Man: You can't trust USA Today to report about anything religious. They're the most atheistic newspaper in this country. That's like looking for information in Wie-kipedia.
Oy. Yes. A lack of faith-based reporting is clearly the problem here.
i wonder as i wander
Friday, January 3, 2014
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
On 2013
This is the photo that is most precious to me from the last year. I don't look lovely, but I love the love.
Tonight marks a new year, and it is time to think back through this last one, in all its glory and pain. From Superhero Journal, circa 2007, here is my yearly processing:
What do you want to acknowledge yourself for in regard to 2013?
What did you create? What challenges did you face with courage and strength? What promises did you keep to yourself? What brave choices did you make? What are you proud of?)
This year, I harnessed every tiny fragment of myself and fused them and pushed them out of my body in one great wrenching, terrifying evening. I floated away from myself and found the tiniest, sweetest separate human in my arms. Nothing I have ever done has been more important than this work.
I’ve fought for my marriage this year. When my instinct is to self-protect and defend and even hide, I’ve tried to show up and reach out my arms and be seen. This has been so hard and so humbling.
I’ve risked and I’ve softened and I’ve gotten up each morning and poured out of myself more deeply than I knew I could. I’ve also begun to come back around to look myself in the face, to ask what I need and who I am and what I value. I am showing up in my own life… not just for others, but for me.
I created new life. I created a stronger marriage. I faced disappointment and adjusted. I was torn into pieces and mended. I chose us instead of just me. I’m proud of the courage to love.
What is there to grieve for this year?
(What was disappointing? What was scary? What was hard? What can you forgive yourself for?)
This year, I grieve the loss of my solitude, of my ability to make my own decisions wildly and recklessly. I lost the ability to hop in my car (or on the train) and stop in a bookstore or a café or a nail salon and whip out my credit card. I lost the ability to sleep without care, to leave the apartment without burden.
This year, I grieve the loss of illusions. I lost my sweet naïve ideas about marriage and pregnancy and sex and even myself. Scales have fallen and I see my own selfishess and the way I conceal when I should speak. I see the stretch marks and fat deposits and the exhaustion and the long stretches between intimate moments and ecstasy.
Childbirth was terrifying.
Marriage was hard. Money was hard. Responsibility, follow-through, consistency, communication. All of this was hard.
I forgive myself for not being present in every small precious moment, for missing minutes and hours and days of this sacred year, for zoning out online and in my head rather than reaching for my husband’s hand or pulling my sweet girl close. I forgive myself for disappearing from my friendships and family and own heart, for being present in my body but disconnected.
What else do you need to say about the year to declare it complete?
2013, though you have been so very difficult, I am so sad to see you go. The precious first moments of looking in my daughter’s eyes, of stroking her face and pulling her close and feeling her tiny breath on my neck… these moments are gone. Please freeze some small bit of this time. Please do not fade out the way some years have. May the pain of birth and the joy of connection sear you unmistakably on my soul that I might pull you back up when I am old and weary. I will miss you.
My word for next year? Balance.
What about you?
Tonight marks a new year, and it is time to think back through this last one, in all its glory and pain. From Superhero Journal, circa 2007, here is my yearly processing:
What do you want to acknowledge yourself for in regard to 2013?
What did you create? What challenges did you face with courage and strength? What promises did you keep to yourself? What brave choices did you make? What are you proud of?)
This year, I harnessed every tiny fragment of myself and fused them and pushed them out of my body in one great wrenching, terrifying evening. I floated away from myself and found the tiniest, sweetest separate human in my arms. Nothing I have ever done has been more important than this work.
I’ve fought for my marriage this year. When my instinct is to self-protect and defend and even hide, I’ve tried to show up and reach out my arms and be seen. This has been so hard and so humbling.
I’ve risked and I’ve softened and I’ve gotten up each morning and poured out of myself more deeply than I knew I could. I’ve also begun to come back around to look myself in the face, to ask what I need and who I am and what I value. I am showing up in my own life… not just for others, but for me.
I created new life. I created a stronger marriage. I faced disappointment and adjusted. I was torn into pieces and mended. I chose us instead of just me. I’m proud of the courage to love.
What is there to grieve for this year?
(What was disappointing? What was scary? What was hard? What can you forgive yourself for?)
This year, I grieve the loss of my solitude, of my ability to make my own decisions wildly and recklessly. I lost the ability to hop in my car (or on the train) and stop in a bookstore or a café or a nail salon and whip out my credit card. I lost the ability to sleep without care, to leave the apartment without burden.
This year, I grieve the loss of illusions. I lost my sweet naïve ideas about marriage and pregnancy and sex and even myself. Scales have fallen and I see my own selfishess and the way I conceal when I should speak. I see the stretch marks and fat deposits and the exhaustion and the long stretches between intimate moments and ecstasy.
Childbirth was terrifying.
Marriage was hard. Money was hard. Responsibility, follow-through, consistency, communication. All of this was hard.
I forgive myself for not being present in every small precious moment, for missing minutes and hours and days of this sacred year, for zoning out online and in my head rather than reaching for my husband’s hand or pulling my sweet girl close. I forgive myself for disappearing from my friendships and family and own heart, for being present in my body but disconnected.
What else do you need to say about the year to declare it complete?
2013, though you have been so very difficult, I am so sad to see you go. The precious first moments of looking in my daughter’s eyes, of stroking her face and pulling her close and feeling her tiny breath on my neck… these moments are gone. Please freeze some small bit of this time. Please do not fade out the way some years have. May the pain of birth and the joy of connection sear you unmistakably on my soul that I might pull you back up when I am old and weary. I will miss you.
My word for next year? Balance.
What about you?
Monday, April 2, 2012
a year: part one
In November 2010, I left Boston. Heartbroken.
I moved back into my parents' home, the parsonage, into the basement that I knew when I was sixteen. I cried a lot that month, and sat on the couch where I'd experienced my first (thoroughly awkward) kiss. I didn't have much to say, except to mourn. The words I could muster manifested themselves in a complex indigo, private.
So I baked. A whole lot. More even than before. I played with several kinds of scones and cookies and biscotti and bread and eclairs and cakes and buttercreams and macarons and... and... When I felt powerless to pull anything beautiful out of my own life, I let my hands move independent of me.
I tried to pull myself out of my grief with online dating. I wanted to scream the whole time I applied my makeup. I wanted to wear a snow suit that utterly covered my form or no clothing at all, to teach myself to separate from the body that trapped me. I slammed the door as I left the house.
I gave up.
And finally said: there are worse things than living like Emily Dickinson, small. Cheerful donater of flowers and baked goods to neighbor children with a secretly cultivated garden heart tucked in a chest for someone to find much, much later. There are worse things.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
sing me to sleep tonight
I made you a mix of the songs that have kept me company as the snow falls deep.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
2010: the year of openness
Often, as one year wraps up and another unfolds, I find it useful to reflect on the year. This year, I'm journaling with a community called reverb10. Some of these reflections I will post here.
One Word. Encapsulate the year 2010 in one word. Explain why you’re choosing that word. Now, imagine it’s one year from today, what would you like the word to be that captures 2011 for you? (Author: Gwen Bell)
One Word. Encapsulate the year 2010 in one word. Explain why you’re choosing that word. Now, imagine it’s one year from today, what would you like the word to be that captures 2011 for you? (Author: Gwen Bell)
I can imagine my life as a house. Classic, refined, impeccably decorated with a mix of vintage and modern, with shelves and shelves of books. My house is shielded by trees, so light and wind are filtered. Neighbors and children rarely visit; the sounds within are muted, controlled. My house is often wrapped tight, curtains drawn, windows closed.
But this year, I have opened the door, torn down the screen, pulled back thick curtains and allowed winds to blow through my carefully arranged house. Even when the skies darkened and the clean air turned wet and angry, I held open the door.
Winds blew into the dusty corners of the living room, kicking up dust shapes that beckoned to me with glittering tendrils. You have choices, you know, they say. Don’t be afraid, they whisper. The winds have been brazen, kicking statues to the ground and watching them shatter, rifling through book pages and catching up the pressed flowers, setting a few violets down unharmed on the pages, and dissolving others to dust, sweeping them out the windows. The storm has penetrated every recess of my careful rooms, sweeping out the basement with my embarrassments, blowing open the attic with its disappointed hopes for love.
Out with a job that defined but controlled me. In with time to think. Out with some relationships I had hoped to keep, while others have been returned to me more precious than ever. Open, to a different job, to new friends, to love, to honesty, to faith, to a totally new life, and to what old lives still want to tell me.
Open. This year I’ve been open, like a book, like a room, like a womb. Unknowing, blindly, I have cracked myself wide and allowed wild winds to blow through this careful life, handing me back to myself. I have resisted the urge to cling, forcing my fingers to release, allowing this breath to take and leave as it will.
Next year, my house will be cleaner and less careful. Next year, I want to invite in more strangers, more neighbors, more children. I want light, and I want uncareful sounds, laughter, silliness. I want to welcome joy.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
conversation at work
I'm reaching into the milk refrigerator, probably in order to refill a pitcher.
Cody: Be careful. The skim milk is topless.
Me: Umm... I'm not sure if I'm comfortable with that. But, I guess as long as she is.
Cody: Oh, who would notice anyway? She's skim.
Cody: Be careful. The skim milk is topless.
Me: Umm... I'm not sure if I'm comfortable with that. But, I guess as long as she is.
Cody: Oh, who would notice anyway? She's skim.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
timestamps
So, I work at a cafe now. Today was the first full day of school at MATCH High School, and I wasn't there.
7: 15 - Around this time, I realize, Kirsten would be waiting for me by the elevator, our high heels echoing in the dark, empty "big hall," unmuffled by the college pennants. We were rarely fully verbal until one or the other of us slunk across Comm Ave. to pick up coffee at Dunkin' Donuts. Instead, I'm scraping out the unused raspberry muffin batter the bakers left, then washing the bowl in cloudy water, letting warm sanitizer drip down my face and shirt as I hoist the clean dishes onto the drying racks above my head. I'm deep in thought, prayer even, as the water wrinkles the tips of my fingers.
9:00 - Last year, I would be in the middle of period one -- probably a brain frame or two on the whiteboard, probably at least one whiteboard marker dried out, probably trying to wake up a few sleepy sixteen-year olds leaning against the wall. Today, I'm wrapping lemon ginger scones in eco-friendly paper, and handing them over to salivating customers.
10:30 - Last year, period three begins. I'm standing at the doorway to room 203, shaking each kid's hand as she walks into the room. With some, elaborate routines have evolved. Salutes. Primitive daps. Mostly smiles. I remind one student about staying super-focused today, ask another about his weekend. Around this time a few days ago, a woman I recognized entered the store with her girlfriend. We used to be in a book club together. She asks if this is what I do now, if I'm not teaching. I confirm this. She says, "Oh. I'm sorry."
12:30 - I would be sitting at my desk right now. Or rather, at a table facing away from my official workspace (as I cannot work with my back to the open space). There would be a small pile of assignments haphazardly stacked on my desk, a scraped-together lunch (probably takeout from across the street) half eaten in front of me. There would be at least one other lion-hearted teacher within earshot, planning, processing, laughing. There would probably be swearing at the photocopier. Now I am standing in a narrow space before a long cutting board, frenetically assembling sweet potato sandwiches and turkey wraps for faces that are becoming familiar. I don't have to call John's name. I remember him. I know that this time of day, this ham sandwich will leave off the cream cheese. Got it. I'm in a zone, moving around my coworker like a dancer, grasping at tomato wedges and cucumbers without thought. If I make a mistake, there will be half a sandwich to throw away (or, more likely, foist upon a roommate); it will not translate into a frustrated child calling my cell at 10pm with questions.
5pm - I would still be at work... making photocopies, ravenous. Kirsten and I would be rushing each other out the door, trying to scheme up a justification for a beer or pizza run. We would rehash our frustrations, triumphs. The whole ride home would feel like a swift decompression or a slow high-five. Tonight, I am sitting on the green couch when she comes home. Though I showered after work, my wet hair is already completely dry. I'm wearing a tank top. No makeup. I'm laughing with another roommate, telling silly anecdotes from earlier years.
It's not better, exactly. Nor is it worse. It is change, though... needed change.
And we're ordering thai tonight. High five to that.
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