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Monday, 30 June 2008

Well-Being

Does anyone have a better term for "well-being"?  It seems so...bland, somehow.  But that is where I am.  A state of well-being.  I wake up happy each morning, excited about a new day.  I go to sleep smiling.  Amid hot flashes from hell, an office piled high with boxes and boxes of forty years of family memorabilia and twelve years of student/teaching debris, and coming off a week spent with doctors and adjusting to surgery and meds, like James Brown always sang, I feeeeel good!

I'm happy to be alive, to be on the mend, on the move, to just be here and be me, this last day of June in 2008. 
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tags: summer breezes, bliss
Thursday, 26 June 2008

In Pursuit of Wellness

Today I see the fourth medical professional this week, this time for a painful minor surgery.  The bad news is that I've let a lot of minor health issues go too far, through procrastination and laziness.  The good news is that I can fix all of them.  However, because I'm committed to spending this entire summer with my husband, I'm out of town a lot, so I have to crowd stuff in together, and I start feeling a bit overwhelmed by the appointments, the research (so I can make sound decisions), and the expense.

The results are worth it.  From head to toe, I am slowly getting better.  Similarly, the house is slowly improving.  It occurred to me, after the fact, that my reading room is positioned in the center, or the heart, of my house.  I sit there with my first cup of coffee, gazing at my newly trimmed massive old oak.  I tend to spend an afternoon hour there, reading one of several books I've got going right now.  And my husband and I planned out our vacation work project there together over the course of several evenings.

So I am working towards a happier future while trying to actively live in the present, a tough act for this old worry-wart.  This very moment, I am well.  In a few hours, I'll be in pain and a drug-induced fog.  But then I'll be well again.  And if I accept the pain, even somehow manage to embrace it and listen to what it tells me, I will learn something that may prove useful in the future.

This morning, I am here.  I am alive, well, a little scared, but a lot joyful.
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tags: reflection
Wednesday, 25 June 2008

The Teacher Learns a Lesson

Yesterday, I got another email about what plastic bags do to the environment and felt renewed shame.  We have cloth bags, but we never remember to bring them with us to the store.  Then in the middle of making dinner, we lacked a crucial ingredient, so we ran to the store, ended up with much more than the one item, and as we checked out, the eternal question of plastic or paper reminded us.  I said, exasperated, I've got to find a way to remember the cloth bags.  And the bag boy handed me a car window magnet reminder.  And the cashier told us that they make micro paper bags that fold so small you can keep them in your wallet. 

This idealism and commitment from high-school kids snapped me into action.  The cloth bags are now hanging on our front door knob so that I will put them in my car the next time I go out the door.  Every time I put away groceries, I will put the bags "away" on the front door knob.  New habits that I hope become ingrained, thanks to some practical tips from teens.  The next time someone gripes to me about our youth or says you can't change the world, I'm going to tell this story.
moments InMyLife | comments (7)(popup) | comments (7)
tags: change
Monday, 23 June 2008

What's going on in my little corner of the world

Lately I find that, by the time I've caught up on my blog reading, there's no time left for a post.  Once I got over my lethargy, I got moving, and I've been really busy lately.  Weekends are taken up with family.  My nephew left this weekend for Camp Lejune, and our kids came over yesterday for the first of what I hope will become semi-regular family dinners, just the eleven of us.  Spending more time with my sisters and parents too.  I guess, in a way, we're all redefining, adjusting to life's changes.

Weekdays are spent cleaning, clearing, and sorting.  We've decided, against our better judgment, to hold a garage sale.  Madness, I tell you, but necessitated by the recession and a house that has become cluttered somehow. 

My hot flashes are already intense, coming in tidal waves that are difficult to fend off, even with air-conditioning, ceiling fans, and a little Southern Woman's hand-held paper fan in every room.  Since I'm having oral surgery this week, I've opted for watching the baby indoors while the others take care of the sale.  At least he won't mind my drool and perspiration because he does that too.

We're preparing for our "vacation" too, have selected the new shower for our old bathroom.  Now it's just a matter of picking up the sledge hammer and getting going.  What a nightmare that will be.

We've rearranged the house.  Couldn't buy new furniture this year, so we've moved it all.  What was the family room is now the dining room, larger and lighter, perfect for those family dinners.  The old dining room is now my sitting room, cozy and lined with books and photos of children.  Currently the guest room is a storage room.  There is so much more to do here, but we've started moving in the direction I've wanted to move for a long while.

Have to run...the tree service arrives soon.  Getting rid of dead wood and letting in the sunshine.  A good metaphor for where I am.

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tags:
Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Unlearning Expediency

Listen up, boys and girls, I've got a lesson for you today: good health is finite.  You actually can use it up, often without noticing, until the warning lights begin to flash so brightly that you awaken with a jolt at the railroad crossing of midlife, where the message is clear: repent and abuse thyself no more or thou will crawl into old age like a reverse evolution sketch.

The problem is expediency.  I learned it as a 40-year-old college freshman honors student with two kids still in high school.  I was determined not to slack off on any areas of my life.  I was supermom and super-student on steroids.  Something had to give.  I remember my honors director telling me I could sleep when I was dead.  Graduate school merely intensified the focus.   Now I feel near death.


The pain awakened me this morning like an orchestra tuning up: first the joints, one section at a time: the knees, the ankles, the wrists.  The skeletal section quickly followed, neck popping and the head throbbing like a string section.  One sip of hot coffee, and the tissue section of my mouth chimed in.  Now they're all warmed up, a symphony of discontent.  Clearly, my body is pissed at me.  I've mistreated it, and it refuses to play any soothing music.  Sour notes abound.

The same thing can be said about our house.  The problem with practicing meditation and awareness is that you can hear the groans of your house and the munching sounds of the insects gnawing on it.  You smell the decay of leaves and ancient wood.  You see the clutter, and it glares back at you.

There are no topical treatments for such abuse and neglect.  There is only slow, plodding, expensive repair that must be carefully budgeted.  That which is expedient is expensive, and the results cannot be undone entirely, but we can salvage what's left, both in our old "houses," and in our old home.

So expediency goes, but there is a joy that I'd nearly forgotten, a sweet awareness of each moment, a different kind of expectancy.  It's not dissimilar to pregnancy, a slow growth of new life, ancient and orchestrated by the steady beat of hearts in synchronicity.
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tags: lessons, reflection
Friday, 13 June 2008

Chewing on some thoughts with my toast

A random comment by Neutron Norman on LITM's blog really got me thinking this morning.  Plastic was the pejorative term of the 60's.  Yes, plastic!  In the 60's, wasn't everything plastic?  I remember as a child picking up an apple from a bowl and biting down on plastic.  My mother had plastic plants in her planters.  Grandmothers covered their "good" furniture with plastic.  "The Graduate" pointed to plastic as being what was wrong with our parents' generation.  They weren't "real." 

But plastic was the wonder material of their generation.  Plastic kept food fresher, it was easier to clean, it was lighter and more portable.  It was cheap.  Plastic was disposable, but it was durable and could be reused.  How could that generation, coming of age during a world war when the world was so much larger and the population so much smaller, see anything bad about plastic?

Boomers, the children of this "greatest generation," rejected our parents' values.  We wanted to be "real," not "plastic."  We wanted to be free of our parents' constraints, connections, and connotations.  We rejected their brand of sincerity, of patriotism.  We wanted to be individual, yet we conformed to our generation's concepts of individualism.  We "turned on, tuned in, and dropped out" to an amazing degree.

And then we began raising children, and we used the very plastics we'd condemned.  By sheer volume, we are the ones who filled the landfills that successive generations will have to deal with. 

It's arguable how much we've learned from our mistakes.  But what we've really learned is blame.  We point fingers at our parents, we point them at our political leaders, and we even point them at ourselves.  We've yet to understand that blame leads to paralysis.

When a glass of milk is spilled, we can react several ways.  We can conduct an investigation as to what factors led up to the incident.  We can determine who the spiller or spillers may be, who might have contributed to the spill.  We can locate spill victims, determine how much damage they've suffered, and compensate them.  We can study ways to prevent such a spill in the future.

Eventually, however, someone must clean up the mess.  The sooner the better, or the finish on the wood will erode, the residue of milk soaked in fabrics will sour.  Perhaps we should simply pay more attention, clean up our messes as quickly as possible, and move on with our lives.
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tags: reflection
Thursday, 12 June 2008

Rolling up my sleeves. Need more coffee.

I cut back on coffee the past month, sticking to my two-cup limit, but I've been feeling the caffeine itch for a couple of days now, so I'm brewing two more cups.  It smells so delicious.

I'm also gradually increasing time spent reading, in the hope that I will actually finish what I've started for a change.  I'm really good at starting, horrible at completion.  I've always liked beginnings more than endings, but I'm trying really hard to be more childlike and less childish.

We spent two days hauling around defective dining room sets and have returned all.  I'd no idea that what most furniture stores label as "solid wood" is really solid wood products.  We like our wood solid around here, so I think we're going to have to spend more money and time, and this project, like so many others, may wait another year. 

Really, we were just running away from the bathroom.  It needs to be gutted, but we're lacking in expertise and money, so we may just repair, but even repair involves replacing walls and possibly floor, so why not go the whole nine yards?  Because of the horror stories.  We'd be one of those Can This Marriage Be Saved? couples, I'm sure.  He wants to go in and whack away walls and build them and do plumbing, and I'm, to be honest, horrified.  We are amateurs.  One tiny leak, such as the one caused by the original professional crew, and we'd be doing this whole thing again in ten or twenty years.  I've been watching home improvement shows and reading the magazines and websites, and he's been jumping around like a two-year-old with a hammer.  We keep going round in circles, and we're both dizzy.

So the bathroom sits, and we are never home, and when we are home, we buy furniture which we return because, frankly, it's easier than facing the elephant in the bathroom.  And the tree in the yard. 

So, right now, before I can chicken out again, I'm calling the tree service.  And then I'm going to dig in and really clean this house because I think we're going to be moving some furniture tonight.  And he'll order more tractor parts.  And we'll look at our dwindling savings account.  It keeps the bathroom demons at bay.

UPDATE:  I'm so excited!  The list...it's dwindling!  I'm on a roll, making phone calls, scheduling things, organizing and cleaning.  I hardly know myself.  It feels so...satisfying.  Feet, don't fail me now!
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tags: home improvement
Tuesday, 10 June 2008

Clarity

I walk in the glass door and wait my turn bleakly.  She has one of those annoying summer colds, but it does not detract from her usual cheeriness as she asks the usual questions.  I look at the chart, where everything is doubled because of the worsening cataract and blurrier because of the retina problems, and, with glasses on, am only able to read the top line with my left eye.  I knew my vision was worse, but this confirmation heightens my tension.  A round of eye drops, and I am sent back to the waiting room, waiting for my pupils to dilate enough for the exam, making my eyes more black than blue.

A cranky, fidgety woman waits there with a man who constantly reassures her in an overly solicitous tone.  The assistant comes in to check pupils and tells two people they're not ready; the irritated woman calls after her that she is ready.  She raises sightless eyes to the flashlight and is told she is next.  Her voice raises, becomes more querulous.  She asks the man why she has to be here, and his quiet answers fail to appease her.  She begins to rail loudly about her cancer and the fact that no doctors can explain her vision loss.  Eyes all around the room empty of irritation and fill with compassion.

My pupils grow large enough that I am moved to the exam room.  He's backed up today, so I have time to practice meditation, an art I think I will always practice and never master.  Every second my thoughts intrude.  Last night I dreamed that I was about to eat a gummy worm when it came alive in my hands. thinking.  Remember to look for the museum passes.  thinking.  Laundry basket piled high.  thinking.  Did I wait too long after the symptoms started?  thinking.  I'll never get the hang of this.

The doctor patiently explains to the woman in the next room that her problem probably has nothing to do with her surgery and may be related to her diabetes.  He sharply reprimands someone outside my door over a chart error.  Then he softy reassures someone else that her eyes are okay. 
He's in a good mood today. My door opens. 

He explains that my symptoms are probably due to the vitreous fluid still separating, possibly some more bleeding in the back of the eye, but that the repair still holds; no new tear.  Now I am aware of my breathing, simply because it returned.  He wants to monitor me weekly again.  I whisper the hope that I can have the cataract surgery before I return to work.  He laughs, not unsympathetically, and says there is no surgery in my near future.  We have to wait for resolution with the retina first.

I stumble to the receptionist to schedule my next appointment and make a light, but not-so-funny joke about the irony of eagerly anticipating cataract surgery when you're only 52.  As I wait for my receipt, I hear a young girl's voice say that my blouse is very pretty, and I turn and look into eyes that radiate contagious sparkles.  Out the door, the sunshine is blinding, but then, so is my smile.
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tags: reflection
Monday, 09 June 2008

Home Improvement?

As cushy as hotel life can be, it's so good to be back home.  I did the math, and he's been away from home more than he's been at home this year so far, but at least the last month I got to go with him.  It's been a time of reconnecting, not so bad as having to reintroduce ourselves, but you can certainly understand why I really don't want to think about applying for another job right now, even though I will.  It's been a tough year, and the future is a big question mark.  Time spent together has been like coming outside after a long, cold winter and feeling the warmth of the sun on your face.  Can't get enough of that.

The past week, we've been negotiating home improvement.  "Negotiating" is an appropriate term.  He's the dreamer; I'm the realist.  He never reads so much as an instruction manual, while I research things to death.  He wants decisions made with little to no discussion; I need to pose several outcome scenarios before I move forward.  When we finally make a decision, I've come up from about 50% certainty to 75%, while he's moved down from 100% to about 85%. 

After work today, he has to exchange an item that came in a box that came taped shut.  It's not a small item; it's a heavy, bulky dining room table, and we had to drive about 20 miles to get it.  I told him nothing good ever comes from a box that's been opened; he made the decision to purchase it anyway.  The store was closing for the day, and the forklift was put away, so we went with it.  The sky was heavy with black clouds.  We headed home in a driving rainstorm, unloaded it all, inspected the table and found a damaged corner.

His face was a study.  I could see him struggling with the strong desire to just accept the table as is.  He really had wanted to put it all together while I cooked his favorite meal, and it's no small task to exchange the table today.  And he always wants his decisions and actions to be final.  But he packaged it up, gracefully, and loaded it back in the car.  We tossed a salad together, tried a few new ingredients in it, and opened a new bottle of crisp apple wine.  Both turned out to be delicious, and we had a great time eating what may be the last meal on our rocky, chipped, early American dining set that I bought used for $80 thirty-four years ago.

The new table is counter-height, which is very comfortable for us and our long-legged children; it comfortably seats 8, which will work very nicely for those summer Sunday dinners we've planned with the kids, and has that new style of leaf which folds in on itself, much nicer than the old leaf we stored in the hall closet.  Even so, our old, out-of-style table and broken-spindle chairs seem so much more cozy, more like home, just as our termite-damaged, shifting-foundation, banged-up, patched-together old house feels more like "us" than a comfortable, contemporary hotel.

But I like the feel of working together to improve the old to fit who we are today.  It will be a good summer.  I can tell.  Even if the table doesn't work out.
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tags: change
Friday, 06 June 2008

On a Roll

Can you solve this puzzle?

You are riding on a beautiful white horse.
On your left side is a drop off.
On your right side are several ostriches being chased by a lion.
In front of you are four large gazelles which won't get out of your way
and you can't seem to overtake them.
Behind you is a stampede of horses.
What must you do to get out of this highly dangerous situation?

Get your drunk ass off the merry-go-round.

Okay, one more, kiddies; then I have to get packing...

THE HILLBILLY VASECTOMY

After their 11th child, an Alabama couple decided that was enough, as they could not afford a larger bed.
So the husband went to his veterinarian and told him that he and his cousin didn't want to have any more children.
The doctor told him that there was a procedure called a vasectomy that could fix the problem but that it was expensive. "A less costly alternative," said the doctor, "is to go home, get a cherry bomb, (fireworks are legal in
Alabama) light it, put it in a beer can(COORS), then hold the can up to your ear and count to 10."
The Alabamian said to the doctor, "I may not be the smartest tool in the shed, but I don't see how putting a cherry bomb in a beer can next to my ear is going to help me."
"Trust me," said the doctor.
So the man went home, lit a cherry bomb and put it in a beer can. He held the can up to his ear and began to count!
"1"
"2"
"3"
"4"
"5"
( you'll love this...)
At which point he paused, placed the beer can between his legs and continued counting on his other hand.
This procedure also works in Tennessee , Kentucky , Louisiana , Arkansas , Mississippi , Missouri , West Virginia and Washington DC. 

(Of course, it's not limited to these states.  I'm pretty sure Florida is included.)
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tags: just for fun
Friday, 06 June 2008

TGIF

We've seen most of these, but they're still good for a grin:

TWENTY NINE LINES TO MAKE YOU SMILE

1  My husband and I divorced over religious differences. He thought he was God and I didn't.
2   I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it.
3  Some people are alive only because it's illegal to kill them.
4  I used to have a handle on life, but it broke.
5  Don't take life too seriously; No one gets out alive.
6  You're just jealous because the voices only talk to me.
7  Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder.
8  Earth is the insane asylum for the universe.
9  I'm not a complete idiot -- some parts are just missing.
10  Out of my mind. Back in five minutes.
11  NyQuil, the stuffy, sneezy, why-the-heck-is-the-room-spinning medicine.
12  God must love stupid people; He made so many.
13  The gene pool could use a little chlorine.
14  Consciousness: That annoying time between naps.
15 Ever stop to think, and forget to start again?
16 Being 'over the hill' is much better than being under it!
17 Wrinkled was not one of the things I wanted to be when I grew up.
18 Procrastinate Now!
19 Have a Degree in Liberal Arts; Do you want fries with that?
20 A hangover is the wrath of grapes.
21 A journey of a thousand miles begins with a cash advance.
22 Stupidity is not a handicap. Park elsewhere!
23 They call it PMS because Mad Cow Disease was already taken.
24 He who dies with the most toys is nonetheless DEAD.
25 A picture is worth a thousand words, but it uses up three thousand times the memory.
26 Ham and eggs...A day's work for a chicken, a lifetime commitment for a pig.
27 The trouble with life is there's no background music.
28 The original point and click interface was a Smith & Wesson.
29 I smile because I don't know what is going on.
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tags: just for fun
Friday, 06 June 2008

Much Ado About Nothing

Sometimes I think that should be the title of my life's story: much ado about nothing.  I've tended to over-dramatize since I was a kid, seeing each new sorrow or joy through an emotional microscope.  The ego has a capacity to stretch further than the imagination. 

My tendencies, however, make me really appreciate good drama, and last night's play was so thoroughly enjoyable, I can't seem to shake it this morning.  We went to see the Bard performed by the Atlanta Shakespeare Company at the Shakespeare Tavern. a non-profit group that travels to schools to educate kids on Shakespeare.  This is one of Atlanta's secret treasures, though the house was at capacity last night. 

They're wonderful.  Last night's actors, on opening night, were simply sensational.  I've seen a handful of productions of this play, but never have Beatrice and Benedick been played better, and the supporting cast was excellent.  We laughed, we cried, we laughed until we cried, we were transported.  One of our group was a young man whose only experience of Shakespeare had been a reading of Hamlet in high school, and he could not stop talking about how great it was, how he'd enjoyed himself so much more than he thought he would.

That's the beauty of Shakespeare performed with relish and dedication.  If you're ever in Atlanta, do yourself a favor and look them up. 
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tags: summer breezes
Thursday, 05 June 2008

Fine, thanks, and you?

Reading: Pema Chodron's When Things Fall Apart (thanks, Limine!)
Working on: understanding a counterintuitive perspective that feels somewhat...intuitive?
Writing: cover letter (with much angst and a determination to finish it today)
Listening to: internal narrative (but aware of this) to the tune of Paint it Black
Thinking about: limitations and risks of do-it-yourself home improvement projects
Rereading: Much Ado About Nothing (for tonight's performance)
Eating: Pork chops and fried okra for lunch with a bunch of guys who talk engines
Enjoying myself: immensely
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tags: summer breezes