Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Strawberry

I remember an old zen story about an enlightened man who was being chased off a cliff by a tiger. He could either get eaten by the tiger or fall to his death. As he is falling, his life stops for a moment and he sees a strawberry. He grabs the strawberry and eats it, savoring every sweet bite. 

This is the extreme of living in the moment.

Today Claire-Adele and I went zip lining in Costa Rica. It was billed as a cloud canopy tour, but instead it was an adrenaline junkie fix, with a giant swing, zip lines and repelling down a 40 meter platform. After getting zipped down the platform, we had to climb back up. Part of the 40 m climb was in a hollow tree trunk. The last twenty meters was up a rickety and uneven ladder. The tree trunk was cozy or claustrophobic, which I preferred. The open air ladder was freaky. We were clipped into a guide rope which would slow down the fall but probably not stop it. Anyway, I met every step up the ladder with my mini-mantra “I can do this.” I took one step at a time and never looked down. It was amazing what I could do when I broke it into small bits.

I am writing this from the warmth of my room in the B&B, so you know I survived. The riskiest part of the trip was the lightening. We had to stop the ziplining two zips from the end because they didn’t want anyone to get electrocuted while hanging from a metal wire in a tree canopy.

Claire-Adele had a blast and looks good in all of the pictures which she will post on Instagram and her dating profiles. “Guys will know I’m up for adventure,” she said. Or maybe it was down with adventure, as if adventure has a direction.

I did not look nearly as charming as Claire-Adele did in my pictures. I couldn’t fix a joyful expression as I was coming down. I looked terrified or bewildered or amped up on drugs or whatever. I did not look good.

I am not a big fan of the adrenaline junkie vacation where a death waiver needs to be signed, but I relented. As I jumped off the platform for each of the half dozen times, I kept thinking of the zen strawberry. Thought the ride on the zip line lasts only a few seconds, this is the closest thing I’ll ever get to feel like I’m flying. When fear was gripping me, I thought I might as well enjoy the ride.

In the pictures, on the other hand, I looked more like I was getting chased by a tiger instead of enjoying a strawberry. 

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

A Tale of Two Men, and Frozen

I was talking to some friends the other day when one of them said,


"When you are no longer afraid of getting hurt by someone, you can start to see who they really are."


I was blown away by this idea, and I've been thinking about it ever since. When I am afraid of losing someone or when I am clinging to them after all hope is lost, I lose perspective. Once I give up that fear of abandonment, I see more clearly. In the past few months, my fear is decreasing, and my clarity is increasing.

Hold this thought.

A Tale of Two Men

Once upon a time back in 2010, I had a carpenter and a mortgage broker. Both were phenomenal at what they did, best in class. When I needed to refinance my mortgage, I'd automatically call Robert without needed to get second or third quotes from other mortgage brokers. I'd leave a message for Robert saying I wanted a new rate, and he'd call me back within two hours having already talked a bank and gotten me a rate better than I expected. When something in my house needed to be fixed, I'd call Carl without getting bids from other carpenters. Why? They did a great job and I trusted them. Wasn't that enough? Why look around when I already had what I needed? 

A few years ago, I was trying to refi my mortgage and I called Robert and I couldn't find him. He had switched firms a few times, and he eventually started his own mortgage brokerage business. So I googled him. 

It turns out he was in prison for a year.

Not for ripping off his mortgage clients. Not from stealing from banks.

He was arrested for kidnapping a woman on a boat to smuggle pot from British Columbia to Washington.

This was shocking. Why would he be a drug smuggler as a side hustle when he was a damn good and very successful (and presumably rich) mortgage broker? I can see someone who has few other job skills getting in the drug business, but this guy was a rock star at what he did. I didn't understand this. What is self-sabotage? Why risk losing a successful legal endeavor for something that could land him in the clink? Let's compare Robert to Carl. Carl just replaced Jack's deck at the house a few months ago and presumably, has never been in prison.

Robert made a choice. He chose to blow up his life. Sure, he thought he was smart enough not to get caught, but he did. When people do wrong, they might blame all of the forces of the universe, but that is bullshit. People have a choice in how they behave.

  • Being an asshole is a choice.
  • Being a raging lunatic is a choice
    • ("Oh but they started it so I had to yell back," is bullshit. Being civilized in the face of an asshole is also a choice.)
  • Being a grumpy and misanthropic curmudgeon is a choice.
  • Neglecting your family is a choice.
Some of these maybe subconscious choices, but they still are choices. People may not be trying to be malicious, but the effect of whether they are trying or not, is that people get hurt.

Frozen

I was driving last night when the song "Do You Want to Build a Snowman?" from the movie Frozen can on my playlist. For those who haven't seen the movie, this song is in the beginning when the youngest sister, Anna, is reaching out to her older sister, Elsa, making a "bid for connection," as marriage expert John Gottman would say. The older sister rejects the young sister, and the younger sister doesn't understand why.

I thought back to the comment my friend made the other day:

"When you are no longer afraid of getting hurt by someone, you can start to see who they really are."

That statement goes both ways. When we stop being afraid, we can see everything about the person, the good as well as the bad. We see the whole rainbow, not just black and white. Also, when we are afraid like the older sister in Frozen was, we can't see when people love us, when they are making a bids for connection. Elsa's heart was closed. She couldn't get hurt, but she also didn't let the love in, a love that could have healed and helped her.

What I am afraid of?

I am planning a trip with my daughter, and I have been nervous about it for the usual travel related reasons, like driving along dirt roads in a place I've never been. But that wasn't entirely it. I am afraid of getting my heart broken by my daughter, and not for rational reasons. My first daughter, Ada, died. While Claire-Adele is strong, brave and a fighter, I don't see anything bad happening to her. Yet, I am afraid. 

I had a challenging relationship with my mom, and I don't want that with my daughter. I want a peaceful, easy-going and respectful relationship, where we can have fun and laugh, where was can talk about our jobs and our dreams. Claire-Adele is smart and thoughtful and doesn't need my advice (unless she asks for it). Yet, if I fear having turbulent relationship with my kid, I will fail to see her for who she really is, which is missing the point. The point of a relationship is to see someone in their whole humanity and accept them, warts and farts and all. When we unfreeze our hearts, we risk getting hurt. When we close our hearts, we can't feel love. 

I am making a lioness doll. This is what I have so far. 
Somedays I feel how mid-production lioness looks.

Sunday, November 20, 2022

Text from a friend today...

I am going to embroider this on a pillow and give it to her for Christmas.



Saturday, November 19, 2022

Where I am I Supposed to Be, and Creative

Last Sunday, I had no plans except for a yoga class and to finish a project for the Eileen Fischer Renew Chop Challenge where we take scraps of old clothes and make them into something new. I had been working on my project for a few weeks, and I needed to add the final touches.

I was kind of depressed because I had "nothing to do," nothing formally scheduled or planned. Claire-Adele and I were working on our upcoming trip, which was fun, but otherwise I was feeling sluggish and uncomfortable because of my lack of plans. I was antsy.

I was talking to one of my friends who is in the same boat I am in: getting a divorce and having an empty nest.

"We never had to think of what to do before because there always was so much to do. We were at the mercy of other people's schedules," she said. "And hanging out with out kids because they were home was something to do. We didn't need to make plans."

I wish I had practiced doing my own thing more when I my kids were still in the house, carving out time and space for myself -- doing what do I want to do, not just tackling at the pile of stuff that needed to be done.

Sunday morning, I kept looking at my scrap project, knowing I needed to finish it. I'd look at it, and I'd look at the pile of remaining scraps. I'd add a stitch here, and then do the dishes. I'd come back to the couch where I was sewing, and add a few more stitches. I'd read a little bit of Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr, and then I'd add a few more stitches to balance it out.

What I thought was going to be a miserable and depressing day because I had "nothing to do" ended up being wildly creatively productive. I needed that down time and space to ponder.

There is an expression for people recovering from challenges: "You are exactly where you are supposed to be." I had always thought that was bullshit. There have been some amazingly awful times in my life and I can't reconcile the concept of "That was exactly where I was supposed to be" with death and disaster, or cleaning up the aftermath. Yet, now I find it to be true. The harder part is when we run away from where we are supposed to be, whether by actively avoiding it or numbing out. "Grief waits" is a phrase I vividly remember after Ada died. When I felt sad and was in mourning, I felt sad, but I wasn't sad about being sad. I knew I needed to grieve, and that grieving, while painful, is actually healthy. I now think that "being where we are supposed to be means" that we feel the way we feel, and we don't feel bad about it or avoid it.

Last Sunday was uncomfortable, but it I was exactly where I needed to be. I needed to sit with the discomfort. Now, I can have a day with not much planned, and feel okay. I see it as an opportunity to chose what I want to do, not as a burden for me to slog through. 



Bunny's dress is made out of the cuff of a dress shirt. 
I never would have thought of this without spare time. :)

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Sauna

I read 

somewhere

that 

sitting in a sauna

four times a week 

will prevent

dementia.


So I go to the sauna

Downstairs

in my health club

telling myself

"this is good for me."


Why can't I just go

because it is fun

and warm

and relaxing, 

making me happy 

and bringing me peace?


Why can't 

that 


be enough?


Or is it 

the other way 

around?


Maybe the sauna is good for me

because it is good for me

like reading a book

or tending a garden

or calling a friend

or holding a dog

or sunshine.


Maybe it is good

because it is good.




"Dog Sitting on Newspapers"


Monday, November 14, 2022

Hoarding

I took a few art history classes in college and I loved them. My modern art class was perhaps my favorite class I took in college. My dad gently nudged me away from art history into something more practical, like math. Which was fine. I loved math, too.

Paul Allen died in 2018, and left behind a most impressive art collection. It was all put on the auction block last week at Christie's. The collection sold for more than $1.6 billion.

So the guy is dead. And he had great taste in art, or he had enough money that he could afford great taste in art.

Before the art was sold, it was put on display. Thousands of people lined up to see it. I never would thought that people would go see art that is up for sale, but they did because they might not ever get a chance to see these masterpieces again. After the sale, the art will likely go to private homes instead of to museums.

I wish Allen would have donated the art to a museum, even if he made his own museum. He already did with MoPop, a museum that celebrates pop culture. He could have given the art to the SAM, or multiple museums. The Met takes art collections from single donors, as it did from Robert Lehman, scion of Lehman Brothers.

I have another question -- is it really great art if no one sees it? The paintings aren't famous--they are the opposite: they are private. No one knows the names of these paintings. They won't be studied in art history classes, which I think is tragic. I can understand that people want to own masterpieces, and I don't want to discourage that. Yet, I think there is a point where some art should be on public display and shared with community.

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Recycled Advice

I was talking to Claire-Adele about this painting class I am taking. Each week we work on a new exercise, like painting in different tones, or making a color chart. Some of the people in it have a decent amount experience and talent. I've never painted with oils before, and it is obvious I am a beginner.

"You have a unique drawing language," the teacher said to me. The poor woman was stretching for something kind and interesting to say about my work. I wanted to reply that last time I took a drawing class was in middle school. My teacher's comment reminded me of when I took a watercolors class in my twenties with my friend H. H was painting pearls (super hard in watercolors) and I was painting a pumpkin (super easy in watercolors.) The teacher walked by and commented on the beautiful shade of orange I created, which is the easiest color to mix. It is impossible to make a bad shade of orange. Did I mention my friend was painting pearls? She was making the color "iridescent" which is way harder than orange.

I was grumbling to Claire-Adele that everyone in the class was better than me and I sucked and blah blah blah. I was having my very own private pity party.

"You aren't there to compete with other people," she said. "You are there to learn and become better than you were before."

I wasn't thrilled with her response, as I wanted empathy, not advice. Nevertheless, she was right. The strange thing was that what she said sounded exactly like something I would have said to her. Here is my daughter, giving me advice, echoing what I have probably told her a thousand times.

So then I called my dad looking for sympathy. Maybe he'd have a story about a time when he was bad at something and he overcame and triumphed.

Nope.

"You aren't there to complete with other people," he said. "You are there to learn and become better than you were before."

I am not kidding Claire-Adele and my dad said the exact same thing to me, probably verbatim. There must magic code that has been culturally imprinted in my family, that is getting passed down. It was interesting to see it so directly passed down within a week.