Category Archives: Regional

Just Flesh

I just finished reading Anne Lamott’s new book (thank you, Shirl) and am about to employ one of her techniques. I’m going to go on a cruise. When she needs a break, she takes a cruise, as she calls it, by nesting in her bed with magazines, blankets, pets, and chocolate, and stays there until she feels recharged. I do that sometimes, but probably not often enough.

Today I need it. I went to the medical center, and my experience there was as unpleasant as the last visit was pleasant. First, as I walked from the parking lot, a fighter jet flew over so low and loud that it set car alarms off. They fly from Moffet air field. The sound hurt, and the vibration invaded my body. Everyone outside the center looked alert, surprised, and dazed. One woman was pushing a baby carriage to her car, and that poor child was quite distressed. As was the mom. And I felt momentarily angry on behalf of that child.

I went to the mammogram department. The machine wasn’t working. They compressed my breast three times and the machine read “error.” She promised I hadn’t been exposed to radiation, that the machine wouldn’t even process the shot. She went out and came back, turned off and back on the machine, hoping that would work. I guess it did, because she took five more x-rays. Each one also hurt, because she pressed my breast harder than the last visit. They’re trying to get a good look at a four centimeter cyst. One that I’m pretty darn sure is benign, because I’ve had it since 2003; it was drained once, partially, and refilled again.

On the last shot, she had me standing next to the machine with my arm draped across as if I were hanging out with my best girlfriend. Except that she pulled my shoulder up to a point of discomfort; I had to stand on tiptoes to tolerate the pose. And then in her hurry she forgot to release me. She took the film out and was hurrying to get out of the room. I said, “Um, can I–” She, absently, “Yes, yes, you can sit down.” Me: “But I’m stuck!!” She: “Oh, I’m sorry, I wasn’t looking at you, I’m sorry” as she released me. All the while, I was breathing shallowly because it hurt.

I was told to get dressed and wait in the waiting room; my ultrasound wasn’t scheduled for an hour. While I waited, I read, and I observed patients interacting with staff. One receptionist was especially snippy and dismissive toward a woman who came in to schedule an appointment for her husband. “Is he an established patient? What’s his chart number? I can’t help you if he doesn’t have a chart number. Go to the front desk.” She wouldn’t even let the woman finish giving her answer.

The ultrasound technician, a man, called my name. I followed him into a room; he handed me a gown and said “Everything from the waist down is off.” He left. He returned and said, “Lie down.” Then he put goo on my breast and did the exam. Not a word was said. My past experience in Austin was quite different; the technicians were kind, asked how I was, saw that I was comfortable. This one barely acknowledged me. When done, he said “You can get dressed.” I asked, “Do I wait here?” “No, in the waiting room.” Again I sat, waiting. About ten minutes later he walked by and said, “Okay, that’s all for today.” No explanation. No comment that the doctor will review this, or that they’ll contact me further. Nothing. I was dismissed.

And given what I’d seen of how visitors were dealt with, and how hungry and tired I felt, I decided to just leave. I’ll call the woman with whom I scheduled the exam and follow up. My understanding was they were to get a release faxed from Austin that I could sign, so they could obtain the other films. However, when I asked the mammo technician, she had no clue what I meant.

I felt all teary and edgy. So I went to In-n-Out for lunch — a bad-for-me lunch, but what the hell. I sat reading more of Lamott’s book, which was probably not wise, because the essays were poignant, about the death of her mother, and life’s hardships, and while her essays usually end with a gem of truth or light, I’m more susceptible to tears when I feel this tender.

When I got to work, I decided bribe the students with the promise of a recess in the nearby park if they worked hard. Thus all 60 kids got a break, and it gave us coaches a bit of breathing room.

Yet I feel heavy, achy, sad, pissed off, disconnected, crowded, compressed, and edgy. The energy in Silicon Valley is fraught with tension. My coworkers, some who have lived elsewhere in California, say this is not the case in less dense areas. I’m not accustomed to supercharged urban living. People are not nice. It’s hard to describe. Everyone’s in a hurry, brusque. People step in front of you in line. People tend to ignore each other. Speak curtly. Dispense with the social niceties that make life a little smoother.

Which leads me to the conclusion that good mental health makes imperative a bit of TLC. I’ll start with an actual water experience, a long hot soak. I’ll smooth lotion on my skin and tell my body I love it. Then I’ll curl up with needlepoint, because my brain doesn’t want more words coming in. And maybe I’ll just go to sleep. A body needs rest. We don’t, as a rule, get enough. Well, I aim to change that tonight.

A Way to Have Fun While Helping

When I moved here last summer, I cast around for activities to keep me busy, since I had no job waiting. I learned of Hands On Bay Area, an organization that works with non-profit groups to coordinate volunteer assistance. What appealed to me was the opportunity to choose from an array of activities without having to commit to just one. For example, I helped out at a community center that collects donations of food and clothes for impoverished people, and then I worked at a community rose garden hoeing weeds. Last week I sorted books and affixed labels for the Bring Me a Book Foundation, and yesterday I conversed with people who are learning English as a second language. A volunteer can sign up for a project one time, or can commit to a number of project occurrences.

I enjoyed the ESL facilitation very much; years ago I did this as a volunteer at Syracuse University and UT Austin with international students. It was a wonderful exchange of ideas, culture, and friendship. When I learned that the project leader would need to find a replacement, I decided to consider it. The next step is attending a two-hour training on the duties involved; after the training I’ll be able to lead projects that appeal to me. The Book Foundation and ESL class occur on Tuesdays, and I can participate in each on alternating weeks. The pleasure in these two projects is that one allows me to indulge my librarian nature and the other my inner teacher.

Last fall I also underwent training to be a grief counselor at the Centre for Living With Dying. I was intensely interested in the work. However, after December I took a leave. I knew that I’d be responding to death in my own life soon, and did not feel available to help others. While I hope to return to the Centre at some point, as they do profound and necessary work, I’ll wait until my heart indicates I’m ready.

Meanwhile, I’m enjoying these other volunteer activities, and I’ve had the pleasure of meeting new people who may, at some point, become friends.

Oh My Aching Arms

But there’s a great reason for it. I spent three hours hoeing and raking at the San Jose Heritage Rose Garden. The tagline on their site says, “…delighting you with a world class collection of almost 5,000 plants of more than 3,500 varieties of heritage, modern and miniature roses, initially planted by more than 750 volunteers in March, 1995.”

I participated as a volunteer with the Hands On Bay Area community group. They provided coffee, juice, and bagels to get us started, and then we set to work. It was a gorgeous morning, and the perfumed air was a benefit of being there. As were the roses, a sight to behold! There are nearing peak spring bloom. I met a woman there and we chatted as we worked, getting to know each other a little. We exchanged contact information, and perhaps we’ll get together for a walk or cup of tea sometime.

The garden is routinely tended to by volunteers; more can be learned here. Go ahead give a hand sometime. It’s a lovely environment, good exercise, and you might even make a new friend.

Give the World

As we approach the holiday season, remember there are many children in situations where money is scarce. You will soon see Christmas trees at the mall with paper ornaments describing age, gender, and suggested gift item for a child. Or you may receive a flyer in the mail requesting your assistance. One event I always support is a book drive. Encouraging a child to read cultivates a life-long habit of curiosity and resourcefulness. It also helps a child to learn that a good book is a friend that can entertain or provide solace.

Locally, the San Jose Mercury News is sponsoring The Gift of Reading drive. They accept books and monetary donations. I always enjoy choosing childhood favorites to give, imagining the pleasure I am spreading to a new generation. Please consider participating, or find a local drive in your area.

Remembering Iris Chang

Chang’s sudden death came as a blow to many of her colleagues in the Bay Area, to whom she has lent generous time and support in pursuit of reparation and an apology from the Japanese government for atrocities committed by Japanese soldiers against Chinese soldiers and civilians.

San Jose Mercury News

Chang had recently been battling severe depression. Services will be held for her next week. The family asks that memorial contributions be made out to the University of Illinois, Iris Chang Scholarship Fund, and sent to the attention of Nancy Casey at the University of Illinois Journalism Department Scholarship Fund, 119 Gregory Hall, 810 S. Wright St., Urbana, Ill. 61801.

Chang is the author of investigative books such as The Rape of Nanking and The Chinese in America, among other works.

Imagine My Surprise

To find Leonard Peltier on my ballot as a presidential candidate. I thought it was the Leonard Peltier, and I was right. Several coworkers I spoke with had no clue as to who he is. If I’d not had a ten-year friendship with a Navajo whose family members had been loosely associated with the American Indian Movement, I might not know this either.

Only in California. It’s a phrase I hear quite a bit since moving here.

It’s A Small World

Oh, I know that’s trite. Trite, but true.

I belong to an Internet community called Orkut. When I learned we were moving to this area, I joined some communities, such as the South Bay Area community, and sent a message, a call for information. I was open to whatever advice people wanted to give a newbie. Well, a very nice man named George was among those responding, and I liked his warmth. I read his profile and thought, “This is a neat person!” So I extended an invitation to become friends, which he accepted. Granted, he hardly knows me, but in these communities the concept of friend is defined loosely.

Anyhow, during the two visits I’ve had with Tish, she has spoken highly — nay, raved — about her friend George. He is so cool that he danced with her to Leonard Cohen. (I don’t know about you, but most men in my life have demurred at any suggestion of dancing, so any man who will boogie is wonderful indeed.)

Her enthusiasm about George sparked my curiosity, so I went to his blog. And wouldn’t you know, it’s the very same George! (Insert a quote from the Bugs Bunny cartoon where Hugo the Abominable Snowman finds Bugs and says “I will love him and hug him and pet him and squeeze him and I will call him George.)

A brief perusal of George’s blog provided some advice on how Movies are cheaper than therapy or pills. Below is an excerpt of his take on a movie that’s been hot in my little circle.

A. and I did get to see “What the Bleep Do We Know,” which annoyed the shit out of me. (Repetition of the phrase “quantum physics” by a slew of experts and special effects to describe peptides’ and hormones’ effects on humans doesn’t help. Biting the pacing of “The Matrix,” railing against addiction/overprescription of anti-anxiety/SSRI drugs and using a leaden overlay of story doesn’t help. Use of a Magic Negro with a basketball to explain superpositioning and a third-eye-touching shaman to explain how Native Americans learned how to see Columbus’ ships really, really, really doesn’t help.

Thank you, George. You’ve saved me some time. I owe you!

Tomorrow, Tomorrow

I’m taking another excursion into San Francisco tomorrow to meld minds with Tish. Like a little kid, I’m all excited as I anticipate the train ride up there. I’ve always enjoyed train rides.

This evening I went to a question and answer meeting at The Centre for Living With Dying, where I believe I have found my next spiritual home. Everything resonated deeply, from the soul of the building (an old, old house) to the phrases people used to express what led them to the Centre. Words such as compassion, transformation, sacred space, healing, home, passion, love, and courage were mentioned repeatedly. Also spoken of was the volunteers’ healing experience of being listened to and heard. To listen well, to be fully present with another person, to bear witness to and withstand someone’s emotions without trying to fix the problems — this is a rare occurrence in a world that suffers for a touch of compassion. I’m looking forward to working there.

Changes Coming

Well, next week my life will again be infused with the discipline of a schedule.

Yes, I got a job! My private practice was part-time (though growing until circumstances changed), so this will require a shift in mental and physical behavior.

I’ve been hired to work as a bookseller for a major bookstore chain. I’ve worked retail before, many years ago. Working on my feet will be hard on me the first couple of weeks, but I’m looking forward to being around books all day, and helping people find what they’re looking for (and perhaps what they weren’t seeking but would enjoy). I’m going to have to leave my money at home, though, or I’ll probably buy more. Perhaps it will be similar to the experience of a woman I knew who worked in a bakery. After she had her fill of all she could eat, she lost the taste for eating so much sugar. Could the same be said of my passion for books?

This also means that posting may be light for awhile, as I adjust. I’ve had the luxury of time for the past year to read a great deal — books and blogs — in order to cull material for this blog. I may not be able to sustain the output, but I certainly will try. I can’t imagine giving this up.

What Happened? I Didn’t Notice A Thing!

I didn’t know about this until my fiancé called a few minutes after it happened.

A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.9 has struck Central California and it was felt from Santa Ana to Sacramento, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

[via Associated Press Wire]

He called to report from work in Mountain View that the building shook, but here in Santa Clara nothing perceptible occurred. Odd.

Library Geek

I want a Librarian Action Figure! Really, I do. There are some quotes on the page that I like a lot:

I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.

–Jorge Luis Borges

In the nonstop tsunami of global information, librarians provide us with floaties and teach us how to swim.

–Linton Weeks

I’d also enjoy reading Ms. Pearl’s book, Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason.

I’m feeling wistful for Austin and its variety of toy stores, such as Toy Joy and throughout Book People. Here, for example, is another reason Austin is weird:
Continue reading

Writing From The Heart

I’m seeking to gather with other writers for a different kind of writing group. Twice a month on Saturday we’ll meet for two hours (such as 10-noon) and write using prompts and journal format (i.e., no keyboarding on a laptop). Each writer will share the result for that exercise; usually there is enough time for two exercises and reading. The ground rule of the group is NO critiquing. The intention is to make a date with oneself to write, to meet up with kindred souls, to play with one’s muse, and have fun with the craft. Meeting location to be determined; probably in a public space, such as a meeting room at the Santa Clara City Library. No attendance commitment required, and the group will be open to new participants from any location.

Right now I’m looking for responses and will choose a start date once I have some interested folks. Approximate start date is mid-October. I’ve posted this on Cragislist as well. Please email if you’re interested. Just click on the “send feedback” link in the About column (sidebar).

Elaboration

When I make personal disclosures on this blog, I strive for more autobiographical vignettes attached to a broader thought or message, rather than writing as though in a diary. I have another blog for that kind of writing.

That said, I’ve made no secret of the fact that I manage to live with (around, despite) ongoing clinical depression. Years and years of talk therapy helped create insight as to part of its origins; it mostly taught me to be aware of symptoms and to be gentle in my self-assessment (one aspect of depression is a tendency toward rippingly negative thinking about oneself). Talk therapy is also what made me the counselor I am, possibly more so than the graduate courses.

On the other hand, I also take medication, and have for six years; it has helped immensely, and so I believe the depression has its roots in the physical as well as cultural/social. In other words, it’s not all my parents’ fault — it’s their genes’ fault! (Smile, please, that was an attempt at humor.) Medication therapy has its place.

I expected this transition to challenge my equanimity. What I wasn’t certain about was the degree to which I’d experience the undertow. Since my credentials are invisible according to the California Board of Behavioral Sciences, and I’d have to undergo training all over again — which I am simply not going to go through after five years of education and clinical training, an exam, and $60,000 — I’m at a loss. I had a private practice in Austin, but here I do not have the connections yet to establish one — and it would have to be as a “life coach” or other euphemism, without the cachet and seal of approval that official recognition (licensure) provides. Jobs I’ve seen require licensure, even for positions such as utilization management. I’ve kvetched about this here before.

The well part of me knows that it’s hard to reestablish onself, that it takes time, but it can be done. I simply need to put myself out into the world, tell people my vision, explore, connect, and trust that the right situation will arise.

However.

That’s the well part of me, the aspect of myself that shines when my life is mostly trundling along its course in other ways. Yet here I am trying to recreate a social network, a sense of place and home, a spiritual community. The loss of these things, along with the loss of professional qualifications (or at least my sense of them), along with the latent depression, are converging. I’m struggling to establish a routine, a vision, goals. I’m struggling with depression — or some of the symptoms. Significantly.

I know I will be all right. I know what is needed to take care of this. I just wanted to write about it (part of the process of taking care), to let my blog community know that I am grappling with this nemesis again. I am so grateful; my life is a gift. I feel vexed with myself that this crud covers my spirit, that I can cognitively understand I am blessed but still feel lost, listless, hopeless, sad. But there it is. I need some good vibes, folks, some prayers or encouragement or a job in my field (which includes counseling, coaching, teaching, academic advising, writing, librarianship, non-profit program management, and information management).

I am going to take tomorrow off. I shall go into San Francisco to have coffee and lunch with Tish. I’m heartened by this, as I think we have much in common. And just for fun, I’m posting in the extended entry the “flower picture of my ideal job” (from exercises I’ve done in What Color Is Your Parachute). In case you happen to have a job to offer (or know of one) that fits, or mostly fits, the description. Ideas, names of people to contact for information interviews, guidance on finding cameraderie in the job search are also welcome.
Continue reading

Local Outreach For Domestic Violence

I think this is a great grassroots effort.

No other public setting invites intimacy like that of the hair salon, a place where secrets are shared and confidences exchanged. Capitalizing on the sisterhood of stylists and clients, San Jose is recruiting hairdressers in its campaign to reach an often isolated group: battered women.

The Hairdresser’s Project, piloted earlier this year, resumes its outreach effort this month, once again using San Jose State University student interns to knock on the doors of hair and nail salons and even some barbershops. Better than billboards and more personal than a public service announcement, hairdressers also often speak the language of their clients.

‘Girl talk’ redefined, MercuryNews.com