With A Flower
I hide myself within my flower,
That wearing on your breast,
You, unsuspecting, wear me too —
And angels know the restI hide myself within my flower,
That, fading from your vase,
You, unsuspecting, feel for me
Almost a loneliness.– Emily Dickinson
Category Archives: Humanities
Too Cute To Be That
Surreal
Surreal
At the turn of the century
it is a long way down
to the mind’s I. A treehouse
chronicles my journey to this
lost continent, which requires
the amber spyglass to navigate.
When I arrive I am barely a
shadow. There is
snow falling on cedars; through
the woods I hear the single hound
wailing for her hometown. After
twenty years at Hull House, I
mourn for that bastard out of
Carolina who left her tender
at the bone. I wander through
trees toward her cries and find
her. My journey ends across the
river, past the canal town. Before
crossing over, I ask her for
directions. “I don’t know,” she
replies. “I’m a stranger here myself.”
–Kathryn Harper
Art Every Day Month – Day 7
Pastimes
We don’t watch television anymore, at least not together. So right now I’m catching up on recorded episodes of Chuck. I also plan to catch up on Dirty Sexy Money eventually. However, I will probably pass on old episodes of Reaper. It’s kind of a replicate of Chuck (slacker guy with best buddy work in retail and have whacky adventures), but I think Chuck (the main character) is much hotter and more adorable. When I go to bed (in half an hour), Husband will have his much-needed quiet time (if our little girl will oblige him by staying asleep) and watch them too.
This evening I escaped for a few minutes to Barnes and Noble, where I indulged myself with the following:
What Mothers Do: Especially When It Looks Like Nothing (since I spend hours sitting in the rocking chair holding her, I need something to read)
Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind (recommended by Karen)
Walt Disney Records : Children’s Favorite Songs, Vol. 1: 25 Classic Tunes (because the only tune I can remember of late is Frére Jacques; I make up words as I sing to her, narrating our activities)
Claire’s colic is still… colicky. Husband came home and took over with Screaming Mimi. She’s so exhausted. As are we.
Learning To Live In the Moment
Yesterday I wrestled with ambivalence about what I’ve wrought by having a child.
There are no vacations from this. Every day will be about getting this child fed, clothed, bathed, keeping her occupied. Her needs always first. No matter what, I feel a tension. I’m aware that I’m always on call, not knowing the next time Pixie will need something, so it feels as though I can’t start anything or delve very deeply into anything, because I may have to drop it. I’m struggling with accepting that. My mother said she remembers this feeling, but she was much younger and with no years of living according to her own plans and desires, so it may have been easier to embrace.
The odd thing is, before she was born I wasn’t doing a whole lot; I was on my computer for hours, read books, etc. But I had complete freedom to do whatever I wanted whenever I wanted, and I only had to consider myself. This is no longer true. Even if someone comes to babysit, there’s a time when I’m expected to return, and I’m aware I need to return.
This tension is taking a toll physically too. In the mornings my feet hit the floor running. Once Husband comes to bed after finishing his “shift,” I awaken, knowing that sometime in the next hour or so she’ll cry and it will be my turn to start the day. So I lose precious sleep. Then, once I’m up, the tension moves to my intestinal track, specifically the lower, which makes be wonder if I’m developing irritable bowel syndrome.
What aggravates is that I do not let myself immerse in any activity of my choosing, because some part of me is always aware of her. Why start something if I will have to leave it?
What I need to do is find a way to fully attend to whatever I’m doing in the moment, and to find a way to quickly engage and disengage from anything I’m doing for myself. Otherwise my life is spent as a lady-in-waiting. At this point I’m only able to let go if Husband is on duty. Last night he urged me to soak in the tub, which I did for an hour. I had to continually return my mind, my attention, to experience the scented water. Now, I’m not saying I should be able to take a long soak when I alone am in charge, but even reading is something I’ve sacrificed. I don’t pick up a book to read anymore. I can’t settle into it. Even magazines don’t get read. I skim a lot on the web, but that gets boring after while. And even on the web I find myself reading stupid shit, gossip websites, rather than some of the good stuff that’s out there.
Perhaps the approach I need to aim for is what Zen means.
Loving the Expanse
Karen at Cheerio Road has a neat post today about the Zen bookshelf. She mentions Rainer Maria Rilke’s book, Letters to a Young Poet. I haven’t read it entirely, but two of the readings at my wedding were from it. They captured what Husband and I discerned is the essence of marriage and what we commit to.
Once the realization is accepted that even between the closest people infinite distances exist, a marvelous living side-by-side can grow up for them, if they succeed in loving the expanse between them, which gives them the possibility of always seeing each other as whole and before an immense sky. …To love is also good, for love is difficult. For one human being to love another is perhaps the most difficult task of all, the epitome, the ultimate test. It is that striving for which all other striving is merely preparation.
Love is a high inducement for individuals to ripen, to strive to mature in the inner self, to manifest maturity in the outer world, to become that manifestation for the sake of another. And this more human love will be consummated, endlessly considerate and gentle, good and clear in its bonding and releasing; it shall resemble that love for which we must prepare painstakingly and with fervor, which will be comprised of two solitudes protecting and touching and greeting each other.
–Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
Three Dozen Reasons
(This post is more for myself and may be of zero interest to you.)
I Am Grateful For/That:
- I have a washer and dryer inside my home and don’t have to lug laundry to a laundromat.
- Ditto for the dishwasher to save us from hand washing dishes constantly.
- The invention of the baby bottle dishwasher basket.
- I’ve got good quality ground coffee on hand (and it’s even fair trade coffee).
- Claire is growing and is over her cold.
- Slipping into deep, sweet sleep with the occasional help of Dr. Ambien.
- It doesn’t matter that the house hasn’t been vacuumed in a month, because I have a newborn, and that’s a reasonable excuse.
- Managing to put clean sheets on the bed and clean towels in the bathroom last night.
- Husband and I got long hot showers last night.
- Tivo. Costco.
- The 30 minutes I had yesterday to finish my pregnancy journal entries, complete with photos.
- The white noise CD Husband made (he found the sound files free on the web); when Claire is swaddled, rocked, and the volume is turned up sufficiently, it calms her immediately and helps her fall and stay asleep.
- Learning that noise comes in different colors.
- Other free stuff on the web, such as black and white shapes to print and show to baby.
- My sister-in-law is planning to visit from Austin sometime in the next month.
- Getting myself and Claire out for a short walk yesterday by myself (meaning I was able to lift the stroller and carrier and get us up and down the front stairs).
- Blogs such as: Cheerio Road, Antique Mommy, Cute Overload, I Can Has Cheezburger?
- Husband being such a collaborative and patient co-parent who is capable of seeing humor in many situations.
- Heating pads (and electricity) for my sore back.
- The magic of the baby swing. And D batteries.
- The look of recognition that I see glimmering in Claire’s eyes when I pick her up.
- Swaddling.
- Friends who come over on short notice to take a walk with me and Claire.
- Friends who bring us meals (home-made, deli, take-out, restaurant gift cards).
- The ten zillion old cloth diapers my mother sent us to use as burp cloths.
- Eucerin Aquafor healing ointment (great diaper rash preventive and general baby moisturizer).
- Adjusting to Claire’s crying (still challenged by that, though).
- Claire’s fascination when I read aloud to her; she turns her face toward me if she’s in the swing and looks intently in my direction, although I know she doesn’t see clearly.
- Generous family leave benefits from Husband’s employer.
- No more itching of my C-section scar.
- Stella the cat and her equanimous personality.
- The many gifts, cards, and flowers we (including Claire) received celebrating Claire’s birth.
- I’ve lost all of the baby weight and now weigh less than I did at conception last December. It’s good to wear my old clothes again.
- The pain in my left knee has gone, as has the hip joint pain, thanks to the Relaxin being out of my system.
- The pregnancy-induced carpal tunnel syndrome is abating; I still can’t knit, but my hands don’t go numb holding a pen or the phone anymore, and there aren’t shooting pains up my forearms anymore.
- Claire smiles!! Real smiles in response to ours. She also coos and vocalizes more.
Chop Wood, Carry Water: A Mother’s Spiritual Practice
There is no right way. There is always a right now way.
The video is also at this link.
Being Friendly Doesn’t Hurt
Another one for the library and Amazon wishlist: I Sold My Soul on eBay, by Hemant Mehta.
When Hemant Mehta was a teenager he stopped believing in God, but he never lost his interest in religion. Mehta is “the eBay atheist,” the nonbeliever who auctioned off the opportunity for the winning bidder to send him to church. The auction winner was Jim Henderson, a former pastor and author of Evangelism Without Additives. Since then, Mehta has visited a variety of church services — posting his insightful critiques on the Internet and spawning a positive, ongoing dialogue between atheists and believers.
I Sold My Soul on eBay tells how and why Mehta became an atheist and features his latest church critiques, including descriptions of his visits to some of the best-known churches in the country. His observations will surprise and challenge you, revealing how the church comes across to those outside the faith. Who better than a nonbeliever to offer an eye-opening assessment of how the gospel is being presented — and the elements that enhance or detract from the presentation.
Mehta announced prior to his churchgoing odyssey that he would watch for any signs of God’s existence. After spending Sunday mornings in some of the nation’s leading churches, what happened to the man who sold his soul on eBay? Did attending church change his lack of belief? The answers can be found inside.
–Amazon.com Book Description
I was led to this book from a contemplative post at Dale McGowan’s Meming of Life blog. Dale basically takes the adage “you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar” and considers how atheists and agnostics might apply that wisdom to their interactions with people who are religious. The post also contains an interview with Mehta, an atheist who also holds to the above adage. I plan to check out Mehta’s blog too, called The Friendly Atheist.
Spoiling a Pleasure
The surest way of spoiling a pleasure is to start examining your satisfaction.
–C.S. Lewis
Sunday Scribblings: Phenomenon
Inspired by the Sunday Scribblings topic this week, Phenomenon, I will attempt to articulate my thoughts on two phenomena — two transitions — that are dovetailing in my life: motherhood and blogging.
As my pregnancy has progressed, I’ve had time to begin the process of learning just how much my life will change. I know I won’t comprehend this completely until I’m in it. But as Karen Maezen Miller writes in Momma Zen:
Many of us consciously schedule motherhood for a time when we think we are done changing. We have arrived. We are stable. We’ve figured it all out. No more uncertainties or ambiguities for us. These are the years when we are likely to affix to a career, a partner, a home, and a hairstyle. With enough willpower and self-discipline, we can seem to forestall change for years on end — maintaining our chosen looks and pastimes, our precious privacy, our patterns and preferences, our way.
On the surface I don’t fit all the parameters Karen describes. My hair is a barometer of my moods and changes often. I’ve had a patchwork quilt of a career, having only begun the one I really wanted in 2000 at age 37 only to abandon it in the move to California in 2004. I’ve moved every few years since fledging my parents’ nest at 20. I didn’t want to be single parent, and it wasn’t until age 36 that I met my husband. (In fact, I avidly did not want children in my 20s; I sensed they would blow my life wide open.) I was gung-ho to have kids by age 38, but by then I was no longer the only one controlling the schedule; Husband needed to feel ready as well.
Anyone who knows me well knows my beliefs about life and my self-concept weren’t obvious to me until my late 30s — except the period where I immersed myself in a fundamentalist religion where I was told what and how to think. I depended upon others (often to my detriment) to define and validate me. It wasn’t until my late thirties that I could identify the values I hold most dearly, the words that describe the passion running like a gold thread through my life: education, community, creativity, expression. It wasn’t until I met my husband that my life became stable enough to pay attention to things other than survival. I began creating art in 2002. I relaxed into myself. Poor to nonexistent self-confidence was my major obstacle, and while it remains, it’s much diminished.
Despite all those differences, I am well-acquainted with driving my own life. While my goal in life was not to “arrive” — I didn’t postpone children until I’d reached some ideal state or lofty goal — and while change has been at the core of my life, I often chose the change. There were many things I could not control in my life, but I controlled how I responded to them. With crappy living situations, I went out for walks. I hated my job, so I took classes toward a long-term goal. My finances were tight, so I ate less. I had no money for a social life, so I saw few friends and devoted myself to a pen pal. I wanted better opportunities, so I moved 1800 miles to an unknown city and started over. And now that life is comparatively easy, I still have a sense of control: if I don’t feel like cooking, I don’t, and we eat out or fend for ourselves at home. I can shower when I like. I read for pleasure. I sleep when I want. I come and go as I please. I have plenty of time for my hobbies.
And then, in 2002 I discovered the ideal hobby for me, a writer who doesn’t seriously care about being paid and published: blogging. In my teens I journaled, but this waned in my 20s until I began my pen pal/journal relationship. When I have an audience in mind, writing has more appeal. Blogging provides the instant satisfaction of expression where many eyes will see it and in a format that looks appealing and official. It provides a sense of community with other disembodied “voices” and ego gratification from comments.
It is also a giant black hole for time, and it is my addiction. I spend more hours than I care to admit or are healthy on the Internet. At first blogging felt meaningful, and I developed friends. Periodically I feel compelled to adjust the balance of living online and living in real life (toward less online). But I do much less living than ever. Since finding stability and love, I seek out my cozy home life more; I don’t feel a need to get away (I used to walk for hours, go places, meet people, attend events). This reclusiveness has been compounded since the Internet/blogging phenomenon; I’ve lived increasingly in my mind in abstraction. Inertia roots me. I’m not alone; many people complain they do this too. I justify the time spent by saying, “I’m a writer.” Bullshit. When you’re reading Perez Hilton or TMZ or frittering time at 43 Things, you’re not writing. And increasingly I’m aware that the sense of relationship with others whom I regularly read is harder to maintain. Without occasional shared real life experiences, these relationships are just words on a screen with maybe a photo to give the mind’s eye a visual context.
Soon my life will change dramatically. Karen also writes:
The mother of a teenager once said to me, “I remember when they’re about eight months old and their ego begins to develop. It’s not pretty.” Neither is your own ego, and you don’t have to wait eight months for it to appear! I can see now how much of motherhood, from the very first hour, carries the early warning signs of ego warfare. I want to sleep. She wants to eat. I need to do this. She needs to do that. Not again. Again. It can feel as though someone were eating you alive. And what is being eaten is your ego.
It seems ridiculous to talk about infant care as combat. Your baby’s needs are pure and uncontrived. They are not manipulations. They are not strategic assaults. They are just assaults, relentless and evolving, against the way you want things to be. You love your child, yes, and yet you flail and roar, you cry and whine and tremble with the terror of life beyond your control.
This is what awaits me! Yep, I’m a bit frightened by it. Yet I’m also curious and engaged. I want to give myself to this experience. Will I want to write about it? Perhaps. Then again, maybe I would rather just live it. The blog is not a child, and the world does not need me, simply another voice on a screen. If I gave up blogging, my dedicated readers would miss me, but not much and not for long, because they, too, have real lives.
I always find it amusing when bloggers feel a need to explain an upcoming absence, or to apologize for not writing, or to apologize for “inconveniencing” readers by not writing. But I’ve done this too.
I wish I didn’t have a blog, that I’d never been bit by that bug. I wish I didn’t feel the need for the ego gratification of the pretty blog format and instant ability to share and show off (Look at me! Look at me!). I wish I wasn’t such an information hound, easily beguiled by trivia, hungry for more ideas. Let me be honest: increasingly I read less and comment less often on other blogs. I don’t really care about the other writer as much. Blogging has become, for me, mostly an avenue of expression and is no longer very reciprocal. But oh, it is so very easy to piss away hours of my life; self-employment was difficult for me because it takes a kind of self-discipline to structure one’s life, and I lack that trait. When I had a job, I squandered less time. The external schedule gave my life a spine.
Well I’ll soon have a job, but one without regular hours, and one that will demand more hours than any job I’ve ever had. I don’t know if I have enough energy or interest to give to this hobby any longer. Recently other bloggers I’ve read have also called it quits, because they felt the time spent blogging could be put to better use achieving their dreams. So maybe I’ll write, or maybe I won’t. It will be interesting to see what impact the phenomenon of motherhood has on the phenomenon of blogging in my life.
Inspire Me Thursday: Goddess
Having just discovered Inspire Me Thursday, I had to play!
Illustration Friday: Poem
Reading
I’m especially pleased that I was selected to read and review an advance copy of first novel Gifted: A Novel, by Nikita Lalwani. It was my first choice of all the books offered. You see, LibraryThing has created an Early Reviewers group in conjunction with Random House. How can I say no to a free book?
It should make a pleasant change of reading pace from a book I’ve been devouring today, which is Birth: The Surprising History of How We are Born. It’s excellent if slightly traumatic reading about the history of midwifery and obstetrics, tools and fads, cultural differences toward women and birth, and occasionally gruesome details about what women have endured (and still do in many parts of the world). Some might say I’m dotty to read it at this time, but really I find it fascinating. And it inspires my gratitude that I’ve found a doctor and hospital birthing center that I feel confident about. (I’m also scared of this great unknown event that will happen too. Yet I’m focusing more on the excitement of it. Just wanted to come clean, though.)
To round out the the subject matter, I also began reading What Are Old People For?: How Elders Will Save the World. As a middle-aged mom-to-be, I’m no longer young, but I’m not old — it’s an interesting life stage. I’m often disbelieved when I tell people my real age, because (they say) I look so much younger! And I don’t act old! What is “old” supposed to act like? I tire of this “amazement,” which really isn’t flattery. It’s ageism. I notice it in myself, too, this tendency to look at a woman my age who might have more wrinkles than I, and to judge negatively. Other times I’ve caught myself simply not seeing (I mean, really looking and registering) and older person (in a grocery store line, perhaps). Perhaps this book will tweak my perceptions.





