Archive for 2011

 

From Rollercoasters to Rapids

Monday, December 19th, 2011

When a friend of mine found it hard to believe that I had been the victim of verbal abuse, I couldn’t explain it … or I wouldn’t explain it … or perhaps I didn’t know how to. While I was deep in meditation, noble silence and general bodily pain, I had extracted in these operations this piece of my pathology and, as the springs sprung out of my head and it felt like I would be the one this time to be escorted off the property and medicated, it was a tough one for me to process, having always defined myself as a strong, self-assured woman. Struggling to identify with this part of myself, a friend explained that it isn’t so much the words as the intention to undermine, emotionally withhold and make the other person feel like they deserve it. It isn’t so much the verbal as it is the non-verbal that constitutes verbal abuse.

So I did what I advise all people not to do when driven by a need to self-diagnose … I Googled it. As I consider the ripples of this post, I must confess to a very long alternate document with a ream of words, explanations and websites to try and fully explain what it feels like to be a strong woman at the mercy of a controlling partner. But I looked again at the Paulo Coelho quote from the previous post and concluded that his simply stated truth applies here, and having to justify, prove and defend only makes me seem more crazy than I can rightly take credit for.

You’ve got Google. So use it if you dare. And while you search and sift and read the parts relevant to you alone, I will continue to process … and “with a calm and equanimous mind” I will embrace that I have moved and shifted and that even while the sediment is settling in my ever-flowing river, the law of nature dictates that nothing is permanent and the rapids will come once more. And the waterfalls will throw me off my feet. But there will be calm again too.

All in a Letter

Monday, December 5th, 2011

I have survived Buddha’s Boot camp only to find myself preparing for battle. I have gone from Meditation to Mediation, that one little ‘t’ representing two concepts that are worlds apart yet strangely complimentary. Mind over matter doesn’t get me what I want but it sure helps me not sweat it for more than a few minutes before letting it go … even though we have effectively turned Marital Art into a Martial Art and I find myself searching for an appropriate place in the divorce agreement to insert something that disallows shouting out of context. I also search through the division of assets and wonder where the column is that indicates the division of friends. It seems the wake of his contact with mutual friends is plagued with being snubbed, hung up on and, in one very puzzling case of hypocrisy, being excluded from the wedding guest list of a guy I have known for three decades who proposed to his now-ex wife while she was still married to another man.

It’s none of my business what anyone thinks of me and if my ex-to-be wants these people in the settlement, he’s welcome to them … I won’t defend myself to people who have known me for years yet make no attempt to find out how I am faring in this saga.

As Paulo Coelho says, “Don’t explain. Your friends do not need it, and your enemies will not believe you.” So I don’t. I just continue to be my authentic self and, through my own interpretation of the truth, I get to keep the friendships of real value while he gets the duds. In terms of the settlement, however, if I can just insert that extra column, they should at least weigh up nicely against a couple of pieces of furniture. There is still a chance the friends will discover the truth and neutralize their judgment. Furniture isn’t so fickle though – it’ll still be mine.

These boots are made for walking

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

So I survived Buddha’s Bootcamp! The twelve days felt like over a month and, although I didn’t leopard crawl under fences or scale the walls, I did find myself resolutely marching beyond the course boundary to my car a couple of times – day 2 and day 7 I think … although I’m not quite sure what I was planning on doing once I reached it. My key was locked away in an undisclosed location – together with my wallet, my pen, my iPod and my phone – and I’ve never hot-wired a car before.

Noble Silence began at 7pm on the day of arrival and lasted a full ten days. Apart from the obvious No Talking, Noble Silence also means No Gesturing and No Eye Contact, as well as nothing that distracts fellow meditators, like Yoga and Jogging … protesting that I was in fact a Runner and not a Jogger left them unmoved and I was forced to be late for sittings just so I could gently disguise my brief cardio as a slightly flustered rushing. And all the banned activities (and then some …) mentioned in my previous post were clearly pointed out during orientation and written on boards that indicated the days schedule; the glaring 4am start the most obvious sign that we had clearly all lost the plot.

The things I missed most out of all the banned activities? you wonder. Probably reading … followed closely by the sexual misconduct – ten days without words is Easy compared to ten days without touch. There is perhaps good reason, therefore, that there are separate male and female dining halls, separate male and female entrances to the meditation hall and the walking paths used were separated into male and female areas by a ‘no-man’s-land’, making the long country grasses completely redundant.

Pain is now my friend! After over 120 hours of sitting in postures for up to two hours at a time, determinedly not moving while observing and working through the agony, it’s no surprise that for the first two days during sittings and instruction, I heard “With a clear and calm mind, focus on your desperation” rather than “your respiration“. And as soon as one session ended, we were told to “Take break 5 minutes then come back to dhamma hall for further instructionā€, 5 minutes, approximately the amount of time it took to get just one foot working again before the next sitting … they may as well have hacked through my joints with a blunt saw. That’s when the one-legged man said, “Who’s sorry now?”

So … would I do it again? you just have to know. Hell yeah! I’ve learned Buddha’s technique of Vipassana meditation, learned to smile through torturous pain and learned not to speak … the latter, the most commendable by far. My nickname changed rapidly from Lady Penelope to Lady No Words since, according to the volunteers doing seva, I was the single soul who did not ask for anything or in fact utter a word the entire course. I kid you not! Perhaps I take things too seriously or perhaps I really did need word rehab.

So I’ve done the love. I’ve SO done the prayer. And now all I can think about is pizza. Overflowing with knowledge and understanding and a torrent of unspoken words, however, I can’t help but wonder if that makes me a good dinner date or not. I have come out of these long and mostly agonising days with real hunger – not just for pizza but for wisdom – and the thing with walking this path is that there is such a vast pool of it – wisdom, not pizza – and no end to the number of wise and intelligent gurus; from freak to straight; imparting their very own interpretation of the essence of it. Even the longest journey starts with only one step and each one doesn’t represent a different path but rather a different pair of shoes to walk it in.

With the year I’ve had so far, when I grow up I think I’m gonna be a Buddhist nun. But only if I get to keep the shhhoes …

Shhhhh …

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

I joined the gym two weeks ago and have been going for two hours a day ever since. I clearly look like the new psycho-nutter gym bunny and there’s a man who quizzes me every time I go on why I’m working so hard. “Two Oceans?” he wants to know. “Comrades?”
“No,” I said, “Vipassana.”

It’s the name of my latest challenge – my metaphorical mountain – and I leave today. I’ve had a large beer, a couple of ouzos, a chocolate binge, greasy food and my final gym session … not all of them this morning … and I’m now as ready as I’ll ever be to go into silence and meditation for a long ten days. No music, no reading, no writing, no mind-altering substances of any kind, no sexual misconduct, practically no food and definitely – absolutely! – NO talking … which obviously means no mobile phones either which, in fact, get confiscated on arrival. The discipline for the duration of the course follows a strict routine of morning bell at 4am followed by mediation sessions and lessons throughout the day, ending with compulsory lights out at 9.30pm – no objection considering the list of banned activities. People have been known to jump the fence to escape. But, like a friend of mine said, fence jumping is ok, it’s the fence sitting that’s intolerable. Another friend’s great advice was to make sure I didn’t leave anything on the fence when I jump it. Such faith.

“So what’s the point?” the man at the gym wants to know. “What do you hope to achieve?” “What’s your desired outcome?” “Nothing,” I respond, “absolutely nothing.” He’s not happy with this answer but it’s the truth; I can’t make something up just so he can make sense of it … as tempting as it is to stem his flow of questions. I choose instead to reposition the headphones in my ears and turn the volume up, shrugging when I see his lips move.

Expectation, after all, always taints the outcome. It sets you up for disappointment. There’s no success or failure on this course and just the process of doing it is an opportunity to be with a personal process that will evolve over time. If you were to press me, however, I would probably say it’s like rehab for talking. And, like everything I intuitively plan to do, it couldn’t have come at a better time. I have come to a crossroads of self-expression … I have seen with my third eye what I desire and I have opened my throat chakra and allowed my heart to flow out. The expectation gene made an appearance though and the gremlins shut me down. Yes, perfect timing. I have a chance now to contemplate what it means. Or maybe I have a chance now to just let it all go. A chance to disconnect from my words and reconnect with my body.

I tend to find passages in books at appropriate times and this morning’s reading brought the following to my attention:

“In silence, inner listening forms the bonding of heart and mind. Listening is an essential part of communication. In taking the time to be quiet, we are able to truly listen to ourselves. The chatter of the mind eventually dies down and the song of the heart pours forth. In this opening into silence, the upper and lower chakras can enter into resonance with each other, connecting mind and body.”

As I pack, I realise how little I will miss the phone, the email, the talking … but! as a grazer, it’s the lack of food that makes me most nervous. I’m sneaking a bag of almonds into my bag … think the sniffer dogs will find it? I might find the discipline when I get there not to eat them but they’re my safety blanket. Often you just want something because you can’t have it but if you can just satisfy your mind that your needs are being met, you often realise you don’t need them anymore.

If you hear from me before the 28th of November chances are I needed to jump the fence …

Addendum to previous post

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

And just as I was perusing the conflict in my Gemini soul, I found the following quote:

ā€œThe universe exists only through a constant dance of consistency and change. Through consistency, consciousness finds meaning; through change it finds stimulation and expansion. To find consistency within change is to embrace the unfolding flow.ā€

- Judith Anodea (Eastern Body, Western Mind)

True Fiction

Saturday, November 5th, 2011

It’s hard to believe I was emotional road kill only a few weeks ago. I sit here now, firmly grounded with every chakra open; my heart open wide and my throat, although not as open as my other chakras, is doing great. I have shifted from writing to talking and in doing so I have cleared the pathway to my heart’s desires. I know what I want now and, although there are no guarantees I’ll get it, I’m prepared to pack away the petulant child and be patient with the evolution of things to come.

In a recent, and not so rare, moment of self- flagellation, I accused myself of having stunted self-awareness. I read up on chakra three and chose all things yellow. And I returned to my healer and soul mate, who admired her handy-work before offering up her word cards. I picked Play and Reliability from the first deck and Earth and Air from the other. And there I was. No mystery involved; just pure Contradiction. And, yes, I am and always have been aware of it. I can’t help but wonder then if perhaps it isn’t so much a lack of self-awareness as it is a total awareness … of a self that makes no sense.

ā€œKnow thyself? If I knew myself I would run away.ā€ – Goethe

So I question the belief that it is only when I can bring the two poles of my personality together that I will be whole. And I wonder if I can really only be complete when I can be consistent.

The cuckoo’s nest …

Saturday, October 29th, 2011

ā€œI don’t phone you as often as I would if I didn’t know exactly what you were up to anyway. It’s not good to be so open, Penny. You really should try and keep something to yourself,ā€ she said.

One of my oldest friends is also my biggest critic and she doesn’t let me get away with anything. She won’t give opinions when I beg her for them and gives me a lot of lip when I don’t. But each time she knocks me down with her lack of compassion or judges me for things that don’t fit her profile of reality, normality and common sense, I have to remind myself of the theory that each friend we have is a reflection of a part of ourselves and I use it to learn from her, something about myself.

So I’ve kept quiet for a while, I’ve bunkered down and the blogosphere has been calm for a couple of weeks. She still hasn’t called though.

When my car broke down and the old Beetle I was driving broke down too, I was rescued by another friend of mine; someone who, with a tremendous amount of compassion, discusses life in ways that make broken down cars seem like clever subliminal ways to be rescued by friends who have messages for you they might otherwise not have given. Hers was given with trepidation considering her knowledge of my tender heart. “I don’t mean this as a criticism,ā€ she ventured, ā€œbut what you will probably discover one day is that when you are ready to let all of your stuff bounce around in your head more and feel less inclined to put it all out there, using your blog as a venting tool to push it away from you, that’s when you will be emotionally well.” You know when the joke sounds different but the punch line is the same …!?

I totally get it though. And I totally get that the same applies to emails and text messages that I push out there as though I can intellectualise my feelings and shun responsibility for my words. It’s my purge … my emotional bulimia.

What’s good for me is not necessarily good for my blog, and vice versa. So perhaps it’s when I’m blogging profusely that I most need that call to check up on what is really happening in my life … because when you are reading something here, I am ensconced in crisis and when I am quiet, the world is just a better place.

Meet my Twin

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

She’s connected to me … but only just. She is practically the same person, but there is just this partial separation. I sometimes don’t really know who she is and I certainly can’t keep up with what’s going on in her mind.

When I started writing this blog it was anonymous. I couldn’t deal with people knowing it was actually me who was thinking these, often morbid, things about baby and relationships. I was so accustomed to searching under carpets for spaces to shove things; I was ashamed and sure people would judge me.

And then something happened. My mind did what the earth did when the tsunami hit Japan – it shifted – and all the stuff that was under the carpet was washed out by the impact. And I stopped caring. I gathered the trash and I recycled it into bulletproof garments. I claimed my opinions and my ramblings and my crazy attitude to babies and the world in general, and people judging me … well, they just couldn’t touch me.

But claiming my own mind was only partial. When I put my name to the blog, a kind of separation occurred … the person I am and the person who writes, somehow, split. Me, and the person who writes as me are kinda the same person but not totally. I occasionally go back and read past posts and it’s like I’m reading them for the first time – I just can’t believe I Wrote some of the stuff … I can’t believe I Knew some of the stuff. And when people quote my ramblings back to me, I often don’t even recognise them as my own.

I’m not saying I don’t believe in the stuff I write … it’s just that it feels sometimes like my Gemini twin has gone it alone … I’m the Talker and she’s the Writer. My mother always told me it was like her fourth child had turned out to be twins and my ex always claimed to have married a harem – he didn’t know who he was going to wake up with in the morning … Ā Gemini’s get a bad rap because we can do it all – as long as we want to! – but we’re not all bad … unless you’re talking about those emails and text messages. But if you think I take responsibility for any of those, think again! – that’s all Her.

A Patchwork Quote

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

Paulo Coelho wrote: ā€œWords are tears that have been written down. Tears are words that need to be shed. Without them, joy loses all its brilliance and sadness has no end.ā€
Shakespeare wrote: ā€œGive sorrow words; the grief that does not speak whispers the o’er-fraught heart and bids it break.ā€
And A.A. Milne wrote: “A quotation is a handy thing to have about, saving one the trouble of thinking for oneself.”

So I meander here through a maze of other people’s wisdom and try to find my feet in tear-formed pools of grief where others have already trod. The eyot has sent me back to the garden where I turn my reflection to the spring sun and dive into Judith Anodea’s river of words, in Eastern Body, Western Mind, which I use to irrigate the weeds that are learning to grow amongst the flowers. ā€œThose who are idealistic about love sometimes find the greatest pain. Wide-eyed they fall, giving their utmost to the beloved. Great is their dismay, when giving all they could and valuing this love above all things, they see their lover casually mistreat what they had regarded as sacred.ā€ Just when I thought the gardening was all done, ā€œ… a painful situation triggers wounds from previous hurts that were never healed and we feel like we are re-experiencing every hurt that has ever happened to us.ā€ Like driving a garden fork through your foot … and not just once!

ā€œThe emptiness of abandonment may be re-experienced every time it happens in adulthood, where the loss of a loved one leaves us feeling like we’re falling apart. The body itself may reflect this collapse, with the muscles chronically undercharged, the legs weak, and the upper back hunched over as if the spine cannot quite hold itself upright.ā€ I don’t collapse and feel like dying anymore – well, not as frequently anyway – but my body has shut down. It’s had enough and no longer even heeds the call of my inner Forrest Gump. I can no longer fight it so I dose myself up with Tryptophan and I lie on the grass and find farm animals in the clouds, wondering if perhaps the dose is too high.

ā€œWhen we fall in love, we strip ourselves of defences. We open to another and to the world. We expand and grow. When we are hurt in matters of love, we are hurt in our most vulnerable, trusting aspects. The purest form of self is wounded. It no longer feels safe to be authentic. Our system – wounded at the very core – shuts down and we lose not only our lover but ourselves as well. This is the deepest loss.ā€ Each of our friends reflects a certain aspect of ourselves; they allow the different aspects of our personalities to breathe. When we lose a friend we lose that aspect of ourselves too. ā€œThe point of grief work is to regain connection with the self inside rather than increase our attachment to what was lost.ā€ With a lover who you connect with on a cellular level, all those things he awakens in you are lost when he leaves and this is the part we truly grieve. ā€œIf the object of our worship should leave, fall from grace, or reject us, we are devastated. To heal, we must then reconnect responsibly to the self within, seeing it as an aspect of divinity in its own right, and much in need of love and understanding.ā€ Ultimately we can get over anyone who leaves – even when it feels like an impossible goal – but we can’t get over the missing pieces of ourselves. My deficient heart has responded to the wounds by withdrawing and I findā€œ… distance from others and defend against closeness and the risk of getting hurt again.ā€

I am reminded of a quote by Rumi: ā€œYour task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that have been built against it.”Ā He also wrote, ā€œLovers do not finally meet somewhere, they are in each other all along.ā€ When my heart was broken I didn’t search for love. He was already in me. But I still had to put in the time, seeking out the barriers I had built against loving him, gradually breaking them down. And opening myself up. And allowing myself to love him. But as my heart opened like a lotus flower out of the cesspool, it was plucked by the knife of abandonment.

Rollo May wrote, ā€œTo love means to open ourselves to the negative as well as the positive – to grief, sorrow and disappointment as well as to joy, fulfilment and an intensity of consciousness we did not know was possible before.ā€ And in this heady mix of uppers and downers, and waking up in Vegas where the broken down barriers lead to love and the love leads to barriers, which get broken down to expose the love … and on and on, I suddenly sober up and see that all I’m left with is ā€œ… the hangover and the memory of love.ā€

But when I feel like stopping there, Brandi Carlisle’s voice strains down the headphones cord, ā€œBut these stories don’t mean anything if you’ve got no one to tell them to. It’s true, I was made for you.ā€ and the barriers stand tall with the reminder of what an irrelevant sentiment that is when love pierced my abdomen and stuck me in a frame to display my beautiful wings; preserving me when I would far rather have died.

But, hey, ā€œRelationship furthers the evolution of individual souls and the collective soul of our planet.ā€ So I slurp down bowlfuls of bittersweet soup for the soul, take one for the planet, and trust that the cycle will continue, just as it should.

Gender Roles

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

I recently took my child to visit his grandparents for a week. It’s always interesting hearing the things he comes up with in this completely different – often dysfunctional – environment; a setting that brings out in him a renewed confidence to speak his mind … ironic considering I tended to forget I had one when I was living there.

Sitting at the dinner table one evening, we were talking about someone we had met on a picnic, commenting on his wonderful sense of humour and eclectic flair. My father seemed out of the loop so my mother leaned in close and filled him in. “He’s gay!” she said in a whisper that made it sound criminal, her eyes flashing over to where my child was sitting.

“Pffft,” my child muttered, drawing himself up tall, folding his arms and mustering all he could of his six-year-old ego. “You do know that men can marry men and women can marry women, don’t you? Don’t you?” he demanded. I gave him the proud mum look … with a touch of amusement … then sniggered into my pumpkin risotto, waiting for a response. There was a stammering from the other side of the table … then silence … before my – much older – niece broke in with, “And men can marry women.”
“Ha!” came the reply. He smiled, relaxed and uncrossed his arms. “OB-viously!” he chuckled and continued with his dinner.

I don’t always know where he gets his information but I try not to shush him when he’s expressing himself even when it is at the expense of ‘normal’ dinnertime conversation in a house where even I am still learning how to fully express myself. I’ve learnt, though, since a recent conversation with my mother that perhaps we both need a lesson in boundaries when visiting there. There is a possibility my house will be sold and I will need to be out before Christmas. I have been telling everyone I’ll be going to Durban to stay with my folks for a while until I find somewhere to live, taking the unconditional love of my parents for granted. Prematurely it seems! My mother’s response to my suggestion was, ā€œHaha, it’s not going to happen.ā€ Clearly she has no trouble expressing herself … loud and clear!

Quick, get me some weeds

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

I used to live in London; my first abode a bedsit in North Eyot Gardens. It took me a while to get to wonder about the meaning of the name but once I found out what an eyot is I took a stroll down to the river to take a look. Sediment, deposited in the Thames over time, had formed a small island in the river, diverting the flow; steady around one side and fast around the other.

Sediment has been forming in my river lately and my flow bumped headlong into in about half an hour ago when I came across a Spanish song I downloaded and never bothered to translate – because the river was flowing too fast at the time – it was a song from my Love and I was drowning him in my torrent at the time. My river has hit this mound and has turned into a swirling whirlpool … but, before it gets tumbled over rocks and completely washed away, I will imprint it on my time capsule of all things tumultuous in my life.

I have not gone anywhere like the song suggests; on the contrary,Ā he has set up his own diversions to keep his river from merging with mine – wants to take in the beauty from a safe distance, avoiding the rapids and the whirlpools – but he wants me to flow beside him in case he ever needs to use my water.

Read it and weep. And in your weeping add water to my river, which must now get fuller and stronger to push through this diversion … because nothing must be allowed to stop it now.

Te mando flores-Fonseca
I am sending you flowers

Te mando flores que recojo en el camino
I am sending you flowers, which I picked up on the road
Yo te las mando entre mis sueos
I am sending them to you between my dreams
Porque no puedo hablar contigo
Because I can’t speak with you
Y te mando besos en mis canciones
And I am sending you kisses in my songs
Y por las noches cuando duermo
And during the nights when I sleep
Se juntan nuestros corazones.
Our hearts are coming together.

Te vuelves a ir
You go away again
Y si de noche hay luna llena
And if there is a full moon by night
Si siento fro en la maana
If I feel cold in the morning
Tu recuerdo me calienta
Your memory warms me
Y tu sonrisa cuando despiertas
And your smile when you wake up
Mi nia linda yo te juro
My beautiful baby I swear to you
Que cada da te veo ms cerca.
That every day I see you closer.

Y entre mis sueos dormido
And while sleeping between my dreams
Trato yo de hablar contigo y sentirte cerca de m
I am trying to speak with you and feel you near me.
Quiero tenerte en mis brazos
I want to have you in my arms
Poder salir y abrazarte y nunca ms dejarte ir.
To be able to come out and hug you and never again let you go.

Coro:
Quiero encontrarte en mis sueos
I want to find you in my dreams
Que me levantes a besos
To get up with kisses
Ningn lugar est lejos para encontrarnos los dos
There is no place too far away for the two of us to meet
Djame darte la mano
Let me give you my hand
Para tenerte a mi lado
To have you by my side
Mi nia yo te prometo que ser siempre tu amor
My baby I promise you I will always be your love
No te vayas por favor.
Please don’t go away.

Te mando flores que recojo en el camino
I am sending them to you between my dreams
Yo te las mando entre mis sueos
I am sending them to you between my dreams
Porque no puedo hablar contigo
Because I can’t speak with you
Y voy preparando diez mil palabras
And I am preparing ten thousand words
Pa’ convencerte que a mi lado
In order to convince you to stay by my side
Todo ser como so amos.
Everything will be like we dreamed it.

Y entre mis sueos dormido
And while sleeping between my dreams
Trato yo de hablar contigo y sentirte cerca de m
I am trying to speak with you and feel you near me.
Quiero tenerte en mis brazos
I want to have you in my arms
Poder salir y abrazarte y nunca ms dejarte ir.
To be able to come out and hug you and never again let you go.

The Goose and the Gander

Sunday, October 2nd, 2011

I had a flashback to a scene from When Harry met SallyĀ … Carrie Fischer’s character was divorcing her husband and they were sitting in the living room sorting through who gets what and I seem to remember a fight over … uh … was it really a wagon wheel table? My memory may be playing tricks on me for the purpose of this blog post but … at the end of the day it all boils down to Stuff. You want it even if you don’t want it. I’m not terribly sentimental about stuff but there are certain things that belong to me; they are part of me and part of my story. If they went up in smoke I probably wouldn’t miss them but the idea of them being in someone else’s house out of spite is not a place I care to go. I’m used to my buttons being pushed but it feels like they’re being pushed with an electric probe these days. I’ve felt a fair amount of spittle fly into my face lately, but since learning a new use for my word, Trust, I can let the hostility slide over me. I can Trust that I will be bombarded with verbal, email and sms abuse about anything from the state of the garden to the friends I hang out with but I can now also Trust that an apology isn’t far behind. For most things…

ā€œI think what I am doing is very different from what you did.ā€ The sms glared at me from my Nokia screen and I glared back until the screensaver came on. Like so many things these days, the ā€˜conversations’ tend to end right there, requests for elaboration futile.

ā€œI hate to generalise,ā€ a male friend of mine said, ā€œbut it’s weird; it’s just a guy thing. Ego maybe.ā€ I was telling him about my husband’s big Secret about having a Girlfriend. I knew of course – small world that it is, my people know her people – but it was still just a rumour until he told me himself months later … and only because I inadvertently prompted it. I had, after all, told him the moment I met My Guy even though we were already separated. I was relieved by the news and felt smug about how he can no longer be self-righteous about my ā€˜affair’ and I threw my head back and laughed at his hypocrisy about not being able to move on until the divorce was final. None of it really matters you see – it is such a tiny blip on an antiquated radar – our relationship has been over for years and I want him to be happy in the same way I found life after death … albeit temporarily. But playing the guilt and blame card still? … trying to absolve himself by comparing? … hmm, it just doesn’t sit right.

Is that really just a guy thing? Does Ego really excuse hostility, hypocrisy and self-righteousness? I hope it’s just a phase. Like my great-grandmother, Dottie, used to say, through her cracked lips and crooked teeth, ā€œThis too shall pass.ā€

 

Prince? What Prince?

Friday, September 30th, 2011

I did this fun survey thing a few years ago and, reading it now, notice that not much has changed – apart from the obvious … and the fact that I am now most definitely more of a morning person indulging, most days, in a hearty breakfast. But the most apt feedback right now is the following:

9. What kind of car do you drive?
Beetle (LHD from Holland) … ten years old – it’s the love of my life and I would only replace her for a Beetle, circa 1970 … or the next fabulous hybrid if I manage to get the thing referred to in 52 below.
(If you want to know the answer to 52, best you click on the link below and read the survey):
http://www.bhalababy.com/2008/11/07/survey-2008/

Seems like my car breaking down and my getting to drive an old red Beetle, circa 1970, is actually just me Living My Dream. Very Clever of me getting my camshaft to just snap right off like that! It’s not only good laugh-a-minute fun entering a time warp to my early twenties (appropriate considering…), it’s grounding me and I don’t want to give it up … yet!

It’s turned me into a modern day Cinderella – the clock struck 40 and my carriage turned back into a pumpkin. I have lost my prince and there isn’t a Glass Slipper in sight … not that my modern day prince would have bothered to look for it anyway … and I have banished the Fairy Godmother from the land for playing such Foolish Tricks on me in the first place.

Coincidentally the very newest Beetle is rolling off the production line, but I still don’t have that thing in 52 so my next address downgrade will come with a car downgrade too … although one princess’s downgrade is another one’s dream.

ā€˜Careful what you wish for’, they say … Hell, why?

Chakra Talk

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

So she bought the Diva Eats Homework story … but she gave me tougher homework this time. A few of my chakras are out and they need some serious PT to pull them ā€˜back in’. My heart chakra is totally closed, as is my base chakra and my throat chakra is way open and way closed all at the same time.

The problem with my throat chakra is that it closes up and then all of a sudden opens way too much and then I talk … a LOT. On my own I am rediscovering the truth of who I am – very upbeat, relatively chilled, and not at all angry. The first two still apply but the last one … geez … we’re talking Tourette-style outbursts that would clear the shelves of Coleman’s English mustard at the local Pick n Pay should I still be a teenager in my mother’s house. But when the words spew forth during a normal conversation, I am fortunately as inappropriately amused by them as I would be were they falling from the lips of someone with the actual disorder. But apparently my laughter and subsequent self-deprecation won’t cut it; I need to do some serious work in the area … on quality as well as quantity.

Base has been out for a while – I eat root vegetables, I wear red and tuck various semi-precious stones of varying frequency into my bra, I do kriya and I go for dips in the ocean. But until I stop sabotaging my health and until I feel secure in the world and until I can trust without fear of abandonment, I can consume all the beets in the world for the good it’s going to do me. Grounding myself is tough when I have always been rooted in the air.

My offensive language and health issues do not, however, come close to the work required to prevent heart failure. My formerly open heart chakra that brought with it the characteristics of love, compassion, empathy and altruism is probably where most of my work lies. Closed doesn’t look good on it. But I too readily shed my cloaks, and I then opened my heart too wide … my soft landing turned out to be a rocky outcrop and my knuckles are white from hanging onto the edge. I’ll be letting go any day now.

Today brings the new season’s new moon, Navratri and a nine-day fast, which is sure to bring alignment, focus and the emergence of new possibilities … and maybe even a new vocabulary. But not just yet. My car broke down again today – Ā£%$%!^Ā£$@&^%& – and while I was still adjusting, through new awareness, my approach to the situation, the mechanic’s intern approached me shyly and offered me the use of his car. I recognised the part in me that wanted to say ā€œNoā€ but I shushed her while fuelling the car from a jerry can and push-starting it down the hill. Driving an old beat-up Beetle with no petrol gage, a dodgy battery and an ignition that needs gentle coaxing to fire it up is definitely good for the heart chakra; it’s red so the base chakra is sorted, and the whoops and hollers as I will it up hills opens my throat to a healthy volume.

No theme song today so I end with a quote from the chakra book I’m reading:
“For one human being to love another human being; that is perhaps the most difficult task that has been entrusted to us, the ultimate task, the final test and proof, the work for which all other work is merely preparation.ā€ – Rainer Maria Rilke

At last I understand this doesn’t mean romantic love but the love that flows from my heart for all – that is the real love that will open my heart again. And the grounding trust will flow from that place and hopefully put a lid on my foul mouth. I often wish I could put a lid on transformation … but it would be something like damning the Thames and my river needs to flow if I am one day going to emerge the person I am meant to be.

Flashcard Meditation … Part 2

Monday, September 26th, 2011

I’m still listening to Gloria Gaynor … and smiling … and tapping my feet … and getting ready to kick off my shoes and dance on the bed. But first I need to finish this.

The diva is the new guru. And this particular one seems to have totally distracted me from my task … the one given to me by my healer who has insisted I follow on with all the contrasts I have been quoting. She looked at my ‘homework’ of a couple of months ago – the flashcards of negatives – and said, ā€œOK, now you need to come up with a matching pair for each of these; something positive that counters each of the negatives.ā€ I sighed and agreed, while crossing my fingers behind my back.

Thing is the concept, for me, is flawed. It would be like planting weeds where the flowers used to grow. Yes, for me and the purpose of this exercise, the weeds are the positives – they are the ones that grow unabated. The idea with the positive flashcards was, for her, so I could plant more flowers amongst the weeds, but she had forgotten that my balance comes in reverse and staring at the flowers too long caused the problems in the first place. The flowers provide the hope of beauty while the weeds provide the reality of imperfection … and excellent compost. Sometimes the best place for the flowers is in a vase.

Gardening analogies and divas … a contrast too far? Perhaps. The point is I’ve licked my wounds. It’s enough now. I’ve explored. I’ve delved. I’ve dug my hands deep into my grey matter. I’ve planted. I’ve pruned. I’ve watered the garden with my tears. I have become the river that flows through the garden … sometimes a trickle, sometimes a torrent but always fluid … watering both the flowers and the weeds, neglectful of neither, valuing each in its ability to provide balance and perspective – compost and beauty. I am moving through this.

The garden may never be done … but what’s the point of a big bed if you can’t jump on it. When I see my healer tomorrow, I will be sure to tell her that Gloria ate my homework.