Tuesday, December 31, 2019

New Year's Eve: 2019

Friends ~ I have been thinking about stuff lately, as in: there's so much stuff in my house. I was thinking about my relationship to the myriad of things in my house, only some of which I think of as mine, though I should probably be more honest with myself and accept the fact that as the person who owns this house, yes, really, all this stuff is mine.

It's a modern problem.

Marie Kondo has had a couple of big years with her ruthless cleansing. And I think she has a point -- up to a point. I am not now and will never be a minimalist. I have no desire to be. The thing MK gets absolutely right is her "spark joy". To me, "spark joy" translates directly to humans I love.  As I write this, I am sitting on my couch, looking at my Christmas tree. Each ornament has a story. It's all beautiful in a shiny, mismatched kind of way -- but more importantly, it's a lifetime of stories, displayed for a short slice of time. And when I take them out each year, I am reconnected to each person. That's the spark for me; that's what makes meaning.

But it's New Year's Eve. I am feeling the call to ponder the past, look towards what's next. After a month of socializing, tonight finds me quiet. Dog at feet, soup bubbling on the stove, listening to my beloved cousin's husband perform folk music via livestream. The perfect way to wind down this year. And yes, what a year.

I don't believe in New Year's resolutions, though I know that for some, solid goals are good. Right now, my personal aspirations -- whether attainable or not -- seem of miniscule importance compared to the greater needs around me. Another day in the news, another day with too many people being attacked, being killed, simply for being. I grew up in the 60s and came of age believing in human progress. I am about to turn 60 this year, and I'm not sure if that's still true. But as someone I knew years ago used to say: You have to act as if. As IF love were possible, as if progress were possible.

And here we are.

What will next year and the new decade bring?  The pessimist says that I'm not sure I want to know; The optimist in me thinks that surely cooler minds will begin to lead. To think about ten years is too much. Let's just work on tomorrow, and take it one day at a time. One relationship at a time. One conversation at a time.

My cousin-in-law is singing his song about Icarus:

Sun goes up, moon goes down
and you knew from the start
the measure of all things
is still the heart.


Truth.

I don't have resolutions -- but what I have is a prayer. I am praying for listening. We have to be patient; we have to be kind. Cruelty cannot be a way of life. We are interconnected species, all.

2020 has arrived. Holding us all up in love.

Peace.

(Note: for info about the fabulous Greg Greenway, here is the link to his webpage: https://c9tuning.wordpress.com/)



Wednesday, November 20, 2019

On Reaching Out

A couple of weeks ago, something happened to me that's never happened before. One afternoon, on a day when I was already recovering from a recent cold, I felt my chest tighten, the left side of my face being pulled by pain and I thought: my God, I think I'm having a heart attack.

It had been happening for most of that afternoon, but on the train after work, it became pronouncedly worse.  I wanted to go home and ignore it, but instead, I texted my son to say simply: Not feeling well. I'm going to the doctor. 

At Urgent Care, they discovered that my blood pressure was an alarming 180 over 130. Completely sky high for me, someone who doesn't have high blood pressure.  The EKG didn't seem to allay their concerns and they calmly suggested I let an ambulance take me to a hospital, at which point I burst into tears because as anyone who knows me knows that the first thought I had was: I don't have time for this. I am not someone who has heart attacks; I am someone who helps others who have heart attacks. 

Which -- I know before anyone says it -- is ridiculous.

But I went. Without going into all the details, there were many EKGs, bloodwork to check enzymes and a stress test. I stayed the night, met with a wonderful cardiologist from Australia and in the end was given a diagnosis: stress.

It was *not* the heart. It was a panic attack.

While on one hand, that's "good" -- no surgical intervention required -- the body was telling me something, something I was being forced to notice. And worse than that? The body was forcing something that now OTHERS would notice.  In my mind, there would be shaking heads and rolling eyes. A heart attack was bad enough -- but a NON-heart attack?? I felt ridiculous. I felt embarrassed. I was ashamed.

BUT...friends. There are friends. I have friends, and in all honesty, to paraphrase Lou Gehrig, I am the luckiest woman on the face of this earth.

What brought me back home to my mind *and* in my body were my friends.  They talked and texted me, telling me that whatever was going on with me was okay. REALLY okay. I felt chest pain and acted on it? GOOD CALL. I felt chest pain and learned it was a panic attack? GOOD CALL.  No differentiation, no judgement.

My guardian angel-across-the-street came right to the hospital with a phone charger because -- of course-- my phone was almost dead. She sat and talked, literally talking my blood pressure down, announcing the lower numbers as they dropped.

She was also the one who told me the next week that coincidentally, a male friend of hers casually came into her office and told her that a few days before, he'd thought he was having a heart attack.  He went to the emergency room, stayed overnight for tests and learned it was a panic attack. No big deal. NO big deal, she said. He wasn't ashamed; it was just what happened. He'd gotten information and was glad he did.

It is in that spirit that I wrote today's blog. I have been thinking about it for the last couple of weeks. I have been open about other life events in the interest of demystifying them and validating experiences, particularly around those that women historically don't talk about: miscarriages, post-partum depression.

I routinely tell new mothers to reach out immediately if they think they aren't feeling "the way they should" which is a pretty big sign. I realized that for mental health issues, it isn't as obvious. There may not be a "baby" to prompt the conversation.

SO I am putting it out there. I was caught off-guard by my body's response to life's stress. Once I got it, I responded and am responding in appropriate ways -- care from doctors and therapist, accepting compassion from friends and family, and most importantly; paying attention to my mental health.

My Irish angel IS right; there is NOTHING to be ashamed of.  Nothing.  

Your encore for today? Check in with yourself. Feeling pain, whether a broken bone or a broken spirit, it's all valid. Talking this over with my co-workers, I said something that they said I should embroider somewhere: The body doesn't lie. It's truth.. You may not need a stent or bypass surgery. That doesn't mean you don't need care. You deserve care, no matter what.

Peace.






Saturday, August 24, 2019

On Cars

I am in the process of buying a car. Not a new one -- "pre-owned", as they say. New to me. So ordinary, I know. And yet.

This is the first time I've ever gone car shopping by myself. On the cusp of 59, I went for the first time into a dealership and took the test drive I'd arranged the day before. I knew it was the one, knew it the minute I read the stats and saw the picture. All it had to do was run and not sound like there was a jet engine down by the muffler. Just get me from Point A to Point B, reliably. All the car had to do -- really -- was not disappear before I got there. It hadn't, I drove it, and I immediately put down my deposit.

And yet.

Though this is my first solo car, that's not the "and yet" of this story. It's because I'm not getting a car. I'm saying good-bye to a car.

My car: my loyal, problematic, ugly-as-sin car finally, (FINALLY! my friends and family are surely saying) reached the point of no return.  It's 21 now.  I used to say "It's old enough to vote but not old enough to drink" -- but now, well, it can do that, too.

When my mother died in 1999, she'd only had it for a few months, and it came to me. I'd never thought about an SUV and wasn't quite sure when I first took the wheel. But being a person barely five feet tall, I found the height incredibly useful and its ability to handle snow comforting. We hit it off.

My Dad always had a formula for keeping cars. If you need work done on a car but over the course of a year you spent less that you would in year of new-car payments, then you're okay. That made sense to me. For years, nothing alarming happened.  Ten years went by. Fifteen. Work got done, sometimes annoying or costly, but it always stayed below Dad's financial threshold. Around year seventeen, more serious money got spent and it was then that I realized something true: no mechanic would ever say to me what the oncologist had said to us in 1999, that the end was near. It hadn't occurred to me that cars could literally live forever ...IF …. you wanted to spend the money.  The other piece, obvious to all, was that I didn't want to let it go because it was hers.

I know that people anthropomorphize things and cars, in particular. Occasionally, I imagined the car with a tail to wag, joyfully shaking its back end like a dog, but really, I had no illusions about it. There was no particular kind of mystical or spiritual energy. It just was. 

At some point in his youth, my older son told me that he wanted to drive the car when he got older. I remember telling him that I hoped he would but knowing he wouldn't.  Then in June, he began to drive. That kid, now an 18-year old man, was driving -- the car, that car. This past year, too much began to go wrong with it. When the kid began driving it, I realized letting it go was going to break my heart.

Initially, it was the final gift from my Mom. Neither of my sons ever knew her so in a weird way, having one of them drive that car felt like some kind of connection, even if it wasn't. But the truer piece is that twenty years later, I know the stories. When my boys were born, they came home from the hospital in that car. It went down to Florida and back. It has spent more time filthy than clean. The radio works but the volume can only be controlled if you kind of pull the knob out -- but not too much. I have carried loads of gear for trips, unknown tons of groceries, too many seedlings and compost for the garden, and on one occasion, a somewhat illegal number of teenagers, with two stuffed sideways in the back. But we made it.

I made it. I made it mine.  Twenty-one years and 166,000 miles.

My bumper stickers will need to be replaced, but that's okay. I have some good ones ready to go.

And your encore? Think about your purchases and make your connections. You may find them somewhere.

For those who are curious, I'm donating my car to our local NPR station this week.  If it can serve some good in the world, even in its state, I want to make that happen.

Peace.




Friday, June 21, 2019

On Endings and Beginnings

It is curious how things happen simultaneously. People often say that things happen in threes, but of course, that isn't true. It's fixed attention. We see what we want to see and find what we are looking for.

And yet.

Yet sometimes, there is a cluster of events that happen in a closer-than-customary proximity and forces us to observe the occurrence. Perhaps make meaning, perhaps not. But there you go.

The last three weeks -- for me -- has offered up an extraordinary amount of endings and beginnings.
As I am writing this, literally, my best friend's brother's life is slipping away. Some of the drugs were removed this morning and he is in his final decline. The family is around him and it will be an ending. Today. Today at 11:54 am EDT the summer Solstice occurs. Summer begins. The end of spring leads to the beginning of the next season. My own mother died on the night of the winter Solstice in 1999, and though I do not make comparisons or draw conclusions, I observe. All during the month of May, my office at work prepared to move out of our building. Because I was the liaison for this process with people in my suite, I was hyper-focused on getting that ending done right. I had been at that desk in that weird, lovely, quirky space for fifteen years. My boss had been in the building for over thirty. It was a grueling process, saying good-bye to the familiar, the space which I had claimed and loved.


I finished up packing my own things on the day of Commencement ~ May 30th. Commencement: the day where universally, multiple meanings of endings, beginnings and going forward are addressed. On Monday, June 3, the move happened. I was the last person in our suite, which I had always jokingly referred to as our airport runway since it was a hall with offices like gates off to the sides. I shut off the light and cried. 

June 11th, my son graduated high school. My 18-year old, first-born son. So grown up: shaving, learning to drive, buying himself a new suit to go to prom with money he earned at his job. Am I proud? Hell yes. Did I cry? Of course. 

And on June 6th, I went back to my original name when my divorce was decreed. 

Graduations happen every year. People die, trees are cut down, people move. Of course.

I also became a home owner in the last three weeks. My house -- my sweet, small, garden-encircled, hot-water-challenged house -- is now my own. It is a beginning. 

In the garden at work, the seeds that we started in March are flourishing and producing food. 

I have begun to take my new space at work -- a God-awful mauve cubicle -- and make it my own. I am not sure what to do yet about all that mauve, but in starting again, I am finding myself delighted. Truly -- a surprise! I am truly delighted in both the process of figuring out what makes my heart sing, and the observation that yes: my heart can and does still sing. 

And the encore is just that: encore. Again. For the good and for the bad, take the next step. I have nothing more profound than that. Be alive while you are alive.

Peace.











Sunday, May 12, 2019

Mothers Day: What I've Learned from Lilacs

The house I grew up in was built in 1858; it was an attached farm house, with a barn attached to our kitchen. On each side of the barn door were old lilacs -- purple on the right and white on the left. The purple, the larger of the two, was massive and towered over the edge of slate roof. The white one was never as gloriously large but produced reliably, with white puffs of sweet fragrance. 

As a kid, I always knew when it was spring because in mid-May, the lilacs bloomed, followed immediately by our lily-of-the-valley. Glorious spring fragrance. In school, they taught us that the purple lilac was the New Hampshire state flower, chosen because it represented "the hardy men and women of New Hampshire" and could live for hundreds of years. 

My mother loved our lilacs. She had grown up in the house; her dad had bought it in the 30s. In my mind, lilacs were synonymous with her -- hardy, resilient, tough on the outside but for brief periods of time, showing a surprising softness. That was my mom. 

When my brother and I decided we had to sell the house in 2004, it was a gut-wrenching decision. Three generations had lived there. The house along with the lilacs and maples -- had been there since the mid-1800s -- and we had to say good-bye to it. 

Before we left, I decided I had to take some of it with me. The soil by the barn turned out -- no surprise -- to be mostly rocks with some soil squeezed between. That the lilacs had not just survived but thrived made me respect them even more. Such tenacity!

But I was able to pry out two scraggly suckers. I worried about the roots but carefully wrapped them in damp paper towels then in a plastic bag for the trip to Massachusetts. 

When I got home, I planted them in two places. One got pretty much immediately mowed over by someone who didn't know plants. 

And the second... seemed to be in limbo. It didn't die, but it wasn't exactly giving me hope. For two years, it produced a few sad leaves, but that was all. In the third year, it seemed to make a decision. Like Morgan Freeman's quote in Shawshank Redemption: You either got to get busy living or get busy dying. The lilac decided to live. The next few years, it began to grow, really grow, but no flowers. I worried that mine would never bloom.

Finally...finally...one year, there were TWO bunches of blossoms. I was ecstatic. The next year: nothing. Back to gloom.

But then, dear Lord, then.... that next year: my lilac bush was a riot of purple. So many bunches that I couldn't count them. It kept growing, doubling in height. Sending out its own suckers. 

SO now, as you have guessed, my lilac is exactly what I knew and loved. A full, glorious lush explosion of color and sweet fragrance, making the bees -- and me -- crazy.

I am beyond words when I go out and spend time with it. Smell -- the most primitive of the senses -- triggers something, that feeling. I get that. I get that and more. It is my mom, clipping dead limbs, snipping a bouquet for the table. It is my grandmother, doing the same. It is me feeling like this flower is the most important flower in the world. And most importantly, it is me: wanting to recreate all of this for myself, not believing I could...but doing it.

Today is Mother's Day. At the Arnold Arboretum, they celebrate the day with lilacs. Lilac Sunday. Today it's raining so few will pack a picnic as they have been doing there since 1908, fifty years after my house was built. 

I have a bouquet of lilacs on my dining room table; the room smells like heaven.

And the encore for the day is one I come back to often and probably always will: tenacity. Take the risk; be tenacious. Yes, it's true -- sometimes people will mow over your lilac. But it's also possible that your sucker will sink its roots down into the rocks, find the nutrients buried within and decide to send itself up into the sky. You won't know if you don't try. 

Happy Mothers Day!




Saturday, April 20, 2019

On MInistry

Yesterday, I lead the worship service for the Unitarian Universalist students where I work, Harvard Divinity School. They gather every Friday at noon and take turns leading the services, figuring out how to integrate the parts of the service and find their voices. For me, it is always wonderful to watch it unfold but yesterday, I was given the incredibly privilege of leading them myself.

I am not ordained.  For years, I was obsessed with it and went so far as to go to an open house for a theological school that now, no longer exists. It seemed that to be legitimate meant to be ordained by my denomination and to have that credential. I have been at the Div School for fifteen years, which -- truly -- is an education for which I am paid. In my thirties, when I began to process of discernment, one my mentors told me: "Only go into ministry if you can't NOT do it." The life of giving oneself to it was a demanding one, she told me. But that didn't keep me from it. When I was at the point of applying -- at 39 -- I became pregnant with my first son. Then I had my second son.

If it sounds like I am saying; "Well, I would have gone into ministry but...", I'm not. I did go into ministry. I am a minister.

It has taken me a long time to claim this, to believe this to my core. At HDS, we say that we "define ministry broadly" which the absolute truth. Because I have been able to tell this to them, I have been able to let myself believe it, too.

This blog is dedicated to my Dad, who I have always said was first minister, though he, too, was never ordained a UU minister. For so many years, I have spoken about HIS ministry -- for surely, it was ministry -- and if I had a dollar for every time I've wished he was alive now so we could talk about what it takes to do this work in the world, I would be a very rich woman.

But. I have found my own ministerial voice. My own way. My church in Milton lets me lead worship once or twice a year, and the students at HDS do, too. It is a gift that brings me to tears. I am still learning and growing.

What is my message here? For many years, I doubted myself.  It thought only orthodoxy and the prescribed path was the only way I could claim my identity.  Self-doubt? Yes, of course.

My encore today is: when you consider your identity, who you are, what you love, stay with it. I don't know how long it will take you, but I can say that when you own truth, it rings clear as any bell.

Yesterday, my sermon was titled: A Very Good Friday. I preached on what Holy Week offers UUs to think about. I got some wonderful feedback afterwards. It felt good, crafting all of it. I felt like I was preaching with, not at,  which matters to me. Communication, after all, is transactional: a two-way process.

So stay with it, friends. How you see yourself, who you are at your core, matters. Keep at, living -- or figuring out -- your truth.

Amen.

* AND my bonus for today is: I am part of a podcast! In February, First Parish in Milton started recording the services and mine was included. If you are curious what one of sermons sounds like, here it is. The sermon was titled: A Wide-Eyed Theology, which covers a bit about how UUs think.

Open your podcast app and go to “Open podcast by URL” and paste in the following link: https://feed.podbean.com/fpmilton/feed.xml

If you are on iPhone it is under Podcasts app, Library, Edit



Sunday, February 3, 2019

On Letting Go

Some of you know that just about six months ago, we got a second dog for my younger son -- a boisterous, supposed "chiweenie" named Scrappy. We were already a one-dog house, but because my younger son really wanted a dog of his own, I researched rescues and found this dog on Petfinder. Short story: we got him.

This first thing you should know that in point of fact, he is NOT chiweenie, which is a cross between a dachshund and a chihuahua. These are smaller dogs, max of about twelve pounds. This guy came to us at 28 pounds and probably gained two more, though at full-force when he lunges -- which he does-- feels more like 280 pounds. Sigh. His temperament is not calm, like a chiweenie; he faces life at full-tilt race. When it was revealed through DNA that in fact, he was part dachshund AND mostly Manchester terrier, THAT made sense. With his long nose and incessant energy, we realized that what he truly is: a locked and loaded, rat-killing machine.

Now: there's nothing wrong with a rat-killing machine and if you, say, live on a farm which we were told was his original life, that is a great idea. But it isn't our life. Our life is one where the kids are at home every other week and the single mom works full-time.

Yet, every minute of every day, Scrappy is happy. He is just thrilled to be alive and with *you*. Near you, with you, ON you, in fact. Every minute. Perhaps some kind of separation anxiety of his?  Possibly.

We followed instructions about getting him acclimated and trained. He had been originally crate-trained, so we got a crate. He was 18-months old when we got him but was still having accidents in the house, so we used techniques to get him past this. He was GREAT for awhile, then went immediately back to pooping in the house. Peeing in the house. Chewing things that weren't food, in the house.

On walks, he acted as though he wanted to tear into everyone and everything, though he would NEVER bite. But he appeared terrifying and soon, our other dog began imitating him: peeing, pooping in the house, barking like a crazy dog at everyone, both of them pulling wildly in different directions. The real problem was that this is a dog who hadn't done walks on leashes. He was an off-leash dog in an on-leash family.

We talked to the agency; we tried tricks, tips, sprays and positive reinforcement. And I think you are figuring out where this is going.

The week before last, my son finally said what I had been thinking: that Scrappy is a *great* dog. A loving, beast of a great dog -- but he is not a great dog for us.

It was a heartbreaking truth. We realized that you can love someone so much but that the bottom line is that not every relationship is healthy and good for both of you. We knew it wasn't what he needed as much as it wasn't what we needed.

I called the agency -- Forever Home Rescue New England -- who were incredibly supportive and lovely. They were glad I'd called and the first thing they said was: "This doesn't mean you're not a good dog mom; it doesn't mean he's not a good dog. It just means that the fit isn't good." In a world where this is often so much shaming and focus on perfection, these were exactly the words I needed to hear. She reposted Scrappy as being available.

Within two days, the most amazing thing happened: the family that had originally surrendered him because they had too many dogs, realized that HE was the one they wished they hadn't surrendered. They have a farm...with cows. They wanted him back and said that if transportation couldn't be arranged, then they would drive up from Tennessee to Massachusetts to get him.

So yesterday, Scrappy left us. As I write this, he is on his way home. Because he is the only dog going south, he is sitting up front in the cab with the driver. We sent him off with his toys and a bag of his favorite treats. I am not sure about the schedule, but I think he will be reunited tomorrow. Do we have some worries about him? Of course we do. Letting go ...even with all the assurances in the world, even when you know it's absolutely right...is hard. Sometimes, excruciating.

But it's also essential.

Should I have never adopted him? I ….don't know. We have learned so much in the last six months. As my Dad used to say: You don't know what you don't know. 

I really have no encore for today. Today, it's just a story. A hard story that documents life.

I will hold up the image of that happy dog, running like a mad man through the grass, wild smile on his face, and go forward through my day.

Peace.