Friday, December 30, 2011

all in good time

This year, as the clock ticks down the final hours in December, I'm not making resolutions.
Last January I wrote the following:
This year I will spend more time being gracious. This year I will spend time reading things things for fun and learning to meditate. This year I will complete a 60-mile marathon, and go on a silent vipassana retreat. I will listen to music I've never heard and spend more time looking at the ocean. I will laugh more and watch more movies. I will take more mini-vacations. I will take more bubble baths and use the outside grill more. I will enjoy the little things. I will create something beautiful as often as possible, and I will take every opportunity to extend respect and friendliness to those in need. I will spend more time looking at the moon and stars. I will do things I've never done before. I will care for my friendships.
I will care for myself.

I don't know that I spent more time being gracious. I read a little for fun, but only a little. I did (better) learn to meditate. I did not partake in the 60-mile, as I failed both my fundraising and training goals. I may have laughed more... but I don't think I used my Netflix account at all. I moved into a house were bubble baths were naught and I used the grill only once. I haven't gone on a silent retreat (yet), but I'm en route. I'm studying Buddhism with more vigor than I intended and finding it extremely fulfilling.
I have created beautiful things and honest works of art.
I have tried to extend respect and friendliness. I have often failed. But it remains my goal.
I didn't look at the moon and stars all that much.
I did do things I've never done before. The landscape of my friendships changed drastically. I leave the year with, largely, a different set of supports than those I began with.
This year I became much happier at my job. This year I gave someone a kidney and gave them back their life. This year I took up causes. This year I gave of my riches as much as possible, and in varied ways. This year I learned a lot... a whole lot about myself.
I do care for myself. I love myself, very much. I'm working on showing it more.

This year I didn't make resolutions. Instead I wrote my bucket list. Things I would love to do - someday. I added the things I have already done, just to remind myself of them.

Happy 2012, my friends. You are my dearest family. And you are ferociously loved.
Enjoy!


Bucket List

√ Meet Alanis
√ Meet Amanda Palmer
√ Go to Wrestlemania
Sit front row ringside for a wrestling event
√ Pet a dolphin
Hug a panda
√ Rescue a stranded marine animal
Watch sea turtles hatch
Backpack across Europe
Have a book published
√ Become a published illustrator
√ Have a gallery art installation
√ Get my motorcycle license
√ Work at a job I love
√ Get a tattoo
√ See Pearl Jam
√ Go to an opera at The Met
Go to an opera in Italy
Look at the ocean from the Scottish moors
Have a beer in Ireland
Drink absinthe and smoke in Amsterdam
Live with Bohemian musicians in Montmartre
Worship at a temple in Greece
See Petra
See the Great Pyramids
See space (through a really good telescope)
See Angkor Wat
Take my mother to Hawaii
Take photos of animals in Africa
Hear the Dalai Lama speak
Stay at the Atlantis in the Bahamas
√ See the Red Sox play at Fenway
√ See fall in New England
√ See a play on Broadway
√ Climb the Rocky Mountains
Ski the Alps
Hang glide
Shoot a machine gun (at a target)
√ Give
Give
See New Year’s Eve in Times Square
Go to Mardi Gras
Go to Pride in San Francisco
Visit the Galapagos Islands
Visit Yellowstone
Ghost hunt at Waverly Hills or Eastern State
Visit T.I.G.E.R.S. in Myrtle Beach
√ Drive across the U.S.
√ Fall in love
Fall in love

Saturday, December 24, 2011

what a difference...

...a year can make.

I've spent many holidays alone. It's old hat, and really doesn't bother me much. I'm not someone who finds "alone time" difficult. Typically, I enjoy it.
Even so, on most of these solitary occasions I have made a wish that it be the last holiday spent alone. This evening as I glanced up at the digital clock on Courtney and Krystle's stove (I have an uncanny knack for looking at the clock at precisely 11:11) I found myself making this virtually automatic wish.
But this isn't my first holiday alone, and in all likelihood it won't be my last.

This year I've undergone a tremendous amount of change and (hopefully) growth. My perspective on "alone," and on relationships, has changed.

Since I was very young, as young as 10 or 11, I've had a terrible aching. A desperate, empty longing for something. For someone. It felt as though a vital part of me was missing.
I had been born incomplete.
And I was desperately searching for that missing part. Frantically seeking this other half, this person, this partner, this soul mate who would make my life (and me) feel complete.
A tragic romantic from the age of 11 (I was emo before emo was cool), I spent years writing to my future partner. Offering all my promises.

For nearly 20 years, it has been my foremost thought. My utmost goal! My all-consuming quest. I was always looking, and always feeling that empty burning inside. In that place where she was supposed to be.

When I awoke from anesthesia on August 15, something miraculous had happened. Something I never could have expected. Though I awoke missing a very real, vital part of myself... I no longer felt like something was missing.
Though I was now actually incomplete...
I was no longer incomplete.
For the first time I can remember, I felt whole.

And suddenly, I didn't want to date. I didn't want or need to look. I didn't feel the desperation or the endless aching need. Things felt very different.

Though having a partner is still one of the things I envision and very much want for my life, it's no long a matter or life and death. Happiness or misery. I won't die if it doesn't happen, or happen soon. My life won't even suck without it.

What happened? Why the change?
Why did I go from going through girls like water to not wanting to date? What the hell happened to me on that table?

Recently I went to a party with a friend- a girl I was dating prior to my surgery. It was reminiscent of the fun college house parties that made my freshman year the best of my life, but even better: with adults (read: more stimulating conversation and less vomit).
There was a moment when I was standing with Sarah and a couple of new acquaintances, listening to them discuss their world travels. Sarah was talking about her year teaching in Amman, and the other were saying sentences like "Well, when I lived in Jordan..." and "It reminds me of living in Azerbaijan when..." I sipped my Sam Adams Chocolate Bock and looked around, having entirely nothing to contribute.
I don't have any stamps in my passport, or even a passport to be stamped. I don't speak five languages like Sarah does. I don't know much about the political climate of anywhere, even the US. I don't know who the president of Georgia is or what language they speak. I don't even know where it is (by Russia??). But instead of feeling self-conscious and out of place and uncouth as I would have in years past, I felt... secure. I smiled to myself, taking inventory of the things I do regularly and have done recently.
I just gave a stranger an internal organ. I'm a fairly accomplished artist. I'm writing a book that I think will be something special. I spend five days a week getting criminals to cry about their childhoods, talking very intimately to people I would never otherwise cohort with. I get tattoos and play with dogs and go to Buddhist lectures and put a lot of energy into being a good friend.
I'm kinda cool.
At that moment I was able to see how my self-esteem has changed.

Having more self-esteem has changed my needs. Or, at least it has changed the urgency of them. The voraciousness of them. I'm no longer at their mercy.

Last week my therapist asked me if I was dating.
I of course said no, and commented that when I tell people this they look at me with sadness. Pity! As though something must be wrong. If I'm not dating, it must mean I don't think much of myself, or I'm hurt, or I'm disillusioned with love. I laughed, explaining how this couldn't be further from the truth. "I've probably never been as healthy as I am right now." The biggest sign of my health, at least right now, is that I'm not dating. I don't even have the desire.
"I just don't feel the urgency," I said. "I know she's out there. I know she's coming. I'm sure of it. She's doing whatever she needs to do right now, and she'll get here when she's supposed to. It will be someone who deserves me, and I'll deserve her."
"She's on her way. I can't rush her."
My therapist smiled a genuinely happy smile, thankfully avoiding the "Awwwwww" she was stifling.

I know that the things I want are unique and difficult to find. I know it will take a while. When our wildly wandering paths finally cross, we can only hope that we fall into step together and are able make the rest of our journey in tandem. Side by side.

She will be someone who wishes to know me, in the deepest possible sense, badly enough to put forth the effort. She will have a brilliant mind that challenges me and an intelligence that compliments mine in a way that makes us feel like we can conquer the world. She will have a power all her own... a tranquil, harnessed passion for her work and interests and, hopefully, for me. She will be sure of herself and sure of me. She will forgive the worst parts of me and love me as I struggle to change them. She will sit in meditation with me and engage with me in tantric sex. She will make me wonder what I thought was love all those times before.

I will be open to criticism and her gentle urging. I will do all I can to not let us fall into the traps that befell my relationships past. I will care for her emotions and be her safe space. I will be the solid pillar when her world is turned upside down. My arms will always be open and always be comforting. I will support her dreams and do all I can to assist her in realizing her goals. I will accompany, if she wishes, when she leaves to follow her bliss. I will give her space if she wishes for space. I will share my life and all I have with her. For the rest of my life, half of every slice of bread I'm given will be hers. Fifty cents of every dollar I earn. I will care for her as I care for myself, and hopefully improve the care of both. I will care for her like what she is - family.

To tell the truth, my feelings on love and devotion haven't changed. I'm still the hopeless romantic I've always been. While love should never ask you to hurt yourself or suffer, I'm sure I would go to any lengths to keep something that was real. If it were to be with her or protect her, I would still walk through fire.
But here, now, by myself... alone in this bed... I'm still whole. I still have a whole life to lead. I still have a thousand things to see and experience. A thousand places to go, countless things to learn. I'm not going to sit around and wait. I'm not going to worry about it.

Someday my prince(ss) will come.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

fear (redux)

I contemplate this blog in an effort to preserve the transparency I hold in such high esteem.
In the last blog I wrote about what my fears are not. Easier than writing about what they are.

While I do not fear death itself, I fear the circumstances. Particularly, I fear dying alone.
Not alone in the literal sense - you never know when you might be hit by a truck or an errant bolt of lightning or choke on a chicken wing. I mean alone in the relational sense. The cosmic sense.
I mean dying alone in the way that my father will die alone. Having abused and alienated everyone he ever had and loved, having no one and nothing. Alone in his bed with no one to hold his hand or see him through to the other side. No one to pay the ferryman.

I can't imagine anything worse.

On the 11th he turned 69. I've often imagined that if he died at home it might be weeks or even months before anyone knew.
Or, perhaps he would go the way of his son and just disappear. The skeleton of a John Doe to be found years later by hikers venturing far from the path. His final resting place an evidence box in the local sheriff's office.

I fear, even though I have proven it wrong, that I will be unloved. In my final days, my hour of need, there will be no outstretched hands. I fear that I will die suffocated by the knowledge that I ruined everything I ever had and everyone I ever touched.

That... is my greatest fear.

I also fear losing my mind.
I fear that I will be an abuser.
I used to fear that I would never find "the one." I don't fear that anymore, but that's for another blog. Possibly the next.
I also used to fear the blindness that this yearning caused. I was fearful of my tendency to force things into spaces where they should not be. Like my temperamental grandfather, who used to become so enraged at jigsaw puzzles that he would take out his pocket knife and carve the pieces until they fit in the spaces he felt they should.
Sometimes I fear losing things that I love. Sometimes I fear losing things that I don't even have yet, or may never have. People in particular. I fear my reaction, knowing my predilection for a deadly sort of depression (even being this far removed from it and healthier than ever. It never feels quite so far away).
I worry that my worst qualities will continue to grow. I worry that my laziness will keep me from enlightenment, or from even embarking on the journey.
I fear that if I ever become a parent I won't be a good one.
I do not fear that I will be a bad partner. I know I am a good partner. I am puzzled by the distinction, as I had the same poor models for both parenting and marriage (though admittedly I have witnessed and participated in more relationships than I have had parents).
Sometimes I fear my anger.

As I am thinking about this, thinking very hard about the things I fear, it occurs to me that I don't actually fear many things.

But you don't need to. The things I do fear can be all-consuming.
The things I do fear are dreadfully commonplace. Being alone. Unlovability. Failure.

I am not afraid of heights or enclosed spaces or snakes or clowns or ghosts or public speaking or bats or rodents or lightning or people a different color than me. I'm not really afraid of much of anything, in that way.

Well, I'm not mad about spiders. But it's not a hysterical fear. I can get close enough to throw a shoe at them or, in recent years, relocate them if they seem friendly enough. I feel the same way about Richard Simmons. Though I imagine I would stay more than a shoe's-throw away if I saw him.
Water makes me a bit nervous. People say I'm afraid of water and I insist that I am not. I drink it and take frequent showers and even enjoy baths and rainstorms. However, I can't swim. It's drowning I am afraid of. Seems like unpleasant business and I wouldn't care to try it.

In writing this... what initially felt like a vulnerable and honest expose... now feels... simple. Mundane.
Normal.
It's what everyone feels.
There is a slight bit of comfort in the normalcy of it. And a good amount of sadness in the normalcy of it. How sad for us! So much fear.

How happy for us. So much opportunity to overcome fear.

I liked the example Robina gave this evening.
When Lance Armstrong set out to become the greatest cyclist on earth, he did not wish to ride downhill. He relished the steepest inclines, as it gave him opportunity to realize his goal. Without the challenges, without those parts that break other cyclists and most people wish to avoid, he would not have realized the goal.
Thus is the way of enlightenment it would seem... more practically, it's the way of happiness.

If only I could always keep this revelation fresh in my mind. Perhaps with practice.

The wise ones urge us to continue digging through our darkness. To face our fears and bad habits and bad karma and weaknesses and call ourselves out with maitri and no excuses. It requires patience, wisdom... control over emotions that I certainly do not have as of yet.
Perhaps with practice.


"The world breaks everyone
and afterward many are strong in the broken places.
But those that will not break it kills."
-Ernest Hemingway

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

fear and death

Perhaps it's all the thinking about higher consciousness I've been doing lately. Hearing ideas about reincarnation and enduring existence and whatnot. Perhaps its the fantastic season of Dexter I'm watching nightly. Perhaps it's just coincidence. But it seems like death is all around lately, popping into my thoughts even more than usual.
Courtney remarked last week that Christopher Hitchens had died. My joking and probably in poor taste response was, "oh yeah? Wonder where he is these days."
A few days before that a friend told me, very assertively, that everyone's greatest fear is most definitely death. I know that it's hers. As certainly as I know it is not mine.
Perhaps it's odd that I am able to so easily accept any post-death possibility... almost so easily that it's without feeling. Perhaps it's that numbness I've talked so much about.
Perhaps it's a sliver of enlightenment. Perhaps more likely, it's the anti-depressants.

Buddhists believe in reincarnation. Our consciousness lives on and is affected in the next life by our karma in this one.
I don't understand all the ins and outs... but it's possible.

Christians believe in a concept similar to karma. When we die one supreme being weighs our sins against our righteousness and rewards or punishes us accordingly. We go to Heaven, or we go to Hell. If you're Muslim, you got to Janna, or you go to Jahannam.
Sounds harsh... but it could be the case.

Jews, essentially same deal. Our actions impact the way in which we go on... ideally we progress and become closer and closer to G-d. Our ancestors are watching over us from this place.
Sounds nice.

Atheists don't think that anything happens after we die. We die, we rot. We cease to exist, there is nothing else. We return to the earth.
Sounds fine to me. What is there to worry about then?

Agnostics just don't know what the fuck is going on.
Now we're talking. None of us actually know what the fuck is happening now or is going to happen then. Kudos for admitting it.

The only option that sounds quite unfavorable is this whole Hell scenario the Judeo-Christian religions have cooked up. I'd opt out of burning for all eternity if possible.

It's funny how no one who has a "near-death experience" describes going to hell. It's always a tunnel with a bright light... bathed in warmth and comfort, perhaps a lost loved one waiting for them... never fire and brimstone and pitchfork-wielding demons.
If the Christians are right, I can't believe that many people are making the cut. Something's afoot.

Of course, the atheists and those who consider science their only religion would say that this scenario is simply nothing more than biochemical reactions. That these images are simply what's produced by an oxygen-starved brain. And perhaps they are.
In my first book I wrote about the moment when I stopped fearing the atheist post-death scenario. A month after I turned 21 I overdosed on prescription sleeping pills and tequila. I might have died if not for medical attention. But in that moment, through bleary teary eyes on brown shag carpet, I didn't care. I was in so much pain that the only thing I cared about was making it stop. I didn't care if I had to do something terrible to make that happen. I didn't care if I didn't wake up.
But I did wake up.
Five or six hours later I awoke, wrists tied to a bed with medical tape, a tube down my throat.
The time in between was so... still. Completely silent. It was, unfortunately, instantaneously gone. But in some ways it was the relief I was looking for. It was the most complete rest I had ever experienced. No thoughts, no dreams. That time was as simple and as black as the charcoal that was now draining from my every orifice.
It was nothingness. And nothingness felt good.
I knew then that if nothing came after this life except nothingness, I had no fear. It was peaceful. It was simple. Beautiful, in a way.

Personally, I don't believe that is what happens when we die. I think that we do go on to something else. What, I have no idea. I think that death is just a transition to something new. A change of clothes, as some people put it.
I'm intrigued to find out. I believe it will be quite the adventure.

And if it's not... I'm ready for that too. I don't wish to hasten it, by any means, as I'm enjoying myself here at the moment, but it will come when it's meant to (I have to believe).

All this writing about death and I've done very little writing about fear. I've done no writing about what I do actually fear, which was the initial intent of this blog.

But alas. It's 2:15 am. I'll have to put off my fears till another day.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

anger

It is important for me to write the things I learn... mull them around in my mind until they present in some well-enough defined way that I might put them down in a permanent (relatively speaking) space. On paper, in ether. Having just returned from the Venerable's second installment of "Becoming Your Own Therapist," I feel hopeful and joyous. Eating an amazing Trader Joe's salad and sitting in my quickly warming, cozy safe space, I feel happy. Content. The books and writing and project around me spark excitement. Perhaps a more accurate phrase would be, they assist me in sparking my own excitement.

Tonight we spent a lot of time talking about "ego grasping." Samshara. Suffering. Pain, anger, grief, jealousy, resentment, low self-esteem. Attachment.
As I am presently wrestling quite vigorously with these very sufferings, I am inclined to write about them each.
As anger perhaps appears to be the most disconcerting to me, I'll start there.
As I sat in meditation this evening, though only briefly, I noticed and found humor in the habits of my mind.
"My, you think a lot about what other people might think of you, don't you?"
"You say "I can't" and "I don't know how" and "its impossible" an awful lot, eh?"

Anger has often seemed impossible. Like a mysterious force that comes and goes as it pleases, strongarming me into being an asshole or being just plain miserable. Forcing me to act like a loose cannon! Forcing me, in turn, to feel shame and guilt at having behaved like, or perhaps just wanting to behave like an animal. What an unreasonable bastard anger is. And so powerful. So effective in taking me hostage.

Right?

Powerful.

I remember quite clearly, as it was likely one of the pivotal moments in my development, thinking about anger at age 12 or 13. I recall thinking that I have the same blinding, rageful, muscular, vengeful anger in me that my father has in him. The same qualities that cause him to be brutal, destructive, miserable, blind... are the same qualities that are in me. I'm unsure why I came to this realization, as I had not faced any particular "wake-up call" with regards to my own anger. But I knew that this was something we shared. That force within him was the same force within me. (Perhaps it's the same force that's within us all. But it did not appear to be the case)
Upon making this assessment I very pointedly decided that my anger must stop. It must go away, it must never be let out- not really let out. I must put it down, put it away, and never feed it.
I must never be like my father. And in order to do this, I must not be angry.

And, I always felt that I did a fairly good job. I pushed my propensity for anger deep inside, suppressed it, eliminated it in many cases. I greatly narrowed the scope of things that triggered my anger, and I constructed a much longer fuse than I believed I naturally had. I did this by no other means than making a very certain choice.

As I grew older, I continued to believe that I was doing a good job of controlling my anger. I believed that the anger I was capable of was so vicious, so devastating, that it would annihilate every living thing near me like an atom bomb- shaking the earth to it's very core.

In some ways it's true. I can count the times that I have been "truly angry," in that blinding, vicious way, on one hand. In these moments I have considered things like murder. These moments are always triggered by very particular things (namely, someone I love dearly being egregiously injured in an evil manner).

But on the other hand... there is too much judgement and irritation and annoyance for me to count. It's daily. Continual. It even happens in my dreams. I am aware that this "lesser anger" is triggered by ridiculously stupid things. Even starting a vehicle is practically enough to make me a complete douchebag. I come out of my skin when people won't stay in one lane or use their turn signal or drive "too slow" (which is typically faster than the speed limit). It burns vast amounts of my energy and is completely absurd. I am aware of this and yet feel powerless to stop it.
My own dogmas trigger blinding anger- I've written about it numerous times before. The "ignorance" of other people (which I'm coming to realize is actually my own ignorance at how to handle my emotions and formulate compassionate thoughts).
Jealousy ignites a deep gasoline well of anger, but we will tackle that shortcoming later.

People have, at several times in my life, perceived me to be "an angry person." And it has shocked me every time.
I've had more than one client tell me that they think I probably have "a vicious temper" and have "a problem with anger," "like them." I've calmly marveled at their assessment, taking a moment to wonder if this was really true. I concluded time and time again that it wasn't... perhaps it was that deep-seated potential for rage they were seeing in me...
I settled on describing it as "it's very easy to irritate me, but actually very difficult to make me angry."

And I think that this is true. But I also think (now) that maybe that doesn't necessarily matter. Maybe anger is anger. Maybe 1000 small angers is just as big as one big anger. Maybe it does the same thing to your insides- only with a chisel instead of a jackhammer.

My ex-girlfriend had a different conception of anger. She often thought I was angry when I would have described myself as merely annoyed, or frustrated, or tired, or even hurt. Because of her experiences, the things I displayed looked very much like very scary anger to her. She described me on more than one occasion as "angry all the time."

And again, the assessment shocked me. I furrowed my brow and tried to dismiss it out of hand... but had no choice but to consider it.

Was I angry all the time?
Had I failed? Had my disavowing of anger failed miserably?

In some ways I guess it did. Perhaps it did destroy my relationship like an atom bomb... even if that explosion was catalyzed by the specific interaction of (us) two elements. It was no less of an explosion. And I was no less than half of it.

My anger is there. It is quite present.
I delight is shit-talking and bitching with co-workers behind the backs of other co-workers. We say miserable things to make ourselves feel better. We make our selves (who we truly, deeply are) miserable and we think it makes us feel better. The more we feed it the hungrier it gets.
I am not without anger, certainly.

But I am also not my father. I am able to practice compassion. I try, even though it is a daily struggle, to nurture my relationships and present myself as someone people might want as a partner/friend/co-worker/mentor/student. I try not to destroy the beings around me. I try to look honestly, introspectively, at myself.
This is not my father. My father's anger is one of the things (maybe the biggest thing?) that prevented this.

I am intrigued and excited my the idea that these "negative emotions," all these sufferings, are optional. That they are not natural and not needed. They are extras. Embellishments that we add out of habit. It is possible to be without them. To actually be *rid* of anger... of jealousy, low self-esteem, grief, depression... suffering.
I like this completely bizarre, foreign concept.
I tell people that the things they believe will be what is true for them. The things they tell themselves create what they feel is "reality."

I believe I don't have to feel anger.

Ever.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

taking refuge

I've always joked that maybe if I'm good enough in this life, I'll be reincarnated as a Buddhist.

I fancy myself pretty clever.
I've always written off the possibility of truly converting to Buddhism, stating that it all seemed "too hard." My internal dialogue said I wasn't "good enough" to hold myself to such a standard. "I'm not even a good Jew," I would say, having been raised a brand of Messianic Jewish that was technically classed in cultdom, "and I'm an even worse Christian." I admired Buddhists from afar, awed by their texts and lifestyles.
I knew Buddhism was the "correct" choice when I first heard someone say: keep your religion, if it works for you, keep doing it!
I was aghast! A religion that doesn't denounce all others?? A spirituality that doesn't threaten and shame the lost into conversion? A faith that was not dogmatic, and is not proclaiming that it alone is the one and only true path to salvation?!
It was so refreshing it was startling. And unnerving.
I set it aside. "Maybe some day I'll be good enough to be a Buddhist," I said.

Having, of course, realized that I was never "not good enough" to practice Buddhism... I find no other excuse to avoid this higher standard. It is hard, yes. Very hard. But too hard? Unlikely. Suffering and wandering through life without direction or meaning... that is hard. Too hard for me (to want to continue doing it, anyway).

The term "taking refuge" makes my heart feel warm and heavy. I can't imagine a term better, or so full of imagery.

I have sought refuge from the storms of my life in therapy and alcohol, self-help books and medication, friends and writing, nature and learning, art and love, the arms of loving partners and the arms of anyone available. All were temporary, mortal shelters that made the rain and sleet more bearable but did little to quell the roaring winds that battered my soul like ruthless, armored giants.

I study blueprints and carry stones one-by-one from the quarry. Building has begun. And refuge awaits. A haven in which all are welcome but none are needed.

I think it may be time.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

dependent arising

This morning I went to the Kurukulla Center with Stephanie to hear the venerable Robina Courtin, a fat old Australian (her words) nun, speak about emptiness and truth. I came home and felt both reinvigorated by her words and exhausted by the cold I've been combating. Her humor and searing wit kept me riveted while the imbalances in my body (grossly aggravated by forgotten medication) poked at me with icy, sweaty hands and tormented my jittery, hungry stomach.
Despite Ethan's loud band practice in the basement (they weren't bad!), I laid down in my bed with Metta and wrapped the down comforter around me. Laying prostrate - not in tradition but in the literal sense - I dozed off and on but mostly laid in thought for the next five hours.
I tried to practice the difficult concepts she had taught: separating the objective truths from the my "viewpoints" and added "embellishments." So little of what we think is actually objective truth. The stories we tell ourselves are laden with feelings and leaps of thought. Assumptions and perceptions.
Too tired to do so, I thought about all the writing I need to do about the things in my life that cause me struggle and strife. About my current difficulties and emotional pain. All the emotions that I feel ashamed of and try to punish away. It can feel as though they're keeping me hostage.
How helpful it could be to tease apart the grains of objective reality from the billowing clouds of emotion and story-telling. Taking apart the personal responsibility from behind the smokescreen of "it's all your fault"s. And, in my case, how very difficult it is to do all this before I forget how or what it is I should be doing.

I have a lot to be thankful for. My god, a lot. An infinite amount to be thankful for!
I should spend more time meditating on that...

Friday, December 2, 2011

intentions

I open the Word document entitled "my book." It's yet to have a proper name. I peruse it, correct a few typos and reword a few phrases before succumbing to the attention-deficit disorder technology has bestowed upon me.. I watch videos and look at fuzzy-headed pictures of baby Beau. I organize my artwork, dragging thumbnails into various tattoo-related folders. I find a long-lost archive of Suicide Girls photos and enjoy that for a brief moment before realizing it's probably wrong to be looking at naked women while listening to "The Buddha" on tv. Maybe you go to Buddhist hell for doing those things. I quickly close the folder and wander off again via mouse-click. The biopic gives me so much food for thought that I am unable to retain any as I clean out my inbox. I write a couple e-mails. I pull out the necessary materials for the various Christmas-present art projects I am working on... and I begin messing with my phone. I curse the angry little birds for preying on my weaknesses and siphoning away hour after hour. A friend calls, another friend texts. I put on one of the various horror movies I DVR'd during October, and pay attention only enough to note that it's a shameless rip-off of The Shining.
Just now is when the kid is due to start going "Redrum. Redrum!!"... but this time he stays silent.
Now she finds that the "book" he's been writing is nothing but gibberish.
And... now he has an axe.
Wouldn't you know, it's stuck in a door.
I predict a chase scene through the outdoor landscape.
I look through amazing amateur photos from National Geographic. I look up reference photos and save them for art I'm not making. I make the mistake of logging onto youtube and it pours gasoline on my already frenzied inattention, wildly jumping from one topic to the next in 1:45 second clips.

Night after night I do nothing. And I do enjoy it so.
Our world is so chock full of stimuli. There is SO much going on around us and available to us at every moment of our existence. And so much of it I find so very alluring. So deliciously distracting. We have created a world in which it is - in actuality - almost possible to avoid our very own thoughts! It is almost possible to stop feeling.

We haven't accomplished it yet. But we'll keep trying.

It's easy to justify this "time wasted" as meditative in itself. Meditation is shutting off one's thoughts, right? Isn't my mindless crop-harvesting on Farmville the same?
No. Not really. It's certainly not for my betterment.
It's good for a break from life, yes. And it's good to have means for a break. But then... we have to get back to life. Back to thinking and feeling and growing.

When I say "we" I actually just mean "I."

I told someone a couple of months ago that I might need to go away for a few weekends in order to write this book. Go to some isolated cabin in the mountains with no wireless coverage and leave my cell-phone in the car. Lock myself in a cozy warm room and Just. Write.

God it sounds great.
And so hard. I fear I need forcible isolation in order to harness my so easily-enticed spirit. To separate myself from all the delectable distractions that I relish in order to create something that I relish even more. Something I can be proud of.


I set this blog about being distracted aside after becoming too distracted to finish it. I'll come back in the morning, I said.
I did. At 4:45 p.m.
Again I'm surrounded by drawing materials, again I'm flipping back and forth between this and Facebook, Hotmail and Farmville... a friend calls and I talk to her for a while, after which I fill out a volunteer application for the NE Aquarium. And it's now 6:24 and I've still written nothing.

Time is ticking away. And that's fine. It's good! We want it to keep moving, as the alternatives sound much more frightening indeed. But it's still scary to feel time moving so quickly, to feel it slipping through our hands like grains of sand. It's frightening to every week, every month, every year say "where did the time go?" Time will tick away no matter what I do with it. But I am going to continue writing and.... when I get around to it... I will spend some time reflecting on the past year and the year to come. That's what I intended to write this blog about.

There will be more blogs to come.
Blogs about things. Not blogs about nothing or disjointed blogs or blogs that stop in mid-sent