Tag Archives: spirituality

Being a Mother Isn’t Easy; You Get One Opportunity

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We can not let go of things that we have never accepted or believed in in the first place.

This will be my first motherless Mother’s Day. I’m not at all looking forward to it.

Because things were complicated with Mom, I’ve never understood why we should pick one day of the year to demonstrate our affection or pay attention to our mothers. My mother, as complicated as she was, would likely make every day Mother’s Day, and in fact I recall her saying such a thing not ironically at all upon occasion.

But she is gone, and I must accept it. I have been faced with having to accept a lot these days.

Life gets complicated as we age. I tell my kids not to rush things; grown-ups are often just big kids, terrified, un-actualized and ready to fight, press through (fight) or flee when things don’t go our way. When things do go smoothly, we thank God; when they don’t go smoothly, who do we blame? Certainly not God; we are all given free will.

All this aside, the last two weeks have been especially taxing at my home.

I have been quiet, mostly, about what’s been happening here. But I hear Mom, I hear her say, “that’s not a friend,” about how we were treated. “That’s not what friends do…” she would add on, saying “No. That’s not at all friendly.”

My son, who is human and flawed like the rest of us, has been singled out on his bus by another student, by someone with whose family we’ve been friends, intimates, for about a decade.

Kids are kids; they do inappropriate things. They unwittingly project their stuff — be it fear, inadequacy, ignorance, anger, arrogance — on to other people.  I get that kids are kids. It’s our job, as parents, teachers, adults, coaches, leaders, and examples to teach them.  When we think we’re teaching, they’re paying attention; more importantly, when we think we’re just existing, we are teaching as well. “Do as I say, not as I do…”

What’s happened to us, Mom would be right. She is right. What happened to us, is not what ‘friends’ do to one another.

The student who singled out our son did so (or he liked to blame it and was supported by his parent in the thrust of it) in the name of “bus culture” — an antiquated and hazing-esque notion, that younger students simply by implied edict and a set of tacit rules, must sit in certain zones and not where they wish.

But there is no bus culture; least of all on this bus. It’s simple bullying. It’s simple targeted, strategic and chronic harassment. My son has been the only one called out –by anyone!– for sitting where he chooses AND this other student has only chosen my son. Why? Because we’re safe; because we’re “friendlies”; because … I have no clue. It’s been a longtime thing between these two. But I do know this, my son’s brother, who’d rather toss his brother into an oncoming Acela train, has testified that his brother has been harassed without provocation.

We’ve had a tough year: my mother died the day before school started.  But my sons, all of them, rallied academically after an initial rough launch. The one who’s been harassed: his grades were strong first quarter: Bs. They started to fall in November. About the time the harassment began, according to reflective moments by both my kids. That’s when he also started to become reclusive. His sleep was disrupted. I chalked it up to Mom’s death, but he was OK with that, for the most part. He wasn’t eating well and he didn’t care about sports anymore. He became hard to deal with at home: openly defiant and then oddly affectionate. I suspected hormones. This particular son has always been a little more intense than his brothers, a little more needy, a little more … work. He has never been malignant; never openly hostile; never physical. It was changing. He was changing.

My grieving was now two-fold. I never suspected bullying because he’s very open with us about those things. He would tell us all the time about something if it were bothering him — usually about three seconds before I would fall asleep, after he’d had trouble doing so. But about this other kid, the one whose family was so close to ours? Not a peep. My husband saw them dis-board the bus one day; the other kid tackling my son on the grass and not getting off him at first; big-kid on younger-kid type stuff. It ended soon enough, but it left an imprint and we spoke to our other son about keeping an eye on family on the bus, especially with this other kid. They’d had a history.

Back to bus culture. That was a stupid premise. As I said, my son has been the sole target of this particular individual. The “rules” are one thing. I can understand and see that; I don’t agree with it, but I have been an older student on a bus wishing the twerpy freshmen would sit somewhere else. But did I call them slurs and push them around and tease them? Nnnnnno. The name calling, constant badgering, profanity, hate speech, hands-on, kicking, hoody pulling, hair-tugging, baiting with a pleasant conversation only to be shown gruesome imagery on a smartphone, “STFU”-ing and all the rest… that’s what I liked to call “unacceptable.”

That’s what Mom would say, “That’s not friendly.” But as I said — kids are kids. They do stupid stuff all the time.

Mom would’ve said about it all, “consider the source” and “don’t throw your pearls before swine,” and her all-time favorite, “Oh jeeze … let it go, Maal. Let it be.” Or then again, maybe she wouldn’t. Maybe she’d tell me to hunker down, to fight for my kid. Which she did, which I remember vividly her doing on my behalf when I was young and dragged through the school playground by a really mean kid.

So we did. We dug in and decided to advocate for our son. What we didn’t expect, what we didn’t see coming, what we couldn’t ever have envisioned, although we should have because history has shown us that no one is special to these people, that everyone is a target, is the tactical attack we endured.

Instead of a rational discussion, which we attempted to have because we have known these people for several years on a personal basis (and because we wanted to do what we could to maintain peace, harmony and freaking decorum), we were verbally abused in our own home.

The adults became control freaks. Despotism reigned supreme; there was no room for conversation; there was no opportunity, no matter how we offered it, for rationality. Instead we were attacked — with wide eyes and open arms, twice.

Opening Arguments

The father apparently had time to interview other riders on the bus. According to him, all these people harbor a just-below-the-surface-level, near-hate for my kid and that he’s always stirring up shit on the bus.

When he opened his best Sam Waterson a la “Law & Order” showdown in our home, complete with righteous indignation and lather, he named four other people (one of them his own child), and according to him, they all indicated to him that my son was the instigator and that ONE PERSON IS TO BLAME AND ONE PERSON ONLY… and he lunged from his seat and unfolded his forearm to aim his magic Uncle Sam / Charlton Heston Moses finger at my kid. He also commanded that his son had the floor, and that my son was to sit down [and shut up] and not interrupt. There was no “Let’s talk this out. We want to resolve a problem here…” There was the SS. There was the gestapo in my family room telling us what we were going to do. There was the Taliban taking a psychic shit in my house.

My kitchen and sink faces this family room. It’s separated by a wall / breakfast bar. My son was seated in a chair, his back to the breakfast bar and my face.

I was on the other side of the wall next to my sink cutting broccoli. I looked up, raised an eyebrow and took note. I let it slide internally thinking, Yikes. That was abrupt, but he’s on the defensive and he’s on our turf. Given the situation, this one can slide. If it happens again, it won’t slide. To show adult unity, despite its desperation, I also reminded our son, “Did you hear that? Gerhard has the floor. Be still.”  My son, Finnegan, nodded, a little freaked out, but nodded.

It didn’t go well. The other kid opened with, “Finnegan is in seventh grade. He is the instigator. He can’t sit where he wants on the bus…”

I put down my knife. I looked up and I said, “Let me interrupt. I need to get this straight. Are you, Gerhard, basing your entire argument and your chosen behavior on bus culture and a tacit seating ‘rule’? Because if you are, you need to stop. This is America. There is no more Rosa Parks bullshit. There is no bus caste system…”

The dad. The dad went combustible. He imploded and impelled me to let his son speak. I said, “I’m laughing at this. I am. This is laughable. You’re defending this??”

“You have to! You have to let him speak…”

“No. I don’t. Not on this premise.”

My husband, the coolest head of all, ever — really — of all time, interrupted and spoke to Gerhard. “With all due respect, I need to ask this: Do you know what ‘instigator’ means?” He defined the word, we all agreed and Gerhard said, “Then, no. Finnegan is not totally to blame.”

Drops mic.

The dad … deflated.

He started up again though, with the names of the other kids on the bus, that they all see Finnegan as the starter and jerk.

I threw that out on a simple technicality. My years of watching “Law & Order” have brilliantly educated me with the commensurate distance-learning Juris Doctorate. “You can’t introduce testimony of witnesses who aren’t called to the stand. It’s all hearsay, rumor, innuendo and if we were in a court of law, Hector, this would be tossed out and you know it. You can phrase a question any way you want and if we can’t do a cross-examination, it’s bogus. You know that.” Internally, I was dying to shout, “Mistrial! I move for a motion to dismiss this case…” but I didn’t. We were just getting started, apparently.

After I pulled a Judge Judy, Hector was even more deflated and as fate would tell, more desperate.

Someone recalled the bus culture thing. I wasn’t having any of it.

“We all make choices, Gerhard, to behave or not to behave. If we based our internal choices on what the rules were, we’d all be perfect citizens. I wouldn’t have gotten speeding tickets all those years ago and there’d be no need for jails. But we don’t. We make choices and you have chosen unwisely to do what you’ve done. And defending your actions based on ‘bus culture’ is a pathetic move…”

He nodded.

Gerhard was the most composed of all of us. I was impressed actually. I envisioned him in a three-piece suit, like Atticus Finch, defending a wrongly accused person.

The energy escalated intensely. The dad brought up old tiffs, desperately trying to peg something, some form of egregious wrongdoing on my son seconds before he tried to walk out of my house.

I called him a coward for introducing that old wound. (Anyone who’s had nanosecond of therapy will tell you you can’t throw old fights into a new one just because you’re losing the argument.) I again called him on hearsay — because he wasn’t there for any of it: the offense nor the apology and that his wife and his child along with myself and my kids were in attendance for the apology and discussion and that before it all ended I cleared everyone to say one last thing if they were still bothered and no one said anything — and that his attempt to leave after throwing that “pipe bomb” and that “molotov cocktail” at us was unacceptable, that he had to listen to our response.

I remember he sarcastically tossed back at me, “Molotov cocktail? Really?” as though SOMEHOW in this entire incident we had surprised them. Oh, by what? Hitting our limit with the bullshit on the bus? By trying to talk it out? Criminy.

I was hot. I was on fire by this point for now my integrity had been impugned.

That. That was when Finnegan spoke up and defended himself and our family and me and his father and our home with a vigor and a passion and sense of justice I’ve never seen. He nailed in detail and enumerated each of Gerhard’s abuses, in front of his father. He raged at the father, tears streaming down his face. He shouted and ardently defended his reputation, and his absolute and God-given right to exist on that bus. He gathered his breath and he narrowed his eyes and looked at Gerhard, “You taunted me! You said to me, JUST TODAY, ‘are you gonna go cry to Mommy about this, you little bitch?’ and HELL YES. You bet I am you jerk! You can’t treat me the way you have! You have no right!”

Finnegan was unleashed. The dad hightailed. Heretofore, his dislike for my son was mostly suspected, but palpable, and only on an energetic level for we had yet to verbally understand and appreciate his long-borne distrust and enmity for my son. He saved that for his anguished condemnation outside my house when he shouted at it from the street:

“I told you, Gerhard! I told you to stay away from Finnegan! I told you he was a bad kid! I told you that he would cause you trouble! But you ignored me! This is what has come of it! This!” Along with this serenade, was the invocation yet again of the bus culture, that Finnegan can’t sit where he wants, that there’s a code (like a Code Red a la “A Few Good Men” if you ask me) and that it must be abided.

I shouted from my house an invitation for the dad to go have intercourse with himself. But I used street terms. This is not good for a yoga teacher, to spew this stuff, but I was now done. I was at eleven. My home, sanctuary, castle, safe place had been invaded.

My husband, still the cooler head, replied, “You can’t justify this, any of it, on bus culture. You can’t. It’s pathetic and desperate and not real… It’s inexcusable.”

Back up two minutes: once shit hit the fan, once I decided I wasn’t going to hear of it, Gerhard smartly noted they were outgunned. He was pleading with his father to move out. To pack up. To stop. To stop. To stop.

Once it moved out to the street in front of my house, like scene from The Real Housewives of New Jersey, Gerhard grew quiet, perhaps realizing the thrust of what was going on. He tried to get his father to stop. He was seeing parent bear behavior in full swing. My mama bear in my cave versus his aggressive frantic papa bear shouting from the street, outside the cave.

Bears Everywhere.

That was Friday.

Within 30 seconds of the rage out on our street, up comes the wife, my friend, to talk. I was in no condition. She and I have had our moments, all of them civil, but still icy. I relented and walked with her on the wet sidewalk. It had recently stopped raining. We walked for about 30 minutes. I don’t remember much of what I said. I was unreliable. In fact I said I was. Her opening statement was worry that this whole thing would come between her and me. I agreed that I didn’t want that to happen, but I recall this: I knew things had radically changed. This door had come off its hinges. I made no promises.

Saturday night, my youngest son cried in my bed for about 20 minutes, terrified of the dad, that he would “rage at me” too. He was mostly afraid he’d never see his friend again, their youngest child, because the man was so angry. We were hunkering down. My family had grown closer, tighter and more resolved than ever to stick together.

The other family, on the other hand, had “vilified” the dad, according to him, for 36 hours later on Sunday he came by unannounced (which threw my youngest into a tailspin again) to apologize only to Finnegan for yelling at his parents in front of him. Finnegan said, “What about when you yelled at me?” the dad didn’t remember. He apologized for that as well, if that was what he did.

But this was a forced apology; he explained that he was the bad guy in his own home. He wasn’t ready to give the apology and we weren’t ready to hear it. See, that’s a funny thing about apologies: the body language was all off. The index finger was wagging in my husband’s face and the torso was leaning in toward my husband. It wasn’t an apology, it was “and another thing…” No matter, it failed. Finnegan said, “I’m not ready to accept it,” and turned away.

I spoke with the wife Sunday evening to tell her we need space. To tell her we can’t have these drop-ins. That we’re all feeling quite raw and vulnerable. She said she understood, that her heart was broken, that she loved me. I listened. I told her this was all still recoverable. That it could be ok given some time and space.

I heard Mom, “this isn’t what friends do…” I hushed it away. I wanted to fix things. I wanted to be the exemption, I wanted to be different, historically, and move forward, ignoring “past as prologue.” So I did, somewhat. I put my best and trusting foot forward. I said “Finnegan is going to give Gerhard a wide berth and we hope you’ve instructed Gerhard to do the same.” She was quiet and said, “yes, sure.”

I then said, “Finnegan, like Gerhard, can sit where he wishes because there is no assigned seating and also because it’s his civil right. He is not to acknowledge Gerhard. He knows this; if he defies me there will be severe consequences.”

She said, “Isn’t that like poking the bear?”

“What? Come again?” I asked, shaking the ice cubes in my head.

“Isn’t that like poking at the fire? I mean, that’s like starting it all up again…You’re going back into the bear cave and poking it…”

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Once again, I was being told what to do. This situation showed me that this person didn’t understand the reality and that there was no negotiation. That I was to do what I was told.

My jaw set. I took a deep breath and became terse; I was done. “Look, I’ve told Finnegan to mind his fucking business on that bus; he assures me he has all year. I’ve told Finnegan that if he crosses me or steps into Gerhard’s space, short of an actual bus emergency, that I will rain down on him an unholy mess of hell. He won’t cross me. He has promised me. So it’s up to Gerhard. If Gerhard can do the same, we will be OK. There will be no ‘bear‘ to poke, right?”

I wasn’t going to do this again. We agreed to end it there. I had no idea what to expect, but what happened the next day, never would have occurred to me in a gazillion years.

She instructed her other child to video record the bus ride home, focusing mostly on my son, according to my other son, and according to the comments from the other child when I called to inquire on the phone moments after my kids walked in the door with, “Mom, you’re not gonna believe what happened today on the bus…”

When the mother called me back, I expressed my confusion, my dismay. “We had an understanding. We had an agreement. What the hell is wrong with you? Why would you invade my son’s privacy like that?! WHY?!”

As cool as a cucumber on an Indian Summer day she said, “I instructed my child to do so to protect my son…”

“FROM WHAT?! The puppet master Finnegan? He’s so powerful that everyone loses their senses and acts like an asshole because he has the power??”

Once again, I sit in awe of my son’s omnipotence. (That was deep and dripping sarcasm.)

She hung up on me. I get that. I was irrational, but she started this next wave, again. I don’t know what they eat in that house: raw seal meat? The predatory nature of all of this, how this whole thing has been handled by the other family is … boggling.

It was over for me. I was done. I had thrown a bone, I had made the call, I had created a space of trust or so I thought. My oldest son and I walked over to their house with their house key and exchanged them. If they’re willing to video record my kids on the bus, how do I know they’re not willing to do it when we are in our own backyard? There is no relief; I had to find it internally. Externally, the relief eluded, like a terrified defensive bear.

Child Advocate.

This is not the first time I’ve been attacked by a “man” in front of my family for defending a child. It’s just the first time I’ve been attacked for it in my own home. This must be what comes of crossing a man… of doing the right thing. I can’t be bothered with “codes” and “rules.” If you’re being a jerk to a kid and I’m around to see it, you’re going to hear about it from me. No one should ever yell at a child. I’m not innocent of it, but I’ll be damned, truly, if I let a grown man … never mind. It’s ridiculous.

This bus thing all went down, the first wave anyway, two weeks ago. I have meditated on it. I have sought counsel with God, through religious people, with spiritual people, with friends, with my Mom’s spirit. All of it has led to the most challenging reply: “Accept what is.” and then this: “Let it go. Let it be.”

Phuuuuuch. 

I thought to myself, “I have accepted this.” I have accepted the notion that people can be assholes and they do assholic things and I’ve had to deal with it; that despite my best attempts at rational behavior, that even I, yes I, can be an asshole too. So I accept that.

But no, I haven’t. I’ve reviewed my words describing so much of what has happened to me in my life: my crazy childhood; my bizarre parents; my complicated relationship with Mom and other women; Mom’s death!; issues with the school over the years and now this situation: all of it, from the treatment of my son to the apoplectic dad and the scheming mother; I’ve looked at so much more. All the offenses that have occurred to me were thusly described as:

Unacceptable.

Untenable.

Inconceivable.

Unbelievable.

Impossible.

Bullshit.

So when I think about it that way, being a wordy person I see the discrepancy. These things were and are acceptable, tenable, conceivable, believable, possible and bullshit? — they were and are all these things because … drumroll: THEY HAVE HAPPENED! THE FATES AND THE UNIVERSE AND GOD HAVE LET THEM HAPPEN!

All of this begs the question then:

Who the who am I to think I’m above it all? Who do I think I am that I’ve got some magic pass that somehow separates me from everyone else who is shit upon? Especially by those people?

No. Clearly, this family has shown us, me, that we’re just as marked as anyone else. That we’re just as un-special as anyone else they’ve gone after. Screw the decade of relationship. Screw the travel and the house sitting and the dog watching and the kiddo playdates. Screw it all to heck. We are no different. We are able to smiled at and then attacked in our own home. We are able to be cried upon and requested of for forgiveness and then video recorded. We too are raw seal meat.

God has shown me. This I must accept.

My back was KILLING me for days after the initial incident. I thought I’d been t-boned in a car accident. Hit out of nowhere. I couldn’t walk. This is not good for a yoga teacher.

I asked my friend for remote Reiki to heal me and help me. The Reiki was given by an unknown practitioner who had no knowledge of the situation or of my life. She sent me the messages from her reading:

As I began the session I kept hearing the words “Let it be.”  I then saw you bending over and picking up pieces of what seemed to be broken glass.  You kept saying:  It is back-breaking work picking up the pieces.”   Your spirit asked: “What am I to do?” You were told over and over to “let it be.”  “It is not your job to pick up the pieces.”  Your spirit then asked:  “How can I help then?” You were told:  “Accept what is.”  You then asked:  “How?” You were told:  “Love what is.  Don’t try to change it (the situation).  Change how you feel about the situation.  Accept it for what it is now.  CHOOSE to accept it.  It is about how you handle the situation.  You are not responsible for the reaction of another.  Your only responsibility is to yourSelf and how you handle the situation.  How you respond is what is within your control.  Trying to fix things is an attempt to control the situation.  The situation is what it is. It is neither good nor bad–it just is.  It is how you respond to the situation that determines the outcome.  It is what you do with the pieces.  You can accept that the glass is broken and can’t be fixed (now).  You can change the type of glass you use or you can not to replace the glass at all.  The choice is yours.  Take the next step.  Just picking up the pieces changes nothing.  It is what you do with the pieces that matters.  What you do when the glass keeps shattering.

Glass. Shattering. “Keeps shattering.” Yeah. I referred to this latest situation as my reality being shattered. But it wasn’t the reality that was shattered was it? It was my belief that we were safe. My belief that I was different, separate somehow unique: that my mother wouldn’t die despite the obvious declines in her health; that I’d have more time to make amends and show her love; that all my Work would reward and protect me. No… I am not separate. I am like you. I am capable of the unacceptable. I am capable of the unbelievable. It reminded me of the time I fought with a beloved family member. Space was requested and space was given. It chewed me up, to give all that space; I wanted desperately to fix things, to move beyond my horrid treatment of that person, to wash it off and let it go… but no, I had to sit with it. I see the value in that, no matter how sticky and smelly the muck.

So I’m looking at this paragraph every morning when I wake and every evening when I sleep. I have written about each sentence in the reading. I am doing the Work to heal myself and I am no longer ignoring my intuition, which has told me many times, to “watch it with this one; you are no different than anyone else…” and so yes, the door is off its hinges. Every time I’ve tried to fix it, to think of things in a different way, to let bygones be bygones, my back hurts again. Reminding me: this is not mine. It’s like a slam back to reality. Accept what is. This is what it is. 

After the report of the video recording, we involved the school. I’d had enough. Gerhard, after an apparent sob to his parents and some form of ownership, started back up on Monday pestering Finnegan and his sibling was urging him to stop so that footage of Finnegan could be revealed on the video.

But the school stepped in. Reviewed the video they have on all the buses now, and confirmed that Gerhard and the sibling were doing exactly what my kids reported and that Finnegan was doing nothing. Just to clarify: for Gerhard to pester my son, he had to turn around in his seat.

Again, I sit amazed by it all and saddened by it because people have blinders on. All my years — almost 10 now — of self-reflection, accountability, ownership, therapy, writing, therapy, therapy, and therapy! Oy! have revealed to me that we must be self-aware. We must listen to our hearts, to our souls. As one of my energy healer friends said to me the other day, “We are remembering what we forgot…” in terms of how to live in a pure way, according to our inner guides and intuition. We were trained as children to be polite, to make nice, to be friends, despite the twinges, the gentle nudges inside us which whisper, “Nooooo… not that one…”

Free will, dude. We screw ourselves all the time.

The other mom and I have made amends, as much as I am comfortable extending. She apologized for hanging up on me and for instructing her child to video record my son; she volunteered that it was a crazy, irrational thing to do. She told me that the video didn’t record. I don’t know whether to believe that. I don’t care. I told her the trust has been shattered. That we were looking for houses last weekend to move into to get away. To keep ourselves safe. That we still don’t trust and we live with a fair amount of vigilance. That I still need some space is an understatement. I’m not mad anymore; I’m just smarter now. The surfaces are very spongy.

I repeated to her, we played by the books. We didn’t triangulate. We didn’t try to smear anyone; we certainly didn’t launch an offensive investigation into her son’s behavior and treatment of my son on the bus; we simply tried to keep it bilateral.

To me, this looks like a case of parental sadness and familial hemorrhaging. This child of theirs has a history of pot-stirring, of outbursts, of aggression. But it’s not mine. I have one lifetime to protect my kids. Motherhood is so so so very challenging.

I’ve been very very very quiet about it online.

But it’s time I share what I’ve processed of it; perhaps show you (if you’re still with me) about the words we use when we are hurt and frightened.

In order to let things go, in order to let things be (God has shown me too — last Sunday I saw a man at the nursery wearing the shirt emblazoned with “Let It Be” and an image of The Beatles) — we must accept them in the first place. We must love them, welcome them in, sit with them, feed them and let them stay. Then, and only then, can we let them go.

We can not let go of things that we have never accepted or believed in in the first place. Good God, how I wish Mom were here right now. She was good this way; as she aged, for me anyway, she would go right to the heart of things.

But we all die. Moms die. Every day, someone’s mom dies. Every day. And we are left to decide what to do with all the pieces. All the glass. I like to think there are different pieces of glass in this situation. The bus glass, it’s not mine to pick up. I don’t care. I’m not special. I am just like you; we are not special. We must accept that, feed it and love it in order to grow.

We moms get one life to get this right. Lots of chances, but one lasting opportunity.

Thank you.

30 Days of Brené Brown — Day 22: #spirituality #connection #God #yoga #meditation #higherpower #compassion

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Welcome to Day 22 of “30 Days of Brené Brown.” We are almost in the final stretch here.

Here is today’s quote:

Spirituality is recognizing and celebrating that we are all inextricably connected to each other by a power greater than all of us, and that our connection to that power and to one another is grounded in love and compassion. Practicing spirituality brings a sense of perspective, meaning and purpose to our lives.
― Brené BrownThe Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You’re Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are

This post wrote itself five days before it was written.

It was the last class of the year. It was packed. This room nestled amongst the trees and graced by several windows which overlooked the woods was our safe place. Is our safe place. Many of us have been coming to this class for several years to give ourselves the gift of yoga as taught by one of my most favorite people on Earth.

I was running late that morning, I had to drop off Thing 3 at school. His class was being taught “Family Life Education” (sex ed). The curriculum for the 4th grade was a bit more advanced than I wanted him to have to deal with at the tender age of 10 so his father and I decided to keep him home for the class. He still believes in St. Nick.

I peeked through the gap between the two swinging doors of our yoga room and saw that the women were chatting and so it wasn’t centering time yet. I snuck in, went to my corner and laid out my mat. Our teacher announced that the class was going to be slower. Delicious: a yin practice. “How incredibly lucky!” I felt. I love yin yoga: it’s so meditative and serene. The connection it promotes with the body and the breath and consciousness is so great and so needed this time of year, which can be so unbalancing.

The asanas ended early. We did our svasana. Early. I noticed that something was different but I’m good with change; you have to aim to be if you’re into yoga.

Then our teacher dropped the bomb: “I’d like to have everyone get in a circle.”

Gulp.

I was not feeling this. I had a hard night Tuesday — I’d just discovered a lovely picture of Mom and the boys from 2010 (have I already written about that?) and it threw me for a loop. I’d also exchanged a series of unfortunate emails with a friend who’d decided (without including me) that our friendship had run its course. I was on spongy surfaces, even though I understood her decision and I agreed it was likely for the best. It’s hard, as a yogini, we try not to judge, we try not to hold on, to practice non-attachment, but it’s hard to let go. Sometimes we want to say, “Are you sure?? Do you know what you’re doing?!” as if I am somehow greater than the peace this person achieves without me in her life.

So I grabbed my kundalini shawl (the one from the retreat):

that's me in the background.

that’s me in the background.

And I covered myself in it as though I were modeling for a statue of the Virgin Mary. I needed my cocoon. It wasn’t that I didn’t want to be in a space with the other women, it’s that I didn’t want to be in a space with the other women.

I just wasn’t there. I wanted to honor them by staying, but I didn’t know what we were in for.

“I have a bowl,” said my teacher. “It’s a meditation bowl. And I’d like us all to offer a word or a few words, time permitting, that expresses your feelings, wish or intention for the new year,” or something to that effect. If you’ve been following me this year, I have had a proFOUND year of personal growth and a massive loss. It’s staggering when I think about it.

To sum it up, here’s what I wrote to a friend about the experience (pardon the punctuation):

… as soon as my teacher explained the exercise, a word literally blew into my consciousness and would NOT go away or be replaced. it was unyielding, ironically. it was “release.” as the bowl advanced around the circle of an eventual 22 women, i was 16th, i became more and more emotional. my body started shaking. the bowl came to me. i removed my hands from beneath my shawl and held the bowl. i was sweaty yet totally chilled. the bowl, warm from the other women cradling it, was tarnished on the outside, gleaming sterling on the inside. i fell silent. i shuddered in tears and wept like a child at the feet of God. i literally could NOT speak. i felt like such an energy vacuum, such a fraud: this “writer” who can’t come up with something pithy for the end-of-year class. it was a lot of ego which was swiftly kicked to the curb by my feelings, or something. one person touched me briefly me and she pulled back; i was grateful. i was not in a place, i was not feeling worthy, to receive it.

It was profound. I didn’t bother trying to interpret it; try to MAKE it into something else, I just thought, “hmmm… this … nope, can’t do it…” and passed the bowl. God was in that bowl.

She wrote back, crazy excited for me. She’s super spiritual and very enthusiastic and completely in touch with her purpose in life, so I wrote later to her,

… why is all this happening to me? is it because i’m so full of shit? hah! no, really? is it that i don’t need to “try” to be strong anymore, because it’s pointless? was that word and its replacement a tactic to teach me? my thinking could not even touch the feeling.  i was thinking: mom release mom release mom release mom release… and i couldn’t say anything. internally i was going, ‘rrrrrrrrr rrrrrr rrrrrr rrrrrrrrrr nope.’ i shook my head. sniffled, tried again, ‘rrrrrr rrrrrrr rrrrrrrr-rrrrr rrrrRrrr.’ no.

The whole “experience” was no more 10-12 seconds, about the time others took to share their pearls.

I submitted, continued blubbering and passed the bowl to the next person, and I heard all their meditations while I desperately tried to regroup, but apparently my soul would have none of that. I just sat there, weeping, sniffling, feeling dopey but totally ok with it. I felt so safe. Once I stopped trying to stop crying, it stopped. It was crazy powerful. We have no control sometimes; especially when we think we do. It was like how I’d’ve liked to have felt around Mom if we’d ever let ourselves get that safe with each other. God was with me.

I felt like such a dork. I couldn’t talk and then I couldn’t stop crying and then when I did stop crying, I couldn’t stop talking. The energy coursing through me was like electricity. And those women! Oh! They are so wonderful. So strong. So loving and so compassionate.

I told one of them, “My word? Ironically, it was ‘release.'” And she hugged me tight and said, “YOU DID! YOU DID RELEASE! Don’t you see it?!” and I sniffled, “Guh. I guegg zoh.”

Brown is so right: it was because we were all connected in that room. Just like we’re all connected outside the room, the house, the car… wherever we are, we all are connected: me to you to her to him to her to them to her to Bipsy to Kevin Bacon.

That whole thing went down just as it should’ve. I still need time to process it.  Amazing but true: My tennis elbow pain vanished after that experience. I suspect that means I released part of my grief, or my mom, or myself from the shame I feel, or the fantasy / wish I held on to for so long. I couldn’t do it alone; I needed those women.

I’m unsure of what I was supposed to release. It wasn’t “my” word — well, it was, it just wasn’t one that I got to pick, or say… My soul was filled by that empty bowl.

Thank you.

ps — I hope you are enjoying this series and learning something new and good about yourself. If there’s anything I’ve learned about myself I can tell you this: every day is different and we need to be kinder to ourselves. This “living consciously” stuff is nearly impossible because our reptilian brains freak all the time at the slightest imposition. I think one must have to be absolutely isolated from the rest of humanity in a cave in the Himalayas to achieve it because that’s the only way I’d never be able to blame anyone else for my crap.

Missives from the Mat #8? — Wahe Guru #yoga #serendipity #providence

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My mother had a favorite word, “providential.”

She used to say it all the time about how things lined themselves up in certain ways to allow for things to happen. She had an annoying amazing ability to not judge things; part of that vexed me because that made for slippery accountability and empathy.

“It’s providential, Mally, really, how this has worked out. God has shown you how things happen. I can’t explain your past, our relationship and our difficulties any other way than by saying it’s divine providence. One day you will see,” she would sigh into the phone during one of our many heated debates about our choices in life.

I used to get mad at her when she’d say this stuff. I considered it an excuse for the choices she made in her lifestyle, and she would say as much by stating, “Guilt is pointless. I live the way I’m destined.” I still have little patience for those kinds of things; I know we all have challenges, but we must take part in our lives to effect change. Asking for help is one thing; doing nothing with the help is another. She would at times fiercely defend her position, heels dug in and teeth gritted, “These are the cards I was dealt.”

It was hard at times. I saw little sense in any of it. I have been largely a logician most of my life even though I suck at math.

Because I am my own person, I didn’t realize the irony in what my favorite word, “dovetailing,” has shown: it’s a synonym for providential…  For years I have used “dovetailing” to describe how everything aligns in our lives — neither “good” nor “bad” as it makes way for something else.

So much of the living we do is unconscious. I thought I was thinking separately than she. I thought I was the maverick in my observations. “Providential” seemed so archaic, so Mom. I used to argue with her, saying it was a cop-out; that bending to what we consider our fate was a mistake. I just wanted her to be well.

Once I woke up to the fact that dovetailing means the same as providential, it was too late, she was gone. It’s a yucky feeling, when it’s too late.

I see it now though, how even that: her being gone, is part of a plan, not just for me though. But as far as I’m concerned (because I really can only speak to any of this from my perspective), everything that lined itself up exquisitely before she died was also part of The Plan.

We think we are powerless.

We think we are victims.

When struggles arise we hunker in our teapots and we shake our curled fists at God, at the Universe in desperation wondering, “When will it change?! Give me a sign!”

And the signs are all around us. Always have been. Never weren’t there.

We miss so many opportunities to see that not only does the world spin madly on, but it spins on with signs.

What’s this have to do with yoga? And my retreat? I’ll tell you. Keeping things chronologically in order would require that I go back to before my birth, but I’ll try to start with this summer.

It’s impossible to do this justice in a humane word count for a blog post and some of you might already know this story, but I’ll do my best to flavor it and keep it tight.

No promises. (wince.)

I’ll start in the spring when I started therapy again because of family discord which rattled some very rusty chains in my psyche which induced very inappropriately placed guilt on to me.

High level:

  • doing that therapy allowed me to admit some truths about myself, which in turn
  • created a space where I could reach out and share my talents and gifts (in this case: yoga) with a demographic of people who might’ve never had an opportunity to experience yoga, which then
  • created a dynamic with a person who wanted to underwrite more of my yoga training, which
  • spawned research into yoga training classes, which
  • turned up the 16-day yoga teacher training retreat that I ultimately went on, which
  • generated such an amazing amount of emotional upheaval, honesty, humility, allowance, forgiveness and love that when I came home I was able to be the forgiveness I had sought for my mother, which I profoundly experienced on the retreat

Scant 23 days later, my mother went to God.

There are other dovetailing / providential incidents :

  • writing the self-imposed 30 Days of Jung challenge that I created for myself, which
  • required that I get out of my own way and out of my own head to write about Jung’s quotes with Truth (with a capital T).
  • During that series, I went on vacation to my childhood beaches this summer where it rained so much that our property was surrounded by a moat.
  • Usually Mom would go on that trip too to her house, but she couldn’t this year as she and Dad were sick with bronchitis,
  • Because Mom wasn’t there, I spent more time than usual with my favorite aunt and my cousin and her family which then opened up into a beach trip in North Carolina right after the retreat.
  • After the rainy vacation, I called Mom and we talked about how awful the weather was.
  • Mom got me in touch with another cousin whom I’ve always adored, but I hadn’t seen in years who possibly knew of a rental property for next year.
  • That cousin and I talked a LOT on that initial call about all sorts of family history.
  • Then I had my parents over for their 51st wedding anniversary; Mom stayed in her chair, Dad ate on the deck with us: it was no more pretending, she wanted what she wanted that night. We gave it to her with nary a protest. I walked her to her seat in the car, buckled her in and kissed her on the cheek — the last time ever for her life — and told her “I love you” as I looked into her ancient, graying eyes. She gave her squinchy nose grin back and they drove away.
  • The next weekend, my yoga teacher training began and I was mostly out of pocket. We had very little wifi and I’d have to borrow a phone to connect if needed. I was apprehensive on that retreat. Things were going on with my parents that were challenging for them and I was fearful I would be called home for an emergency.
  • Three days after the retreat ended, I went on the NC trip.
  • After NC, I talked to Mom more. We had really nice calls those days. I told her about the retreat but she was more interested in hearing about my cousin and her kids and that trip to NC. People she knew interested her way more than people she’d likely never meet.

Sixteen days later: Mom died. Who did we stay with in Buffalo? That NC cousin. Would I have stayed there without the beach trip? Likely, but the “lubrication” of us all being together just two weeks beforehand definitely made the request a no-brainer. Who has been another fierce resource for me, checking in with me? Reading my posts and calling me since Mom died? The other cousin. The one who I connected with after the rainy vacation on Mom’s advice.

Mom loved family. “Family’s all ya got, kid,” she would say in an odd mixture of WC Fields and Truman Capote. It was with her family, her cousins and others that she felt free to be exactly who she was: ethereal and energetically rootless, as frustrating as that was for me.

You see… this was all providential. As are all the events that happen in your life. Everything you experience: be it a job loss or a love loss or a lottery win or a scholarship — all of these things are lined up. We just have to be ready to see them. Even with the good times we might feel undeserving. If we only ask “Why Me?” during the “bad” times, we miss out on asking “Why Me?” during the “good” times too.

On the retreat we learned that “Wahe guru!” is something akin to “thank you — for all of it!” a sense of welcoming, a surrender to what is and gratitude for all of what is, even the so-called “bad” times.

During that retreat I had many moments of release, but they all culminated in the Wahe guru! moment of my entire life. We were accustomed to waking at 5:15 for 6:00 sadhana (“spiritual practice”), but this one time, a Friday morning, we woke at 4:00 for 4:30am sadhana. This time is known as the amrit vela (“ambrosial hour”) — a time when the earth’s angle to the sun is magical and mystical and when creativity and invention peak:

The mother, and queen, of all sadhanas is morning sadhana. Morning sadhana is done in the 2 ½ hours before the rise of the sun. Wisdom traditions of all types have discovered the special qualities of this early time of the morning, these ambrosial hours, in which we can determine our reality and separate ourselves from fantasies, illusions, and even delusions, the denizens of our subconscious.  —spiritvoyage.com

At 4:20am it is pitch black, midnight blue dark. In the Blue Ridge Mountains, it’s even darker yet the stars in all their glory and magnificence shine and twinkle and sparkle. In the east, I could see a perfect crescent moon hanging and glowing as if just for me.

Leaning over the side of the deck, to position myself beyond the hang of the covered porch’s roof so I could get a better look at the stars, I began to breathe so deeply, as if guided to do so; as if some cosmic force was impelling me to go further, leave the deck, go on the grass, look up some more, don’t stop, keep looking, spin and look up and drink it all in.

I stepped down off the cold wooden steps, sun worn, cracked, faded. Their rough surface snags my socks, almost pulled one right off!

It was SO dark, but it didn’t matter. I was in a zone. My foot forcefully landed on the gravel, its points digging into my sole. I broke one of my own rules: “no socks on the dirt,” so I could get a better look, see more, keep going… I wanted to hiss, “I’m coming as fast as I can! Hold your horses!” to whatever was calling me out to the space, an oblong spot of grass, about 50′ long behind the house where my views of everything, the moon, the stars, huge clusters of cosmic somethings, galaxies? were completely clear.

I was overwhelmed by my smallness and oddly grateful for it too. I rejoiced, teary-eyed, wet feet, quietly in the chilly valley’s darkness; I felt as though I was one with it all, just far away is all. Chills ran along my body, wrapped in my bed spread for it was barely 50˚ most mornings.

In correspondence we’ve shared about my grief since Mom died, I wrote to my yoga teacher about the moment,

When I am terribly low, I go back to that moment under the stars on the early morning sadhana and how when I awoke, I looked up to the sky and ran down in my stockinged feet and walked on the dewy grass to do nothing but to throw up my arms, to look at that glorious and perfect crescent moon and uncontrollably and silently and humbly weep tears of gratitude as I verbally thanked God, my father, my mother, Jesus and all my woes, challenges, admissions, truths and triumphs for bringing me to that moment. It was my eternal and fixed yet infinite “wahe guru” moment. I was forever changed that morning.
I thought I’d never thank my mother for the life she created that I had to endure. I thought I’d never thank my father either. I understood at that moment that it wasn’t all bad with her, “bad” is the wrong word, but it wasn’t all negative; although like that little poem about the girl with the curl in the center of her forehead, when it was bad, it was awful.
But those tears not only reminded me but they crystallized me. She shaped me. Our souls were graced with one another for a reason; I have no doubt about that now.

So that’s when those moments work: when we can see them all lined up in a row as if they were dominoes ready to tumble. Sometimes they usher unpleasant events, sometimes they usher seemingly regular events until you line them up and look at the stream and see how perfect the cosmic math is — they are all connected.

That morning, I saw one of the most amazing dawns:

IMG_0959

My life changed forever that morning to prepare me. I had an odd sensation, I knew at that moment, that Mom likely wouldn’t be here for Thanksgiving. I can’t explain it but I’ve mentioned it here before. A pit in my stomach lurched each time I thought of her, not in an unpleasant way, but in a conscious way.

That lurching stomach pit told me my days of expectations and hopes and wishes for her life to suddenly change (on earth) had melted away, but I was OK with it. I was at peace knowing that I had no control over anything but my own disposition. Complaining about anything now seems ridiculous. I know that sounds so glib as I type this from my home with my husband at his job and my children with their health and our lives the way they are — at this moment — but that’s the truth. Complaints do nothing but keep us stuck.

Wahe guru means thank you. At least that’s the way I learned it. Thanksgiving is coming up. I suspect there will be many tender moments in my home as we celebrate something, all four of us now, together again, without Mom. Wahe guru for all of it: the easy and the difficult; the pain and the comfort; the sad and the happy; the high and the low; the abundance and the scarcity; the resolved and the anxious; the rage and the joy. It’s what makes us who we are.

I believe there is a string that ties us all together, that makes sense of all our experiences once we get out of our own way and shows us who we are meant to be.

Thank you.