreements all the time, and then we hold ourselves to them. Like the agreement to believe that if everybody just did what they wanted the world would be a mess. I'd like to see. Maybe agreements should just last through the day, like, for today, I will still be angry as a way to protect myself. For today I will go to this job I hate, but maybe tomorrow I’ll craft a plan for something different. For today I will love all the people I encounter, and do this day by day, until I realize I do have enough love, every day. Making agreements I agree with, that’s what I do, now. 


Friday, August 8, 2014

Very Small Vacation


It’s been a while since I’ve felt like writing. I’ve been out of classes now for months, and I’ve been putting my energy into building my practice and actually taking care of myself. I do still have the ‘aha’ thoughts, that make me think I should write about that thought, but then I’m lost in the upswing of everything else that is my life. Like still being the mom to three beautiful women, and the Bubbe to three beautiful grandchildren, and feeling fortunate that I live near them all. 

But right now, it is 6:28 am, and it is a beautifully still and quiet morning considering that I live right in the city, considering that my neighborhood continues to become more and more noisy and congested all the time. I am almost pulled into a trance, where I want to just listen to the birds, listen to the random car driving on the usually busy avenue, listen for the nearly autumn breeze that is stirring, just around the corner. 

Today, I am driving up North with Kathleen and Max, and Megan. We are going to visit my sister-in-law for an overnight, and we’re going horseback riding today. I am both psyched and a little scared, and I’m trying to ignore the scared part. At first, I was like, “Hey sure, you all can ride horse, and I’ll stay by the lake and read a book.” And then I was like, (to myself), “Really, you are going to be that person?” That person, meaning, the person who doesn’t get out there and join in, and do the fun things that they secretly pine about not being able to do. (Or outwardly whine about not being able to do.) 

So, no, I’m not going to be that person. I’m going to go down into my basement soon, and look for some boots, suitable for riding, and I’m going to sit my ass on a horse, and I’m going to have fun, even if I am a little scared, nervous, excited, because I can feel all those things and not let them stop me from having fun with my family. But first, I’m going to go down the block to the new donut shop and buy donuts for breakfast, because we are on a very small, starting right now, vacation.