Archives for posts with tag: being and becoming

Thanksgiving dinner was delightful and delicious. Everything came to the table hot and I’m pleased and satisfied with the outcome, generally. Oh, sure, the stuffing was a little dry (I tried a better quality cubed bread, but didn’t correctly account for the additional liquid I’d need, and failed to crush some of it to crumbs), and I didn’t also make rolls or biscuits (are you fucking kidding me? I made the meal without help, and only have 1 oven and four burners! lol). Still, the “bitching” about those details wasn’t a big deal and overall the meal was well-received.

… The sous vide turkey was fucking amazing!…

By the end of the evening, we were all relaxing, food put away, dishes cleared, kitchen tidied up, and the first load of dishes in the dishwasher, watching old UFC fights and having a merry good time. My feet were hurting like crazy from being on them all day. I’m pretty sure everyone was in pain from their own limits being reached over the course of the day. I was tired, too. Up early, at it all day…no nap. lol Like a little kid, I was at risk of being moody and emotional. I went to bed abruptly when it was suddenly super clear that any little thing might set me off.

… Because little things had begun to set me off, not because I’m emotionally aware and wise from experience. Just human…

Oh damn, what a lovely Thanksgiving, though. Leftovers, too. Yummy. Today? Well, I’ll be safely at home not shopping, putting up the Giftmas tree and decorating the house with festive things. No way am I going out into the retail chaos today! There was already traffic at 05:00 a.m.! Fuck that.  I’ve got better things to do.

Long weekend. If I get the tree done today, I am hoping to paint tomorrow. My Traveling Partner has brought something to my creative experience that no previous partnership has; structure. He’s been actively encouraging me to make a point of painting on Saturday. I’m not entirely sure why, exactly, but having that bit of structure has been…nice. I paint more, and it’s becoming an actual practice, which feels good and definitely nurtures something within me. Easy enough to also do laundry, rotating the loads between paintings and folding things and putting it away after the painting is all done, or while taking a break to think about the next piece.

As things are these days, I quite literally do not have any “days off”, at all, unless I leave for the coast or to go camping. There’s just too much to do, and I’m also employed full-time. I’m not even bitching (well, maybe a little); there’s just too much non-negotiable workload between work, household upkeep, caregiving, and errands that need to be run. It can’t not get done, and at least for now it all falls to me day-to-day (although the Anxious Adventurer handles the majority of the heavy work to do with things in the shop, or big projects like assembling furniture or the hot tub maintenance). I’m damned lucky any day I can sit down for a few minutes. Even taking time to shower sometimes feels like a luxury. Having my partner’s encouragement to paint, in spite of all that… well, I feel very loved.

I manage to keep getting a walk each morning, and making time to write. Self-care matters, and these practices fit neatly into a time of day in which I wouldn’t be inclined to do noisier things around the house. It’s something. It’s a lot, really. I’m grateful for these quiet moments alone with myself. They’re as important to me as time spent at my easel.

A new day.

I stop at a convenient picnic table along the trail and write for a few minutes. Chilly morning. Gray daybreak becomes a gray dawn. Looks like a gray autumn day ahead. I listen to a flock of Canada geese pass overhead.

I’m grateful for this good life, and each new day. Yesterday I made time to renew connections with old friends, and distant family. Our relationships matter more than most other things about being human. I’ve got some good friends. I smile thinking about the various conversations about food and recipes. What a delightful thing to share. I feel fortunate. I sit awhile reflecting on life, recipes – and gratitude.

The day stretches ahead of me. It’s already time to begin again.

The car was already packed when I woke up on Thursday morning. I had planned a new route, unnecessarily long, detouring through autumn forest and along less-traveled state highways to reach the coastal highway (Hwy 101) at a different point, to enjoy a drive I don’t recall ever taking. It more or less doubled the length of the drive, but I was specifically not in any hurry, and I knew my “early check-in” wasn’t going to be available that early, anyway. I took my walk close to home, on a familiar trail, well-maintained, well-traveled, level, familiar and easy. It was a good plan. I hit the road heading to the coast comfortably after daybreak, to enjoy the fall colors.

It was a lovely morning for a drive. Along the way I thought about my Granny, and the many drives we took together, and the detours and side trips she loved so much. I saw so many things and enjoyed so many adventures with my Granny. She raised me through my tumultuous high school years, and I realize now that she surely knew about my brain injury, though she didn’t discuss it with me explicitly. She gave me the love and the safe environment I needed, to learn and grow and – recover. Was she a perfect person? No, of course not. Taking my own Mother and my aunts at their word, she was maybe not even a very good mother to her own daughters, at all. She was raising 4 (and later more) kids, and often as a single mother, in an era when women were still very much viewed as needing to be attached to some man or another. She was strong – to the point of ferocity – and she could be unyielding. I never doubted that she loved me dearly though, and I value her love and guidance to this day.

I pass by the remnants of an old fort. It’s the sort of place she would have stopped. She’d drive an hour on a Sunday morning just to enjoy “the best cinnamon buns in the USA!” in a town rather farther away than most folks would drive for a cinnamon bun, and she’d make a 4 hour detour on a long drive just to see an old schoolhouse. lol She took me to see historic sights all over, everywhere she lived. She would dig in and do more research, and share what she learned, sometimes sneaking a cutting of a rose bush growing there, to plant at her house when we returned. I drove thinking about the drives we shared over the years that I lived with her. So many miles. So many sights. So much wisdom and perspective and shared conversation. Looking back, I know I must have been fucking insufferable. lol Teenagers often are. It’s a feature, not a bug, and trying out new perspectives is one of the ways we become who we will be. She was so patient with me. So willing to talk – and to listen. I pay attention to the sights along my drive, and it becomes a way to honor her memory.

A stop along the way. I feel like I’ve been here before…

I stop at a wayside with a view of the ocean. I take a couple pictures and just stand there enjoying the view, before reading all the signs. It’s not that I had any particular use for the information, I stopped for the view and to stretch my legs. I found some of the information interesting, like the map showing all the nearby other sights and way points, and places to camp. I smile to myself; I think my Granny would have liked the signage. I chuckled to myself as I got back on the road. No traffic – my timing was excellent and the weather was lovely.

I drove on thinking about the contrast in my relationship with my Granny, and my Mother (her daughter, and eldest child). My Mother always seemed, to me, to be intensely practical, but it was finding her college binder of her poetry, written in ink in that familiar handwriting, that inspired me to write long before my Granny’s writing of children’s stories (that never were published) would later inspire me to continue writing. My Mother’s poetry was poignant and romantic, moody and emotional – like the poetry of young women often is. Her poetry revealed a stranger to me. When she caught me reading it, the moment was awkward and filled with quiet tension. She took the notebook from my hand. I never found it again, though I searched the bookcases and the drawers of the secretary for it over and over again.

I don’t think I ever truly understood my Mother, and we were never very close (as I understand closeness, myself). She seemed “cold” to me in my adolescence. Reserved and private, and reluctant to share confidences when I was an adult. We never really “clicked” – or perhaps we were too much alike for her to feel entirely comfortable with me? I never knew. We were in touch on and off throughout my life and to the end of hers, though it was clear from conversations with my sister that my Mother didn’t speak of it. There were even years when she told strangers and new acquaintances that she had “two children” instead of three. I never asked why. She never mentioned it to me. My Mother was, in many ways, a closed book with a fascinating cover. I regret that we weren’t closer, but I learned from her that such things can’t be forced. I learned a lot from her. I learned from her to believe people when they tell you who they are. I learned from her that “family” is a word. Just a word. I learned from her that there’s real lasting value in learning to count on myself, and that no one can take my education from me – though it may not pay off in the way I may have expected it to.

…I learned from my Mother than choices have consequences.

There was a lot to my Mother, and I never knew her well. She remains quite a mystery to me, though she had quite a lot to do with becoming the woman I eventually did become, and the woman I am today. I drove on, thinking about these two women and the woman I am, myself. I think about their expectations, their encouragement – and my choices.

It was an interesting drive. Time well-spent. I’ve continued to think over the life lessons I learned from these women (and others), as I rest and relax and reflect – and grieve. I feel inspired, but… it’s slippery. The paintings I want most to paint feel “just out of reach”. I play in the colors, and let the memories come and go. I’ve needed this quiet time to reflect and consider and sift through the emotions. It’s been an emotional year, and I honestly wasn’t ready for all of it. I needed some time alone with the woman in the mirror.

Sun setting on a headache.

Yesterday, sometime in the early afternoon, I found myself stalled with a terrible headache, and had a panick attack on top of that. It was severe and made me feel sick with dread and overwhelmed with pain and emotion and I ended up “doing all the things” to manage it, with limited success. I finally just went to bed, hoping to wake feeling better (which I did). I spent a restless night of strange dreams, listening to the wind and the rain, waking now and then, and returning to sleep. I woke at daybreak, and watched the soggy sunrise, gray and wet and featureless. The day has been a good one, aside from the blustery stormy weather, which I don’t really mind. The views have been pretty spectacular. I’ve taken some good pictures.

A break between passing storms, a gray day.

Evening has come. I watched the light dwindle and fade away. More rain. More wind. Another night of it. This time no headache, and I’m enjoying that. I listen to the sound of a fire crackling on a hearth – it isn’t “real”, just a video, nonetheless I feel warmed by it, which amuses me. I sit with a cup of tea – finding a couple tea bags of my favorite tucked into my overnight bag, forgotten from my last trip, was a delightful moment. Enjoying it now is pleasantly satisfying and soul nurturing. I write awhile, thinking about these women who loved me and helped me along life’s path at a tender age, and how far I’ve come since then. It’s been a hell of a journey, and it’s not over yet. There’s so much still to see along the way.

Tomorrow I’ll begin again.

I’m sipping the last of my now-mostly-cold coffee, after my morning walk, and before I head to breakfast with a friend I don’t see often. I’m thinking about life and love and things of that sort. I’m thinking over conversations with my Traveling Partner, and our earnest mutual commitment to the life we share and the love we feel for each other.

… I’m thinking about how much actual work it is to create the life we want to enjoy with each other, and how much work it also takes to create a world worth living in…

What are you actually doing to “be the change”? What kind of experience of community and family do you want to enjoy? What are you doing to make that a reality? Yes, you. I sit with these questions myself. They seem worth answering.

When people decry “woke” culture, what are they actually objecting to? Because it’s become some kind of buzzword or verbal shortcut, I think examining the intention behind it sometimes gets overlooked. Isn’t racial equality a good thing? Isn’t gender equality a good thing? Don’t we want everyone to have access to good healthcare regardless of the neighborhood they live in, the color of their skin, their gender, or religion? Of what possible relevance is a person’s sexual preference or marital status when they are seeking healthcare, housing, or a seat in a restaurant? When people shout down “being woke”, are they making a frank admission that they are comfortable with a very non-equal society, of the sort that explicitly disadvantages and “others” some people? Who gets to decide who is “in” and who is “out”?  It’s on my mind. Maybe for obvious reasons (as we all watch the clown car of the new administration fill up, in the background of our lives).

I sigh and bring my thoughts back to matters closer to home. How do I do my own humble best to be a good partner? A good friend? A good community member? I definitely have room to grow. It’s never too late to get a little closer to being the person I most want to be. There’s a lot to consider and probably a few good opportunities to make changes in how I approach conflict resolution, boundary setting, and communication. I’m no saint. I’m often in tremendous pain, more than I’m inclined to complain about. Sometimes I’m just fucking exhausted, with much still left to do that simply has to get done. “Doing my best” is all I can do, and realistically sometimes it doesn’t get everything done – or done in a way that I could celebrate. I’m very human. Prone to temper and moments of irritability. My cPTSD is pretty well-managed, but it’s still lurking in the background. My brain injury is many years (decades) behind me, but I’ve got some brain damage that I still have to work around day-to-day. “My best” has limitations, and my results vary. How do I do more, better?

I sit with my thoughts. Self-reflection is a useful tool. Practicing self-care improves my chances to be the best version of myself. Practicing gratitude, non-attachment, and loving kindness help me create and maintain a resilient and positive mindset. I breathe, exhale, and relax. This human life is quite an interesting journey. So many verbs. So much work to do.

I watch daybreak become a new day. I’m fortunate to have this moment, and so many opportunities to grow toward being the person I most want to be. Feels like a good time to begin again.

What will you do with your moment? Where does your path lead?

It’s a quiet morning. I’m sitting with my thoughts before my walk, and before the sun rises. I’m drinking coffee and thinking about how far I’ve come and what a strange journey life is.

About 14 years ago, my Traveling Partner nagged at me for being “so negative”. I worked hard to change my approach, and was pretty successful (especially after I got help through therapy). I found out much later he was intending to be critical only of the way I used language, not my attitude towards life! For example, my most common response to being asked how I was doing would have been, then, “not bad”, instead of “fine”, or “good”, or however I was actually doing. This was the specific thing he didn’t care for, and purely a matter of style. What I worked to change was my actual, legit fundamental negativity toward my experience of life, the lens through which I perceived all my experiences. I succeeded in making profound changes to the way I view and experience life. I’m glad I did, but I was puzzled and more than a little annoyed that what my partner had been criticizing was a matter of communication style, nothing more.

Hilariously (in a funny/not funny sort of way), I now find deeply negative people – people whose outlook on life is chronically pessimistic, or always anticipating some shitty outcome – super irritating to have to be around for long periods of time. People who respond to circumstances with sarcasm and bitter disappointment before anything actually goes wrong vex me. I just don’t want to be around that all the fucking time. It’s exhausting. Doesn’t matter that I used to be one of those people, I’m generally not anymore, and I don’t really want to waste precious mortal hours being annoyed with life – nor with the people who are themselves annoyed with life. I have other shit to do.

I sigh to myself, stretching and working to ease my physical pain, before my walk on a chilly foggy autumn morning. It’ll be beautiful along the marsh trail. The quiet is lovely. Daybreak reveals the gray of the fog obscuring the view. The park gate groans and screeches as it opens, then clangs in place. I think to myself that I haven’t walked the river trail in a while, and change my plan. Change is. I smile to myself. We can’t know in advance what the outcome of a change may be. We can’t be assured that anyone else will appreciate a change we’ve made, however much it suits us. We can only do our best, walk our own path, and over time find out where that leads us. I’m content with being a more positive person day-to-day, inclined toward general optimism and joy, and leaning away from bitterness and disappointment. Life will surely dish out enough of that shit without me seeking it out or making a practice of it!

Untitled, 7″ x 9″ pastel on Pastelmat, 2024

I breathe, exhale, and relax. I contemplate the time I’ve spent painting since I switched to pastels. It’s fulfilling and healing time. Artistically, I’m in a good place as a human being. I’m enjoying the medium and the work I’ve been doing. I learn more every time I sit down to paint. I “feel heard” (at least by the woman in the mirror) every time I look at these new paintings. It’s a good feeling, satisfying and nurturing. Self-care comes in many forms. So does communication.

This mortal life is too short for negativity and bullshit. There’s so much to see and enjoy. I lace up my boots and grab my cane. I silently dare my pain to keep up with me. It’s time to begin again.

This path won’t walk itself!

Sharing that important opinion? Don’t bother. I mean, okay, your opinion matters to you. It feels good, maybe even important, to “be heard”, and social media gives that sensation a tremendous immediacy, as though you can actually share your relevant (seeming) opinion with the important (seeming) people you perceive as capable of making changes, or needing to be informed of your (“obviously”) critical thoughts and perspective. Only… mostly? No one is actually listening, and generally no one gives a damn about the random commonplace utterly ordinary (often ill-informed) opinions of the average Everyperson on social media. Maybe you go viral because what you said is sufficiently amusing or poignant or well-stated – but mostly you won’t, and mostly no one is listening, and generally no one gives a shit. Hilariously, we’ve mostly (as a society) given up on snail mail, though it sometimes carries real weight. Even that, though, often just amounts to more “screaming into the void”, and trust me, most of what you feel most inclined to say with such urgency isn’t even novel or noteworthy or of any great import. It’s been said by someone somewhere already. Most likely. Human primates tend to be fairly conformist thinkers with limited imagination (in my opinion).

Posts on social media often just sound like someone shouting at their television. It’s pretty pointless and not even very gratifying. lol This? Right here? It’s an example of that; it’s my opinion. I didn’t do any actual research. I don’t actually “know more” than someone else does. It’s just my own impression, based on my own experience. Is it worth sharing? I’m willing to be sufficiently honest with myself to admit that I don’t know that it really is worth sharing; it’s just my opinion, and I’m choosing to share it without any certainty that it matters at all. Hell, it probably doesn’t, and it’s likely that very few people will read this, and fewer still will care.

I write because I write, it’s really that simple (for me). I’d be writing anyway, and this I do know for a fact based on my lived experience over many years. It’s too easy to get caught up in the bullshit drama and artificially inflated sense of importance on social media – so I left social media. I still talk back to thumbnail titles and news headlines, because so often the content isn’t worth actually watching or reading; everything I need to know is in the bullshit click-bait title, right there up front trying to get my attention, and seeking my engagement. I “engage”, more often than not, by commenting aloud whatever my personal bullshit opinion is, and I move on to the next item. This amuses me without inflaming anyone else, and it’s every bit as likely to “move the needle” on some issue (which is to say, not at all). Less time wasted of these precious limited mortal hours.

I’m feeling a tad cynical, I guess. I need to paint, and walk trails with my solitary thoughts, and distance myself from the many disappointments of humanity – and oh good g’damn there are so so many. Humanity kind of sucks, and our best efforts to do better are not nearly enough. Please keep trying though; the effort does matter. I silently remind myself to do my best, and that the journey is the destination. It’s not about what anyone else wants or needs from me. It’s about what I want and need from myself; to be the person I most want to be, the “best version” of myself that I can become over time.

I sigh quietly, looking out into the morning fog. It’s a chilly autumn morning, and this morning I am waiting for the sun. It’s Saturday, and there is no hurry. The morning is mine.

I sit with my thoughts and my coffee. Later, I’ll begin again. It’s my path, and I’ll walk it my way.