Thursday, July 1, 2010

I will follow me

I will follow me; follow me where ever I may be

There isn't an ocean too deep, a mountain so high it can keep,

Keep me away from me...

Okay, so I took a lot of poetic license here. My apologies to the original song writer. It says what I have been trying to say for weeks now.

I wondered many weeks ago how we lose ourselves. It was a question stimulated from watching Sister Act. I always cry when I watch Sister Act. I cried the first time I saw it and I still cry each time I see it. It remains, however, one of my favorite movies. I cry because somewhere along the path of growing up and the path of life, I feel like I lost myself. I cry because I don't know how that happened.

Mind you, I would not change one iota of my life. I am where I want to be and most of the times I am who I want to be. I believe that the tears come from not knowing how to pursue paths in my life that bring me joy each day. Music is one of them. Not music in a rock star, teen idol, stardom kind of way. I so am not up to singing on stage and strutting my stuff. It isn't who I am. I get stage fright so bad I want to throw up. I surely would have ended up a drug addict if I'd tried to go that path, which is one of the reasons my family dissuaded me from doing that. I guess they didn't know any other course to pursue either.

And that is neither here nor there. It does give some history and set up the subject of this blog for you.

Question: How do we lose ourselves?

Answer: No one teaches us to find ourselves in the first place.

Or let me qualify that by saying—in my experience, there are fewer people who find themselves than there are people who lose themselves. And as an addendum to that qualification—I've also found, in my experience, that most people don't know they are lost. They only know they are dissatisfied, unmotivated, and/or angry, and/or feeling guilty, and/or…the list can go on!

I have a friend whose son wants to grow up to ride dirt bikes and get national advertisers to pay him for it. You know, like race car drivers do. He thinks because of his goal in life, he doesn't need an education. My gut reaction to that was—OMG! He wants to WHAT? I suspect his mom's gut reaction was similar.

And then I got to thinking about my own child and how I would approach the same or similar situation. My kid had a bent toward art, poetry, photography and writing. My gut response to that was the same as my mom's and her partner's—you can't make a living that way.

After some thought, though, I realized that is not true. Many people make their livings that way. They may not be vaunted artists and poets and photographers; however, people make livings, good livings, through those skills every day. And they love their jobs. And they know who they are and where they are going and what it takes. They are able to make their joy become their job. What better way to live?

So instead my approach was research and learning. What skills does it take, who does it and who do you admire, how did they get to the position they are in.

I would do the same thing with a boy who wants to grow up and ride dirt bikes. I'd do it because I know my gut reaction is there because I was taught to think that way. If I look beyond my gut reaction, then I have to admit our society is populated with people who do things like ride dirt bikes for a living. Let's talk about football players, baseball players, race car drivers, musicians, writers, poets, movie stars.

Successful ones are few and far between, you say? I agree. When you look at them statistically on a national average, they are.

Those careers have a short life, you say? I agree. One can only get beat up so many times each day before the body don't like it no more. Or one can only play the leading lady so long before they become a mature woman. Or … you get the picture.

The skills they employ, however, are not few and far between and no matter how old you get, the sills are still valid.

Let's refine it down even further. Let's say Olympic Athletes. I cannot even begin to imagine what one does with ones life when they spend most of it for one moment, hoping to get a gold medal. Can you? Can you imagine being the parent of a Christi Yamaguchi? Can you imagine what would happen if her parents' had said—I don't think so! You can't make a living that way!

We would have missed so much beauty. And Christy Yamaguchi would have lost herself.

The trick is to be supportive and find alternatives and then watch them grow. The more you fight with your children, the further apart you withdraw from them.

I'm not suggesting my folks should have supported me in becoming a rock star. I am suggesting they might have supported me in learning about and experiencing the things that could lead to a dream. Help me learn who I am. Who I AM. Not who society says I SHOULD be, or how society says I should be SUCCESSFUL. Or even what society say is successful.

As parents, we can't predict our children's paths. We can't walk it for them. We can only give them the skills to figure it out for themselves. And I don't know if you parents have noticed this—the more you say "no, you can't", the more inclined they are to rebel. And pretty soon you get into the teen years and it is tug of war and you spend your nights wondering where you went wrong and if they are going to live beyond the ripe old age of 19.

So I go back to my little song up there. There is one thing all of us need to remember—not only about our children's lives, also about our own.

I will follow me.

I am my first relationship. I am my last relationship.

I don't care if mommy is looking down at me when I am born; I am still my first relationship. She is out there, I am in here. It is mommy's goal to teach me about myself and the world I live in and how to survive.

In the end, it is my goal to survive with joy. There are lots of words for it. To survive with my wants and needs met. To not sit back at age 50 and wonder where I lost myself.

We all have to work for a living. It is part of life. We spend the majority of our waking hours working. It is what we do. If we weren't working a job, we'd be out in the fields planting and harvesting food, chopping wood, etc. Or hunting and gathering. It is how we survive. It is how everything survives. One needs to eat and have shelter and have a safe place to be. Once survival of the body is accomplished, then we start looking for what makes us … what we are beyond survival.

Well, in this society we've got most of it knocked. We have time to explore and learn who we are beyond survival. Our children have the opportunity to become more than a hunter-gatherer.

At least for the most part. I shudder to think of all the people in our society who still must eek out bare survival. Just because I do not mention it here, does not mean I am not aware of it.

My message is this—relationships are what we do in life. We cannot avoid it. Our primary relationship in life is with ourselves. No matter how far you run or where you go or how many times you change careers, mates, houses, or cities—you will always come with you. You are the constant in a universe of change. You may constantly change and yet you are your constant.

Make friends with yourself.

And then as parents, help teach your children the same thing. Think beyond the box of our family and societal enculturation. Teach your children to think beyond that box.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Walking the Talk

Have you ever had the feeling you were being tested by… I don't know—the Universe—you can use whatever word you relate to there. For me, Universe works. God might work for you.

Life, for me, has always seemed to be a series of tests. I formulate a belief system and then things happen to test my belief system. In other words, it is like Universe asks me to walk my talk.

You know, it is relatively easy to give "advice" to other people. I dislike the word advice, which is why I put it into quotes. I don't really give advice because whatever I write or say, I have no investment attached to it. I've found through the years that people who give "advice" are invested in you talking their advice, and if you don't take it, then they get all upset. That isn't where I am at with what I write. I just observe what happens in my life and share my experience with you. Perhaps in the sharing, you will make your own observations and come to your own conclusions and find a way that works in your life for you.

Walking the talk. It is easy to talk about the way one "should" go about doing something. It isn't always so easy to do what you have said, though. I'm sure we all can relate to that! Just look at how many parents, in frustration, start telling their kids—just do as I tell you. Mostly, I find this is because the parent is not doing what they are telling the child to do, and in the wisdom all children seem to bear, the child points it out and the parent cannot justify to their own selves why there are two standards.

Thursday I found myself in a situation that totally threw me into emotional turmoil. I had an interviewing skills workshop with the Employment Development Department (EDD). I thought I'd go to this workshop and maybe they could help me translate my skills and experiences into words that the employer understands. Sounded like a great plan to me.

They started out their workshop with a quote from Steve Martin—"Be so good they can't ignore you."

I read that and thought, strike one. I am good at what I do, and there are some people in this world who simply shine in certain places. For instance, Steve Martin, is considered to be excellent at what he does. He has been so good, in fact, that no one ignored him. I guess he's just that kind of person with that kind of drive and confidence. He is doing what he loves and it shines through. Good for him!

On the whole, however, I feel a quote like that is meaningless drivel to most of us who find ourselves attending an interviewing skills workshop. It could just be me, and somehow it sets most of us up for failure. We cannot all be Steve Martin. Or, perhaps we could if we were pursuing what we truly wanted in life. That's a thought….

Strike two came at telling us employers were looking to "rule you out" not "rule you in". I totally believe that. When you are faced with hundreds of applicants, ruling out would be the way to proceed because there aren't enough known factors to start "ruling in" until you have leveled the playing field. My feeling at that point was—I don't know if I'm up to that. I don't know if I have that much enthusiasm for whatever I'm interviewing for to shine brighter than anyone else.

Let me say that while all these thoughts are flitting through my head, I am asking questions. As an example, I asked them, "Am I hearing you correctly when you say the interviewers are there to rule you out? That in essence, they are not there to give you the opportunity, they just want to get you in and out and get on to the next person?" They stuttered and stammered (both of them being from long time positions of interviewing people for jobs) and finally admitted this was pretty much the case.

I am nothing if I am not direct. I don't remember when I got to be so disruptive during these things. When I was a child I was very shy and didn't say much. Then I grew up and got pissed off, I guess. <LMAO> after an hour had gone by I could tell they'd just as soon not see me raise my hand…

Strike three was about letters of recommendation. There were many things they said we needed to do or not do and each thing was like a weight on my heart. There was this voice inside me that kept saying—I can't be that. I am not that. I don't WANT to be that! The letters of recommendation broke my camel's back, though.

We are to setup this portfolio with all sorts of things in it so we have them when we need them. You know, resume, references both professional and personal, master job application, our gold stars, halos and angel wings, along with our letters of recommendation. Letters of recommendation are defined as originals on company letterhead that you have received within the last year or maybe two, but that seems to be stretching it.

Hand goes up, "what if you don't have letters of recommendation on company letterhead from the last year or two?"

Answer—Well, you can hopefully go back and get letters from your employers.

"What if you haven't worked in the last year or two?" (I have but I'm curious as to what they recommend)

Answer—Use volunteer jobs. Contact them and get letters. Volunteer jobs are really wonderful.

"What if you haven't had any volunteer job?"

Answer after a pause—Go out and get one now! Two or three ladies in the workshop nod—oh yes! You should go right out and get a volunteer job today. They are wonderful for references and you never can tell ….

"All good and I agree and … how will that get me a letter of recommendation for tomorrow?"

The upshot was Teri finally saying, holding back tears because when I get angry I cry, "I do not feel that I am being heard or understood here. I need help getting a job and telling me to go out and get a volunteer job today so I can have a letter of recommendation is not going to put food on the table tomorrow."

To say the least, at the break I picked up my stuff and went home. EDD had nothing for me. And yet, they gave me a lot to contemplate.

I cannot be what "they" want me to be. If I do not believe what I am telling you, then you—the employer—are not going to believe what I'm telling you either. And yes, during the 2 hours I was at that workshop I pointed that very fact out to the workshop teachers.

The truth is—I don't even want to be what "they" want me to be. I only want to be who I am.

And who I am has value.

Who I am and what I am capable of—where I shine so brightly "they" cannot ignore me—may not put food on the table or pay the bills, and yet this is who I am and I find nothing to be ashamed of.

So how will I be walking my talk? The next interview I get I will be who I am. If they don't find who I am to be valuable to their organization that is their loss, and truthfully, I wouldn't want to work for them anyway. I don't work well with people who value resumes, three piece suits and letters of recommendations over the person sitting in front of them.

Don't let "them" brainwash you. Be who you are and take pride in who you are. You are the only you there is, and while it is very scary to contemplate not being able to eat or pay bills or file bankruptcy or….any of the multitude of things we get ourselves all worked up about and scared of—to live always feeling like you don't make the muster is not living.

Saturday, May 1, 2010



















Each year I sit down and look at my life and celebrate. I review and see if there are things I would change about my life. I’m a huge believer in change. I may not be able to change how I look or change where I live or change what I have experienced over the last 53 years, yet all those things are part and parcel of who I Am. I don’t have much control over physical stuff and sometimes you live in a particular place because it is the best option available at the moment, and what you have experienced is done and in past.


What I can change is how I feel about my experiences, or my physical body, or my neighborhood. I have control over my perceptions. My teacher always said—change yourself on the inside and the outside will change to accommodate you. In all the years since I began to understand what she said and practice the philosophy, I haven’t found her wrong. I say it a bit differently and I stole it from Dr. Phil (I hear the groans…)

Bloom where you’re planted.

Every year I come up with the same answer to my question “are there things I would change about my life”. The answer is no. What I have experienced has lead me to this place in time, and I would not miss this moment for anything.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

He said, she said…

"I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant."--Robert McCloskey

When I was 9, my mom and I moved in with a woman who changed the lives of my entire family. Wally, well actually her name was Wallcie Maureema, and my mom became life partners and while it is difficult to fathom the relationship, Wally was as close to a father as I had growing up. Not to put down my biological father. He was a wonderful and loving man; he just wasn't an active part of my life before the age of 9 or after the age of 9. He taught me some important things, though. Things I haven't forgotten to this day and things that still get me through life.

This is neither about Wally nor my father, though. This is about communication. Wally comes into the subject because from the onset of our relationship communication became the keyword in my life. She taught a discipline called General Semantics. The phrase I learned to describe the concept of GS (General Semantics) is: Words don't have meaning—people do.

In essence, a person learns meaning for the words they use through experiences. For instance, Yup'ik (Eskimo to most people) has 15 different words to describe snow. English has many words to describe snow, too; however, we tend to simply say "It snowed today," as though all snow was the same. Those of us who do not live day-in and day-out in an arctic climate don't have a good referent for snow. Referent is created by experience. Two people living in the same arctic climate for a space of time have a referent when they speak to each other about snow. Yes? If one person lives in an arctic climate and another lives in a snow climate, like Colorado, they have enough referent to build understanding with each other when they talk about snow IF they take the time to listen to what each has to say. Why? Because the snow above the Arctic Circle is not like the snow in Colorado. They share similarities and yet they are different.

So now let's bring this down to relationships, particularly couples. You both grow up in the United States. You both are from the same cultural background. Let's even say you both grew up in the same city or town. One might assume you have common referent for communication, and to a limited extent you do. I can say to my friend, Deby, "you know that little café on Main Street in Lakeside?" And she will probably reply, "I do! We used to go there for French fries and salad with blue cheese dressing." We grew up in the same area, attended the same school, hung out with the same crowd. We had the common referent of age and attending the same school as well as many other things. Yet we had to learn to communicate with each other. She had to learn what I meant when I said something and I had to learn what she meant when she said something.

Why? Because we came from families and our families totally different; we learn communication from our families.

Communication isn't just about the words we use either. It is about the feelings we feel that cause signals in our bodies and about the actions that arise from those feelings. In other words, non-verbal communication. My mother could tell me without saying one word that she was angry. Her entire demeanor changed. The problem was without words—without conscious communication—I didn't know if she was angry with me, with someone else, with the dog, with life, with…. As children we usually figure she is mad at us for something we did even if we can't think of anything we did to make her angry.

Communication is a skill we do not teach until our children get into college. What is wrong with this picture?

There is one thing people have in common—relationships. A person cannot live on this earth without encountering "relationship". As people, we live in relationship to one another. Even if a person had somehow miraculously appeared on some isolated mountaintop and never saw another human being in his or her lifetime that person would still live in relationship. Not just with nature—with him or herself. And if you don't think communication applies to the relationship you have with yourself, then start listening to what you talk to yourself about each day, every day, all day. You may not use words; you may use feelings and emotions. How you communicate with yourself doesn't matter—it is what you communicate to yourself that is important.

How many couples do you know who have problems in their marriage? I'm not talking about problems that stem from alcohol, infidelity, drugs, etc. I'm talking about problems that arise from hurt feelings and misunderstandings, arguments, disagreements, etc. My ex used to walk in the door from work and start spewing. He spewed anger and discontent. You hear about displaced anger—person comes home and kicks the dog because he had a bad day at work? Well, that was my ex. He definitely was not into communication. To say the very least, his spewing caused a whole lot of hurt feelings, misunderstandings, arguments and disagreement.

How many couples do you know where the woman says—I talk and talk and talk and he just doesn't do anything; or care; or change; or …. This is kind of like the spewing my ex did, only from a more female perspective, I suppose.

We have all this "stuff" inside and it comes out without conscious, directed thought.

I have a wonderful example of mis-communication from my own 14 year marriage. I said to him, "I just want you to love me." He replies, "I give you my paycheck, what more do you want?" Both of us communicated a wealth of needs in those two sentences. Neither one of us knew what the other meant by those words.

Is there a point to this blog? I don't know … do blogs have to have a point? Okay, okay….my point is—people don't just magically learn to communicate with each other beyond the basics. Basics like giving directions to the nearest Starbucks and even that can involve a whole lot of conscious thought; however, most of us know "turn right, turn left". Yes?

Learn how to communicate. And just like everything in life—first communicate with self, then communicate with other. First self, then other.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

When in doubt, have a good laugh

There are days when I may not write a word and there are other days when I may just post a quote I really like. It's my blog and I can do want I want to…regardless of what all the little voices in my head are saying! <LMAO>

Harry Dresden is a modern-day wizard and I mean to tell you, he really gets himself knocked around. It makes for an exciting story. The thing I really like about Jim Butcher's character, though, is the humor he uses through his stories and the points he makes about life through his character, Harry Dresden.

This quote goes hand-in-hand with where you find the inspiration to keep on going when you seriously question why you "should" keep on going. Nature is only one of the places I find the desire to keep on keeping on. Laughter is another. I laugh at the strangest things. I've always said I have two choices when times are tough—I can laugh or I can cry. The two actually work together for me. Usually through my tears I see the humor and start laughing. It can really put a damper on my pity party. <VBG>

So, I offer up a quote that I read the other day:

"Laughter, like love, has power to survive the worst things life has to offer. And to do it with style."

Harry Dresden via Jim Butcher, Blood Rites.


 

Friday, April 16, 2010

Help me! I’m dying and I can’t speak up…

How did we lose our voices? I'm not talking about laryngitis here. I'm talking about the ability to speak our needs—not our wants, our needs. I suppose I define "needs" as those things that keep our lives healthy and balanced, as opposed to" wants", the things that are nice to have and I can live without.

Monday I was at physical therapy. They help me do my stretching exercises when I'm there because I cannot do them on my own yet. I do more harm to my body than healing at this point. I had a different aide on Monday and she had her hands full with two of us. There was a certain exercise that really, really hurt. I knew when she was helping me that my body was not okay with what she was doing, but I didn't say anything. I just ginned and bore it. Okay, I grimaced more than grinned.

All I needed to do was say something, but I didn't. And now I am paying for it big time. I went about 10 steps backwards in my recovery process.

The people at the clinic are wonderful people. They care and I know they care. I knew they cared from the first moment I walked in the door. They are doing everything they can to make my life better. I guess I'd say they are partners in recovering my health.

As a partner I fell flat on my face. They cannot know what is happening in my body. Only I can know. So I began wondering—how did I lose my voice?

"Voice" is a subject my daughter and I have visited many times in the last several years. Voice is the part of a person that allows them to "just say no". We have a voice from the day we are born; however, it usually isn't the kind of "voice" folks want to hear too much from.

When we are born our voice comes out in a variety of noises—such as crying or laughing. Baby voices are very honest, truthful and to the point. When our needs are met we laugh, and quite frankly there is nothing as special as a baby who laughs. One of my best memories from being a mom is when Meg laughed. She laughed with her whole spirit, her entire heart, with every minute part of herself. Her laugh started at her toes and rolled through her entire body. And anyone who heard her laugh, laughed with her. They say children are honest and I would say whoever "they" are, they are correct. A child laughs and the world laughs with them.

When our needs are not met as a child we cry. The longer our needs are not met, the louder we cry. This is the voice most folks don't want to hear too much of. The cry of a child is like the laugh of a child. It reaches right down within me and I respond. I want to make whatever it is better.

Some things are easy to make better. I can change the diaper or offer my breast or warm up the bottle. Other needs are not so easy to make better. When a baby has a tummy ache, I can hold him or her and rub his or her little back, but I can't make the pain go away. When teeth are coming in I can use ice to help with the pain, yet I cannot make the pain go away. When a child falls down and cuts their knees, I can clean them up, put on bandages, and yet I cannot make the pain go away.

When my daughter was a baby she had an immature digestive system, so each time she ate, she was in pain. The first three months of her life she not only cried, she screamed. She cried until she was too exhausted to cry anymore and then she would fall asleep for about 12 hours. I could rock her, hold her, sing to her, rub her tummy, and yet I could not make the pain go away. I could take her to doctor after doctor, try suggestion after suggestion, read book after book—and yet I could not make the pain go away.

Now, I'm not telling you all this because I want sympathy or because I want you to feel sorry for me. I am establishing my credibility, so to speak; supporting my thesis, if you will.

Some of the suggestions I collected while I was doing my best to stop my daughter's pain was along the lines of: There isn't anything wrong with her. Just put her in her crib and let her cry, and eventually she'll learn to stop getting attention by crying.

Huh? You want me to do what? I think in the old days they called this the Dr. Spock method. No…not Mr. Spock! Mr. Spock would just do a mind meld and come up with some miraculous solution to the problem! <LOL>

Perhaps this is one way we lose our voice. My mother and my aunt gave me that advice, among countless other mature adults who'd had and raised children. And quite frankly, neither my mother nor my aunt was anything except loving and caring parents to me. I learned to love from them, and that says a whole lot and needs no explanation.

When we are children someone has to teach us use our voice. Not have a voice, simply use it in a constructive manner.

And just as we can teach a child to use their voice, we can also teach a child to not use their voice.

I can give you many examples from my own childhood where I was taught not to use my voice, everything from—you're not hurt (I'm not?) to; stop being a cry baby (I am?) to; don't wear your feelings on your sleeve (What do I do with them?).

Our society is filled with wise old adages<snort>:

  • Grin and bear it
  • Put some steel in your spine
  • Keep a stiff upper lip
  • Never let them see you sweat
  • I'll give you something to cry about
  • Boys will be boys
  • No pain, no gain
  • Pain is weakness leaving the body (Thank you Reba for that one)

So here I am, almost 53 years old and I still can't say "This is hurting me more than helping me. What can we do differently?" I look at that and think it sounds so easy and straightforward. It isn't even impolite. It is a rather no-brainer request. If anyone else had come to me with this same scenario I would have asked them why they didn't ask the therapist to stop because they were in pain.

Thus the saying—physician heal thyself.

I don't have a very good voice because my parents taught me not to have a voice. Not intentionally and I sure don't have any blame to lie at their doorstep. They did what they knew to do, and I have to say this about my parents—when they learned better they did do better. And yes, that is a paraphrase from Maya Angelou 's "…when you knew better... you did better!"

Because I did not learn to have a voice, my daughter did not learn to have a voice. I am so proud that she has learned to have her voice and is teaching me and other people to find theirs.

We teach our children how to use their voice or not. As parents we teach our children how to use their voice with integrity—or not.

And from where I am standing, integrity always begins with self. First self, then other. I cannot give what I do not have. I cannot teach what I do not have.

So, here I sit recovering from an injury that did not get taken care of properly because I did not have a voice; because I have laryngitis of the spirit when it comes to health and balance in my own life. The really cool thing about being an adult is that we can choose what we want to keep from our childhood teachings. The cool thing about growing up is we can learn whatever we want to learn. Some things are easier to learn than others things, and yet we can learn. "…when [I] knew better…[I] did better!"


 

Monday, April 12, 2010

Inspiration

What inspires a person to keep on keeping on when there seems to be no reason to keep going?

Good question. One I don't have answer for.

For myself, I've always used my relationship to nature. Nature seems to bring me back to what is real in my life--what honestly matters in my life. Nature lifts my heart, opens my heart, fills my heart with love and joy and all sorts of things. Nature makes me smile involuntarily. In other words, it makes me smile whether I feel like smiling or not.

There was many times in Alaska when I didn't know if I could go on or even why I should go on. I don’t know about other people, and this person can only use live for other people for so long—only live for responsibility or because people love and depend on me for so long. In the end, when it comes down to reality, this person can only live for herself.

First for myself, and then for others.

I lived away from Fairbanks in a small place named Salcha. It was about 35 miles or so south of the city. And on that road, once you get past the air force base, there is a curve. You come around the curve and the whole mountain range opens up in front of you. And it doesn’t matter if it is summer, break up, winter or fall, if the sky is clear there is an enormous white mountain that dominates the skies. It is a breathtaking scene and one that will live on inside me forever...and if I forget, I have a picture.

There was a time when I would come around that curve and not see that mountain because I was so immersed in myself and my sorrows. I was blind to everything except for what was going on in my head. I was going through the motions of living. I'm sure everyone has had these times in their lives to one degree or another.

When I became aware of not seeing that beautiful mountain I realized I needed to do something and do something quick. I needed to find my inspiration. Find my soul, my heart, my love, my strength. I needed to do that for me, so I could also do it for my daughter and for the other people I love.

Most of all, I needed to do that for me. Because if I don't have it for myself, I cannot give it to anyone else.

So after that, each time I came around that curve, I made myself look—really look. I made myself get out of my head and pay attention to this incredible wonder that stood like an enormous guardian looking down over the world. At first, my response was--yeah, there it is and it is beautiful. Okay, Rome wasn't built in a day, eh?

As the days went on, I became more and more in touch with the beauty of the scene and the beauty of the world, and eventually the beauty within myself.

I’ve been able to translate that insight into other places I have lived. Granted, some places are easier than others. Living in the city can make it more difficult and yet, I always find something. In this new place there is a tree right outside my patio that is glorious. When I'm feeling out of sorts I stop and make myself really look at my tree until I can find that place inside that is truly thankful for that tree. And that thankfulness works its way out into my heart and into my mind and into my emotions, and suddenly I find myself smiling. Sometimes through tears, sometimes not. It truly doesn't matter.

So, where do you find your inspiration? What moves you forward when you want to lay down and quit? What do you use for a ladder to climb up out of the hole you might find yourself in so you can see the light?

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Occupation??

So, I'm on unemployment now. I can't tell you how long it has been since I even qualified for unemployment...

I get form in the mail and they tell me I have to come see them and fill out this questionnaire. Cool! 'Cause I have a whole lot of questions and am not having much luck getting them answered.

First question on the questionnaire:
List your usual occupation/ Length of experience/ Last rate of pay

Usual occupation? Length of experience? Okay … well, I’ve been working as an accounting clerk for about 2-1/2 to 3 years, yet that isn’t my “usual” occupation. My usual occupation is homemaker.

So I wrote:
List your usual occupation /Length of experience /Last rate of pay
Accounting Clerk  -- 3 years  -- $18.00 an hour
Homemaker  -- 26 years  --  $ 0.00 an hour

Now I know that isn’t what they really asking and yet…yet it is the truth and they can do with the truth what they will. Perhaps it will serve to make a point. I am exhausted from attempting to be something that I am not so that I can pay my bills and not live on credit because I can’t find a job that will pay me for my skills.

One of those other questions was what kind of job was I seeking. I wrote that I was seeking a job in the field I have a degree in--Human Services.

I obtained a degree in human services because that is where my skills are. I have a wealth of experience and education in human services. I just haven’t been paid for it since 1982 or thereabouts. When I was putting those jobs on my resume (before bookkeeping) I had to laugh, or cry, because the people who an employer might have called for references and recommendation are no longer around. The facility I worked in is no longer around. Even the supervisor I worked under with the State Department of Mental Health is no longer around.

I’m in a real “don’t mess with me” mood about employment and experience and all that stuff today. I’m fired up. They want to make sure I know how to look for a job. I know how to look for a job. I was looking for a job before most of them were out of diapers.

What I want to know from the Employment Development Department is this—how do you get someone to hire you for the job you are good at and trained at. So yes, I put down my usual occupation as homemaker because that is where my experience lies and it makes a huge point that cannot be ignored.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Housewife? Homemaker?

In 1991 I got married and moved to Alaska with my daughter. For the first couple of weeks I remember feeling like I was made to be a housewife. Not that I've ever really enjoyed drudge work, mind you, but simply because I could actually do it and find a sense of accomplishment. I mean, let's face facts here! In 1991 and previously, I didn't feel like I had much to offer. Yes, a whole lot of love to give and even then a wisdom that was both hard-earned as well as from years of study. But when it came to being able to do the basics things like provide monetarily for my daughter ... well, quite frankly I sucked at it. Providing monetarily for anyone (including myself!) does not appear to be my bailiwick in life.

Don't get me wrong here. It isn't that I don't have strengths. I do and I'm aware of them. Nevertheless, bringing home the bacon, or as I tease John now bringing home the chocolate, is not among my strengths.
Eventually, I became disenchanted with being a housewife. I figured this was because

I just wasn't cut out to be a housewife either. Ah, those tricky little voices in my head. I call them the demon voices.
Now, in the present, I find myself at least temporarily taking care of the house and I once again have this feeling that I'm good at it and I'm getting a sense of accomplishment from doing it.

Then the demon voice cuts into my head and reminds me I thought that once before and ended up hating it because ... because why? It’s a good question to ask when the demon voices are chanting, so I do it. Is what I’m thinking reality or not? What is the truth factor in my thoughts? I mean, somehow one must determine the difference between the devils and the angels.

My middle sister's voice provides one answer: Because it is boring.
Well yeah, I guess. It is rather boring when you are limited to washing dishes, cooking dinners, doing laundry, cleaning bathrooms, etc. Especially when those tasks take place in a one-bedroom apartment and for only two people, and one of those people tends to help out a whole lot even though he works fulltime. It means there isn’t a whole lot to do!

On the other hand, going to work every day and inputting data for people who absolutely do not appreciate what you do for them and how it enhances their lives is not only boring, it is frustrating and causes bitterness to arise.
My own voice comes back in and I remember before we moved to the LA area, being so afraid—Afraid of a new area, afraid of all the traffic, afraid of not knowing where I would be, afraid of not being able to find a job ...simply afraid. Humph. My own voice is the demon voice, yes?

I knew this was a good move and I knew I needed to trust myself to work it all out. So I asked myself how I'd coped with moves before and came up with--by making a home. Ah, the angel voice!

I've lived in a several different places since 1991. I spent a great deal of that time in Alaska; however, I relocated to Rhode Island and then to Northern California and now finally back to Southern California. Not exactly where I grew up, but a whole lot closer than Rhode Island and Alaska! The one thing I was always able to do was make a home for myself, if not for anyone else.

And all this thinking comes down to this--semantically, at least for me (and semantics is all about my interpretation) there is a great deal of difference in being a housewife and a homemaker. A housewife is married to the house. Houses are rather boring, don't you think? And they can fall down around you if they aren't taken care of. They can be taken away from you if you can't pay the mortgage. They can burn down, blow up, and have leaky roofs...all sorts of things.

A homemaker, though. One can make a home where ever they are. A home doesn't actually depend upon a house or some type of dwelling. Look at the Buddha who purportedly sat on a roadside and had no abode. Or, how about the Christ who wandered here and yon for years? From all I've read, I'd say these two people did have a home even though they didn’t go home every night to a house.

(And before you start wondering if I’m a religious person, the answer is no. I am, however, deeply spiritual and adore studying religions of the world and finding what rings true to me. Because after all, it’s all about me! To paraphrase Harry Dresden, as said through Jim Butcher—I’m nonpartisan.)

To continue ….a home comes from a sense of belonging and a loving heart. A person can have the most comfortable abode in the world with everything their heart desires inside it, and still be missing the important part--the home. A home does not have to even include more than one person because the sense of belonging and the loving heart resides inside self. This is shared with other people, yet does not depend upon other people.

I became dissatisfied with being a housewife in Alaska because I wasn't making a home. I was taking care of a man who didn't appreciate what I could bring to a partnership. I was taking care of a dwelling where I had no sense of belonging. I was living in a place where those I loved with all my heart were not appreciated or cared for, and where I myself was not appreciated or cared for. And I was too…brainwashed by the demon voices to even see what was happening.

Now an author would bring this to a conclusion; however, I don’t have to do that because this is my blog and my thoughts and I get to play by my rules, and my rules are … Other Wise. I’ll let you bring things to your own conclusion because in truth, we are all other wise.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

The new adventure....

I have a group of friend who I call my hussy sisters because of how we met. They are the sisters of my soul. The people who I can say anything to and know they won't stab me in the back simply because they don't agree. They are my family. They are my family because my family is the same way. We may not always get along or agree and yet, they also aren't going to stab me in the back just because I am ... me.

One of those hussy sisters, made us tee shirts one summer and mine said, in essence, that some of us are wise and some of us are other wise. What an insightful person my hussy sister is. I wonder if she realizes just how insightful she is?

Thus the name of my blog--TK's Other Wise Thoughts--because I am definitely Other Wise and proud of being so.

I've never blogged before. I've never really had an urge or a need. I was thinking, though, that perhaps when the need to communicate my strange thought processes, blogging could come in handy.

The hussy sisters and my sisters of the blood (as opposed to soul) and come to think about it, the rest of my blood family too, think I can write.

The hussy sisters and I get into a debate about me writing on occasion. To the point where I actually sat down and co-authored two stories with the sister-of-my-soul, Nicole Austin. Now she's is a proven author and a writer, and I'm quite proud that she helped me co-author our stories!

I do write. I actually love to write. I suppose if I really wanted to be an author, I could put my nose to the grind stone and be an author. However, I'm not one of those people who dream up plots and situations and answer the question "what if".

That doesn't mean that I can't write or don't write. It simply means that I write what I write when I write it and it tends to be free flowing and perhaps inspirational to some who read it.

You could say that as a writer I am ... Other Wise! I crack myself up some times.