Monday, August 8, 2011

Sentimental

Big news on my front today.  Let me give the back story...I moved to LA 2 years ago, welcomed by a group of friends.  Some I had known for years, some I had known of for years through mutual friends.  It was a family that I was immediately taken into.  I loved them all...even if I didn't like them all the time.

The friend that I new the longest (friend is an understatement, a huge understatement, if there is a word to sum up eons of past lives together let me know) left a year ago.  She went to live out her dream of wandering the earth with a little glitch in her plan...the realization that no one can truly plan anything because life and love happen in the most fascinating and unpredictable ways.  She became intertwined with the life of another before she left the country, and after a near 10 months of chasing each other on one of the most expensive and global affairs I've ever vicariously experienced, a decision has been made.  That decision is to settle in Boston (of all places?) for a while (6 months?).  I scoff at Boston not because I don't believe that it is probably totally rad, but because they surely don't say things like totally rad there.  And if I can paint a picture of this friend of mine...it is of her doing handstands on a beach...not at a white sox game.  To be honest, I am just a little jealous that she is choosing a cold city with a strange accent over the place I think she fits...in my life...because everything is about me, obviously.  Oh and see, I know how ridiculous that sounds.  And truly truly, I support whatever her decision is, and I will go visit even and enjoy it.  But she isn't really the point of this story.

And neither is this, although it helps to give context.  Another one of the people that welcomed me became a good friend too, one that I hung out with very often, acting ultimately silly.  He and I could stay up until 4 am, laying on his floor making throw up noises at each other and laughing until we were afraid we actually may really throw up.  He and I were able to find comfort in each others weirdness that needed to be expressed.  Over the last year we haven't seen each other as frequently, but I was aware that he was planning on moving to NYC at the end of the summer.  Well, as time would have it, the end of the summer is upon us, and my friend is gearing up to leave the West Coast.  I made dinner with him tonight, and we joked and laughed an listened to good music and enjoyed each others company, genuinely.  He dropped me off a few minutes ago and as I was giving him a hug I told him that I'd really miss him.  And then I came inside...and felt like I needed to write to a bunch of non readers out there on the interwebs about it.  He isn't really the point of the story either.

What I'm really trying to say is that right now, in this moment I feel...vulnerable, and happy, and sad, and nostalgic, and like life is the most fantastic and dreadful saga ever written.  The thing is, I don't feel dreadful in a way of wanting to keep everyone right here by my side.  I don't want that, seriously I don't. That isn't the way it works, and I wouldn't implement that rule even if I could.  But it's like those break ups that you know are eminent...you know its for the best, that the person, and you, will grow and flourish  and continue on...and that is what your heart authentically wants and understands...and at the same time...there are feelings of loss or grief.  I know I am not loosing friends, they are mearly just at a further distance.  We won't see each other as much.  We won't talk as much.  Maybe we even loose contact in ways, but I say in ways because it is never completely.  In the fibers of my essence I know the experience that I have shared with these wonderful souls.  They have enriched my life, they have enhanced the experience of the brightest colors or the most delicious tastes.  Without them, it wouldn't have been as sweet.  It would have been different completely, and maybe that is ok too, and maybe this is where I realize that I am not a Buddhist monk and I still have attachments.
What this is really about...what everything is really about in the end some how or another is love.  Here it is again, that word, that feeling, that experience that is so unique and similar for each of us.  It's like at this moment I am experiencing the excruciating beauty of life....the full circle of relationships...the opening and closing of chapters.  I know that the friends I mentioned above are closing a chapter and writing the beginning of the next...and my ego is a little afraid that my character in this new chapter has less lines.  But never fear says my authentic self, because even if the lines are less, they are packed with substance...or just plain love.
Hmm, I guess what I can conclude is that if the only line I ever have in the rest of their books is "I love you" it will be enough...because I mean it, and they know it.  

Saturday, August 6, 2011

The Ouroboros

A few years ago I was having run ins with snakes.  This was unusual for me, as I assume it would be for anyone who doesn't live in the forest.  As it was, during that time, I indeed was living in the forest, in Costa Rica.  Seeing snakes there wasn't uncommon.  Being attacked by a snake there wouldn't be that uncommon either.  In my case, I was dreaming about snakes, crossing paths with snakes on trails and almost being attacked by a snake one time during a yoga class...inside.  That was a weird occurrence.
  I was laying in shavasana, receiving wisdom through my third eye while simultaneously relaxing it so that I could receive wisdom (or lesson my chance for self induced wrinkles).  I felt the teacher's presence near me, not because I have a really outrageous 6th sense, but because I could hear her feet creaking on the wood floor around where I was laying.  I tried to not pay attention as I was trying to not try to connect to the universe.  When she called us back to awareness we rolled over to our right sides and sat up, ending class with 3 ohms.  As I was rolling up my mat she came over to me and told me that a snake had somehow slithered it's way into the room during our last pose.  She spotted it as it made it's way toward my head.  She said that it came very close to me and reared up as if it attack.  She tried to scare it away, and that was why I was hearing all of the creaking on the floor around me.  Supposedly the snake stayed near my head, didn't attack, but didn't move away either, until on it's own time, when the teacher had surrendered to trying to make it leave, did it slither away into a crack in the molding (better get some caulk!)  She told me that maybe it was some kind of sign.
I talked to some other people about this occurrence, about my snake filled dreams and close encounters.  They all decided yes, it was some kind of sign.  One man went as far as to say that the snake must be my totum animal.  He carved a bracelet of a snake eating it's own tail (called the Ouroboros) and gave it to me to wear.  It was a heartfelt gift and I wore it with pride, until I broke it slamming my hand on a counter after too many Imperials (cerveza).
The Ouroboros signifies death and rebirth, infinity and wholeness.  Cycles.  Endings and beginnings.  Potentially something was dying inside of me during that 6th month stay in Costa Rica...only to have something else born in it's place.  I can see that now, a few years later.  I can see how many times that has happened in my life...in everyone's life.  Growth.  The difference is that the snake that eats it's own tail doesn't fight...it allows the cycle to flow through naturally without struggle.  As I reflect about this, it serves as a reminder to me to stop trying to receive wisdom through my third eye, to let wrinkles come as they will, and let this life be what it is.

The Ouroboros
the rhythms of this universal song pound with sweet reminisences of ultimate truths-sweat rumbles, waving and washing over the oneness, dripping down and splashing into out ocean as we dance with graceful ease and shine joy.  we are moving on our own, but our beats follow the same drum, our steps parallel, our reflections mirrored.  my sorrow is yours as your love is mine, we borrow, share, feed and bathe each other in this unending abundance of connection. heart opening and rising, bodies fade away but this circle lives on. i am full, complete, i am a dancer that moves with spirit, that follows the lead of unlocked wisdom, outpouring from the waterfalls, rivers and veins of this life.  to flow is to know love.  to know love is to live love.  to live love is to show love and share love and be love.  i am but an open servant to loves unblockable flood, i do not fight the current, because it flows through me and through you and with this it is true that we are love.  that you are me and I am you.
      

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Shattered Glass and Second Chances

I was in a serious car accident a few nights ago.  One that I am not proud of, one that I am also not ashamed of.  It was a series of choices and consequences that led me to being thrown into the dashboard of a Honda Accord speeding down the 10 freeway at 3 am on a Wednesday night.  Those choices involved massive consumption of tequila.
Disclaimer:  I still plan on consuming tequila.  Maybe not on a regular basis, and probably not so much all at once.  It wasn't the alcohol that did this...well it wasn't entirely the alcohol.  It was the people, drinking the alcohol, and choosing to get into cars.
We were out, celebrating.  Celebrating my birthday actually, a few weeks early, but it was the only day everyone seemed able to come out.  The party was a blast, good music, good people, dancing, festivities.  All things that I like.  We were close to my home, in the same town...no need to get on the freeway.  So why did we get on the freeway?  That is a question that will likely never be answered.  I left the celebration with a male friend (who really is a whole other story...or a non story anymore).  *Confession:  Maybe not exactly at the moment, but in the very recent past I had been aware that this friend drinks and drives.*  I was not paying any attention what so ever to how much alcohol he was consuming at the party.  In all seriousness, I figure that he had a little to drink, or maybe even more than a little, but I felt sure that we were going to get home safely.  Or did I?  Did I even think about getting home safely?  Here is where my level of alcohol consumption comes into play.  I was so drunk that I didn't make a conscious decision to figure out if the person who would be transporting my life from point A to point B was sober enough to do so safely.  Instead, I got in the car and passed the fuck out.  Out of habit, thankfully, I buckled my safety belt before slipping away into unconsciousness  (slipping away?  more like I was already there).
The story picks back up for me when I wake up, startled, confused, shocked, scared as I look to my left and see the driver of the vehicle against an inflated air bag.  At that moment it registered that something happened and I looked in front of me to see my airbag and myself covered in glass.  I don't know how long I sat like that before the police arrived, but when they did, they helped me out of the car and checked me out.  I didn't seem to have any broken bones (xrays confirmed this later) or huge gashes, just scrapes and bruises.  They asked me lots of questions.  I felt like a baby bird that had fallen from it's nest, stunned and shaking.  I was still not sober, and really confused.  Meanwhile, the driver of the car was getting arrested for Driving Under the Influence and shuttled off to jail.  "What happened?" they kept asking..."good question" was all I could reply.  Did I need the paramedics or to go to the hospital?  Maybe...but I declined.  I wanted to go home, and so they took me.
I woke up the next morning with glass in my shorts, and a bad hangover.  Or was it a concussion?  Either way I alternated between puking and sleeping all day, barely coming to terms with what had happened little than 6 hours before.  What happened...?
That night, the male-friend driver came over.  He had spent the last 24 hours in jail wondering what the hell happened and if I was OK.  He could hardly look me in the eyes.  "What happened?"  I asked.  "I don't know," was his answer.  I don't know what we hit.  He doesn't know what we hit.  The police don't know what we hit.  A guard rail?  Another car?  A deer?  God???  No answers.  No one knows.  The police think, according to the angle of our car and the damage, that we were hit.  That another car, perhaps a drunk driver as well hit us, and never stopped.    
The next morning I woke up like a zombie.  I cried off and on all day.  I went to Urgent Care to make sure I was fully intact and as far as they could tell I was.  The effect of the trauma however was truly expressing itself through my depression.  I stayed in that state most of the day, which was yesterday.  I forced myself to hang out with some friends in the evening, and that really did lift my spirits and help me laugh.  It also brought about discussion of "what next" and how what had happened was the most text book cliche of a life changing experience.
That brings me to today.  3 days after a serious accident i've heard that your injuries should feel worse.  Mine feel better.  I also feel clear that my life is very very valuable to me.  I thought that I valued my life, in the way that anyone who hasn't come close to loosing it has valued their life maybe.  I feel clear that there is a tremendous amount of momentum behind me propelling me into forward motion.  I feel clear that now is the time to ride that momentum and change and shift into where and what I am on the verge of becoming...which is me...the same me that has always been...but more me than has ever been.  It is time to have value in my work life and I feel that a shift is happening there.  But it isn't that I am giving all of my power to this event and to this force. I am feeling my own power.  My power to take responsibility and make this life what I want.  It feels as though I have no other choice at this point, like there is no going back to wherever back was.  I cannot shrink into the same stifling habits any longer.  It's time to put in work and really show up.  I'm not getting run over this time, or anytime.  I'm here.  I'm really here.             

Friday, March 11, 2011

Offering it up to.......

What is it with resistance?  Do we resist anything other than change?  Sometimes I resist the urge to shove a cookie in my mouth, or to quit doing sit ups.  It seems however that anytime change is nearing, I immediately want to cling tightly to my current and past experiences, and avoid the oncoming endeavor.  It is such a strange reaction because I really do know that change isn't bad.  I have been through enough changes in my life to truly know that by surrendering and keeping a positive attitude render the "dreaded" change generally harmless.  If it isn't harmless, it is at least a learning experience which is the reason I am alive anyway.  So either way, no matter what happens, everything is as it should be.  So why, still, do I feel that certain stress, the digging of my heals into the earth, my nails sharply scratching at whatever it is that I am so afraid will go away...

It isn't the actual change that I am afraid of.  It is the times before the change and after the change- the adjustment period.  It is the fear of not being able to adapt.  It is a fear that things will suddenly go wrong and that I won't be able to find happiness again.  It is a fear that I will be left out.  (I am not so sure that I even know what "wrong" is anymore.)  And what is under this irrational fear of mine?  (I say irrational because, as I stated above, I know that change is nothing to be fearful of.)  There must be a deep hurt under these fears.

The first most gigantic change that I ever experienced in my life was that of my father passing away right before my eyes.  It was a sudden thing, nothing that could have been prepared for, one second your here, the next, kaputz!  Do I still have a hurting place inside about this that is unexplored?  I don't think that it was his death that conjured up all of my hurting feelings more than it was what happened around me as a result of his death.  We did the best we could, all of us, mourning and moving on.  But maybe I left something behind, maybe some part of me got swept up in the commotion of things, the swirling of energies, the change of times.
I remember that day, knowing that my life was going to be completely different from that moment on.  I remember thinking that all I had ever day dreamed, my mom and dad and brother taking vacations  and laughing and being happy together, was not a possibility anymore.  More than anything, I changed that day.

Working through and healing this hurt, as much as I have, has helped make it possible for me to live.  I have had many opportunities to face fears and defeat them, to take life by the reigns and to steer my future in any direction of my choosing.  I have traveled.  I have moved many times.  I have started new things and I have ended old things.  But today, when my roommate announced that she would be moving out and in with her boyfriend, I felt happy for them, genuinely happy for them, and a very real shot of anxiety for me.  Now I'd have to find a new roommate, new furniture and cookware, I'd have to take over the lease, I'd be loosing a friend.  That is where my mind jumped to.  All of those things and places that, if I slow down for a second, could really be pretty cool, except for the loosing a friend thing, that isn't really cool...But again, if I just slow down I know that if she and I are to drift apart, we will drift apart, and if we don't we won't.  Can I simply be grateful for the time that we have shared?  For what I have learned?  For the very moment???

My only solution, the only thing that sounds completely comforting and secure to me to do with this is to just offer it up...to someone else.  I have found myself in situations sometimes wondering how on earth I would handle it, or wishing it could be for someone else and not me.  I have found that often things just work themselves out, and that if there are things that seem much too big for me, I don't have to carry them alone.  I don't have to shove them onto someone else either, but I can ask for help.  I can offer the things that I am confused, stressed, or upset about and get them off of me.  Who am I making these offerings to, you ask?

Some people offer their god's delicious fruits and beautiful flowers.  My god?  My god gets offered all the shitty things I can't handle!  And a gracious thank you.  No really, I don't know if it is god, or spirit, or universe, or nothingness, I don't know what it is....perhaps it is just the space between here and there, but whatever it is, I am allowed to offer things and issues up into it's vastness.  That is what it's there for.  And to be honest, it feels good to know that I can do that, to know that if I can't figure anything out, that I can just throw it all up into the sky and ask for a little assistance and then tune in and see what happens.

So that is what I am going to do with this circumstance.  Dear who/whatever, for however many reasons, I am having trouble figuring out how to feel, what to feel, what to do, and where to go with this current situation of having to get a new roommate.  At this moment, it seems much bigger than I can handle, and I would appreciate some help.  I also want to throw in there that I am open to whatever it is that may be happening for my greatest and highest good.  Thanks.

Deep breath in.  Deep breath out.  

And now, I get to just stop thinking about it, because even if I didn't find a roommate, fix the world or heal my inner child, I did something, and the something I did is enough right now.  I am sure that I will gain more insight and clarity as time moves forward with not only this situation, but also with this issue which I recognize has more to do with opening rather than just resisting.  

It feels good here, in this space, like this.  That is all I need to know.          

Saturday, February 19, 2011

grey is my favorite color

I just read this sentence..."her ambivalence between letting go and hanging on intensifies..."

One in the same I suppose, hanging on and letting go.  Both are extremes, holding tight to something, clutching it for dear life, or letting it loose, free to run through you fingers like ribbon, unsure if you will ever hold it again.  Both hold a sense of urgency and perceived relief.  Somehow if you hold it, it will be safe right?  Or if you let it go, it will be better, safer out there doing whatever it is programed to do.  The holding and releasing are only major functions of the one doing the holding or releasing, the object is not what is important, the attachment to the object is what causes all the fuss.  The issue is never really the issue, it is how one reacts to the issue.  

This letting go and hanging on business are made up concepts, fooling us into thinking that we "care" or have roots.  These earthly constraints, these conditions that we learn and adhere to are sometimes so cleanly unlearned, yet sticky in practice.  That quoted sentence I started with is about a daughter experiencing her mother's death.  There is such honest beauty in the gray area of her ambivalence between those two concepts.  Certainly in times of death...what can one do other than reside in that space between here and there, where it is neither safe nor unsafe, neither exciting nor depressing.  That space simply is, just like life simply is.  We try to make it much messier than it is, and we try to clean up the messes that we make.  What would happen if we could all just observe and not judge and not try to fix everything?  

  

Mumbling to myself

I'm sitting here, musing over this impatience theme again.  Ironically enough, I am sitting here, thoughtfully writing about impatience.  There is some acceptance of present moment steeped in that.

I caught myself thinking about a habit I've had, in the past, to push things off until...?  Until when?  Until I am ready?  Will I ever be any more ready than now?  I think yes.  Perhaps if I prepared, there is a chance I would be more ready in the future.  However, am I certain that the future will ever come?

Along with that however is the simple fact that I cannot possibly do everything at once.  Picking and choosing come into place, as does what opportunity presents itself.  What is the percentage here...10% me, 90% life.  That is all I get, 10% to fall all over, the other 90% is left up to that big tumbling lottery wheel in the sky doling out scenarios.  Putting it that way really brings things into perspective; that I am a small part of a much bigger laugh in.  Does this mean that I should just eat that damn cookie?  Or does it mean that I should just wear the damn dress, screw loosing the 5 pounds first?  Does it mean I should eat the cookie while wearing the dress?  Does it mean I should not eat the cookie and loose 5 pounds?



      

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Because I Can Type, I can Have A Blog.

Anyone can have a blog.  Well, anyone that can reach a computer with internet and string a few words together forming at least a semi coherent sentence.  Put that way, certainly not anyone can have a blog, and surely, many people shouldn't.  What makes me so special, that I am one of the "approved" millions that gets to rant it out online?  I fall under the privileged category, having the tools and where with all necessary to make it happen, along with the slight ability to corral some words together into a sensical thought.

Nice to meet you.

A common theme that has been quietly haunting my life and most recently pressing with increased urgency is that of impatience.  The feeling of wanting desperately to "be there" is one of such familiarity.  Yet I know the worn out expression that, "it isn't the destination that is important, it's the journey."  And, at fear of sounding like an insincere brat, the truth is that I am enjoying the journey.  I take time to laugh and appreciate.  I'm alive, I'm well, I'm surrounded with good company.  But I'm no Buddha and sometimes my ego finds the opening and goes for it.

So why this impatience nipping at my heals, and how to keep it at bay?

 I believe my impatience is building because I have kept it stifled at great lengths, hog tied and gagged, thrown in the trunk of my life, willed to keep quiet.  I willed it as such because I didn't really want to think about what it wanted.  It wanted to know when we were getting there, if we were close, and that is the most annoying question to ask someone who has no god damned idea where they are going.  How do you answer that question other than a repeatedly furious I DON'T KNOW, shortly there after followed by an uninspired yeah, sure, almost.  At least the first answer was more honest.  But the second answer became the all too common answer.  I got tired of trying to figure out where I was going.  I was uninspired.  I was a little bit hopeless.  I was scared.

Let's talk about now.  The truth is that I am still scared.  And that I still don't really know where I am going.  But I'm giving myself permission to dream a little bit, and to play, and to experiment.  I'm learning how to let go of the fear of failing, or the fright of commitment, of the endless self judgements.  I'm remembering that just because he is doing this, or she is doing that, doesn't have to mean a damn thing about where or what I am doing.  It's a freeing thing to know that my path is my own.  I forgive myself for the misunderstanding that I should be like anyone other than myself.  I am right where I need to be.

There.  That feels a lot better, no?  That's all I have to tell that little impatience monster and he skulks off,  defeated.  For the moment, I've won the battle.  Tomorrow is another day, and next week, and next month, and next year, but if I can live with this sense of self assured calm, the space between here and there seems like a nice place to be.