Category Archives: Social Science

Taken By Surprise

Grief is a strange thing. You know how it’s easier to deflect one’s energy to a smaller concern than cope with a huge one? Sometimes it’s easier to fuss about the thing that appears to matter when one isn’t ready to deal with the real issue. This came up for me tonight in a major way. There was an object promised that has not materialized, and a long time had passed (over a year) without much indication as to when it would. I became very focused on the soreness I felt in its absence and over the lack of information about when it would arrive. This came to a head in recent days, from which a good manifested: information and discussion leading to understanding. When I talked with Husband tonight about the catalyst for my roiled emotion about the Missing Object, it became clear tonight that the tension around was masking something deeper for me — grief. Grief over:

  • leaving behind friends and family in Austin;
  • giving up my counseling career, which I had worked toward creating for 14 years;
  • losing two pregnancies last year;
  • having a wedding smaller than I imagined having because circumstances forced certain choices (what we had was sweet and joyful, but if my father-in-law hadn’t been ill and dying, we would have had a bigger affair with our families converging);
  • the fact I’m getting older and still am “in flux” with my profession, still unestablished, still lacking confidence and polish;
  • and ultimately, grief over my father-in-law’s death. The grief is about losing his presence in my life, and it is also about losing the future with him in it.

All these losses occurred in a span of 15 months. Pretty heavy stuff, and it came up at the end of a very long day.

Knowledge helps — both the knowledge about the what as going on with the Missing Object and the knowledge about what this is really about for me. Neither bit of knowledge fixes anything immediately, but the information provides relief and clarity.

I need to sleep now.

Neither Rain Nor Sleet Nor Threat of Death

The closest call came when he was stuck in traffic and a group of gunmen walked up to the car in front of him to drag out the driver, kicking and screaming. He watched silently, hoping the gunmen would not take him, too.

“I cried when I got back to the office,” Mr. Mikayel said, pushing his large-lensed glasses farther up his nose.

Neither War Nor Bombs Stay These Iraq Couriers (New York Times)

Self-Portrait Tuesday: All of Me Week 3

We are still exploring the “embrace the mistakes, love the ugly bits” theme. This week I don’t have a deeply personal story or contemplation to share. What you see here is the fruit of my labor: my first ever knitted hat. I am little-girl proud — “Lookie lookie what I made!” I’m pleased to have completed it and equally gratified that it fits. Is the hat a perfect rendition of the pattern I followed? Heck no! Some of my stitches are looser or tighter than need be, and the seam isn’t exactly right. I had to tink a couple of rows. (Tink is knit spelled backwards and means one carefully un-knits a row with a mistake in it. Knitting slang, yeah baby!) Yet I learned much making this (how to read a pattern, how to decrease stitches), and the next hat I make will be better. When I was younger, I used to be afraid to start new things, because I wanted to get it right the first time. The judge in my head was quite adamant that I was only valuable if the outcome of my action was exactly right. What a fallacy that is! I’m glad I learned to move through fear.

Mistakes are the portals of discovery.

–James Joyce

It was when I found out I could make mistakes that I knew I was on to something.

–Ornette Coleman

Just because you made a mistake doesn’t mean you are a mistake.

–Georgette Mosbacher

I’m Doing My Part This Weekend

None of us get enough naps. Naps are essential for mental health. Naps are productive — contrary to what we’ve been taught. Our culture promotes tension and crabbiness. Part of this is the severe lack of naps. Declare your home, or wherever you are, as a free nap zone.

–SARK

Yesterday I took a four-hour nap. Today I worked from 8:30-1:30, came home, and dove into bed. I awoke refreshed three hours later, ready to attend dinner with friends and engage in the delightful conversations for which I’m famous. *koff* Well, okay. At the very least I’m not crabby.

And I also managed to get Tuesday off as well, since I’ve racked up a bit of comp time, so I’ll get my three-day weekend starting tomorrow. Yum.

Schmoopy

When I came home from work, I found:

Inside the card said, “And that means everything to me.” Husband also wrote a sweet note. He’s not one given to romantic fluorishes, so these occasional cards mean a lot to me. The man also knows another way to my heart. Look below!
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Self-Portrait Tuesday: All of Me Week 1

This month’s challege is to “embrace the mistakes, love the ugly bits.”

You are looking at my legs: chunky, sturdy, burdened with fat. They are scarred, dimpled with cellulite, and generally under-appreciated.

For many years I hated my body, especially my legs. When I was in 9th grade, I had a severe crush on a 12th grader. I was friends with his brother, an 11th grader, and confided this. This “friend’s” response was blunt: “My brother thinks you have a fat ass.” (And still I hung out with this guy!) Prior to that comment I had not felt consciously bad about my body. I had not dieted, nor had I fallen into obsession with weight. That comment literally changed everything. I spent the rest of my high school years feeling as though I had buttocks that were grotesquely large. I hated my curves. I wanted longer legs. And you know how much I weighed? Throughout high school I was 5 feet 2 inches and weighed at most 125 pounds. In my junior and senior year I dieted severely and began running and using laxitives. Sometimes I would binge on cookies and Snickers. My weight was as low as 118, and I continued to think that I was fat. I wanted to weigh 110. I never made it.

In my twenties my weight climbed, first to 130 until I was about 22, after which I reached 160 pounds. The summer I turned 25, I decided to try the rotation diet (not a bad diet if you can stick with it and use it properly). I also began running daily, up to three hours a day, because I was incapable of moderation. In a period of 12 weeks, I lost 25 pounds (my goal was to get to 125). I looked great. I felt great. I found a boyfriend. And then one day, I fainted in a mall. The doctor tested and found me anemic. His advice? “Eat more meat.” That was it. And my boyfriend, eager to take care of me, began feeding me huge weekend breakfasts. I didn’t own a car at this time and walked a lot, so the weight mostly stayed off for a couple of years.

When I moved to Austin, my weight crept up to 160 again and stayed there. This was okay by me. I worked out in a gym. I was flexible and strong. I wore size 14 jeans. I felt pretty good about myself. Then an elderly man who’d become a friend in a grandfatherly sort of way one day told me (after he’d had me as a guest for dinner), “You know, Kathryn, you’re pretty. If you lost 20 to 30 pounds, you might find a boyfriend.” If he’d punched my stomach, the effect would have felt the same. I was hurt and angry. I told him so. He apologized, but the wound remained. And his comment keyed into my fear that maybe it was true, that I would never meet a man who would want me whom I would also want — all because of my big fat ass.

At the end of my graduate program, I was talking with my advisor on the steps of a campus building. He was an older fellow, perhaps in his late 50s or early 60s. I had admired and liked him. For some reason, he felt compelled to suggest that I try whatever the fad diet that year was (I think it was Atkins Metabolife). He’d done it and he felt great! I was so pretty; I’d be even prettier if I were just a bit thinner… I was galled by his suggestion. It didn’t hurt as much because I was getting to a point of accepting myself more. I still found it insulting.

At another event I ran into a man I was acquainted with from a church I’d since left; he too was in his late 50s. His first words: “You look great. Have you lost weight? You look like it.” (I hadn’t lost weight.) I wanted to reply with, “Actually, no, I haven’t lost weight. I’m as fat as ever, thank you very much.” What was with these men?!

In 2000, my weight soared to over 200 pounds. This happened shortly after I met my husband. (He, by the way, loves me as I am. He wants me to be healthy and happy with my body, regardless of the number on the scale.) I dined out more often, ate larger portions, and drank more wine. I also stopped exercising. My husband is not very active, and being around him connected me with my inner couch potato. I’m not blaming him! I’m simply noting that I have a streak of laziness in me that proximity to another sedentary person had activated. It’s my responsibility to take care of my body. In the past couple of years I’ve made effort to work out more and lose weight; I’ve had limited success. Part of it may be aging — my metabolism is getting slower. Recently joining a gym has helped. I’ve enjoyed the variety of machines.

In 2003, the evening before Thanksgiving, I took a walk in my Austin neighborhood. I was thinking about my clients and my private practice when a pickup truck pulled up to the stop sign nearby, and a male voice yelled, “Only a husband could love those hips! What a fat ass!” Then they turned the corner, their hoots of laughter fading. I was the victim of a drive-by insult. And yes, that hurt.

We live in a fat-hating world. Women hate fat. They hate themselves. I went to the beach with some friends in 2000. I was at my heaviest, but I was okay with it. After all, I was with my girlfriends. Why not wear a swimsuit and have some fun? One friend who weighed only 116 pounds would not take off her shorts, because she was ashamed of her “fat legs,” even around three of her close women friends. How sad. When I commented that I weighed almost twice as much as she did, they all protested, saying, “You’re not fat!” O fercrissakes, quit lying to my face. Wait, you’re right: I’m not fat, I’m obese. Most men hate fat on a woman, too. Based on my experience, they’re more “honest” about it. Perhaps I should find that refreshing? Wouldn’t it be nice to live in a world where weight wasn’t at the forefront of most peoples’ minds?

I’m not happy with my body in its current state. I ache too much, my muscles are weaker, and my balance suffers. I used to be sturdy — not skinny, not fat, but solid. Coordinated. Consequential. I want my power back. Forget 125 pounds. Forget 145 pounds. If I were to get back to the weight I was at in 1999 — 160 — I would consider that a success. Until then, I’ll keep trying to love the “ugly bits.”

Self-Portrait Tuesday: Freedom

This is me standing by my very first car, bought new, in 1991. I was a few months shy of 28. This vehicle opened my world. I had gone off to SUNY Oswego in 1989 to finish college. A financial shortfall required that I leave school and return to work at Syracuse University in 1990. To say I was discouraged is an understatement. SUNY required that I take 18 more credit hours on campus (they’d already generously accepted my credits from three other colleges), but the campus was 50 miles away and I had no car. At that time I earned about $16K a year, I think, and I rented a room in a duplex. Money was scarce. So I went into hibernation the year of 1990 and decided I’d just leave the goal of getting a degree alone for awhile.

Yet the dream would not die. I wouldn’t let it. In March 1991 I was looking through the Sunday paper and saw a car dealer advertisement for a 1991 Eagle Summit for $6,000. My ex-boyfriend took me out there the next day. They tried to up-sell me to a car that actually had automatic transmission, air conditioning, and a radio, but I was determined to buy what was advertised. My research into reliable cars had put this car on my list. They let me test-drive it, and I took it to the bank, where I got a $1,000 cash advance. (I didn’t think they’d let me finance the entire car.) I brought it back, sealed the deal and got a four-year loan for the rest (which I paid off one year early). I was bursting with joy when I called my parents to tell them I had to come over that night to show them something important. They were happily surprised for me, and impressed with my resourcefulness.

This car then allowed me to commute to Oswego the summer of 1991 through December 1992 while I worked full-time (and took other classes using remitted tuition from SU). And then I took this little car — which I’d dubbed Blue Belle — to Austin in 1994. I quit my library job, sold my furnishings and most everything else, and drove to Texas, where I found an apartment, a job, and a new life. Blue Belle served me well for ten years, and I actually cried when her transmission failed September 2001. Replacing the transmission exceeded the value of the car. It was time to let her go.

This little car gave me freedom.

A Drop of Fire, a Million Indentations

Soul. The word rebounded to me, and I wondered, as I often had, what it was exactly. People talked about it all the time, but did anybody actually know? Sometimes I’d pictured it like a pilot light burning inside a person — a drop of fire from the invisible inferno people called God. Or a squashy substance, like a piece of clay or dental mold, which collected the sum of a person’s experiences — a million indentations of happiness, desperation, fear, all the small piercings of beauty we’ve ever grown.

–Sue Monk Kidd, The Mermaid Chair