Archives for category: anger

I woke from restless dreams about change and started my day the usual way, more or less. The evening, yesterday, ended on an unfortunate contentious note that seemed neither necessary, nor helpful. I finally gave up on conversation and went to bed, feeling irritated and frustrated.

I managed to sleep, but my sleep was both unsatisfying and filled with strange dreams of things not turning out properly regardless of effort or attempts to fix things. I woke feeling glad to be released from my dream life.

View from the trailhead before dawn.

I got to the trailhead still fighting the fairly stupid very human urge to “prove my point”, left over from last night. That kind of horse-flogging, tail-chasing foolishness is an incredible waste of precious limited mortal lifetime. I snarl quietly at myself to let that shit go. I breathe, exhale, and relax. I roll my eyes in an unseen expression of exasperation, and sigh. Letting a moment of discord take over my thoughts and “live in my head” that way does nothing to add to my life, and it’s pretty fucking pointless, generally. Seeking to convince someone else of something that directly contradicts their experience or beliefs is unproductive.

Either, or. Neither, nor. Grammatical details matter most if the result affects meaning or understanding. The rest, I think, is a matter of style… but… language functions by agreement, does it not?

… I still catch myself doing a search of my written work for a turn of phrase and a keyword I’d been accused of not using (or not using correctly), and easily find dozens of examples, old and new. It’s neither rare nor used incorrectly, where I find it. On the other hand, to the point my Traveling Partner was making, it’s also not at all consistent and I often don’t bother with it. I write very much the way I talk, so it’s a given that in spoken conversation and day-to-day use, I’m certainly also quite hit or miss, and probably misusing grammar on this detail a lot. I sigh. Is he right? Is he wrong? Am I? Are we both? Are we neither of us specifically exclusively correct? The particular point of grammar involved really matters to him. Less so to me (aside from how much it matters to him).

“Emotion and Reason” 18″ x 24″ acrylic w/ceramic and glow details, 2012

I sigh to myself and let my vexation melt away. What matters most to me is how much I love this particular human being. Enough to work to change. Even to flex my style. There is work involved, especially because I just don’t actually personally care much about this particular point of grammar, myself (using”neither/nor” to support the negative most correctly vs lazily defaulting to “either/or” all the time). Being very grammatically correct on this point has often gotten me teased for sounding pretentious or stuck up, and I suspect that drove me to discontinue it in favor of a more relatable approachable conversational style. I think it over as I lace up my boots before I put the whole vexing thing aside to walk the trail.

The things we do for love

There’s a hint of daybreak in the paler gray of the pre-dawn sky. The moon has set, but I won’t need my headlamp for long. The chilly dampness of the marsh wraps me in mist and silence. It’s a good time to begin again.

12 years ago I started this blog. It was a difficult time in my life, in spite of having a lot of the ingredients available for contentment, emotional security, and joy. I was deeply unhappy, and mentally unwell. I was teetering on the edge of making very final, very poor decision about my life that I wouldn’t have been able to revoke. Things felt incredibly bleak and I was “trapped in the mire“. When I considered starting this blog, I didn’t have a clear idea of what I was seeking from it and I could not see my path ahead. I was wandering in darkness, metaphorically.

Sometimes our path is illuminated. Sometimes we walk our mile in darkness.

I sought encouragement from one of my partners at the time, asking her thoughts regarding beginning a blog. I had kept a pen & ink journal for many decades, I just wasn’t certain I had something to say that was worth “sharing with the world”. She had a blog, and I hoped that she would have words of encouragement and maybe some insights. No, she did not have that. Instead, I received a valuable lesson regarding the likelihood that any given person has any interests but their own in mind, and a reminder that regardless of the relationship, however close I may think someone is, there’s a real chance that they do not have my needs and interests in mind at all. She smirked at me with a certain smugness, and told me rather dismissively that it probably wasn’t worth it for me to write a blog, and that chances were that no one would ever read it anyway, and I probably wouldn’t be able to “keep it up” more than a couple days. I was… hurt. I felt “invisible” and misunderstood. I felt exactly what she intended; dismissed and diminished. Then the anger – did she even know me? (She did not.) It was a lesson worth learning, and although I am fortunate to be so well-loved by my Traveling Partner in my current relationship, I have also learned to take care of myself, and to be the one meeting my emotional needs, first and reliably, as much as I know how to do.

Wherever it leads, the path we choose in life isn’t going to walk itself.

That first blog post was barely a beginning – but it was a beginning. Since then, I’ve had so many beginnings, and so many words of encouragement from so many people dear to me. I’ve shared my voice: my thoughts, my fears, my ideas, my astonishment, my affection, and my anger – and so many emotions and experiences on this path. I’ve practiced practices, and shared those here. I’ve failed and started over, and shared that too. Once a year, I am reminded of her dismissive words so long ago, and I smile and sip my coffee; she definitely didn’t know me. lol (As it turned out, I didn’t know her either, but I soon learned all I needed to know.)

Where does this path lead?

Since I wrote that first post, I’ve written 3111 3112 blog posts, with an average of 163k words each year (about 750 words each time I post, sometimes more, sometimes less), posting an average of 258 days per year. Consistency has worked for me. I’ve found my way into the inboxes of a couple hundred long-time subscribers (thank you), and turned up in more than 5 thousand searches and every search engine I’d ever heard of, and a few that were new to me. More than 34k people in 123 different countries have found their way here (I’m not surprised that most of my readers are in the United States, Canada, and the UK). I’m not “famous” (and not seeking fame), and I wouldn’t consider this blog wildly popular, but I’m definitely glad I started writing here – and grateful that you’re reading. I hope my musings have been helpful in some way, and if not helpful, I hope you’ve at least been entertained for some little while. Thank you for reading.

I’ve still got to walk my own path.

I’ll also say this; you have value. You have something to say in the world, something to contribute. Don’t let someone else’s opinion hold you back. If you’re inspired to write, or sing, or dance, or sculpt, or film, or share who you are with the world in some way, begin! If it doesn’t work out easily – begin again! We become what we practice. What you have to say matters – maybe a lot. We all want to be heard. It’s easy to become discouraged when someone whose opinion matters to us doesn’t support our enthusiasm when we expect it – don’t let that hold you back. We’re each having our own experience, and they have reasons of their own for not giving you the support you want and need, and those may have nothing to do with you at all. Let that shit go. Walk your own path. Find the traveling companions on life’s journey who are actually “going your way” for a while, and walk with them. Sometimes the journey is difficult, but that doesn’t make it less worthy.

Each step along this path has been worthy in it’s own distinct way, although I don’t always see it at the time I take the step.

It’s been 12 years since I began this blog. It’s been worthwhile to write each day that I did so. It’s been helpful more than once to look back on my own thoughts and words, myself, and seek my own council from the woman in the mirror. It’s buoyed my spirits when I felt low to read your comments, and know that I am “being heard”, and to feel that something I’ve said may have helped light the path for some other traveler.

The path isn’t always easy, but it’s mine, and I’ll continue to walk it. It’s time to begin again. Again.

It’s time to see what’s around the next bend…

I’m not even joking, this morning. Have you seen the news? A man in New Orleans drives a truck through a crowd, killing and wounding many…a man in Virginia with a “no lives matter” patch and a stockpile of more than 150 homemade improvised explosive devises at the time of his arrest…a man in Montenegro fatally shoots 12 people… It’s pretty horrible the quantity of killing going on. Let’s not even get started on the multiple genocides being committed around the world. It’s bad. Horrifying. Contributing to the horror is that it also amounts to an enormous distraction from other pretty terrible things going on in the world around us, that slowly degrade global quality of life (at a time when we have so much technology and resources available that we should be easily able to end disease and poverty, entirely).

…Humanity needs a “software update” to our operating systems…

While I intend that metaphorically, I am totally serious about it. It’s hard to “do your best” in the world, if you’re inclined to think that “your best” includes mass murder, fraud, dehumanizing cruelty, and petty bullshit justified by how right you think you are. I sip my coffee thinking about that. How to do better, I mean. I’ve been to war. I’ve seen combat. I’ve seen killing “up close”. I’ve seen violence and rage. I’ve seen the damage done by “othering” groups on the basis of some bullshit criteria. I’ve seen pain and fear and hopelessness – and the behavior it can produce. We can do better. Doing better unavoidably begins with each of us, individually, doing better ourselves – and then setting clear expectations with each other, and holding ourselves and our societies accountable to an ethical standard. I’m not saying it’s easy – I’m saying it probably begins with a change in thinking (and choices). I’m saying starting with a “software upgrade” could be helpful.

…When was the last time you read a book, an actual bound book that you held in your hands?

Consuming media through the internet doesn’t reach us the same way reading books does. There’s science on that. (I recognize the conflict in provide a link to an online source. It’s difficult to link directly to the printed word.) You could “do the thing“, of course, and read about reading (how delicously meta). I’m just pointing out that reading and doing are the two most direct means by which we human primates “upgrade our software”. We become what we practice – and it’s helpful to learn what practices we might do well to adopt, rather than wandering about just trying things out and breaking shit or hurting people.

Why am I even on about this? The current political climate, mostly, but also the nasty shit in the news recently. I just don’t get it – it’s the 21st century, how are people still so ignorant that mass killings seem like an effective solution to anything… or that an indvidual even has that right? So… yeah. Here I am. Reading books and doing my best to be a better human being today than I was yesterday – because I have learned more than I knew yesterday. It’s slow going, no doubt, but it’s better than not learning and growing at all, isn’t it? Steps on a path.

So far this year – and possibly over the past decade – the most important book I’ve read is On Tyranny, by Timoth Snyder. No kidding. It’s even pretty small. I don’t ask much of you, but this one is that big a deal; I’m asking that you consider reading it (please), and if not this book, then some other* that may advance your understanding of the world, and the part you play in the society we live in. Surely that matters?

If you knew that reading a book could change the world, wouldn’t you do it? Hell, if you even suspected it might be helpful, wouldn’t you make the attempt? Such a small thing… and another way to begin again. I know, changing the world isn’t easy – there are a lot of verbs involved, and our results vary. It can be discouraging. Still, we become what we practice, and incremental change over time is powerful. We’re all in this together… what are you doing to make the world a better place for all of us to thrive in? Something to think about, and I do. I sit here with my coffee on the first workday of a new year, dismayed by the bad news on display, and grateful to have a chance to begin again. Again.

*Please note; if the books you are reading make you want to kill people, or seem to justify the killing other people are doing, or somehow excuse other vile human behavior, you are likely reading the wrong fucking books. Choose your books with care; you’re putting that shit into your brain.

It’s another icy morning. The fog is dense on the highway, and denser still on the trail, where it dips low towards the marsh and the river. Frosty ground is slick beneath my boots and branches and grasses sparkle white as my light passes over them. I’m thinking about hot coffee, grateful for warm gloves.

I won’t sit long at my halfway point. It’s too cold to write comfortably, and the fog obscures the view. It’s a work day, too, and timing matters.

I’m in a bad mood this morning. My Traveling Partner started my day with his annoyance over some small thing, and I didn’t need that on top of my tinnitus screeching in my ear and this fucking headache, and my arthritis. I keep trying to push past it. Move on. Let it go. It wasn’t my annoyance, after all. Pain sucks, though, and I’m cross about dealing with it. I’m hoping for a relaxed routine work day after a lovely holiday weekend.

I yawn in the cold morning air and see my breath mingle with the fog. It’s time to walk on. It’s time to start the day. It’s time to let small shit stay small and not take other people’s bullshit personally. It’s time to begin again.

Trigger warning: domestic violence.

Yesterday was weird and difficult, although I never figured out why I was so fragile and irritable (yesterday). I definitely was, though, and it was definitely me. My Traveling Partner had helped set up the day so I could paint, or decorate the tree, but my irritability quickly made painting unlikely; I don’t like the work I produce from that headspace. Then, after another load of Thanksgiving dishes were done (almost finished with all that!), we started discussing the Giftmas plan, and the placement of the tree (conveniently already in the car), and realized the one we have has too big a “footprint” and doesn’t give my partner enough room to get around (a temporary condition, but a thing we’ve got to account for this year).

We measured. We talked. We shopped (online – no way was I eager to go out into the world the Friday after Thanksgiving). We finally found a tree that met our shared needs well. Later we figured out a better place for it, too. Somehow, as successful as all that was, it didn’t improve my irritability, which continued to lurk in the background. Sure enough, I eventually lost my temper, and it was predictably enough over feeling both micromanaged and also unsupported. Rough. I’m not even sure I was “wrong”, though I definitely did an absolutely crappy job of communicating my feelings and my needs, before, during, and after. Shit.

(It wasn’t about any of that.)

We got past it. I never did stop feeling irritable, but I succeeded (if it can be called a success) in keeping it to myself for the rest of the evening. It sucked, and somehow I still have yet more dishes to do.  My Traveling Partner suggested I ask the Anxious Adventurer for help with the dishes. Honestly, while I’d love the help (and appreciate it any time he does the dishes), what I want is for him to do the dishes because they need to be done, and he lives here, and he’s part of the family, and it matters for our shared quality of life, and he’s a responsible fucking adult. I don’t want to have to ask. I loathe the assumption that it’s somehow “my job”. I’m neither his mother, nor am I the g’damned maid. But that feels like a discussion for another time, and I squelch it, again, and let it go.

(It wasn’t about that either.)

I left the house early, this morning, and noticed the neighbors had taken their trash cans to the curb, so I put ours out too. (Sometimes it’s hard to figure out holiday trash pickup.)

I had the highway to myself on the way to the trailhead, which felt like a luxury, and my latent irritability began to dissolve. It got me thinking about what life would be like entirely alone. An interesting thought exercise… We are social creatures by nature. We form families, tribes, communities, and societies. We gather in groups and build cities. We distribute labor for sustained efficiency. A solitary human being alone in the world would be at much greater risk. How would one human being be able to know enough? To do enough? A primitive life would probably be the best one human being could do alone, and without the shared skills and effort of a group, the risk of some small misadventure becoming a fatality is pretty significant. Bitten by a snake or a dog in our modern social connected world? Go to a hospital or call 911, or rely on bystanders for aid. You’ll likely survive. Alone in a solitary world, you’re probably more likely to die. We rely on each other so much. Even our precious solitude and solitary experiences are supported in some way by the fact that other people exist. Think about it awhile. Solo hike through the wilderness? Okay – how about the car that got you to the trailhead? The gear and provisions you carry? Or what about being “magically alone” in some great beautiful library? Who wrote the books? Where does the light to read by come from? What will you eat and drink?

I drive on thinking about interdependence, interconnectedness, and my fondness for solitude in spite of how much I truly rely on others. Eventually my thoughts bring me again and again to the safety and risk reduction inherent in family… and how damaging the trauma of domestic violence really is. That damage lasts. Is that what all of this has been? My PTSD? It’s the fucking dishes triggering me?? G’damn it.

It’s been many decades since I lived in terror within my home environment – that’s the nightmare of domestic violence; home is not safe. (It wasn’t then, it is now.) My brain and chemistry were altered by those experiences, perhaps permanently. I still sometimes struggle to feel safe in the one context where my safety should feel most secure, at home with my family. I still have nightmares. I still deal with the chaos and damage. I still bear the emotional and physical scars of that violence, although it was more than 30 years ago. I still lose my shit over the fucking dishes in the sink out of a fear of harm I don’t even detect because it has become part of the noise in the background of my consciousness. Nearly a lifetime between me and that nightmare, and I still deal with the damage done, and still crave the seeming safety of solitude. Worse, I’m aware that my broken brain and lingering chaos and damage inflict new wounds on those dear to me now. That’s shitty – and seeking solitude doesn’t prevent it, or heal the damage done.

… Dishes in the sink still cause me intense stress and a fear reaction that hides in the background of my consciousness…

G’damn, fuck that violent psychopath and the damage he’s done. Sometimes it’s hard to forgive and move on. I earnestly hope he rots in his own vision of hell for an eternity that the human mind can’t fathom. I hope he gains real understanding of the damage he did and has to live with the awareness of it until his dying day, with regret that never eases, and guilt like an itch he can’t scratch.

… And I hope I learn to forgive myself for how hard it is to heal, and the damage I’ve done to everyone who has ever loved me since then. I know it’s a lot. Every now and then it takes me by surprise and I have to face it all over again. Healing takes time and it’s a long journey. It can feel too long, sometimes. I sigh quietly. I breathe, exhale, and relax. My Traveling Partner is right; it’s important to be vulnerable, to trust, to communicate. If I don’t say how some of these experiences affect me the way they do, I just look like a headcase and hurt the people around me needlessly. They aren’t mind readers. They weren’t there then.

… And I’m not there, then, now. I’m here, and I’m safe, and it’s okay to trust love and feel safe at home. It just needs more practice. I’ve got to begin again.

I walk down the trail thinking about how safe I am at home with my Traveling Partner. I think about his enduring love and patience. I think about how much he cares and how horrified he is, himself, over what I’ve been through – and how angry. I let myself take comfort in his anger at the man (men) who mistreated me and did so much damage. I let myself feel wrapped in the protection and safety of his love. I think about our cozy home together. The charm of the holidays. Who we are together when my chaos and damage don’t rise to the surface. I breathe, exhale, and relax. I keep walking. It’s a journey. The journey is the destination. Ancient pain and trauma are in the past. Love is now. I’m okay now.

We become what we practice.