Yes, and

panzanella_allerinaglenmaclarty

There's a stretch of my insides
that doesn't work right
now and then

To keep it happy
I have to put certain things
down there
and keep certain other things
away

Forever

(Which
in case you didn't know
is as long a time
as there is)

So I can think about
all the things that can't go down there
or I can think about
all the things that can
like a glass
half-full or empty
or luck
that's good or bad

Or
I can do both

I can think about pizza
and applesauce
I can think about donuts
and cheese
French fries and orange juice
Cupcakes and cucumbers
Thank-you-drive-thru and peppermint tea

They all live in my world anyway
whether I send them to my insides
or not

And if I can make a world
where things that I choose
and the things I do not
can live together

Maybe I can begin to embrace
and understand
and include
instead of fear.

Yes, and
instead of
Yes, but

And yes,
it will take some doing

And yes,
I will slip

And yes,
it will probably make me crazy
from time to time

On the other hand
this hasn't?

This has worked so well
for me
for the world
for millenia
this "Yes, but..."?

This faux-accepting
fully dismissive
discussion-stopper
of a so-called conjunctive?

How much can something join us
if it's pushing us apart?

Yes. And.

Yes,
it has always been this way

And
it is time to change.

Now, and forever.

xxx
c

Image by Allerina & Glen MacLarty via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Art, life and the Happiness Dip

morocco_idoestzerue-bot

Launch is great. Synthesis is superb.

In between the two, however, is most often an ocean of hell, a vast, tedious chasm between the happiness of just being and the happiness of informed being.

That's way denser than the fluffity-fluff I usually throw out here, so let me back up a moment and tell a story. Two stories, actually.

The first is a story of my happiness. It's something that, despite what a certain tag on this blog might have you believe, I don't think about much these days, although I'm still curious about the mechanics of happiness as I do my work, since so many of the people I align with seem to find themselves in various stages of getting to happy.

Anyway. That story.

When I was a baby, I was a happy baby. Not a touchy baby or a gooey, juicy, hug-me-up baby, but, if eyewitness reports are to be trusted, a shiny, happy baby who was interested in most things and delighted with a large subset of these. Additionally, putting aside my status as Only Grandchild, I was, if these same reports are to be believed, Fun to Be Around, a quality that most of the people I've polled say I was able to maintain throughout my childhood. So fine: a happy child.

If you asked me to pinpoint the time that I stopped feeling happy, I peg it at around age 10. I peg it thusly as I have a memory, not to be completely trusted, as I have a not-completely-trustworthy memory, of standing in my maternal grandparents' backyard, feeling what I now recognize as creeping blues wrap its arms around me. I'm sure there were other moments leading up to it, but the realization of that moment was that the party was officially over, with no notification of when or assurance that it would someday start again.

Thus, I spent the next 30 or so years chasing happiness, or a clue, or whatever I was making it out to be at the time. A feeling of wholeness, I guess, and of being centrally me but able to connect with...what? The other side? "Happiness"? At one point, I named it "Big Colleen," imagining some kind of eternal, omniscient, wiser me who was also the face of the universe. (I know, I know, but these things are slippery-hard to describe, dammit.) There was this feeling that maybe, if I learned the right path or the right key combination or the secret handshake, I could get either back to myself or forward to myself, whichever way it worked. Meanwhile, there was a lot of the psychic equivalent of being out in the rain and cold with insufficient protection, and inchoate longing, and other piece-of-shit states of being.

If you have read other bits of my story, you know I had my real-life equivalent of that moment in the cartoon (or was it Gilligan's Island?) when the coconut fell on my head and I woke up, as if from a dream, to happiness. I've yet to fully explore that epiphany, but I've taken stabs at explaining it in a play I wrote several years back, and have hinted at it an essay here on the blog. Since I'm obviously not going to get at it here, either, it was basically like this: there was a pre-Hospital Epiphany me and a post-Hospital Epiphany me, and the post-me was as astonished that I'd ever felt bad about anything as the pre-me was that something like this could really, truly happen.

The other story is about my trajectory as an actor.

I've written bits here and there about my odd-10 years in the acting profession (including an acting-related epiphany that I was clueless to act upon, but was interesting, nonetheless), and have not shied away from discussing how very, very bad I was for some time. Because I was. For years, even as I felt this obsessive need to pursue acting and become better at it, I was pretty miserable while practicing most aspects of it.

What I haven't discussed is that I was good when I started. Really good, apparently. Couldn't-go-wrong good, where I was an effortless conduit for Real Human Emotion. I believe the teacher's first words upon seeing me onstage the first time were "well, we've got us a live one," but I couldn't say for sure because I was so live, so full of passion and as-yet-unexpressed longing, I could hear almost nothing. I was just Real Energy, up there in front of people. This lasted for perhaps six months, at which point I'd started to accumulate some real, if shaky, technique, and the whole thing fell apart. The whole experience can be summed up in cartoon form as that moment when whichever Warner Brothers character finally realized he'd run past the cliff on sheer fury and energy, and, looking first downward to confirm, then audience-ward for the gag, plummeted to the earth below.

Seth Godin talks about The Dip in business: that long, slow slog between getting an idea and getting it to the place where it works like crazy, where it takes off into the stratosphere, where it becomes that unstoppable rocket to the moon you'd half-envisioned, half-just-hoped it would be at the beginning of the curve.

I think there's a dip in life, a big dip, the king-daddy of all dips. If you were looking at it from a Hegelian perspective, it would be the antithesis phase, where every last bit of every idea put forth in the thesis phase got challenged. What I like to call the Sucks Ass phase. Because here you are, happy and carefree and connected, when all of a sudden, and generally, for a long, long time, things start seriously sucking out of nowhere, and everything you thought was true and possible becomes unclear and maddeningly out of reach.

What I finally realized was happening in those years, for me, it's important to interject, was that the carefree awesomeness of childhood finally got burdened with the icky structuredness of adulthood, or rather, training for adulthood. I went from having my own ideas and minimal external pressure to do or be anything to having my own ideas squished and squashed and sometimes pushed aside as I learned all of the Very Important Things that were necessary to ensure I was able to be a capable adult.

Or, in the parlance of acting, I learned technique.

There's nothing wrong with technique. Skills and knowledge are wonderful tools, both, but mastery of them is a bewildering and not particularly intuitive process. There is a lot of Fucking Up, and dropping your tools on your foot, and breaking things with your tools, and breaking your tools on things. Worst of all, at some point in the process, I think we get so into process that we become process, instead of realizing that process is there to be our servant. That we and process are there to serve some greater good. Like an actor must learn to master technique, whatever technique, so she can reliably and artfully channel the emotions needed to tell a story, we must learn to master these tools so we can bring our humanity to bear in useful ways, instead of just HULK SMASHing our way through life.

I confess that I got back on this tear after reading my friend Gretchen's post the other day about whether artists are unhappier than their non-artist counterparts. I have no data and an uncharacteristic lack of opinion on it, other than "the tortured ones, probably." I think that unhappier people are people in that chasm, or dip, where they're still figuring out how things work. I think that happier people are ones who have either figured it out or, mean and elitist though this may sound, never thought much about anything in the first place. I've maintained for a while that a good indicator of intelligence is knowing that one isn't, really: you have to be a certain level of smart to have any idea of all the things you can't possibly know; people who are very, very certain that they know best scare the crap out of me.

Not much point for a long and winding post, except maybe this: if you're struggling with something, the way is through it.

And if you're through it, try doing a little analysis of the stages you went through. It's not going to speed things up for the guy right behind you, but it might make the tedium more tolerable...

xxx
c

Image by i does tze rue-bot via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

I'm the kind of person who

crossedarms_hoyasmeg

Yesterday, via various miracles of modern technology and brave union brethren having fought for what's theirs, The BF done got a bum knee fixed up good as new (we hope) in less than seven hours, including schlep time to and fro.

While we were allowed a bit of canoodling time pre- and post-procedure (of a chaste nature, them curtains is flimsy), primarily we were on our own, him, blasted out of his skull on the good meds; me, making do with provisions from the local Starbucks acquired on foot.

Having been through many, many outpatient procedures of a colonoscopic nature thanks to my frayed internal jump rope, we brought things with which to entertain ourselves during our waking hours: he, a sole issue of Harper's; I, Quentin Crisp's autobiography, a self-help book, my current fatty spiral notebook (one should always have something sensational, etc.) and an iPhone. (Because really, if checking your email, Twitter and Facebook streams every five minutes isn't entertaining, what is?)

We brought them because we knew there would be down time. We brought them because we knew we would not have each other to talk to for seven hours. We brought them because we are the kind of people who bring stuff to read when we're going anywhere: the airplane, the surgical center, the toilet. God forbid we have a spare moment available and nothing good to fill it with.

As it turned out, I spent very little time with Quentin or Martha and a whole lot of time with Dolores. Dolores was there to accompany her friend of 35+ years who was finally having the cataract surgery Dolores had been begging her to have for ages now. She herself is very fit, save some miscellanea that comes with aging. (And she has had some of her miscellanea examined by the same guy who examines mine, Dr. Graham Woolf!) Dolores is 73 years old, lives about 10 miles due south of me and sings in several choirs (including a thing called a "bereavement choir," which she turned to on the recommendation of a fellow parishioner when she was "mad at God" for taking three of her five sisters from her in the space of 18 months).

Furthermore, Dolores grew up near Jacksonville, FL. She graduated from the last all-black high school in the state of Florida, a high school which had an over 90% rate of sending students on to college, where she was headed toward the end of this week for her 55th high school reunion. Husband #3 (she divorced #1 and buried #2) is not coming with her, as he's infirm, but Dolores seems not to mind much; in fact, Dolores seems like the kind of person who makes friends wherever she goes.

Dolores does, not me. I'm the kind of person who brings a stack of reading material because I'm the kind of person who is painfully shy around strangers, hopelessly introverted and most definitely does not make friends wherever she goes.

Only, it seems, I am not.

Somewhere along the line, I started talking to people. I started smiling, I guess, and asking questions. Offering chairs, runs to the Starbucks for muffins, information about my own I'm-the-kind-of-person-who self. I'm not entirely sure why except that somewhere, somehow, I started getting interested in people's stories, and people's energy, and seeing which kind of stories matched up with which kind of energy. Maybe it was a result of all those acting classes and shows and script writing, where one is forced to plumb the depths of one's soul to find where it overlaps with someone else's. Maybe it's latent Journalist's Disease kicking in, I am, after all, the granddaughter of a newspaperman.

I probably won't have a grasp of the wherefore for a long time. Hardly matters. Because what I finally realized yesterday is that I'm not the kind of person who I used to be, and moreover that it would probably behoove me to stop thinking of myself as "the kind of person who" anything. In my teens and 20s and even my 30s, it felt awesome to stick stakes in the ground, to say "I am for this" and "I like that" and carve out my identity. And it felt equally awkward to have that Person I Was change, to feel vaguely embarrassed about my earlier, over-the-top love of Aubrey Beardsley or Bachman Turner Overdrive or circus peanuts. I was the kind of person who likes circus peanuts? What the hell kind of loser was that?

We set so many unnecessary traps for ourselves, I think. And yes, I think other traps may be necessary, the shame in acting badly trap, or the guilt for not taking care of ourselves trap. At least until those habits are flipped over to their sweet side, those traps serve some kind of purpose. Pegging ourselves as this or that is perhaps understandable in our preteen and teen years, perhaps into our twenties. It's more of a trying-things-on activity then. But I've seen so many people stiffen into some grotesque version of something they should have tried on and discarded years ago, I'm not so much for the I'm the Kind of Person Who game any more. I still have ideas and preferences and loyalties, of course, but I'm far more interested in the Strong Opinions, Loosely Held game nowadays.

It is scarier to be fluid, for sure.

But it is far, far more fun in the waiting rooms of the world...

xxx
c

Image by hoyasmeg via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Quiet, please

hushboy_supasushy

One of the chief changes between Colleen of the Past and Colleen of the Present is a dramatic reduction in the Noise Tolerance Threshold.*

I'm not sure what this is about, exactly. The younger me spent copious amounts of alone time, but definitely liked commotion: city noise, constant soundtrack of AM commercial pop radio, thrum created by hordes of people, anywhere. I grappled with loneliness far more back then, so maybe the hubbub helped with that. Most definitely, it did: when I'm feeling blue, I still find myself slipping an old movie into the SuperDrive to keep me company on the few lonely nights I have.

If I had children, I'd definitely understand where the need for quiet comes from. The little bit of time I spend around other people's kids I generally find enjoyable, provided the kids aren't intolerable rat bastards, but I'm always, always depleted afterward, craving the quiet of total lockdown. (God help the parents of extroverts who are themselves introverts: that's a pretty fair example of hell, I imagine.) But I have no kids around me 24/7, nor, now that I'm spending more time at My Country House than the Fabulous Divorcée Pad, do I have the kinds of ambient noise issues I had living in an area of dramatically increased population density (which is one of the biggest, as-yet-unnamed psyche killers this recession has brought about, I'm convinced. We went from a relative paradise of mainly solo-apartment dwellers to a post-collegiate-in-NYC-levels of bodies per unit. And from the sound of things, the same bidness is going on to the north and south of us, as well.)

It may be the sharp uptick in reading and writing that's happened over the past six months. When my life was more of a balance between my writing life and my dwindling designer life, there was room for all kinds of sound. I worked better and more efficiently at sketching and composing visually with music, albeit mostly from my "lyric-free" playlists, music without words, or at the very least, without words in my native tongue. The right kind of sound engaged just enough of my monkey brain so that I could be non-self-critical (or less so) during the conception phase; it also did something kind of magical in the composition and execution phases, but that was more like throwing on some great tunes to pump you up when you're running or cleaning house. That kind of sound, I get.

What I've tiptoed around without examining too closely is the possibility that as my brain ages, it needs more space to focus. I'm already noticing the disk spinning longer when I try to access certain data like names, although to be fair, that was never something I was especially good at, and I suspect that this skill in all of us has been somewhat diminished by our increasing reliance on the Great External Brain, a.k.a. the Internet. (If you have hard data on causality, lay it on me; I'm sure it'll be temporarily depressing, but in the long run, I'd rather know my brain can get back in shape at the gym than that I have 5 years to squeeze out what's left of it before I resign myself to a life of gardening and airport novels.)

Finally, there is the hope that this is temporary, some kind of phase. In the throes of a Crohn's flare, when all available resources are being directed toward a damaged organ, there's not a lot of spare blood available for brain bathing. You get fuzzy; you get sleepy. It becomes hard to focus for long periods of time, and your thoughts aren't as sharp as they are when your gut is in the pink. I may yet cave, but I'm doing my best to pull out of this flare without meds, and that means getting down with the short windows and mad prioritizing and quirky conditions, lots of sleep, lots of rest, lots of quiet, my body is demanding. I'm not complaining (much), both because there's little point (no higher court to take this one to) and because I'm hanging on to the hope that as my body bounces back, my brainpower will, too.

That's a slender thread of hope at 48, but it's my thread, and I'm clinging to it...

xxx
c

*Except where watching Hulu-is-my-TVâ„¢ is concerned, anyway; there, the sound is creeping up to the ear-splitting levels I remember at my grandparents', in their declining years with their declining ears.

Image by ★ SUPA SUSHY © ★ via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Referral Friday: Photo rescue kit from Sally Jacobs, Archivist

cw_70s-triptych

Referral Friday is part of an ongoing series inspired by John Jantsch's Make-a-Referral Week. For more about that, and loads more referrals for everything from cobblers to coaches to gee-tar teachers, start here. Pass it on, baby!

You know that gigantic box/drawer/garage-full of loose snapshots you have socked away?

Don't worry about them.

As my friend and archivist extraordinaire, Sally Jacobs, says, those are the photos that still stand a chance of making it another generation without immediate intervention.

However.

That cache of round-cornered square satin prints of you at camp circa 1976 that you neatly ordered in the crappy, spiral-bound, Woolworth's magnetized photo album with the stained, Peter Max-ian fabric on the cover? Toast. Unless you get cracking now. Because between the acid of the cheap-ass glue and the toxicity of the cheap-ass plastic, your precious moments are currently the center attraction in what Sally calls "a chemical sandwich of doom." Tasty, no?

The issue of that box/drawer/garage we shall address at a later (but not too much later, now I'm thinking on it) date. For now, may I suggest you do as I do and order you up one "Easy Peasy SAFE Photo Rescue Kit" from Sally, who assembles them lovingly and persnickety-ly from several sources at what looks to me like not much profit for the purpose of helping preserve you, in all your Quiana-clad disco glory, from imminent doom. (And so you know, these evil books predominated from the 1970s through the 1990s, although they're still available today, so just stay the hell away from ANYTHING PLASTIC when it comes to storing your photos, 'kay?)

Said Easy Peasy SAFE Photo Rescue Kit contains some surgical spatula-type tool thingy that you've probably seen your dental hygienist farting around with, along with gloves, the correct pair of arcane pencils, and instructions, plus some other goodies if you order by today, May 8 (scroll to the bottom of the page to see them). Because she is nice and my friend, if you identify yourself as a reader of this here blog, she will also send you a PDF about the right way(s) to digitize (i.e., scan) your photos.

VERY IMPORTANT: She only makes 100 of these packets a few times per year. As of yesterday, there were 85 available. Just so you know.

And yes, I bought one! So prepare your asses for Round Two of Scanning My Damned Photos, this time, done right!

xxx
c

3steps


Painters, marketers and the twain meeting

ruts_zappowbang

I am not exactly an expert on destuckification, that's Havi's purview (she even has a packet!), but I've been stuck in enough ruts to have learned a thing or two about getting out of them.

More to the point, I am a goddamned patented, triple-certified, Lifetime Achievement Award-winner of grappling with change, largely because, like most things we become intimately familiar with, I suck eggs at it.

Which is why I am delighted when anything comes together in such a way as to let me see the bastard from ever-so-slightly a different angle. Or two angles, or maybe two lenses that, when focused properly, bring a microscopic part of the bastard into sharp focus.

A few days ago, one of my favorite writer-thinkers on or off the web, Seth Godin, posted a little sumpin'-sumpin' about the bastard. It's about the rut part of change, or the one of the states you find yourself in when change not only seems like the only answer, but only the remotest of possibilities. Only as Seth points out, it's not. You can, hold on for tricky footwork, switch ruts!

Okay, so you're not really hauling yourself out of a rut by climbing into another. Although I suppose you're welcome to turn it into another rut, if you're a glutton for punishment. No, Seth's radical suggestion is that you hop out of your rut by changing everything, and there are some pretty "everything" suggestions he floats out there like deleting your entire website and starting from scratch, or moving to Thailand.

But there are some equally non-seemingly-"everything" items on the list, too. Starting a blog? Listening to live music? Buying art? These are "everything"?

They are, though, when you are lodged comfily (or not) in your rut. When you're prone with grief, weeping into a pillow, exhausted by your own emotion, getting off the bed is "everything." Getting off the bed and walking to the bathroom to wash your face? Holy crap, that's "everything" with a cherry on top. Getting off the bed, washing your face in the bathroom and going to the kitchen to make a tin of soup? Good night, Irene, it's a revolution!

Robert Genn, the fine artist who writes the fantabulous newsletter I'm always after you all to sign up for, puts the rut equation slightly differently: the not-moving is sterility, the moving is fertility, and getting from one to the other is as simple (not easy! although sometimes!) as changing up your media or mixing up your speed, slow for the fasties, fast for the slowies.

Yesterday, I had a real-length walk in the morning. (Don't worry, I took it slow.) Afterward, I had a cup of coffee. (Okay, maybe not as noble a change, but I needed to try it to see if I'd fall apart, because I was a-skeert I would. I didn't.) I did some writing, and, per a friend's gentle admonition, did not worry about the writing I could not do. I gave myself permission to go to bed early, and to make this short. (Attention new readers! This post length is short for this blog! You've been warned...)

Everything is a rut (that's the bad news); "everything" is a way out of it (that's the good news). You don't have to work on all your ruts at once. You don't even have to work on any of them at all, in fact, but I hope you will. We all have lonely roads to walk, but when we're all walking them, o, how we'll learn as we all cross paths...

xxx
c

How many Crohn's flares does it take to change a communicatrix?

twitter-_-colleen-wainwright_-every-time-i_m-in-a-crohn_-1

If you've been following along on Twitter and Facebook, you already know that last week represented a physical nadir for me.

Not the Nadir, but the worst flare I've had in almost three years, since I went off the diet. (That would be the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, also known as the Diet That Saved My Life, or at the very least, kept me from getting a new asshole and/or a colostomy bag.)

Ah, free will! You are such a delicious, pernicious devil, aren't you? You step in to help me vanquish cigarettes in one fell swoop (and a jet trail of methane). You help me out of a job I hated, a marriage that wasn't working, a lawsuit no one was going to win. You help me build a mid-life acting career out of nothing but hope, sweat and yellow highlighter, you get me into therapy, you get me out of depression. In what I call your finest move to date,  you even pull me up from the depths of illness, and then, defying all logic, you impel me to gorge myself on the very stuff that will kick my ass back to the curb.

Seriously: what up with that? Would it not have been easier to just...oh, I don't know...help me STAY WELL than to, with additional infusions of will (and rest, and enough steroids to power a major league sports franchise for three seasons), pull me back out of it?

Ah, well. I take comfort in the fact that there have been three years between flares, and even more comfort that somehow, while I am unquestionably a Delicate Fucking Flower, I have healing superpowers. The Youngster commented on it once, a hint of envy and longing in his voice, and it was the first time I sat up and took note of what I'd never thought of as good fortune.

Before then, I'd concentrated on how much I hated getting sick or injured, not how marvelously well I tended to heal. Not that anyone wants to be ill, of course (although I suppose there must be someone, somewhere, who does, this being a mighty wacky world and all), but you know, if you've got to take your share, how great to know that it won't be for that long, all things considered.

I'm too old and too battle-worn to say "Never again!"; I was too old and too battle-worn even to say it two years ago, when I also fell off the wagon and bounced behind it with my face in a bagful of Kaiser rolls for a good stretch. Something did happen this week which hasn't happened before, though: I couldn't write, and I couldn't write because I was too exhausted, and that just about killed me.

I remember reading an interview with the actor Robert Downey, Jr. a little while ago where he talked about how he finally found his way back to the straight and narrow. It wasn't God or family or anything so noble as these that set him straight: it was the sudden understanding that there was something he really, really wanted to do (act well in shitty movies, apparently), and he didn't want anything else getting in the way.

I've reached the point where I can see how my health, or lack thereof, could stop me from doing what I want to do, which is to write, which for now mainly means writing here. Doesn't matter. The blog is my shitty movie, but I'm going to act the hell out of it. And that means no more cookies on the craft service table.

In the days and weeks to come, I'm going to take a cold, hard look at the goals I drew up for myself in 2009, and see where "Take Care of Self" fits in. Which, I suspect, it doesn't much at all right now. And then I will look at what must stay, and what can go, and start hacking away. As my buddy Merlin Mann says in the fine quote framing his fine treatise on the subject, "You eventually learn that true priorities are like arms; if you think you have more than a couple, you're either lying or crazy."

I've been lying. And I've seen crazy. And I'd like to think I'm done with both.

It's time to focus on how well I get well, not how sick I am now. It's time to measure carefully the time I have left, not bemoan what's been spent. It's time to get to work, even if the work is, annoyingly and paradoxically, rest.

It is time to address this business of writing once and for all, and to treat it as a business, with all the regularity, accountability and support a business requires. Maybe that means writing less here and more elsewhere. Maybe that means getting a mailcart job (although that the mighty and magnificent Sage Cohen has managed to write copy for others without losing herself gives me some hope for that road again).

Once again, it's time to change. Then again, try pointing to a time when it isn't; my 48-year-old, post-Crohn's, post-dysplasia, post-married, thrice-post-careered, peri-menopausal self would have quite a bit to discuss on the nature of change with my disease-free, virginal, premenstual schoolgirl self. It was ever thus.

I am beginning to believe that the difference between change happening to one and being at the helm of change is focus and attention. (Okay, that's two things, since when has this blog ever been about literal accuracy? Or proofreading, for that matter?) And, looping back to the many observations I've been having lately about followers of the fat man and the benefits of (OHJESUSNODON'TSAYITDON'TDON'TDON'T) meditation (CHRIST!), all signs are pointing towards it as something I kinda-maybe-sorta-oughta-definitely address soon.

Fine. First, yoga; then, the hard stuff. Where, you understand, "yoga" might just mean "yoga on the Wii." Just so we understand each other.

None of this is remotely sexy. And the only part that appeals is the thought that I might get to string together more hours and more days of feeling like I finally did today, only perhaps better, and with bowel movements. (What? Like this blog has ever been about good taste, either?)

I leave you now to contemplate your navel, or the mystery of the Universe, or the grocery list. And I am officially soliciting advice, god help me, on good, local-to-L.A./East Side yoga studios. Someone who'd teach like Havi, in the non-namaste-b.s. way: a Havi here, not there, who still teaches regularly (or really, really irregularly, my preference.) And don't even talk to me about that Bikram. Not gonna happen.

More soon, as I know it. As soon as tomorrow, or as later as...not tomorrow. And if you would, one final request: some part of your functioning body or brain, whatever it may be? Be thankful for it just a wee bit.

I'm not 100% sure on this, but I think they might talk to each other or something...

xxx
c

Referral Friday: Cafe Tropical

cafetropical_foodgps1

Referral Friday is part of an ongoing series inspired by John Jantsch's Make-a-Referral Week. For more about that, and loads more referrals for everything from cobblers to coaches to gee-tar teachers, start here. Pass it on, baby!

I'd always suspected Los Angeles got shortchanged in the espresso department, and it took an extended trip to Seattle to prove it. More good coffee there than you should shake a stick at, although why you'd go around shaking a stick at delicious, delicious coffee is beyond me.

We have a few decent cuppas here on the East Side in the Lake of Silver 'hood: our local outpost of Chicago-based Intelligentsia serves an outstanding Americano, and I'll grudgingly admit to a sort of liqueur-y excellence to schmantastic LAMILL's brew. But there's no non-carb-y grub at the former and only outrageously priced (albeit tasty...grudging, grudging) at the latter, and Intelligentsia is a chain (albeit small and excellent and definitely to be chosen over all other chains) and LAMILL just aggravates me to no end. Too twee.

What is in the Lake of Silver Land and not twee? So not twee that its outdoor seating area could generously be described as "colorful" and/or "sun-baked"? So far from twee that it has photo signs of food you can point to when placing your order, hosts the hipster AA meeting, and has only TWO available coffee options, negro or con leche?

Why, Café Tropical (rhymes with "bop yer pal"), of course!

Not only that, but, I shit you not, Café Tropical serves up what I've come to believe, after vast sampling, one of the finest and most generous Cobb salads in town, and at the low, low price of seven (or eight? WHATEVER) bucks. Feeds two non-greedy people easily, with some left over if they're really non-greedy. (I'm on the small side, and I can usually get three small meals out of it.) Who the hell eats a Cobb salad with a steaming hot cup of Cuban-style Americano, you ask? Hell if I know, bub. I make a separate trip lunchtime or after.

Of course, there is also an insanely great array of Cuban pressed sandwiches and pastries to make those on low-carb diets weep with frustration and drool with envy. My friend, Ritzy, brought a whole guava-with-cheese pie (a specialty, and hot damn, I know why) to a gals' night I hosted and damned if I didn't cave...and didn't care. Freakishly delicious.

I know, I know, this is a local shoutout, and all y'all come from all over. Grant me a few gimmes, huh? So my fave local spots stay live and local?

And if you find yourself in L.A. and East Side, hell, in L.A., period, toddle on over. It's one of those neighborhood gems no one visiting from out of town used to stumble upon, in the time before Yelp. (I suppose it may have made Zagat's, but I can't imagine a middlebrow write-up of Tropical's...er...charms making it sound that enticing.)

Go. Drink. Eat. Hit a meeting, if that's your thing.

Just make sure you save some room for the guava pie...

xxx
c

Cafe Tropical
2900 W Sunset Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90026
(323) 661-8391

Photo ©Food GPS, via Flickr. More yummy shots of the food here.

Book review: Escape from Cubicle Nation

podcampaz_azchrislee

Back when I quit my last full-time, career-type job in 1992, there were very few books or resources out there to lead the way, and the few that there were didn't come close to the beautifully written, comprehensive, compassionate and FUN new book from my friend, Pamela Slim, Escape from Cubicle Nation.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Pam's career trajectory, she started out in the corporate world (last gig: ginormous investment firm Barclay's), escaped to become a high-powered corporate consultant, and then escaped again to the work she was clearly meant to do: show other people how to get the hell out and create the kind of meaningful, life-and-soul-sustaining work they were meant to do.

That's right: Pam's work is to change the world, one entrepreneur at a time.

The book represents a gigantic leap forward in her ability to do so. Pam already has an extremely popular blog, a newsletter, many friends and admirers on the Twitter, a coaching business and a sometime speaking career (her young'uns cut into her ability to do that for awhile, but it sounds like they're growing up enough to let her out on a book tour, so keep your fingers crossed and your eyes peeled, because Pam is one in-person presence you do not want to miss). But a book allows her to get all of her teachings in one place, and allows you to carry it around, mark it up and revisit sections as you need to.

Why is this book different from any other book?

Today, there are dozens of books on the shelves about finding your passion and becoming an entrepreneur. But there are none that I've found that fuse the two, combining the practical knowledge anyone transitioning from corporate life needs to know with the kind of gentle encouragement certain souls need to make the leap. Pam understands the mindset of those longing to leave, and the psychological ties that bind us to where we are. With humor, stories, mini-questionnaires and to-do lists, Pam leads you through the mental and physical steps necessary to make the transition, from grappling with the issue of identity (in the U.S., we're hopelessly self-identified with our jobs) to getting your ducks in a row so you don't make the leap into a fiery pit that

consumes you. The incredibly wide-ranging advice includes:

  • clearing the time and space to start your business
  • cultivating the right mindset (hello, beginner mind!)
  • creating a simple (yes, really!) business plan that will move you forward, not bog you down
  • locating and reaching out to the support network you'll need
  • an ACTUAL PLAN for figuring out how much money you'll need to generate from various arms of your business (and lemme tell you, when you're a service-based entrepreneur, we're talking Shiva-arms)

There are also useful, concise how-tos on finding an idea to market, uncovering your brand difference, marketing yourself, testing ideas, establishing a team to handle what you can't and, my favorite, dealing with sh*theads. (Asterisk inserted in deference to wonderful Pam, who is the nicest non-swearer I know and one of the few I care to hang out with.)

See? Like I said: comprehensive.

Why you will lap it up, even if you've already made the leap

Any entrepreneur who is out there doing it knows that to succeed, she needs to add to her knowledge base and continually grow (or at least evolve) her business. Pam's book is chock-full of new ways of looking at things and new methods for implementing them. I particularly loved her ideas about having a High Council of Jedi Knights and her "Fantastic 4x4", a kind of master mind group on steroids (not to say that the Fantastic Four did illegal drugs, I'm sure they came by all of their superpowers naturally!)

And that's just a taste of the rich resources within. Escape from Cubicle Nation is one of those books you get and hang onto, to refer to again and again. It's a working-library book and a friendly voice of encouragement to turn to over and over again.

It's what you need when you're out there, trying to change the world. Thanks, Pam, for putting it out there.

xxx
c

Image © Chris Lee, found on Flickr.


escape_cover

The Road, Part 2: Noble truth number 2

buddhasezpeace_jayel_aheram

I have said it before and I will reiterate for clarity (and possible trolls): I am no buddhist. I am not even, like The Sweet BF, one of the half-assed variety. But the more I read of it (which is still precious little, okay, trolls?) and the more of life I see and experience, the more I think old Gautama might have been onto something.

Take one of the (four, four, count 'em, four!) foundational principles of Buddhism, Noble Truth the Second: "Suffering is Attachment," which, for those of you who are even less familiar than I with the Truths, follows hard on the heels of "Life is Suffering."

Then think back on the loss of a beloved grandparent, or a romantic relationship that ended, or a job you were asked to leave before you were ready.

Or, to travel even further into the land of mundane minutae, that feeling you get after a bad cold call, or an audition that went less than spectacularly, or leaving a date that went south or a party that failed to meet your expectations.

What's that word I snuck in there? Why, "expectations," of course. Because in all of those smaller circumstances, you likely had some kind of expectation that things would go differently: that the call would land you a huge piece of business; the audition, a job; the date, a partner; the party, a rockin' good time, and perhaps a brief vacation from other feeling you were currently, wait for it, attached to.

It's a little harder to see what is attach-y about loving a person or even a position eminently worthy of love. And by "attach-y," I mean "wrong," right?

Not exactly.

Attachment isn't wrong; it just is. I'm guessing if the fat man were around today and you marched up to him and said, "Listen, Bub: my gramma rocked the universe and there is nothing wrong with my missing her and I intend to go on missing her and that's that," he'd shrug and say the Buddhist word for whatever. It's not his job to tell you what you're doing right or wrong, but to get his own shit straight enough that he can show you compassion, which took even his Bub-ness a mighty long time of wandering and wondering and trying-and-failing, if the stories are to be believed. (Oh, and what I love about Buddhism? They don't care if you believe the stories, either! Rawk!)

The BF and I listened to a lot of my favorite Joe Frank episodes on our recent trip, which meant we listened to a lot of Jack Kornfield's charming and wonderful lectures, as well. Really, if you like this blog and are interested in dipping your toes in the Buddhist waters, you could do a lot worse than the recorded lectures of Jack Kornfield (here are some you can hear for free!) and the lively books of "zen punk monk" Brad Warner (and he'd be fine if you bought them through those Amazon links or got 'em from the library, and so would I!). They are wonderfully soothing and stimulating at the same time, these shows, and they helped me find a bit of peace in the middle of my discomfort: an incipient Crohn's flare which I thought had mutated to garden-variety constipation but finally reared its ugly head as an incipient Crohn's flare WITH constipation. Which, for those of you who have never had the pleasure, feels like what I imagine the ninth month of pregnancy feels like, stupendous belly, aliens kicking around inside, waves of occasional blinding pain and nausea (sooo much fun in a car in the middle of the Mojave Desert!) and no matter what, that goddamned baby will not come out.

I've been in flares before and learned from them, and not learned from them. I've learned what I can get away with and what I can't, and then I've gone ahead and done all the stupid things (bread! M&Ms! coffee!) that put me there in the first place.

Today, though, as I was skimming through the Facebook, I stumbled on a heart-rending video from a dear friend who was alternately beating herself up and feeling awful about herself because she did something many of us do all the time and most of us do at least some of the time: overcommit. This beautiful lady with her gigantic, beautiful heart, who gives and gives and gives was suffering, and in the course of her piece, she wisely pegged her sad, sad feelings as those of powerlessness and smallness.

I crack myself with how slow I am to learn things, and with how I learn things, period.

Because I can do this again and again, overcommit, and feel dreadful about the consequences, and not even come CLOSE to identifying the root of my suffering as feelings of powerlessness and sorrow because, let's be honest, I am not 1/10th the nice of this great-hearted person, and learn nothing. And yet I saw her suffering and something clicked for me: I am attached to feeling well.

I am attached to the idea that I will always have limitless youth and energy and power to draw upon for getting done the outrageous list of things I must do. Under that, I am attached to the idea that I am in control, and that I have the ability to call my own shots as I see fit. And of course, under all that, I am highly, highly attached to the idea that I have limitless time. Which is sort of a laugh because the last time I looked, I was turning 10 and in four months, I'll turn 48.

What would happen if I let go of the idea that I must always be happy? Or well? Or successful or rich or right on down the line to the smallest of the small: if I let go of the idea that a favorite wool sweater would always be there for me, so that when it accidentally took a spin through the washer and dryer, I did nothing more than chuckle as I pulled out my new, doll-sized pullover?

What would happen if I never got another parking space or that Magic E-Mail or taste of McDonald's fries? Well, if it were the latter of the three, I might be more firmly on the road to some kind of wellness, since there ain't no kind of fries on my diet. But really, I think I might have some peace, which might free up some room, which might mean a bit more compassion and a bit less angst.

I would never, ever in a million years suggest that it's silly or wrong to feel lousy because you've overcommitted. I hope I always feel lousy when I do, because it's no fun for anyone.

But I hope even more that I can learn to examine the lousy and pull apart the feelings and actions that got me to it, so that (a) I don't have to feel lousy and (b) I can be more useful to people who are feeling that way.

What I hope the most right now, though, is that my friend, who is grace herself, finds some of the peace she has inadvertently given me.

Which may be the beginnings of compassion. Which, though it clearly shows my attachment to the feeling, would be awfully nice, I think...

xxx
c

Image by Jayel Aheram via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

The Road, Part One: Strong opinions, fervently held

mouthingoff_demi-brooke

The BF and I returned today from a long trip through the desert (and back through the desert). In the home stretch, we were listening to This American Life podcasts, including one very funny one called "This I Used to Believe," which was a gentle slam on the NPR series of a similar name, This I Believe, and which was far, far better than the oft-mawkish (and sometimes just bizarre) original. (Although I will go on record immediately and loudly as being pro-TIB or anything else that gets people thinking and writing thoughtfully about their lives.)

At one point in the show, Ira Glass gets interviewed by Jay Allison, the guy who led the team at This I Believe, and asked what, if anything, he believed in. (This is what happens when radio producers meet other radio producers, I guess.) It was asked in the context of why Glass had never contributed, something which Glass himself claimed to have wondered from time to time while listening to the show, and what Glass came up with I thought was rather interesting: although as a young man he had believed in a great deal, often with a fervor bordering on obnoxiousness, as he grew older, he didn't think he believed in anything, which is something that deeply resonated with me.

I, too, was a righteously indignant, bordering-on-obnoxious believer (although not a Believer) in my youth, by which I mean, "until I turned 41." There was no opportunity I'd pass over to stand up and tell people what I believed in (and, implicitly, what I was POSITIVE they should); after my umpteenth attempt at proselytizing disguised as "sketch comedy", a hilarious (not) piece about a former prostitute who'd given up the game running into her old pimp, where "prostitute" was "copywriter" and "game" was "advertising", a good-natured friend dubbed me "Soapbox Girl." Which, of course, I took umbrage at. Much of my old journaling is painful to look at not for the endless spooning over boys who quite clearly were not, in the parlance of today, that into me, but for the mind-blowing bloviating I indulged in.

Province of youth, I suppose (although there are an awful lot of old bloviators whose humility hormones never seemed to kick in). You get older, and if you don't spend all your waking hours watching stuff on TiVo, reading  crappy novels or going to MLM meetings, you get wiser, too. Or you don't, and maybe you end up an apoplectic old man in a Kingman, AZ, diner raging against The Gays for not letting that nice Miss California have her say (it's her say, right? it's just her opinion, and this is still America, right?) as your wife tries to reason you down off the ledge.

Honestly, who can blame us? It's not like we're raised with lots of "strong opinions, loosely held" teaching in this country (the U.S. of A., for those of you who aren't reg'lar readers). Come to think of it, I'm not sure who is: some of us grow up hearing a lot of lip service to things like "tolerance" and "to each his own," but there are an awful lot of qualifiers. Some things can't be tolerated, as it turns out, because they're an affront at least and an abomination at worst. Gay people, for example, should no more be allowed to marry than black people should be allowed to co-mingle with whites, or women allowed to own property. If you look at it really closely, the one thing you can really believe about holding tight to opinions is that it causes distress somewhere down the line, to someone or another.

I hate to say I believe in nothing, and I'm not even sure it's true. I believe that nothing is permanent, that everything changes. I'm ramping up to a belief in love over hate always, although let the wrong old man say the wrong thing at a diner in Kingman and, as the song sez, see how love flies out the door.

I do know that if I can't see in my heart to see past my own rage and feel compassion for that man, and to understand him and where he's coming from, I'm not ever going to be able to communicate with him. And if I can't be around certain people, what the hell kind of communicatrix am I, much less person?

For now, I say I know enough to know I don't know much. And I'm working on the beliefs thing.

Oh, and Ira? It turns out he does believe in one thing: that the car is the very best place to listen to the radio.

This, I believe...

xxx
c

Image by demi-brooke via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Referral Friday: Birdhouse for Twitter

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S8yRaWY1xV8&w=479&h=291]

Referral Friday is part of an ongoing series inspired by John Jantsch's Make-a-Referral Week. For more about that, and loads more referrals for everything from cobblers to coaches to gee-tar teachers, start here. Pass it on, baby!

Those of you who follow me there know that I use Twitter in a way that has become decidedly non-mainstream: to inform and share in short, dense bursts, and in as entertaining a fashion as possible.

Some of the tweets fall directly from my brain to the little "What up?" box in perfectly-formed, 140-character packets. Many, however, do not. Wit just don't work that way.

Before Birdhouse, an ingenious little iPhone drafting app developed to help Twitterers who write, one of two things happened: (1), I posted something half-assed; or (2), I posted nothing as I mused over the best phrasing, invariably losing forever whatever germ of a gem I'd started with. Suckery! Confounded suckery!

To paraphrase one of the participants in this fan video, now that I have Birdhouse my teeth are whiter, my children, well-behaved and my tweets are "favorited" all the time. Well, not really; nobody's tweets get favorited all the time.

Birdhouse lets you save drafts of your tweets, star and review them, then publish (or presto!, unpublish them) as you like. It's not meant to replace other iPhone apps, but to complement them. (Although I wouldn't be surprised if those other iPhone apps start baking in something Birdhouse-like themselves once they do the Homer "D'oh!", so I hope for the developers' sakes they have some really neato features lined up for future releases.)

Full disclosure: I am a friend to and mad fan of Adam Lisagor (@lonelysandwich on the Twitter), who developed the app along with his able compatriot, Cameron Hunt (@camh) from my new-favorite city, Portland, Oregon. (Should we all just move there now? Seems like all the cool kids are doing have done it.) But hey, them what knows me knows I don't just SHILL. And even if I was, it's a crapload of functionality for just $3.99.

If you're just using Twitter to talk about what you had for lunch (and please, stop doing that!) or mostly to share links, promote yourself (stop that, too!) and shoot the shit on the backchannel, as they say, keep on using your regular iPhone client.

But if you want to use Twitter to entertain the world and make yourself a better in the bargain, Birdhouse is the tool of the month.

In the good way.

xxx
c

Birdhouse writing app for Twitter on the iPhone, just US$3.99


How are you changing the world?

bee_joosteto

At one time or other
everyone wonders
whether she'll change the world
in some way
great
or small

But the truth is
you can't not
change the world
because everything you do
makes it different,
great
and small

You can change the world
by the way you answer a question
or the phone

You can change the world
by giving change
or time
or right-of-way
even if they're wrong
(especially if they're wrong)

By the way you listen
and the way you speak,

By the way you greet the dentist
or the tax man
or the President,
the one you voted for
and the one you didn't

You can change the world
by the way you eat
and spend
and save
or don't

By the way you pray
and the way you talk to the people who don't
or by the way you talk to the people who do pray
if you don't

You can change the world
by writing a book
or by reading one
or by passing one along

You can change the world
by the way you love
or the way you hate

You can even change the world
when you accept
that we are all wired
to do both
and still choose one
in the face of another

You can change the world
with everything you think
and feel
and do

And you do,
with everything,
small
and great.

xxx
c

Image by joosteto via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Looking at an old thing a new way

kidsperspective_respres

While rumor has it there is a brain nestled somewhere behind them, one of the main things I provide those who hire me as a consultant is a new pair of eyeballs.

Same with editors. Same with interior designers. Same with coaches, shrinks, proofreaders (hoo boy, proofreaders!), trusted friends, non-trusted people who sit next to us on airplanes, stylists, headshot photographers, yoga teachers, bodyworkers, and feng shui consultants.

In fact, one of the exercises my favorite feng shui book in the world walks you through is Looking At Your Old Place with a New Pair of Eyeballs. (Not literally called that, but hey, I like literary symmetry and callbacks.) You're supposed to pretend you're a guest visiting your own home for the first time, or that you're you giving the nickel tour to a guest who's visiting your home for the first time, to see what you see. Because we humans are marvelous at adapting, which is useful when you find yourself in drastically reduced circumstances like a bison drought or post-war Vienna or seven stranded castaways here on Gilligan's Isle but is not so good when it comes to seeing your 47 years of accumulated crap, much less seeing what of it you can begin to release.

One reason I now realize I've been stuck so long in a particular place is that I was looking at it like Colleen of the Past, not Colleen of the Future or even Colleen of the Present.

Colleen of the Past likes things the way they are now, which is to say, the way things were then: this apartment, this circle of relationships, this job, this routine. Any changes are implemented slowly and are, for the most part, additive. Think closets that maybe get fuller instead of a wardrobe that occasionally gets thinned into usefulness. A thing is added and another thing, and everywhere-a-thing-thing, until yeah, you have a lot of clothes but you can't get at all of them and most of them look like whatever decade you turned 30 in. (I'm pretty sure that was a Marcia Wilke line: most people get new hairdos until they're 30, after which you can carbon-date them by it.) (I'm paraphrasing, of course.) (Oh, and to read up on Marcia, go to this page of marvelous writers and scroll in a downwardly direction.)

For me, some huge, usually uncomfortable thing has to come to bear before I will give a clear-eyed look to how useful a long-ago behavior or situation or what-have-you is suiting me today. Like a couple of leery-eyed misogynists from the Inland Empire checking out the rack or a shredded colon. And then I usually have to enlist outside help, a trusted friend, my shrink, a coach, to get a good, outside look at it. I've learned some tools that have helped me see some stuff in a new way. I harp on about Morning Pages (from Julia Cameron's The Artist's Way), but hey, they work. As do good shrinks and honest, longtime friends.

In a pinch, run your shit past that stranger on a plane. Provided you're non-threatening (no one's going to poke a bear 30,000 feet up), you might get some pretty eye-opening perspectives.

But look. Look look look. With fresh eyes and an open mind.

And, you know, a notepad or somesuch...

xxx
c

Image by respres via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

If I can do it, anyone can

grandmawriting_cote

It's a strange thing, being in front of an audience instead of in it.

I'm not sure if my cohorts on last week's panel (or stages everywhere) agree, but I'll wager that no matter how much you know, it's rare that you feel you know enough to stand where Mrs. Kent or Professor Schwartz did, teaching the people facing you about what you know.

Parents must feel this way all the time, especially when their kids get old enough to start asking questions. I know enough to give reasonable explanations for various basic physical phenomena, but after that, I tend to fall back on reciting stuff from the latest issue of Modern Jackass. I blame the great gaps in my education, which were mainly self-created: there are a lot of classes I never paid attention in, and a lot of things I never bothered learning because either I wasn't interested or I figured I could ask someone else, later. Maybe in the back of my mind I was pretty sure I wouldn't be making any biological question machines; more likely, I just preferred not to think of anything at all.

My coach, Ilise, who helps me more than you all can know, and who, like my shrink is and my beloved paternal grandmother was, one of the more patient folks I've met in my life, says you only have to know more than the people you're helping. At first, I felt this was borderline, if not flagrant, fraudulence; the more I slog along, though, the more I realize that in my own fields of interest, communication, mostly, and propagation of ideas, I'll never know enough to know more than most of the people I'm with, unless I decide to limit my "speechifyin'," as The BF calls it, to classes of 7- and 8-year-olds. And even then, they're bound to be one up on me when it comes to some of the Crazy Things Kids Are Saying.

I bring up this appalling and shameful lack in me because, for whatever reason, I've had a few worrisome (but nice!) compliments lobbed in over the transom recently. People saying very nice things to me somehow vaguely at the expense of themselves, mostly along the lines of how much they like the way I say this or that (and thank you! I thank you, from the bottom of my heart!), but with a sort of wistful ache, as though I had used up the awesome or gotten an inside track on something or there was just no way they could do it, too, have things come out on paper (or screen) the way they floated around in their heads and hearts and dreams.

I say this next bit gently, but say it I must: Stuff! And nonsense!

Whatever your dream of perfect expression, I'm here to tell you that: (a), it does not exist; and (b), if you knuckle down and DO, what eventually comes out will make your dream beside the point.

Don't believe (a)? I grapple with Right Expression all the time. EVERY time. No, really: every single time I greet the blank page or sit down with an actual, live human bean, I think, "Nope! This isn't going to come out at all right." And somewhere in the middle (several times in the middle, usually), I think, "Nope! This is not at all it, not at all! I will not be able to connect in a meaningful way and express these ideas at all, nope, not at all!" Positively White Rabbit-like, I am. (For the record, sometimes I do, sometimes I don't, and sometimes I actually know when I'm going to. That last happens so rarely, I could count it off on toes and fingers, and I've never worked with a lot of heavy machinery.)

As for (b), there's a reason I leave the archives to this site up in their entirety: I SUCKED. And everyone should know it, myself included. The only way to get from there to here is one goddamned step at a time, and brother, I've taken them all, even if not as publicly as Internet publishing has allowed. (What you can't see, the years and years of me toiling away like an asshole, trying to sound like Hemingway or Dorothy Parker or whomever I had a big writer-crush on at the moment, I've spared you thus far. But I'm gonna find it, and I'm gonna put it up, too.)

I will add one buzzkill caveat: just because you want to be the Greatest Writer in the World doesn't mean you can or will. You might not be wired for it. Or you might get however many days/months/years down the path and lose your taste for it, something that happened to me with acting. Which, for the record, I did all right at, but never with the ease of my early forays into writing. Like I said, wiring, plus all that other outliers stuff, circumstances, opportunity, logging hours. Although, to paraphrase my Secret BF, Malcolm, again, just because your early contexts weren't the most fertile for growing literary genius doesn't mean you can't become one.

What I do know is that everyone, E-V-E-R-Y-O-N-E, has a story, and a passion, and can be moving and affecting if she opens her arms and drops her drawers for it. On my trip, I read a wildly gripping story by a writer whose amateur status mattered not one whit. Arms opened, panties dropped. (More soon on that.)

It won't come to you, though: you need to meet it more than halfway. You need to hunker down and give it time and love and effort. If your Truth needs to come out with writing, you must write every day; if your Way In is something else, replace "writing" and "write" with the words that suit you. Just don't fart around. I farted around for years, which probably didn't hurt, but nothing really started happening until I started writing every day, with purpose and intent and a certain amount of gravity.

And finally, where the hell is it, exactly, that I've "gotten"? Who the hell am I? Famous? Wealthy? Weighted down with awards and accolades? No. I'm just someone who's finally fairly happy with myself, a medium-sized part of which is probably my way with words. Which just shows to go you I have a long way to go dealing with this attachment stuff.

If you're a writer, write. (And read.) If you're poet, po. (And also, read.) Alone in your garret, or out loud on the WordPress.

Blather. Rinse. Repeat...

xxx
c

Image by cote via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Why we go back and look

lookingbackgirl_p0psicle

I've always been a wee bit suspicious of people who got excited about reunions.

Oh, I've gone: once, to my 10th year high school reunion. And it was fine, in its way. Most of us had matured, but not so much that it wasn't still a little bit fun to see who'd done what (or hadn't). Then it was over, and I thought no more about reunions.

I especially did not give much thought to college reunions. It makes sense in one way: I knew so many people from graduating classes before and after mine, and there were plenty of people I didn't know from my own, so it seemed silly to show up somewhere there might or might not be a quorum of people I'd actually known during my four years at school.

In another way, though, it makes no sense at all. I'd always thought of college as, if not the best years of my life (I've always thought those were both "right now" and "yet to come"), then some really, really good ones. From the moment I showed up on campus, I felt like I was home, not home in the homey sense (I did get very homesick at times), but home as in coming into my own. I felt like I could be myself there, although I wasn't sure who the hell that was, exactly; having such freedom all of a sudden was like having an extra lung added, or just significant extra capacity for breathing, like I'd had new and more flexible diaphragm installed while I was sleeping.

Having the freedom was also terrifying. College marked my first experience of feeling well and truly unmoored, and that was not all sunshine and roses. I'd always had a streak of blue in me, but at school, it seemed to widen and deepen until it was a steep and jagged crevasse with god-knows-what at the bottom and no immediately obvious solutions for getting myself out. The randomness of my life pre-Cornell was dictated by other people: I had little control, but at least I could point to the people who did; now I seemed to be pulled this way and that with no warning and by utterly invisible forces. Small wonder that I was able to resist the siren call of Ithaca all these years.

When I was invited back to speak on a panel about social networking for the school's annual entrepreneurship event, though, it was harder to say "no." In fact, not only did I not say "no" or even "maybe", I said "YES!" immediately. This surprised and pleased me in equal parts. Great, thought I: I'm over it! I'm fine with the past. I have no demons. This will be, in the parlance of the modern day, awesome. And it will be spring (maybe): one of the two finest times in which to visit. (For the record the other is "anytime but February.")

As the day grew nearer, I started to get nervous. The nerves centered around silly things, like whether it would be too cold (it's been known to snow in April here) or what I'd do if my Crohn's suddenly flared up or whether I'd be able to fit into any of my nice clothes. By the time the day rolled around, I was talking excitement but feeling nausea, and I was finally starting to admit the seat of it.

Things would have changed, and substantially. I'd read about the changes, and seen pictures of some: new buildings, old buildings razed to build new buildings, wild expansion of the campus. I'd changed, too, and seeing a bunch of fresh-faced children going about the daily business of edumacating themselves was going to be irrefutable evidence of exactly how much closer I am to death. At one point on the 9+ hour trip here, there's more than one reason it's been 25 years, I did some quick math in my head and realized it had been more years since I'd been back than I'd had years when I was here. Handily.

Like most things, dread gave way to a mixture of excitement, curiosity and anticipation in the dwindling minutes before my arrival. And when I got off the plane and saw my friend, Joshua, there outside the security gates (yes, even at little Tompkins County airport), looking much as he had some 25 years ago, most of the last of the dread fell away. I peered out of the car window at darkened, changed Ithaca on the way back to his house, then at the university across the water, on the other hill, until just before I fell asleep. The next day, I had the cab take me to campus a bit early for the banquet dinner so I could walk around and drink it in a bit before I ducked into the brand new (to me) Statler to mix and mingle like the grownup I now am. (Or at least, the one most people take me to be: me, I still feel like I'm 12 years old most of the time.)

I sat on a low wall atop the slope that overlooks the town and Cayuga Lake, gazing out over the old stone buildings that were there long before me and the new brick ones that had replaced my old dorm. Everything was different; everything was the same. And I finally realized that the sadness I'd felt then was really longing, and that what I was longing for then, I'd actually managed to become: not famous or accomplished or wealthy or powerful, but myself, completely. I was unhappy, and now I wasn't.

And then I cried a little.

And then I went to dinner...

xxx
c

Image by p0psicle via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Referral Friday: BrownBag Books

brownbagbooks journals

Referral Friday is part of an ongoing series inspired by John Jantsch's Make-a-Referral Week. For more about that, and loads more referrals for everything from cobblers to coaches to gee-tar teachers, start here. Pass it on, baby!

I've said it before about the web, and now I'm going to say it again about stuff in general: the more there is, the more we need smart people to curate it for us.

Brown Bag Books is one such curator, and they are, saints be praised!, a curator of books. Possibly the finest curators of books I've come across in 10 or more years, if the bagsful of books The BF and I walked away with from their tiny stall at the Silver Lake Crafts Market is any sign.

img_0314_cropOh, yes, did I mention they travel? That's their thing, really. They're a traveling roadshow of books. Awesome, awesome books. Because they have a good eye, and because, as they say on their site, they take no crap. (No offense, consumers of crap! And hey, I'm a consumer of crap myself at times; I just don't like it mixed in with my good stuff.)

Their schedule is up on their website. It's, er, a bit out of date. I'm sure it's not that they don't want to sell you books. In fact, I'm sure it's because they're avid consumers of books themselves, and they get around to the rest of it as time permits. Check back often. You will fall in love with this little traveling bookshow. You will fall in love with the books themselves. Quite possibly, you will be like me and fall in love with the lovingly crafted journals made from recycled hardback bookcovers, with cool, Easter-egg-surprise touches inside.

Brown Bag Books
P.O. Box 3502
Running Springs, CA 92382
phone: 909-890-7453
brownbagbooksinfo AAAAT yahoo DOOOOT com
and at a location near you, if you're lucky

Everyone's got her basket

361168668_2b0dbd68f9_b Everyone has her basket.

And in that basket are all the things a body gets in a lifetime:

The long legs the natural grace

The way with words or people or numbers or animals

The force field that makes money or love or ideas or children come to them first

The gene soup that makes eyes blue stomachs sturdy loins fruitful brains prodigious

Even the luck, the ponies the Kojak parking the pair of pants on sale or the person of their dreams available at the exact moment where need and want meet, even that is in the basket.

There will be days when you look down at your basket and marvel at the wonderful wonderful things inside

And there will be days when you cannot bring yourself to look at all or rather where the only place you can look is at the basket next to you and with longing.

But every day someone is looking at your basket with longing

Every day someone would trade baskets with yours sight unseen

I have been in all of those places and mostly I am grateful for the grace that forgave my foolishness

This is my basket to carry and uncover layer by layer day by day year by year

And sometimes story by story.

May your basket overflow with beautiful things of incomparable joy and wonder

And when it does not may you be visited by the same grace that sat down beside me to show me the beauty and the joy and the wonder I could not see

xxx c

Image by The Wandering Angel via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Taxing

somawisdom_christina_snyder

I've made less last year than in any year of my life since I started working.

I made so much less that it's laughable. No, literally, my tax preparer, who has been tending to my taxes for some 10 years now, actually laughed last night as he showed me the columns with their neatly declining numbers from left to right. And the most hilarious part?

I laughed with him.

So did the guy who shares his office. We laughed and laughed until I didn't think we could laugh any more. And then I would make another crack about my long, slow slide into the poorhouse, or my astonishing way with a buck, or how glorious were these economic times in which we lived, and we would laugh some more.

Yeah, it was late and they'd been pulling 12 and 14 and 16-hour days for weeks now. Yeah, it was late and I've been working 7-day weeks of 10 and 12 and sometimes 14-hour days now. I know myself and these guys pretty well now, though, and at this point, I'd say we would have had ourselves almost as good a laugh at 10am, fully rested and freshly caffeinated. Stuff is just funny now that wasn't before. I mean, sure, it's scary, too, in a way, but in another way there's a crazy kind of freedom that comes from things moving this fast and changing this unpredictably. Like a veil has been torn to reveal the absolute chaotic hugeness of the universe...or maybe the curtain pulled back to reveal there's no Wizard of Oz at all, just a guy working a smoke machine with every last bit of energy, and frankly a bit relieved that the jig is up. It's tiring, keeping up appearances.

Taxing, even.

Rest assured that I am well taken care of. Yes, my adjusted gross income is laughably low, but I've planned for it rather than having it suddenly and horrifically visited upon me as so many people have recently. (If you are on the pre-jump side of change, consider this yet another vote for getting your nut low and and your cushion big while the getting is get-able.) All around me I see blessings and opportunities and punch lines.

On this day where so many of us raise our fists and curse the heavens (or the previous administration, or the previous-previous one, or whatever scapegoat of your choosing), may you find a little something to laugh about.

And if you can't? Feel free to laugh at me...

xxx
c

Image by Christina Snyder via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

Readying to go

packingforny_hive

It's been a day and a half of mad, unbridled productivity here at My Country House, a.k.a. The BF's.

You could chalk it up to Spring, only it's always Spring here in Los Angeles, except when it's Summer. (Nothing much of anything gets done here in Summer, or at least the dog days of it, and in that way only are the citizens of Los Angeles much like the citizens of any other hot place in the world.) It's been lighter longer for a few weeks now (and none too soon, for the depressives among us). The work flow has been the same mix of medium-pressing and many-spigotted.

No, I think the reason I've been at my busy best is because I'm heading out of town tomorrow for a goodly stretch, and that's as good a way to see it as any: me, stretching. For as much of a homebody as I am most of the time, there's a part of me that not only loves but needs to get out of Dodge. Pulled away from my routine, I see things differently; surrounded by stuff that I'm not used to seeing, I think of old stuff in new ways.

Plus, there's the grand and glorious freedom of pretending that all you have to worry about is the one, small bag, okay, the two small bags...okay, the two small but incredibly dense and heavy bags are all that's weighing you down in the world. I know from my own experience not to try fleeing trouble: it tracks you down and gives you an extra noogie just for thinking you could outrun it. But it's fun to be free of stuff and bother, even if it's only a pretend free. And who knows? Maybe after enough of these trips, I'll get closer to the vagabond spirit of my friend, Evelyn, who in the four years that I've known her has made an art of wandering and wrought brilliance from the thing most call rootlessness.

For now, I'll use them as an excuse to do what I always do with a bit more diligence. It gets a lot of stuff done.

And it's probably getting me ready for the next thing...

xxx
c

Image by hive via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.