Monday, December 16, 2013
This simple thing
You say you are afraid, like no-one else. You are more unsure than you have ever been. You are depressed, like never before. You turn to me with these things: fear. lack of confidence. mistrust. sadness. anger. doubt. unhappiness.
I think, in these conversations you seek: comfort. reassurance. healing. confidence.
And here I think to myself, perhaps you want to hear that you are not so alone. That countless others have felt this way, even though you feel like the first. I could whip my own angst-ridden words out, the ones I never hit publish on. I could tell you I know what it is like to hear dark voices in your mind all day long. I could tell you of the way this darkness coats my mind even as I smile and network and write, through days and nights and weeks.
In my impatience, all I want to tell you is -- none of the above. Just this, what I tell myself: Get over it. You're not the first or the last to have felt this way. And there are better things you could do than coddle these emotions.
But I'm trying, instead to remember this: Perhaps you are not the first to be in this space. But perhaps this is not what you want to hear. Perhaps you like being alone in your fear, cradling it like the only thing you can feel close to. Perhaps you do not seek comfort or healing. Perhaps you do. I'm not you, and don't know.
But this know for sure: For me, this moment is a time to learn to be kind. To listen softly, in the now, to how you feel. If only I can learn to silence the voice in my head that says: Been there done that. Move on. If only I could move on too, from these simple lessons.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Between the words
This long absence has been a different presence. In the real world, there are names, identities, responsibilities, deadlines. Even if I'd rather be exploring experiences in self-reflective words, flights land and drafts are due and the world, my real world, spins on by. For a while, it's easier to just spin along and see what we churn up together, the real world and I. So far, there's this:
Quit my job for a degree in writing.
Learning that I get annoyed -- extremely, justifiably, so -- when people come up and talk to me about this blog.
I don't care who you are. This blog is not a communication from me to you. It is not a means to solicit your opinion of my life or actions. It is a collection of personal reflections, some more foolish than others. If you'd like to discuss them, leave me a comment. Don't, under any circumstances, say -- "Hey, I read your website and here's what I think!" If I wanted to initiate a real-world conversation with you on the subject, I would have.
The difference between a hyphen and an em- dash. Yay grammar!
Realized that I still think of grammar and finances only in French. I can't explain English tenses, but I'm your person if you want to learn about plus-que-parfait. Ou la bourse.
And most of all, this:
Accepting that this blog is probably going to stay quiet for a while longer. As I transition to a full-time career as a writer, work and life aren't as separate as they once were. Words distinct to each are sparser, and I'm still thinking through where the common ones should go.
Sunday, June 09, 2013
Dream a dream
In the dream I stood by a beach in what was a bit of an adventure. After classes at college that day I'd taken a walk to the beach, a short walk to a famous place. I lived in a land where I knew the language well enough to speak it, be heard and understood, but not well enough to call it my own, my mother tongue. The beach was everything promised. Fabled pillars of ancient stone, steps down to the crashing waves. I stood for hours, watching the stones turn to rose and gold, the beach turn dark and the steps recede to grey echoes in the dusk. As I climbed back up, the waves were already washing over the lowest few.
I walked through the tall pillars, up and down flights of stone stairs, past huge doors bolted many years ago to block out wanderers from the present (I'm not sure such a ruin exists at the beach in reality, since I've never been there). And I was lost. I couldn't find the short walk from the campus that I'd taken, and the unfamiliar roads were deserted. Not a soul on the streets, no transportation, only locked doors. This is where the dream gets a little fuzzy. I could speak this unfamiliar language to the people I met, but no one understood me. I managed to find a rickshaw who offered to take me home for an exorbitant amount of money. I got in, only to find the driver had other plans. I'm not sure quite how I managed to get him to take me back to the ruins. Somewhere there I thought I might find a safer alternative. It was a popular landmark, and I could call someone to come pick me up, at least.
So I called him, the person I had moved to this city for. Terrible cell phone reception, and he didn't hear or understand anything beyond that I had gone out, and would be late getting home. He wasn't curious or concerned. After a long while of fidgeting with the phone, I called my mother, and she could barely hear me. It was even later, and I was sobbing-screaming by now. "I don't know if you can hear me. If you can, please call a cab to get me home and let _ know I'm okay."
I don't know how the dream ended, if she heard me or the cab came. I don't know if in my sleep, I found home. I do know that I didn't understand this yesterday, though it has lingered and weighed me down since I woke. Since I woke, I'm still not home. I have not been for a long time. And only now do I have the words to voice this.
Our conversation this morning makes it clear. I live in your world. Even this far from tradition and native tongues, I stepped into your world five years ago. I don't know if you are aware of this. But I live in a world where the only resolution is what I think your father's way was- one of non-communication, unilateral decisions, wall-building, hurt fostered by an absence of words, an unwillingness to work past hurt to heal.
This is not a world where my words will help. I can speak the words of this unfamiliar language, but should not expect to be heard or understood. I can try to find help, even pay exorbitant amounts of money for it. But this help will not take me past the ruins. I will find myself here, time and time again, in space framed by locked doors and formidable pillars that have stood for years. Make no mistake, it is a beautiful place. One where the waves crash over weathering steps and water, light and wind make a world of wonder every sunset and sunrise. It is paradise, for a few minutes each day. The rest is dark, towering, walls I crash into when I try to feel my way through or out.
Only after our conversation do I understand yesterday's dream. And here is my solution of sorts. While in limbo, trapped in your childhood, I revert to mine. Write down fights verbatim in an effort to logic them out. Listen to the other person without judgment. Use words to understand first, not express. Don't change things you don't understand. Do these things and insight will come, as sure as wind and night sky.
There's a somewhat silly poem in a children's book I particularly love. It's a little reminiscent of the Alchemist to me, the part where the boy calls on the sun and wind and cloud and they answer. But they are only to be used when you know, completely, who you stand with, and what you stand against.
"With _ in this fateful hour,
I place all heaven with its power,
And the sun with its brightness,
And the snow with its whiteness,
And the fire with all the strength it hath,
And the lightning with its rapid wrath,
And the winds with their swiftness along their path,
And the sea with its deepness,
And the rocks with their steepness,
And the earth with its starkness,
All these I place,
Between myself and the powers of darkness."
(A swiftly tilting planet, Madeline L'Engle)
A few silly words, yes. But they give me comfort as I live this dream. Perhaps there will be others when I wake.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
The promise of yesterday
Tomorrow is ethereal and familiar. It shines on horizons, shimmers just past fingertips, glows in morning light and casts pearly sparkles of future bliss in your eyes today. Tomorrow's promise is flimsy as air, vanishing like mist as the sun rises over the ocean.
Yesterday is what remains. Like stubble that leaves your skin raw, like the warm smell of a lover's skin that rises up in your mind the next day. Like thorns prickling in the crook of your elbow, like old aches that stab your flesh when it rains. Like the feel of an old gift against your skin, like healing bruises that catch the nip in the air today a little harder. Like breath catching in your throat as you remember. Yesterday is forever, regrets and all. Yesterday promises that you will remember pain, know fear, be fearless. Yesterday promises to remind you that you are wiser, and you may even be braver by tomorrow.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Get the coffee to go
Show me a person who's good at "networking", and at least half the time you can be sure you're looking at someone who has learnt how to talk to themselves in private- In parking lots, restroom stalls, broom closets and for those lucky enough to have them, office with doors that close (and aren't made of glass).
What they say to themselves you may never know, and it would be rather self-defeating to spend this post telling you what I tell myself before I must do this thing called being nice to people I don't know very well. Instead, for my own reference and possibly yours, a list of things to remember (this may or may not be the list you read to yourself before you open that door) about networking, in no particular order:
- Note from an incredibly wise person, read by twelve-year-old-me, paraphrased from memory: "Introversion is a form of a vanity. It means you spend more time thinking about yourself and your reactions than you do about other things/people."
- Networking isn't about "putting yourself out there". It's about opening the doors so other people can step in if they choose.
- Most people love to talk about themselves (introverts included. We're often the worst offenders). Ask about them. Learn who they are. Genuinely want to know this other person.
- Just for a while, forget your frame of reference. Know them from their shoes. When they offer a bit of themselves, receive it gracefully. Graciously. Not with, "Oh, interesting, because I feel the same way/disagree/think that..". Just "Interesting, tell me more about.."
- When they feel comfortable, they will want to know you too, this person they have let in. Then you have a connection that works- a "network" of two, if you will.
- Networking is about believing that just for a little while, you have a dream that is strong enough to push you past the limits you've set for yourself. You have to "want to fly so much that you're willing to give up being a caterpillar." Yes, it hurts, and so what? And yes, your dream may crash and die tomorrow. But for now, it is here and alive, so give it a chance.
- Networking is about knowing that you, the you that wants whatever it is you're reaching for, is (most likely) going to be in a better place than the you that would rather curl up on the couch with the ice-cream.
- Sometimes, before you take that call/ pick up the phone/ answer that email/ open the door to the meeting room, networking is just about telling yourself to just do this now, and tomorrow, tomorrow you can get the coffee to go and not speak to a soul, and today will be just fine.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
How you read me
I'm reading a book about how we, as readers and writers, read stories. The writer describes the process of reading in metaphors of painting, moving through landscapes physical and emotional. He recounts Anna Karenina sitting on a train with her book, how she jostles back and forth between the world of her moving train and her book until the book story grows strong enough to pull her into it, away from her own. I, of course, read this on my own jostling, moving train ride.
He writes as a writer who reads, weaving words through classic essays and novels to tell a tale of how we write. He tells of his own journey from naive writer to sentimental and finding equilibrium between the two. Somewhere, this swing of his narrative echoes my own. Reading this is a bit like walking a long trail and finding a little pile of stones that says someone else was here.
And somewhere in this arc it is no longer I who read the book, but the words that find a part of my journey. They name this road and its travelers with their meaning, and in this naming we are read, and we are known. In this knowing I read, and find a self in the words.
(the book: 'The naive and the sentimental novelist', Orhan Pamuk)
Monday, March 11, 2013
Success
"To leave the world a better place/ Whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition (...) this is to have succeeded." -Emerson
I firmly believe that each of us can (and perhaps even should) aim to do all three. The important thing to remember, however, is not to try to do all three at once.
Friday, March 08, 2013
Life is a little confused right now. Usually, I'd come here and attempt to write the dilemmas to a solution, but this one time, there is no clear single road. The decisions are all mine as are the consequences. For the first time, I'm struck by how little free will I've exerted in my career choices thus far. Voiced preference and attempts to go certain places, of course. But never before have I placed one definitive step before another, knowing that there can be no going back, not entirely knowing what lies ahead. (or perhaps I have, and only did not have quite as much riding on my shoulders as I pushed my feet off the ground.)
In any case, there is confusion, unrest. I visit this space often to find the second sight I named this blog after. And I visit, and read, and feel a little more at peace. The only decision I can try to make is to do less harm, with every step and every choice. Less harm in every way. To relationships, to family, to people unknown. To myself, physically, emotionally, intellectually. To the earth, in this 50 miles of it that I cross twice each day. Less harm and more peace, with every action. So I read this little prayer for peace below and need no other words, just for a little while.
In any case, there is confusion, unrest. I visit this space often to find the second sight I named this blog after. And I visit, and read, and feel a little more at peace. The only decision I can try to make is to do less harm, with every step and every choice. Less harm in every way. To relationships, to family, to people unknown. To myself, physically, emotionally, intellectually. To the earth, in this 50 miles of it that I cross twice each day. Less harm and more peace, with every action. So I read this little prayer for peace below and need no other words, just for a little while.
Tuesday, January 01, 2013
Pray for peace
Pray for Peace (- Ellen Bass)
Pray to whomever you kneel down to
Jesus nailed to his wooden or marble or plastic cross,
His suffering face bent to kiss you,
Buddha still under the Bo tree in the scorching heat,
Adonai, Allah. Raise your arms to Mary
That she may lay her palm on our brows,
To Shekinah, Queen of Heaven and Earth,
To Inanna in her stripped descent.
Hawk or Wolf, or the Great Whale Record Keeper
Of time before, time now, time ahead,
To terriers and shepherds and Siamese cats.
Fields of artichokes and elegant strawberries.
Pray to the bus driver who takes you to work,
pray on the bus, pray for everyone riding that bus
and for everyone riding buses all over the world.
If you haven't been on a bus in a long time,
climb the few steps, drop some silver, and pray.
Waiting in line for the movies, for the ATM,
for your latte and croissant, offer your plea.
Make your eating and drinking a supplication.
Make your slicing of carrots a holy act,
each translucent layer of the onion, a deeper prayer.
Make the brushing of your hair
a prayer, every strand its own voice
singing in the choir on your head.
As you wash your face, the water slipping
through your fingers, a prayer: water,
softest thing in earth, gentleness
that wears away rock.
Making love, of course, is already a prayer.
Skin and open mouths worshipping that skin,
The fragile case we are poured into,
each caress a season of peace.
If you're hungry, pray. If you're tired.
Pray to Gandhi and Dorothy Day
Shakespeare, Sappho, Sojourner Truth.
Pray to the angels and the ghost of your grandfather.
When you walk to your car to the mailbox,
to the video store, let each step
be a prayer that we all keep our legs,
that we do not blow off anyone else's legs
or crush their skulls.
And if you are riding on a bicycle
or a skateboard, in a wheelchair, each revolution
of the wheels a prayer that as the earth revolves
we will do less harm, less harm, less harm.
And as you work, typing with a new manicure
a tiny palm tree painted on one pearlescent nail,
or delivering soda, or drawing good blood
into rubber-capped vials, writing on a blackboard
with yellow chalk, twirling pizzas, pray for peace.
With each breath in, take in the faith of those
who have believed when belief seemed foolish,
who persevered. With each breath out, cherish.
Pull weeds for peace, turn over in your sleep for peace,
feed the birds for peace, each shining seed
that spills onto the earth another second of peace.
Wash your dishes, call your mother, drink wine.
Shovel leaves or snow or trash from your sidewalk.
Make a path. Fold a photo of a dead child
around your Visa card. Gnaw your crust
of prayer, scoop your prayer water from the gutter.
Mumble along like a crazy person, stumbling
your prayer through the streets.
As it begins
This year began for me with a sunrise hike up a mountain- one that is only about ten miles away from where we live, with a gentle yet unrelenting incline up winding paths that lead a little over 2500 feet over the bay. A hot breakfast and an unexpected dessert, as the restaurant handed out freebies to mark the day. Follow that up with a relaxed day of long naps and lazy reading.
And I wish the rest of the year is marked like this day - small challenges to keep us active, unexpected sweetness, much rest and many good words.
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