Category Archives: Humanities

Self-Portrait Tuesday: Thoughts on Identity

There’s another creative endeavor I recently found called Self-Portrait Tuesday. Each month has a theme, and each week participants explore the theme using portraits they took of themselves. The theme for November is exploration of identity. Below is a photo I took as I played at modeling a scarf I made last night. This photo was the best of the bunch.

As I looked at the photo, I was uncomfortable with what I saw. And the thing is, it’s all superficial and I know better. I mean, I was trained to be a psychotherapist, I did years of my own therapy, I understand my value is not based in externals. What kind of example am I?

But we are all our own critics, I suppose. When I look at this photo, I see a woman whose skin is beginning to show less resilience and freshness. I see the double chin forming, the face rounding out. I’m not in the best of shape and am significantly over what is considered a healthy weight. This became the case in 1999/2000, and I’ve not met with success in reducing it significantly or maintaining loss. Motivation is a factor, but so is age. My metabolism simply doesn’t burn as strongly. I am aging. We all are, but there comes a point when what’s inside, how one feels, begins to contradict what one sees in the mirror. This is the beginning of mortality consciousness on a new level.

Continuing to look at the photo, I see a slightly shy gaze peering back. The eyes are kind, inquisitive, and perhaps a tad mischievous. In childhood, you would have found a photo of me next to the word “hyper-sensitive” in the dictionary. I probably would have appeared next to “shy” and “crybaby” too. Later you’d find me next to “introvert” and probably still would. I’m not a commanding presence. I don’t seize attention, never felt comfortable flirting or showing off my body or using my sexuality overtly. For years I was guarded against in-person relationships with men. One of my most intimate relationships was conducted over ten years in letters to a man I never laid eyes on. I am a discovery that only those with open eyes find. I don’t look like much on the outside, but there’s a mother-lode of interesting goodness inside.

That’s why Internet publishing such as blogging is one of my favorite hobbies. This type of writing has connected me to others of similar interests, yet whose dispositions toward introversion would have meant we never met. And I get to “display my wares” to an audience of kindred spirits. As I look at the woman in this photo, I am curious as to what awaits in her future. At mid-life I am getting a little long in the tooth to become a mother, but we shall see. I’m also getting to an age where it will be harder to convince employers to hire me, something that increases sharply when one hits 50 and up. (Read Ronni Bennett’s blog if you are dubious.) And yet I have reached an age where my willingness to explore is less hindered by fear. I feel more accepting of my flaws and mistakes. I don’t feel a need to apologize for my existence anymore. I am full of experiences and have something to say to the world, some measure of aliveness to offer. People drop in, take what they want or need, and go on their way. I like this — my virtual personal café. And really, what more can a person ask for than a venue to offer her talents to the world? We are all seeking meaning and significance; we’d like to be remembered forever, but obscurity is the destiny of all but a few. Right now, right here, though, I’m making an impact. I hope it’s a good one; I strive for that.

All Good Things

My father was very sure about certain matters pertaining to the universe. To him, all good things—trout as well as eternal salvation—come by grace and grace comes by art and art does not come easy.

–Norman Maclean, A River Runs Through It

Better Dead

It was a book to kill time for those who like it better dead.

–Dame Rose Macaulay

Hee! I’m a bit of a reading snob, I suppose, because I think serial mysteries and romances fall into this classification. There are actually occasions when such a book is desireable, even a slightly sinful indulgence. My “I like time better dead” author used to be Lawrence Sanders many years ago. More recently it has been Patricia Cornwell’s Kay Scarpetta mysteries with a little Jonathan Kellerman thrown in. Some people like chicklit, others like romance or adventure or science fiction. What’s your genre for killing time?

In Which I Recognize a Need

I am having one of those restless yet stuck days. The kind in which I realize that having a job, even part-time, would probably be a good thing. I’ve been applying without much success.

I feel a void in my life, in myself. Not enough fresh input is flowing; I’m stale. I need more interaction with other creators. However, I’m not feeling extremely well, so venturing out of the house is taxing. Writing doesn’t appeal these past few days, which means I’ve prepared nothing for tonight’s memoir group meeting. I’m making art, but feel a need for an infusion of ideas. I feel as though I live in slow motion.

This too shall pass. Usually when I’m mired in sluggishness, just writing about it breaks me out.

Where Wisdom Begins

Disappointment and loss are a part of every life. Many times we can put them behind us and get on with the rest of our lives. But not everything is amenable to this approach. Some things are too big or too deep to do this, and we will have to leave important parts of ourselves behind if we treat them in this way. These are the places where wisdom begins to grow in us. It begins with suffering that we do not avoid or rationalize or put behind us. It starts with the realization that our loss, whatever it is, has become a part of us and has altered our lives so profoundly that we cannot go back to the way it was before.

–Rachel Naomi Remen

A Chance to Redeem

It is the rare person who, looking back over his life and seeing what he has done to it, hasn’t sighed for a chance to redeem what he has cheaply used or carelessly ruined. If only somehow, somewhere, there was a way to live again the days we have darkened with our blind haste – the innumerable occasions when our indifference trod on all the pearls of GodÂ’s graciousness; the times when our pride, or our fear, or our meanness poured the acid of contempt over the fair countenance of anotherÂ’s soul! If this grace were ours, how we would leap to the chance!

–Samuel Howard Miller

Look at Every Path

Look at every path closely and deliberately. Try it as many times as you think necessary. Then ask yourself, and yourself alone, one question… Does this path have a heart? If it does, the path is good; if it doesn’t it is of no use. Both paths lead nowhere; but one has a heart, the other doesn’t. One makes for a joyful journey; as long as you follow it, you are one with it. The other will make you curse your life. One makes you strong; the other weakens you.

–don Juan Matus

[via Whiskey River]

So Moving

I just have to post these three lines here, because they are so moving — even haunting — to me. The entire piece is a treat of images and metaphors that radiate with a daughter’s love for her mother.

She was the daughter of broken hearts and the mother of unbroken daughters.
She was a dream I had as a child that took me decades to wake up from.
She was an emerald, brilliant, flawed, a tragic mess of perfection.

–La Peregrina, Santiago Dreaming: Writing Love Letters in the Sand

About Life and Death

I have always believed that death does not end a relationship (mentioned in “I Never Sang for My Father”) and that the honoring of our dead is important for our own quality of living. Death not only does not end a relationship, but as I said yesterday, we must periodically learn to “dance with it.” Am I scared of dying? Yes, I am, but I no longer hide from it as I once did. Day of the Dead has that childish, fun quality of spoofing death, teasing it, to take the fear out of it. All my extremely conservative Dutch relatives are probably squirming in their graves right now protesting their inclusion in a custom they probably would find pagan, but I’d rather think they are happy to be remembered this week.

–Fran Pullara, Sacred Ordinary: Day of the Dead is About Life

Art Everyday

We are on the cusp of NaNoWriMo, which I signed up for. No pressure. I’ll write and see how far I get.

With the same relaxed attitude, I have also joined up with Kat for her version of Nano. This is her third year.

One way or the other, creativity will find its expression this month!