The Unbearable Lightness of Forgetting

Sometimes the lightness or the forgetting comes from organic sources, as in “it just happens.” I walk into a room with a task in mind and it dissipates as I arrive on the threshold of the room of the intended action. I may rinse and repeat this action up to 3 times before remembering what I came to do. Given I live in a one-bedroom apartment I am logging only steps but the chasm is huge in my hummingbird brain. Sometimes however, the forgetting is the necessity of healing and moving on. That is a more deliberate and difficult task, which takes redirection over and over from a memory, either bad or good. A memory that has burrowed it’s way into my brain and wants to take up residency in defining who I am. It wants to tether my worth to its contents and that is too high a price for anyone to pay. So I work on forgetting, on letting go.

This type of forgetting is temporary; I don’t want to erase the memories of a first kiss at the edge of Central Park with the snow flying. I just want to file them away for a day when they make me smile and appreciate how beautiful the memories were instead of the sadness attached to the rest of the story that followed.  There are times when the past is just that, and other days where it comes spilling out of the radio, a movie or an email and takes up residency in my Now.

Those are the days I work on being lighter. Lighter in the way I choose to redirect and focus on how badly I need my eyebrows threaded, my toilet scrubbed or a yoga class to center. Instead, I make the choice to stop playing a memory tape that has been presented to me and let it go even for just that moment. I have a touch of OCD so derailing the crazy train has been difficult at times. To look away, pull myself away, or chisel my attention away from the memory, the issue or the bag of Twizzelers sitting on top of the refrigerator feels like a betrayal. But in reality it, it being the forgetting, is exactly what I need because I am hyper-focused and lack perspective. I get that by stepping away, so I need to forget for a little while to achieve that.

Stepping away from a memory is not bad, nor good, it is just about being in the moment and learning what you have right now. I spent a lot of my younger days looking forward, projecting what might happen, playing out endless scenarios in preparation for things that never came to pass. I invested my days in speculations and missed all that was unfolding right before me. So forgetting in the future tense is as important as forgetting the past.

As an example: some years ago after a mammogram I got a call that the test showed a small lump. They didn’t know what it meant and other tests had to be done. I started imagining every scenario that might play out and almost none where good, though I did get a great draft of a eulogy I wanted read. I came to find that it was nothing, a small cyst. I had jumped ahead to lots of things that were ugly and that made me sick and anxious before I knew what was true.

The next time this type of opportunity presented itself I did it differently I decided that bad news was a lot like Pizza Hut I didn’t have to go looking for it, it delivers. So I waited till the data came back and then acted on what is. I used my new skills at forgetting and even used denial till all the facts were in. You don’t know till you know and that is all there is.

There are people who use forgetting on a daily basis. My sister Chris is one; she does it organically on waking. Each day is new, bright and shiny as she has a head like a sieve or colander. All of the events of her day run out her ears at night and when she wakes she has a fresh start. It does make those around her a little cranky as they always have to give her a replay of events, but it makes her lighter. She can laugh at a movie she has seen 100 times with the same enthusiasm and enjoyment. How great is that, huh?

There is a gift in forgetting and coming at life new without past prejudices and fears, a gift in stepping away from a memory for a little while to heal, and gain perspective.  The lightness that forgetting brings is powerful. So when I come into a room for the third time and have forgotten yet again why I am there, I need remember to send a memo to the Super Hero Justice League to let them know I really can use my powers of forgetting for good too, and then maybe they might return my calls.

Posted in Change, Faith, Fear, Health and Wellness | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Where’s the fun?

Recently I was walking on the beach with a friend of mine who was frustrated with life and the waiting game he was caught in. He said he felt like he was biding his time till a job fell into place. All signs pointed to the end of August early September. That part felt good. What to do till then with no money felt shitty. This boy was used to having money, to flying around from city to city to play, doing what he wanted when he wanted with little to no thought to the price tag. He was unaware of fun on the cheap; boy was he a lucky bastard to have met me.

It is no secret that I like to have fun, love to laugh and am up for any adventure. These skills sometimes place me in the role of Julie your cruise director from the Love Boat but I soldier on because it’s a gift. I have a knack to find fun, laughter and wonder everywhere. It’s just how I roll. There have been times in my life where I earned a six-figure salary and was a very unhappy person. Not that being broker agrees with me but figuring out what makes me tick and choosing better sure as hell does. I started with identifying what sucked in my life and removing those things. Doing so made me lighter, happier and I was better able to find people, work, and activities that made me feel whole. This is all good stuff, and stuff I learned to do on the cheap. The best accessory to finding a good time other than me is the right attitude. You have to be serious about finding joy every day, about being happy you are alive and well and frankly as my dad Willy-boy said, “everything else is gravy.” He was right. If you are alive and well that is all you need to get where you need to go.

Where we were headed on this morning was wandering the beach and talking. What things did he love as a kid, what things did he do in the past for fun? We were mining the past for clues to the now. Sometimes this works sometimes it makes you nostalgic for what you used to be able to do and now can’t, so we left yesterday-land and moved on. This was all well and good but things were not getting any brighter. I needed to take charge and direct some social activities. I offered up a half a dozen suggestions but he was distracted. I let the subject drop and just lead my friend as best I knew– like a Sherpa in the wilds of ennui.

What I know about life is how you see things is how they are. And if you see them as lousy they are. To shift that mindset is a tricky thing and no one-thing works consistently. Each one of us has to figure out what makes them laugh, what makes them feel loved, nurtured, and what makes them lighter. For me walking or yoga calm me and get me grounded. Talking to someone that I love helps do the same and usually laugh as well since I mostly only hang with funny people. Life is short my man, what is the point of being here if you are not enjoying the ride? Other things that work for me to feel good is when I try something new, a new place, food, activity, anything like this gives me a buzz. I love a learning curve and ‘new’ gives me that. So when I feel like I am stuck and I am killing time in life, because I am waiting for a job, money, a lover or a sandwich, I know I need to get an attitude adjustment. I look in my bag of tricks and pull out something that helps center me, reminds me to take back control of what I have control of and let the other things fall away. Sometimes it is just bubble wand and bubbles, other times feeding huge scary bat rays at Sea World which gum at your fingers like a toothless pony in a broken down rodeo.

If the first thing I try doesn’t work I go back to the bag and pull out another, music, movement, a good book/movie, the beach, each move gets me closer to fine. Each thing in my bag is cheap or free. I am in control of my amusement, my choices, my ability to allow, engage and enjoy. We all are, which in my opinion rocks.

When I work with kids in grammar school sometimes they tell me how they don’t want to grow up because things get harder, the school work, jobs that they will have to hold down, responsibilities of being an adult. I am an adult, that is true I have taken care of myself solely my entire life, I have good credit, have owned multiple homes, moved from state to state, held very prestigious jobs and generally done well for myself. I am not however grown up, that is just plain silly and of no use to anyone. Grown up is a make believe term deeming that one should be serious about things one should never be serious about which is practically everything. Hello? It’s not like we get out of this alive. So back to the kids I point out to them that getting older and being an adult rocks. Point number one I start, I get to eat candy whenever I want, I can have ice cream, pizza or pie for breakfast. Their eyes grow large like saucers at this. Point two I continue, being an adult means you can drive. Bingo, game over, I win. There is nothing better than freedom to go where you want when you want. Even if you have to scrounge the sofa cushions for gas money it is always worth it.

So after our walk I suggested a roof top burger joint to my dear forlorn friend, a man who eats one meal a day. Yes indeedy from the time he gets up to the time he goes to bed he eats non-stop and is built long and lean. A frickening crime against nature with the things he consumes but don’t get me started. This suggestion pulls his head up off his chest and he stops in his tracks, “a burger?” We amble up to the roof for a kick ass burger where he starts to lighten up despite the ½ grass fed beef and fries he was chowing down on. He finds that by looking through the window in the stairwell he can look straight through to the window on the other side and see the beach. He is now able to find the goodness at will now I notice. He is happy, he is sated, and the things that do not matter are falling away. He is planning his next meal, and then a day at the beach with all the appropriate accoutrements of sandwiches, chips, snacks, beverages and beach chairs for napping. He is getting lighter by the minute; I will soon have to tether him to the table as he will be up like Bullwinkle in the Macy’s day parade. Then he kicks it into overdrive by remembering he has one last Zebra snack cake left in his fridge. He is waxing euphoric about every bit of minutia of these crack like snack cakes. He points out crack is whack, and he can stop the Zebra’s anytime he wants “ Yes Whitney” I murmur. We were wandering back to the car at this point and laughing pretty hard about nothing and everything. It’s the little things we string together that build a great morning, a wonderful day and a beautiful life, not the big ones.

He loves to walk on the beach and that usually is a good place to get him heading in the right direction. Talking was also good, especially to someone with my sparkling wit, or more like 5th grade sense of humor. Each of these are things he has in his bag of tricks–which got him so far on this day–he still was not where he wanted to go. So I helped him to remember to reach in to that magical bag and pull out the big guns, food, glorious food. By the time we were driving back home he was telling me to stop because we were laughing so hard. Ok I was laughing, he was snort-laughing and trying to drive. Me, I was trying not to pee on his car seats.

We always have the ability to see things differently at a given moment, wanting that, wanting to get out of the bat cave and into the sunshine is about making the choice over and over to move to the light, the laughter and the snack cakes.

Posted in Change, Health and Wellness, Play | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

True Road Travelers, Faith and Dairy Products

Words are tricky twisty things. Don’t get me wrong I love them, I just don’t trust them. I trust action; action bears shades of intention and truth. Not wholly mind you but enough to get a bead on, enough to steer into or away from someone or something. Your best tools are your gut, your intuition, faith in yourself and your moral compass. The most important word in that sentence is ‘your’; not your teachers’, not your parents’, not your lovers’, not your best friends’, and not your religious icon/pop stars’. It’s easier to look outside ourselves for the answers, seek out experts, not so easy to go within and trust ourselves much less make peace with what we find there. I am sure this was even more difficult for Diane Duyser of Hollywood, Florida who put half of a 10-year-old grilled cheese sandwich with the image of the Virgin Mary up for action on eBay in 2004.

“Mrs Duyser says she noticed the image burned into her sandwich as she was about to tuck into it in autumn 1994. ‘I went to take a bite out of it, and then I saw this lady looking back at me,’ she said, according to the Chicago Tribune.” Mrs Duyser went on to say, ‘the sandwich has never gone moldy since she made it 10 years ago.’”

I think having faith for Mrs Duyser was difficult in the beginning but the lucky break of wining 70k at a local casino helped her hold true to her vision of the Velveeta Virgin. The universe is a kind and generous place and there are signs of that everywhere. Of course if you are looking for signs of death and destruction they are out there as well. How you see things are how they are, simple as that. Not so simple to change your orientation of glass half full, half empty or what the fuck I’m gonna spill it anyway… but it can be done.

We can’t control what goes on around us, we sometimes have some small influence but we own how we react to what is presented to us in any given situation. We have control over ourselves and we have the choice of being accountable for our actions or not. You show up or you choose to deflect, defer or keep so busy you can’t get still enough to hear your truth. There are lots of different ways to get lost out there, but only one way home. But you say you need an expert opinion? You don’t trust the words of a champagne soaked, red headed slacker Amazonian princess… fine be that way. Here’s what a few crusty old dead guys have to say:

“To find yourself, think for yourself.” — Socrates

“Self –trust is the essence of heroism.” — Emerson

“Just trust yourself, then you will know how to live.” – Goethe

A brilliant sensitive man once told me he only lied to himself. I pointed out that if we only lie to ourselves we in fact live a lie and lie to everyone around us. I understand it’s hard to trust yourself enough to be who you are no matter what those around you are thinking or doing. Really it’s spooky stuff. People want you to be nice, to be cooperative, and to be complacent. Anyone who knows me knows I am none of those things; I can be when I choose, but I rarely do.

I choose cranky when I am tired or hungry, I choose to cheer folks on when I believe in and love them however annoying that can be, I choose to stop and marvel like a three year old at small flowers on public walkways that peek up between the cracks of concrete. I also choose that when someone pokes at me with a pointy stick enough I stop letting them get within range. I am not a well-liked woman in many circles but I am well loved in a few, and that counts more than I can say. That is all that matters. Finding your truth, your true north and holding fast to that. That is your currency in life and that is where you shine.

Words are beautiful things but that is all they are unless your words, thoughts, and deeds are aligned. There are two ways to make choices either from a place of love or a place of fear. Only one works… no guess on which one. When I look back to where I messed up I came from a place of fear. I was afraid of rejection, confrontation, being found lacking so I did something out of fear or avoided something or someone because of fear. When I do that things go in the crapper. When I do something based on love– I am not talking about being in love I am talking about kindness, compassion, love… love–well things seem to work out; even though they might not be easy they are always right.

So this is a lot musings in the ether, in the philosophy of living and a little bit of grilled cheese. Sometimes that is all life is a wandering about, looking inside and finding out what you are hungry for, and sometimes that is a blessed grilled cheese sandwich. Bon appetite.

Posted in Change, Creativity, Faith, Health and Wellness | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Get Out of the Way

When I do things well I do just that, I get out of my own way. Whether it is writing, mediation, painting, yoga, or mischief, all them is done better without thinking. The quality of the work, creativity and fun is exponential to how much I release control and trust the process, the muse. I know this sounds easy but for a girl who lives in her head and has a touch of OCD, ok several hands full, this has been and is a hard fought battle.

I have just finished a rewrite of my second book. The fact that I can say I have a second book at all is a testament to what I am saying. I wrote a mystery during Nanowrimo this past November which I wrote about in another blog and will put a link to at the bottom of this piece*. Nanowrimo is a challenge where you commit on a website writing community to write at least a 50k word book, fiction, from scratch starting November 1st and have to be done by the 30th. I did it and was thrilled. I have just finished the first reading and doing the first rewrite for that book. What I found out doing this is that the book is fairly cohesive, funny, detailed and clever. I am sorry to say however I had nothing to do with that. The reason being I don’t remember writing any of it. I just simply got out of the way and followed where the characters lead me. Each twist and turn was a great adventure and very much a surprise.

So here is the “Ah Ha” moment Oprah is always going on about. Things can be as easy or hard, as big or little as you chose. I choose this book to be fun, easy and an exercise in calling myself forth. What that means in clinical terms is “pull your skirt out of your back pocket Mary and butch up.” I did and it was a breeze.

I started a writing group a month or two ago. I didn’t do it on purpose I knew I needed to get back to writing more seriously, my friend David loves to write but had not done it in a long time. I approached him to see if he was interested in messing about with writing and before I knew it 3 or 4 other friends heard and joined in. Most of these folks have wanted to write but have not done very much. Most of them think it has to be perfect, professional, Pulitzer out of the gate. I couldn’t spell my name correctly with those kinds of critics, editors or saboteurs sitting ringside in the creative process. Being creative, making something out of nothing and editing live in two different camps in my experience. You can’t think your way into creativity whether it is making art or making love, you feel your way there, you tumble head first if you pardon the innuendo.

Having been in other writing groups and having facilitated a few of my own over the years I am attempting to show them that there is a certain wonder, magic and very bad grammar when you let go. They are resistant but sooner or later I might have to resort to getting them liquored up with pen in hand, for now we mess about, write, and laugh. I have had this “getting out of the way” experience in many of the arts, painting, and photography, even dance which is a new and terrifying endeavor. I started yoga a year ago and always have my best class when I unplug my thoughts, stop trying and just move.

People believe that success comes from discipline, structure, method, process – not true in my case. Success has come by doing something despite the fear, despite being uncomfortable in the learning, unsure of my ability. The only way to fail at something is to stop trying – or better yet not try at all. I know a lot about that last one. I spent a large portion of my life sitting on the side lines and being a critic, an observer and a voyeur. What I learned is it’s exactly like Lotto; you have to be in it to win it. You have to love to be loved; you have to fail at something to succeed. And as I have said all of this is easier if you don’t over think, in fact if you don’t think at all and just trust.

Now I am sure you can see the wisdom to this theme when it comes to most things. I am also sure the addition of mischief to that list is an eye brow raiser. Please let me illuminate. A few weeks ago my friend Susan was leaving for the UK for an extended stay. She had been fighting with a squatter in her garage and it had gotten ugly. It seems the squatter though evicted came back and had a litter. Mama opossum was a bit of a tart and got herself in a family way. Susan wanted them out before her trip but Animal Control would kill them and the green option conservation folks told her to turn on the music and lights to chase them out. That just turned her garage into Varmint American Bandstand and her neighbors were unhappy with that. A side note to that I don’t care what you say a opossum is not built to Salsa, they are Cloggers from way back. Not politically correct but true.

The conservation folks also recommended a special elixir that would chase mama and the brood from the garage condo and look for safer and quieter lodging. Along with a few other friends, I had heard about the ongoing opossum battle as the trip got closer but did not gage how it would impact Friday night burgers, beer and tater tots at our favorite joint The Station. The night is all about the tots really, the love of the tot is mighty and is woven into some of our trailer park-school cafeteria-DNA. What happened that night in the name of chivalry and mischief was pure and unplanned. It started when Susan announced to David and John at the restaurant “I need male urine, drink up boys.”

Nobody blinked except the waitress who after taking the drink orders high tailed it out of there. Susan explained the conservation folks told her to put male urine around her garage to scare the opossum away. Being resourceful she tried a different flavor but it didn’t work. She needed to pull the big guns out or get the boys to. After negotiating the terms of how to evict the opossum physically and the possibility of running a wet ring around the garage we ordered. By then we had the second round of drinks and had lots of fun planning the equipment list, for me getting my camera was paramount because this was going to be good; for them: flashlight because well rangers carry one and for more adult beverages because well that’s what makes for good elixir.

There was one tense moment when David stood up to go the men’s room. Susan made him swear he was only going to wash his hands for dinner. I thought for sure she was going to follow him in, and so did he. After dinner Susan the designated driver drove us back to her house for Mission Hysterical. The boys begun by moving the cabinet which had become the home to the opossums. They spoke in negotiation terms to the opossum, pulled out draws of the cabinet/home and ferried stray babies who had not glued them selves to mama to the backyard. Then they used a broom to guide mama out after flipping the cabinet over. I ran around them like a CNN correspondent taking some very bad and very funny pictures. About 30 minutes later they had avoided anyone getting hurt both by a bite from a cranky and possibly rabid opossum or the critter wranglers themselves. Susan was elated.

Then the question came “do you still need the elixir?” Susan shrugged and John ready to be relieved and off the firing line for public urination took off for the bathroom inside the house. David at the time was out in the yard still making sure the babies that were separated from the mama were safely in the shrubs so she could find them. When he walked back to the house he asked Susan if she wanted him to pee on her garage. Not a question a woman gets often so she smiled and shook her head yes. She knew what she wanted. This was a no camera event as I had not gotten in touch with David’s handler for this type of photo. We waited inside for the deed to be done and after the fact I was given the opportunity to document the result.

What that night offered was a chance for my friends David and John to show up and help in an unusual way, in an unplanned way, in an uncomfortable way and they did it in spades. They were able to go with what the universe offered up and jump in. The amount of laughter, bonding and mischief that took place over this evening was more than we had planned or would have gotten by hanging out at The Station or watching a movie at my house. The Awesome Opossum Critter Wranglers were born that night. The memoriam sticker reads “Ossom Possum Critter Wranglers – We can piss on your problem. We aim to please.”

You see a muse can appear in many forms and it is up to us to watch and listen for it, then get out of the way for the learning, creation or mischief…it can appear in the form of a friend, an inner voice, a scruffy grey haired, steely eyed, pointy nosed lover, or a opossum.

* http://www.flickspin.com/pearhater/blog/a_tale_of_two

Posted in Change, Creativity, Faith, Health and Wellness | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

My People

Someone asked me about writing a message to the people and what that would sound like. In order to write a message to the people I thought I should have to have some. I used to in another life. It was a corporate life back at Apple Computer, that was a long time ago at least 3 careers back. It’s not like a have ADD or something, it’s just that….oh look a butterfly, eh you get the point. As a side note in a more recent life I was in the school system they don’t have a lot of hierarchy action like corporate America does, they have kingdoms. There is a Principal and Vice Principal and minions. Which doesn’t bother me, it’s not like I’m a good minion, I don’t take direction well. These days I am working solo and am my own minion which reminded me I needed some people.

I remember being in a meeting once where a peer, a pompous stick up the ass project manager volunteered “his people” for a specific task we were discussing. The thing here was, this stick wasn’t a manager, there were no people reporting to him. He had no visible people. He was doing a power posturing puff-up dance by saying something like that in a meeting. Thinking about it later I had to admit I loved the concept. Having “people” meant you had power. Of course if I had people they would love and adore me; I would be their brilliant fearless leader instead of being another lackey like everyone else sitting around the pressed, imitation wood corporate table. By saying you had “people” you were golden. So I introduced this concept to my sister Chris, the having of the people, perhaps legions of them. Legions of tall, strong, muscular male bodies glistening in the, oh I digress, any hoo.

So was born the concept of “my people” taking on tasks, projects, etc. The key to success was making sure these projects were not time sensitive as to the fact that they really needed to get done in the next decade. My people were successful in that upper management changed direction more frequently than Zsa Zsa Gabor got married. So with each redirection “my people” would be told to stop on the current project and redirect their efforts, it was brilliant really.

The people principle does not however work in a domestic situation. Having my people take care of my laundry, cleaning and bills left me naked, living in squalor and in the dark with my electric turned off. My people work much more effectively when I can put them to work on pointless, daylight burning, pet projects of the clueless. Here my people excel! They can leverage skill sets, crunch timelines and restructure with the best of the best of the imaginary.

Recently one of my imaginary people came to light, or evolved into human form. It only took me 15 years to get this to happen but hell, I am impressed I could manifest one of my people at all. I have a hard time remembering what I walk into a room to get unless I do it 2-3 times. So back to my manifestation, I called my friend John and got his voicemail. Which until that morning I had not paid attention to his outgoing message, but this particular morning I did. What we learn when we listen, my god this was better than sliced bread or my latest science project of bathtub gin! His message said “This is John your house manager please leave a message.” I had manifested a HOUSE MANAGER! I knew John had been a house manager in a previous life for multi million and billionaires but this was a horse of another color. I left my message stating that if he was my house manager he was doing a piss poor job as there were dishes in my sink, laundry to be done and frankly the apartment was a sty. Ok, I had a house manager albeit for a short time. I surmised that because soon after listening to my message he disappeared into the ether. How I know this because the number I had has been disconnected, he moved and all there is left of my new house manager is a faint scent of pancakes… damn. But that’s ok I think I will try manifesting a masseuse named Thor next.

Posted in Health and Wellness, Play | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Center Spot

I grew up in a house where my parents came at life from two very different directions; there were two languages, two sets of values and two sets of skills for moving through the world. One example of this is language one parent loved words the other hated them. My mom has always professed to hate them, yet she uses some of the most dramatic and visceral language of anyone I know. My dad loved them, I believe partly because he loved to read, and he loved the sound and music of language. He spent a lot of time in his head and the life they drew for him was substantially richer than our quarter acre lot on Long Island and his days as an ironworker. He would have loved to been a toastmaster I think but alas he had the social skills of a red eared box turtle. To be fair the red eared is the most gregarious and social of the box turtle set.

I can remember trying to leave parties with my dad, he would stand on the porch, in the driveway, or on the walk and say good bye for an hour. The poor host and hostess were exhausted by the time we could get him in the car. He just could not read people; he had been raised by wolves. He was brilliant but only in a formal education and book smart way. My mom is more street smart, intuitive and has some people skills. She has brilliant business sense but not much advanced education which makes her doubt formable ability. Too bad that they hadn’t appreciated what the other brought to the party and bottom line they were both a couple of major nuts. If you have ever read any of my writing you know the Pearhater did not fall far from that tree.

My mother’s language options are as bold and action oriented as she is, it is never an “odor” it is a “stench”, not a “cut” but a “gash”. Even n her attempt to get us to choke down orange juice at breakfast before school was based on the cautionary tale of sailors who got scurvy. I was the only 2nd grader that knew not only what the cause of scurvy was, but also the symptoms and treatment for it. My dad on the other hand used language as tool, he drew it as a weapon when you disappointed him and when he deemed you worthy he anointed you. He was precise and lethal. I have high school memories of conversations around the dinner table about words such as mellifluous, foible and tintinnabulation. During those moments my mom was long gone from the table banging pots at the sink.

My parents were opposites in many other ways as well. He was adventuresome about food; he loved to try the exotic and new but was not a risk taker in life. My mother was a risk taker and adventuresome in life but hated to try new foods. She could and does eat the same thing day in and day out. He was more of a planner and fear based where she is a fly by the seat of your pants, liar liar pants on fire type of woman. There was some dove tailing in their relationship, some challenging of stance, vision and knowledge. I can’t say if it worked for them or not, that is not my call. I can say it was a chaotic existence for my siblings and me.

I can see where that jumbled, jagged mix of their parts is blended in me in many ways. My love of language, both for the exaggerated as well as the fine crafted appears. I see the blend to where I fall on the IQ, EQ scales and my squirrelly high sense of intuition. As to adventure I crave it in everything from food to life across the board. I have been called fearless; however I don’t think that is true. It would be more accurate to say I posses an insatiable curiosity, and I work around the fear. Fear is a limitation, I don’t play well with limits, they just piss me off. I love the adrenaline that comes from a new experience and a steep learning curve. These days I rarely care about looking foolish, not knowing the answer or being vulnerable; I only care about what is true, what is real, what is learned, and how it feels.

As I get older the feeling part of that equation has blossomed which has been a delightful surprise. I have immersed myself in sensations of life, the skin to skin, the slow evolution of a brilliant pinot on my tongue, laughing so hard my body sings, the wet sand between my toes with the sound of the waves crashing. The love of words is still there, the thrill of an adventure is there, but now the appreciation of what is in the moment has given them the depth and richness that failure brings to success.

I now understand my folks better as well. My mother was the one to teach me the value of a road trip; a puddle is meant to be jumped in and even better was a jump in the ocean with your clothes on because the opportunity presented itself. I learned to be open to what the moment offers and how to play, and play hard. These days I play like it’s my job. My dad taught me to let what is unfold in its own time, like a fine scotch, a good story, and human frailty, and that each of those warms with the touch. Don’t get me wrong the wealth of knowledge and skills I derived from them does not take them out of nutdom, but it has helped balance the darkness. Balance was not a skill they possessed it’s one I am cultivating, hence the sour patch kids between workouts yesterday. Really it’s all about finding the center spot the one filled with sweet, rich, gooey goodness and getting every last drop.

Posted in Change, Creativity, Health and Wellness | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Bad Call

Years ago I worked in a call center for Apple Computer. My primary customers were technicians in the field who had problems fixing computer equipment. I was what you might call a “Master Technician” or expert the field used as a resource to help troubleshoot. I liked the job for the most part except for being tethered and having to pay attention to the stats, oh yea and watching your liquid intake was a must. Once in a blue moon the Customer Service call center was overrun with calls and needed us technicians as back up phone agents. That division talked to end users, customers, you know… angry people. Yikes. Anyone who works for a large company usually gets some kind of training working with people, communication skills, diffusing anger, etc. I got tons at Apple right down to learning about the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator which is a personality assessment tool; it measures people’s psychological preferences. This was a great tool because it showed me how I perceive and process information and make decisions. As interesting as this test was in terms of me it was fascinating to apply it to understand my coworkers, family, friends and oh yes those I let in my bed. Needless to say it has been a valuable skill in my tool bag over the years.

Anyone who works in Customer Service, works with the general populace– or as my grandmother who was not known to be the nicest woman called them “the great unwashed”–has the patience of Job. People can be rude, ignorant, impatient, stubborn, and downright nasty. Face to face they can reign it in, sometimes, but when you add the layer of anonymity a phone gives them people feel more comfortable in “acting out”. So my experiences with customers as a bartender at weddings while in college, or waitressing in a bad Mexican restaurant did not even come close to what was flung at me when the overflow customer calls came. There was not enough money in the world to make me want to do that on a regular basis. Hey I am not a pansy; I started as a technician in the field in computer business. I was used to having angry folks in my face from the beginning when it was deemed my fault that their Mac Plus power supply burned out every six months. When I smiled and listened to them in person they calmed almost immediately. Listening was important and so was the fact that that smile was generally a foot taller than them holding a long screwdriver. Over the phone I was just a disembodied voice, I was the reason they could not log on, get to their life online, the reason that their electronic happiness had gone away. They were pissed.

That being said I have also been on the other side of the coin. That is where most of us have been. We have spent hours tangled in the branches of sadistic phone trees where there is no real answer, help or exit strategy. Companies have made it so difficult to actually make contact to a human being that when you do get there you explode all over them in frustration and rage. The only customer service folks who are easy to find are the ones who want you to buy things; plane tickets, clothes, gourmet food, anything a glossy catalog marketing team can imagine. If however the item is defective well good luck with that, that is a full time job in getting it rectified. You need to take a leave of absence from work, stop showering and interacting with anyone other then the phone tree or the muzak on your phone while you wait in purgatory for attention, not resolution. Resolution comes from the divine and is not easily doled out. God help you if you do not have your data with you when you get the body on the phone. If after you have typed your account number, address, phone, birth date, social security number, bank account number, highest level of education, number of green vegetables eaten the previous day, all done with a shaky hand driven by the troughs of coffee consumed while navigating the phone system and are missing something pertinent WaWaWa you go to the end of the line, thanks for playing. There is no good side of the phone to be on in Customer Service these days.

The newest wrinkle is that now many companies have outsourced this type of job overseas, to places like India. Here we are boosting those economies all the while inflicting verbal abuse on their inhabitants. I guess that is a fair trade, it’s hard to say. Most of the times I have had this customer experience it was fine: some small issues with cultural nuances and accents and large issues with company policy. The utterance “I’m sorry it’s company policy” is the new ‘Holy Grail’ for the phone agents. Sure you can get their manager on the phone who may give you a coffee mug or a 30% discount off another product that will be broken, the wrong size, or rancid before it’s time, but they can not fix your problem because fixing it would be against “company policy”. I don’t blame them, the call center folks; I don’t blame any one person. I am not happy however with any company that puts me the customer, at the bottom of the list when it comes to satisfaction and value. They create this mess with cost cutting measures along with improper training and policy to stay afloat. Bad call on their part. You put in me in a phone tree from hell or with someone who can not or will not help me when I get to them 15 hours after I initiate the call and I would rather drag my front teeth down a black board than buy your product again.

The best example of the inane company policy model I have heard played out was on a recent trip to Florida. My sister lives in New York and I live in San Diego. We meet in Florida at my mom’s for a visit once or twice a year. We time our flights so we share the expense of the taxi and do virtually no solo time with my crazy mother. It’s a win, win. Two weeks ago when we were there the north east was doing what it does in the winter, snow like crazy and twist up air travel. I was heading west, which was lovely for me. Chris my sister was not so lucky. Her trip home was canceled and she had to fly out the day after me. She toyed with the idea of riding with me to the airport and staying at a hotel close by. Financially it would have been almost a wash and it certainly would also have been a huge sanity boost. So she called the 800 number for the hotel she found online. Things were getting complicated during the call and finally after 5 minutes with the phone agent she said “forget it, cancel the reservations.” The woman said she would have to transfer her to another location and to please hold it might take 4-5 minutes. So Chris waits and gets her transfer. She explains she wants to cancel the reservation and why. The phone agent explains the cancellation policy is that Chris would have had to cancel on the 7th to not be charged. Chris explains that today is the 8th and she made the reservation 5 minutes ago for the 9th and that she would need a Time Machine in order to cancel the reservation before she made it. There was no laugher on the other end of the phone just dead silence. This is where the culture nuance could have helped. All the woman said was it was “company policy” and she had to charge her. After 30 minutes and another transfer to the actual Florida Hotel and its reservation manager all was solved. In total it was a 45 minute exercise in frustration.

“Sometimes” Chris said after it was all over and she had poured a large tumbler of wine, “I try to make small talk while they are trying to help me and I ask them where they are”.

“What do they say? Where are they?” I asked with my own large tumbler of wine.

“Detroit”. She dead pans.

“No, really?”

“Yep, guess they are not supposed to say where they really are due to ‘company policy’. So then I ask them ‘How the weather in Detroit?’”

I started to laugh, “Are you are trying to trip them up or make them laugh?”

“Both” She said. Didn’t sound like either worked.

Well I suggested “After asking them about where they are, then what the weather in Detroit, or where ever … then try slipping in ‘How many cows are in the street?’”

She choked on her Cabernet when she laughed, but I could tell she was filing it away for another day.

Posted in Change, Health and Wellness | Tagged , | Leave a comment

That was not my beautiful life – the road to loserville

Yep, I admit it I am a loser but not in the traditional sense, yea, yea, what a shock me not traditional who would have thunk it. Sitting here typing this very late blog I am less than 3lbs away from hitting my goal weight. I am, and have been a member, on and off, for the last 7-8 years, of Weight Watchers. I have mostly been on for the past 5 though with various degrees of success. There were times years prior I tried lots of diets and weight loss programs The Zone, Atkins, Weigh Watchers, Suzanne Sommer’s, and the Cabbage Soup or otherwise known as the “you can’t go out in public because you are a gas bag diet”.

I grew up in a house where my mom lived on and off on diets, that legacy was passed down. Though looking back at pictures I was slim most of my life and as I got older not more than 10-20 pounds over till I was put on a medication to help with my out of control migraines. Those meds and a lifestyle of stuffing my emotions got me up to what a defensive tackle for the Miami Dolphins weighs. I am a tall girl so I rounded out to the silhouette of the Michelin tire man, very unattractive. Not to mention the self loathing that accompanied the weight gain, the feelings of loss of control, and overall sadness only exacerbated the problem. Eventually I hit rock bottom around my 40th birthday. I realized if I managed to live another 40 years I did not want to be hauling the body I was sporting much less be making that ungodly groaning noise I was making just getting out of a low slung chair. This was not my beautiful life and it was up to me to go find it. The pain of existing in my skin was so great that introducing a healthy lifestyle was really the lesser of the two evils.

It has taken a long, long time. A long time to learn what works for me and not judge it. I hated exercise and finding things I could tolerate in the beginning and eventually love took almost a lifetime. Learning what foods made my body feel good, listening to it when I was satisfied with my meal and not keep eating until I feel stuffed like a Thanksgiving turkey. Weight Watchers ultimately gave me many tools, support and the philosophy that “it is not a diet, it’s a lifestyle” that worked for me. I do not do well when I deprive myself of anything. I am a creature who needs choice and variety. If I feel trapped I bolt. It’s a simple fight or flight thing for me: if I am told that I have to give up carbs for 3 weeks, then that is all I want, need and obsess on. I need the freedom to choose or feel as though I do. We always have a choice; even not choosing is a choice.

There have been two things that have come to light to get me all the way home here. The first was really learning, really understanding that my coping method of eating my emotions no longer served me. I learned to feel what I was feeling instead of stuff it down with food, whether the emotion was stress, anger, boredom, or happiness, didn’t matter. I never felt better after eating during those times only worse. So when I started to take walks in time of high and unmanageable emotional states, or write in my journal, or call someone to talk I felt better. I always felt better. These skills became my new coping mechanisms, my new tools in my self care tool bag. It didn’t mean I didn’t try food first in the beginning but I didn’t get relief I was seeking and by just walking out my door and around the block for 30 minutes I did. It took time; I wanted to keep going back to where I used to find comfort but no longer did. Finally I let it go and moved forward. I replaced a bad habit with a good one as the universe abhors a void.

The second thing I that got me this close is I just didn’t give up. I kept tweaking the food, my mood, the exercise, I failed over, and over, and over for years. I just kept getting back up and looking at what beliefs limited me, what mindset and habits were sabotaging me and addressed them. What can I say, I am one stubborn bitch. I was also fighting for my life, my mental and physical health. I knew that giving up was not an option I didn’t want to going back to that half life I was existing at prior to this. The pain in those mornings of looking in my closet and being ashamed to get dressed because I had run out of angles in the mirror I looked OK at. It hurt too much. So I kept t trying to get healthy, making small adjustments, small steps, meal by meal, mile by mile.

Three and half years ago I lost my youngest sister Amy to Leukemia. She was 36. She was diagnosed just at the point she was pulling her life together. She had fallen in love, was getting physically and mentally strong and healthy. Then she was diagnosed and dead within 6 months. Life can be very short. I swore after her death I would not only get healthy but wanted to honor her by honoring my body. I wanted to become athletic in a way I had never done before. I wanted to be the kind of athlete who moved with ease and grace. I wanted to be someone comfortable in their body, strong, confident and happy. None of these things I had ever been or dreamed I could be. It was pure fiction to me, ok science fiction… I put that marker in the sand and promptly forgot about it until late last spring. On a phone call with my trusty sidekick and BFF Marsue, she reminded me about that vow, that desire to become an athlete in some sense. She also pointed out I had done it. I had not exactly forgotten the desire to take it to that level of fitness, I had just been doing those small steps to get there and I forgot to look up to see I had arrived. I am happy to say the view is better than I could have dreamed.

A few weeks ago I was walking on the beach with a friend of mine and we were talking about our schedules for the week. I mentioned I had my Weight Watchers meeting the next morning and he stopped walking. He took my arm and spun me around to look at me incredulous and said “You don’t need to lose weight.” He turned me sideways and continued, “When you turn sideways you remind me of an Angelfish, you all but disappear except for those eyes.” I burst out laughing , not only was it one of the nicest things I had heard in a good long while it was hilarious to me to be compared with such a graceful creature. So within the next week or two I will hit goal. I will have lost a little over 90lbs which is essentially a prima ballerina from the Moscow Ballet Company. I have no doubt that I will hit goal, you see once I started connecting the dots to how my body worked, emotional hunger verse’s physical hunger, and strung all those small steps together I understood bone deep I was no longer my old story. I wasn’t holding on to the things that no longer served me. I was working on a new story, a new life and it has grown up around me on my journey. It seems in my new story I am something of an Angelfish with an incredibly beautiful life. I can’t wait to see what happens next!

Posted in Change, Faith, Health and Wellness | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

I Hate That

How many times a day do you think, feel or say, “I hate that?”  Usually it is small things that break a relationship, the one small oversight or transgression that builds to epic proportion in our heads and makes us blow. It was just such an event with my 9-year-old DVD player. He started out skipping small things in the beginning, a line of dialog, small but meaningful gestures. I let it slide; we all do in the beginning. It’s me; I expect too much, I’m too picky, too demanding. Then he began to skip whole scenes, lose plot points, and check out for whole sections of what made my evening good. I still let it go; I would cajole, curse and push all of his buttons to no avail, the rat bastard. Finally it was a friend who brought it to my attention that this was an easy quality-of-life thing to fix. I knew it, but had chosen to muddle through, be a big girl and make it work. Unfortunately I was the only one. My DVD had no such plan and I was paying Netflix to watch 2/3 to ½ of all the movies I was renting. I was a dolt.

The fix was a new DVD but I was putting it off because it felt like a luxury expense and not a daily quality-of-life issue. What I did over the years, as this went on, was minimize its impact. I love movies, documentaries, episodic TV series and all types of film. Film is a way I learn, relax and explore; they are a healthy coping mechanism and they bring me immense pleasure. I was spending half my night fighting with the remote, cursing like a truck driver, bringing up my blood pressure and making myself a cranky old thang. It sucked. It was a small thing I had control over and put it off not realizing the fix would have a huge impact on my life. It did.

But then there were the 20-year-old mugs. Ugh. Tea and coffee stained scratched glass I could not make clean no matter what I did. They still worked so I hated to give them away.  It was just a mug after all, why the big deal? Why did it make me frown to pour my hot morning beverage in something ugly? What can I say I am aesthetically driven and they were an eyesore, that and I am a shallow wench.  To replace them or even just one with a special mug for my tea or coffee seemed so small and self-indulgent that for 5-6 years I just thought about getting a new mug.  Not even a set mind you, just one and I still never got around to it. One day in Marshalls for $2.99 I found a lovely little mug and remembered my promise to myself and kept it. I would smile every morning I filled it, it was bright, clean and made me happy. If someone told you that you could make an investment of $2.99 to start your day with a smile instead of a frown wouldn’t you do it? The point it took me 5-6 years to do it. Why? I thought the small things were small and did not make or break an experience, my minute, hour or day. I did not take the time to adjust my life to me. One size does not fit all folks!

I started to pay attention to all the little things in my day that annoyed me, that made me think “oh I have to fix that”, “I hate that.” I started to realize it was not the big things that made for a good day or a bad day but the little things because that is what life is small little moments strung together. Yea sure there are big days in there, promotions, moving, falling in and out of love, but it’s everything in between that we forget to examine. We look forward or we look back but fail to recognize exactly where we are at this moment and that that moment is all we have. Why not make it great?

After those last two incidents I got a pad out and sat down to figure out what other little annoyances ticked me off during my day. I sat, and sat and got nadda at first. I left the pad on the dining room table and went on with my life. Then as my day and evening wore on I would get tweaked by something and walk over to the table and write it down. These things can be so small, so fleeting we don’t always remember them but they pop up every time we go to do something.

Here is the sticking point: you need to have control over it to fix it. That doesn’t always mean throwing money at it either. One item that went on my list was my filthy car; I live in a flight path, on a city bus route and park beneath where Pterodactyls nest. Back east it rains so god washed my car. Here it doesn’t rain near enough for me to get in and out of my car without feeling icky about the crust, dirt and dust, and that is just on the inside.  The outside is a hundred times worse depending on what the Pterodactyls ate. I have taken to washing it once a month. This was prompted by a friend who put on a HAZMAT suit to drive with me. He made me realize that I had let one more thing bug me yet not fix it till it was way over the line.

So get a pad and write down 5 small things that you have control over that get on your nerves every day. Your partner chewing with an open mouth is not a good one choice for a few reasons; you  have no control over them is one. As to your partner if they have resisted learning the closed-mouth-chewing skill till now you best forget the duct tape option and choose to sit next to them rather than in front of them when they masticate. Or leave the room when they eat. However, if when you get dressed in the morning your closet is jammed with clothes and you can’t find anything you want, are tripping over shoes, etc. that is a lousy way to start your day and something you have control over. Think about taking an evening or a Saturday morning, put on great music make a cup of fabulous tea and clean and organize your space. Make it an event, not a chore. Hell, invite a friend who has OCD like me and open a bottle of wine. Life is meant to be enjoyed why not inject fun everywhere you can?

Start to look at your life and how to make every experience better. A great example is sitting in traffic. That was the first thing my sister thought of to fix. I pointed out we were looking at things she had control over and that traffic was not something she could control but she could have influence over the experience. I suggested trying books on tape, lectures or a specially mixed CD made by my niece just for her commute. She could pick up a favorite beverage and sip it on the road planning her evening in the quiet of the car. Though she cannot change traffic she can make sitting in it a better experience.

So the exercise is to get that pad out and pay attention to the things that tweak you during your day. Think about how to make things better. Can they be removed, replaced, organized, and improved upon? Doing so will raise your overall mood and quality of your day.  I recommend starting small, like my mug. The payoff is big no matter what, so keep it simple.

Life is full of choices, putting your head down and pushing through “this is the way it is,” your “have to’s” and “it doesn’t matter it’s just a teacup” is one way. Why sit there waiting for those great moments instead of making them? Why spend your time living for your weekends, evenings and the ‘good times’ when the other option is ditching what doesn’t work.  And for what has to stay: reframe it. Think about how to make it better, think “Ah hell might as well dress that pig up and teach it to dance.” Again except if it’s your partner then it best to pay someone else to give them lessons.

Posted in Change, Health and Wellness | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Heart Healthy

This past winter I experienced a clearinghouse of death. I lost everything from my confidante Hector the Beta fish, to my first love and that five-year friendship to my confidence in what I believed to be true. I had no job, very few friends in San Diego, my Life Coach business was winding down on clients, and the abyss opened up. Most of these endings happened within a weeks’ time the end of December to the first few days of January.

What’s a girl to do? I pulled my skirt out of my back pocket and manned up. But I did that in a very different way than I had in the past. Instead sucking it up and blocking out the pain I let myself feel my feelings. I kept going to yoga.  And I cried while doing my Vinyasa’s.  I kept walking and running and cried during that.  I cried when writing and reading and in dark movie theaters during comedies. I was a soggy mess. Hey I’m a girl for the love of god we cry. The point is I felt my emotions but I did not become them, which means they did not overwhelmed me for the first time in my life. I did not define myself by my wounds, my sadness or my loss. They were a part of me, a part of my life in that moment but not the whole of me nor would they be anything but transitory. Like life, they’re here and then they’re gone.

I knew to do this because of Weight Watchers. I have been in Weight Watchers for about 9 years on and off. Prior to that I have tried every diet I came across from the Suzanne Sommers diet, Atkins, The Zone, the Color diet where I ate only green food one day, red food the next which incidentally covers Twizzlers nicely. Nothing worked. I got a personal trainer, saw a nutritionist, fell on and off every routine I ever started.  I would wait till the next Monday, month or bathing suit season to get back on again. I hated myself and did not believe anyone who said or showed they loved me. How could they? I was fat. That sole fact, defined all of who I was. I knew I would have a better life when I was fit, thin and no longer huffed and puffed going up stairs.

I was not fat because I loved food; I was fat because what I used food for. Food was love, food was comfort and food was a way to numb. It was a way to stuff and not feel my emotions. Food was my drug of choice. Not till I learned the difference between emotional hunger and physical hunger did I start to get on the right track. I learned some of that at Weight Watchers who teach that it’s a life style change not a diet. They helped me find concrete tools to work with to figure out what was going on. I played with those tools for years before actually using them, much less understanding how they related to me.

There are different levels of knowing. The first level is intellectual.  You understand a concept. For me it was understanding that I am an emotional eater. That meant I ate when I was not physically hungry but in times of stress, anger, sadness, anxiety, boredom, you name it I ate it. The second level of knowledge is the emotional, heart level; here I learned to connect the dots to how I felt when I ate during times of high emotional content. I learned to feel the difference in my body between emotional and physical hunger. I found that my mood worsened after eating for any other reason than physical hunger. The last level is to the bone, soul knowledge.  Here I came to understand that eating not only made it worse it did not fill that void, the need, or sooth what was ailing but other things did. I learned to find better tools to self- sooth.

This progression is what took years. I don’t think that this would take years for everyone but I was hugely resistant to looking at where the problem really lived, which was in my tiny little bird like skull. I was holding on to the idea of being happier with numb on the surface and self-loathing at the core. What can I say I am somewhat a nitwit.

It is like peeling an onion, one translucent layer at a time. None of this was about weight loss it was about finding self-worth from within not from an external source. Carl Jung said, “Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens. I did just that. I looked at all the ways I dealt with loss, insecurity, anger, sadness, even joy.  When I felt a flash of an emotion I stuffed it down with food. The feeling were too big, I didn’t want that tidal wave to crash over me and sweep me out to sea.  And being a big girl I knew I could eat them and I did. I did it three pieces of pizza, 4 donuts and a pint of Ben and Jerry’s at a time. I know it seems odd to have joy listed there, right? But really it makes sense, if I had something good I knew it was going to end or be taken away from me. What was the point of the high if the low was right behind it? I wanted numb, no highs, no lows, no emotions to tip the scales on either side. Since I have a pulse I have emotions, so this was a shitty way of managing my life.

By using small steps I found better coping mechanisms than eating to self- sooth. When I took a walk I felt better, especially when the emotion was along the lines of anxiety or anger. Movement seemed to disperse them faster than writing in my journal (which was another coping mechanism). Especially walking at the beach– a place that was big enough to hold all the emotion I was feeling–was the best. My dear friend Suzanne taught me about beach walks in terms of bringing your “bad” there. My move to San Diego made beach walks a viable option and I used them as often as I needed.  Besides walking I learned that yoga, journaling or talking to someone I love who made me laugh always made me feel better. Eating did not; in fact it consistently made it worse.

I don’t want you to get the idea I stopped running to food to sooth me. I did not and still do occasionally. It took me about 2 years to really see that eating when I was trying to negotiate my emotions was like hitting myself in the head with a 2×4 it never made me feel better and never would.  Sometimes when things were very bad I would have to use more than one good coping skill to right myself. I would string them together by taking a walk then sitting in a café and journaling, which would help tip me upright.

Being reluctant, a slow learner and not a fan of emotions the next step was excruciating. I had to learn how to feel my emotion without having them take me over, drag me under, and become all of me. The hardest part was to do nothing. To stand still and just feel, not judge, not think, not run, and just be in whatever I was feeling. I squeezed my eyes shut and waited for the waves. They thudded into me, rocked me and made me stumble.  But then they left as waves do; they receded slowly and gently. It turns out the fear of what would be, was far worse than what is.

So I went along like this every day until one of those messy emotions came popping up and I had another damn growth opportunity.  Some I took, some I ate. Over time I choose better and tackled bigger emotionally charged situations without losing myself in the process. I felt stronger, more solid in who I was and I really started to love myself. The cellulite, the bumps, lumps and beauty that was all of who I was. I found out I was worth it the whole time, that weight had nothing to do with me being worthy or lovable and I believed that for the first time ever.

The real test came this past winter when the bottom fell out of my life and rocked everything I had known and challenged everything I’d learned. This is how the Universe works, as your skill progresses so do the opportunities to test them.  As it turned out I could still use all those coping skills while crying, while feeling like someone eviscerated me, while mourning. I could continue to go forward while feeling like at any moment I would break apart. I did. I didn’t give up on what I had learned, or more aptly, I just kept trying. I knew if I kept taking small steps they would take me away from the scene of the crash. I also had to acknowledge I had made all the decisions that put me at the site of that crash. So there were more fucking growth opportunities and I took them with a vengeance. Taking them with a vengeance meant I really looked at my poor choices, beliefs I held that no longer served me and generally kicked around the ugly things in my head that had landed me where I was.

Having navigated that emotional wreckage I came out knowing that I was never going to make those same choices again. Not with food, not with my heart.  I am happy to say I have hit my healthy weight and am at goal in Weight Watchers; in fact I am a week away from earning Lifetime. On the other hand I still have a pulse and being me that means I will be screwing up on a daily basis. But I’ve learned some lessons and I’m ready to move down the road to new mistakes. This is my job as I see it in being human.  It is also my job to take care of my body, my mind, and my spirit and nobody else’s. I own my reactions to what happens around me and will forever work at trying to achieve and maintain balance, in knowing my worth and my heart despite those around me reaching for a zebra cake or a tart.

Posted in Change, Faith, Fear, Health and Wellness | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment