After Chocolate … Love is Everything

I don’t think anyone could deny that love is the axis of our world. The million and one indescribable highs that, by chance, happen to float our way whether we’re on the giving or receiving end of it. Like water to a flower, it’s intrinsic to what makes us tick, what adds that spring to our step. The nuts and bolts, grease and juice we require.

And while I believe each of us experiences this emotion differently—unique beings that we are—there are some aspects we undoubtedly share. How we see the power of it, how it makes us feel when we’re in the throes of it. Like I said, a million highs. A million highs which obviously couldn’t possibly fit on this page, but for the sake of brevity and not wanting to bore the crap out of you, this is my bite-size list.

                                                                                      *     *     *     *

Love is the promise and gravitational pull of all that we deem holy.

Love is that sacrosanct goodness showing us the way to be better, to do better. Helping an old lady across the street, donating clothes to the Salvation Army, sending care packages overseas. The type of things you think about, but never do—or often enough.

Love is grandbaby giggles, farts, and burps.

Love is forgiveness.

Love is joy. Given freely it resonates wings that soar to some pretty spectacular highs.

Love is singing in the shower. Off-key and laughing.

Love is “being that rainbow in someone’s cloud,”

Love is “being that rainbow in someone’s cloud,” the lyrical and sagacious poet, Maya Angelou, said. It’ll make you feel good. So, find that someone, anyone to shine for. Today, tomorrow, as soon as you can.

Loves is what makes us act stupid sometimes. But happy stupid; which is pretty cool in my book.

Love is that profound bliss biting into a frozen Milky Way bar without a care in the world.

Love is fighting and ending it with a big smackeroo.

Love is loving yourself and knowing the rest will follow.

Love is being okay to open the door to broken hearts and broken dreams.

Love is Buddha on steroids. Fearless. Leaping off tall buildings in a single bound into that unconditional safety net you can’t buy at Marshall’s or anywhere else for that matter. Because it’s the one thing in life you’ll never find on sale.

Love is compassion, empathy, the willingness to let those that love you be themselves without judgment.

Love is the eternal rule. An alignment to the universe. That infinite connection beyond life’s most egregious disasters and hardships. It makes all things possible. Not just because they are, but because you worked your ass off to get there.

Love is walking along the beach, holding hands, and sharing an ice cream cone.

Love is boundless, harmonious, hormonal, frightening, exhilarating, crippling, healing. It is all these things and more. Oh yeah, much more. So do yourself a favor … next time love comes knocking on your door, don’t fight it, don’t pretend you don’t need it in your life. Welcome it with open arms and a hallelujah!

I hope you enjoyed my somewhat whimsical and lighter perspective on life. Perhaps you’d like to compliment the read with Over Sixty and Definitely Not Looking for Mr. Goodbar.

 *    *    *

Photo credit: Creative Commons

2 Comments -Leave a Comment

Guilt. The Gift That Keeps On Giving. And Giving And Giving.

We all know the feeling. The one that rubs us like salt in a wound, that has us doing the Mr. Grumpy Pants routine more than we’d like. For something we did, something we think you did, something we shouldn’t have done, something we didn’t do enough of, something we’re doing better than everyone else. I’m sure if I wanted to write a listicle on the subject, it could fill a page. Maybe even stretch into infinity. Who knows? But that’s not the issue here.

The issue is why does this emotion exist at all?
Throughout history, I imagine the topic has crossed many a great mind. Freud, for starters, viewed guilt as a national phenomenon. Nietzsche, on the other hand, insisted this emotion to be unnatural. A learned state of being. “In this way, man wounds himself, this master of destruction, of self-torture.”

Self-torture
I think that’s a damn near perfect description for such a waste of energy. A regret that has no business in our day-to-day. Accomplished by nothing more than a simple shaming device that weakens the spirit to ensure things stay just the way they are.

Our own personal prison of status quo
Coming from Jewish roots, I grew up believing guilt was something to be tolerated. A time-honored tradition passed from generation to generation like my grandmother’s secret recipe for Mandelbrot. Ironically, I also believed it was synonymous with child-rearing. My mother did it flawlessly to me, my grandmother did it to her. And as screwed up as it sounds, I guess I imagined that if I too wanted to be a good parent and have such wonderfully well-disciplined children, all I needed to do was take up the reins. Develop this particular skill set and when my time came I could stand on the shoulders of giants waving my “best mother of the year” award for all to see.

Little did I know then weedling the blame-game finger at one’s young had nothing whatsoever to do with being Jewish. Just being a parent.

And all denominations were welcome
It’s crazy how easily guilt finds its way to our door. And equally crazy how easily we let it in. How we let it capture our sense of obligation. How it becomes in time this permanent fixture on the shelf of our self-esteem until something snaps inside and we finally say, fuck it. I’ve had enough.

For some of us, it takes a lifetime to get to this point. I imagine it might have a lot to do with age because the older we get the less we give a poop about meaningless things and the opinion of others.

But the thing I want to stress here is, eventually, we do all get there. You know, maybe it’s just part of the territory or maybe it’s God’s way of saying, thanks for enduring all those baloney sandwiches and guilt-trips I plopped on your plate.

Either way you look at it, braving the wrath of guilt is a major feat. Empowerment over yourself and those demons that rule you. A beginning, because everything has to start somewhere. Joan Didion once said, “the willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life is the source from which self-respect springs.”

This is where we start to rebuild. From within. Making the foundation once again strong. Finding the right tools, the right perspective to ensure the walls remain upright. Solid. After wading through the wreckage, deciding what we want to toss into the dumpster and what we choose to cherish, wrappers and all, that the light bulb finally comes on. A path illuminates. One which brings along a magnificent joyfulness in having the opportunity to be ourselves and be okay with who that person is and the decisions we make moving forward.

For me, this is the stuff of rare insight I wish I could have told my younger self. That and a million other things that I suppose would’ve saved me from a lifetime of grief.

I realize after years and years of knowing only one thing, emotions fuse together. With guilt comes shame. The two wield this double-edged whammy of a sword that not only marginalizes us but paralyzes us and the whole of it becomes this unbearable thing which makes it that much harder for us to let go.

To be someone different. To look at the world differently.

It’s never easy saying no, especially to the people we care about. But it’s one of those self-preservation tools required. And putting ourselves last each and every time, or at the bottom of the rung, comes with a price. A hefty price. No matter how you look at it.

When I was married, when my children were young, I didn’t feel as if I existed. My husband, my children … their needs came first. Mine didn’t exist at all. I was too busy doing and being everything to everyone — caretaker, official nose-wiper, housekeeper, expert Mac ‘n Cheese lady, errand girl —out of some distorted sense of duty pounded into my brain from an early age, that I forget what I wanted. What I needed.

But then I remembered. And that too came with a price and a very important lesson.
Those that love you, like you, respect you … will understand. And if they don’t. Well, then I say, screw them! They are people who don’t deserve you, who weren’t now or ever Team You.

And that’s the whole enchilada. Slipping into that number one slot isn’t an act of selfishness or defiance. It’s a declaration. A mantra. A breath of air. A step in the right direction.

We’ll never truly live a guilt-free existence. That’s not reality. The world is not a perfect place. But it’s the only place we’ll ever call home. And as Anne Lamott with all her humorous wisdom so poignantly pointed out, “into every life crap will fall.” And when it does, try and remember guilt doesn’t always have to be part of the equation. The puppet master pulling those strings only has the control you give it.

So don’t. Go on. Cut the strings. Eat the damn cookie. Trust yourself to be yourself. Somebody fighting to do their best, be their best day and night.

Peace y’all!

                                                           *     *     *     *

 

 

2 Comments -Leave a Comment

Over Sixty and Definitely Not Looking for Mr. Goodbar

It was a beautiful Florida morning. Not a cloud in the sky, still early enough before the rest of the world took its first breath and perfect for the beach. Armed with a writing pad, a book I had yet to finish, lotion and a chair I bounded for one of my favorite spots isolated enough where I knew I could set up shop right in front of the ocean without having to hear anything other than the lap of waves, the rustle of grape trees and the call of seabirds. At least for a few hours, anyway.

As I mentioned it was quite early and I wasn’t expecting to find anyone else there. However, there was someone else there. Someone I knew and well and had not spoken to in over ten years. I pushed aside the awkwardness of the moment, the reasons that pulled us apart, and just settled my chair beside hers where a conversation began and the details of our lives — what we’d been doing, where we were now—flowed out.

For what felt like hours I sat there listening to everything she had to say. She had recently turned sixty-five and despite all her monetary wealth, two successful daughters and the impending birth of her first grandchild, she was not happy. A deep hole existed where there should have been nothing but joy. This was not something I could tell her. I did not live her life. I did not see where she began, what she had envisioned for herself. Those paramount things she hoped to achieve.

Taking stock is a reality check. It’s something we all go through at some point, if not many points during the course of our lives. And while I’m not certain they’re always productive assessments or easy to do, I believe they’re critical if we ever expect to get anywhere.

One friend when he turned forty suffered a heart attack. Another quit his job and went to work for Starbucks. And although I personally never experienced a mid-life crisis, per se, well, not the kind anyway that entails trashing your clothes, liquidating your 401 (k) to buy a sports car, or giving yourself a do-over with Miss Clairol Pink #3, I did, however, wind up around that same forty mile-marker in the throes of a divorce and menopause. Two messy hardships I did not ask for. And two hardships that would drive any normal woman way off the deep end.

So deep there were days I forgot to breathe, I forgot my children, and they, in turn, forgot about me. But somehow I got through it. Goo Goo G’joob hallelujah. I survived my forties, my fifties seemingly intact, and now that I’m here at the sixty-plus stage over the proverbial hill sitting on a Cornflake after the van has come and gone, I can finally, honestly say I like where I am. I like who I am. Cellulite, age spots, jiggly bat underarms and all.

Yes, I stopped fighting that mother ship a long time ago. When shit happens around you, when those you love die, a ground-breaking seed inside your head grows. And like a breath of fresh air, the I’m-going-to-set-the-world-on-fire kind of dreams that once consumed you, are thrust elsewhere. On your children and your grandchildren, for the simple reason, you’re just so happy to be alive.

Joan Didion summed it up best: “I no longer want reminders of what was, what got broken, what got lost, what got wasted.” So much of our lives are spent reviewing parts of our existence that have become nothing more than wreckage upon a shore. Things that cannot be undone for all the tea in China.

I hope you realize this sooner versus later. I hope everything that bogs down your life, that keeps that hole in your heart from filling, falls away with the simple understanding what matters most is what lays ahead. And the only person you have to make happy is you.

Three years ago, after struggling with life butting in, with blank pages, with characters who wanted to tell a much different story than the one I intended, I finally completed my first book. It was the ultimate cherry. The sense of accomplishment that had alluded me for so long. And the interesting thing is, looking back, I realized it could have happened a lot sooner had I simply understood the difference between writing for others and writing for myself, and the flower of relevancy blooms from within.

I believe it takes great passion, great courage to live your life out loud with the sort of honesty of mind where things that feel shallow sink, and things that feel true float upon the surface as you give voice to all those inner frailties that make us human. Because we’re all screwed up — to some degree or another — and I don’t see anyone exempt from this messy pool of mankind. Not you, not me, not even Mr. Rogers with his snappy sweater and picture-perfect neighborhood.

Look, all I’m saying is that the closer we get to our number being called, re-adjust the lens. Ride the peace train of happiness wherever it takes you. And if that means crusading for the homeless, opening a cupcake shop, knitting sweaters for Etsy, swimming the Atlantic, or retiring to the west coast of Florida with all your Jujubes intact, then by all means go for it!

Me? I’m writing another book.

 

 

 

4 Comments -Leave a Comment