Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Peanut Butter and Cigarettes
But this time, I didn’t really mean to make such a great improvement to the quality of my life and I’m not even sure that I can take credit for it. And when I say that my life has changed you might be confused because my house is still a mess, I’m still unemployed, my bank account is still the same and so is the number on the scale. And at first it might look like something so little, something so insignificant that it wouldn’t be worth even writing about, much less building up to like I have in these first few paragraphs. But here goes.
I’ve been hearing a lot about gratitude lately from really spiritual people and places like Oprah and church. The problem is that the things I’m most grateful for are like things like peanut butter and cigarettes, not exactly stuff that spiritual gurus espouse as the way to happiness. Still, everyone that I respect and admire says that having gratitude is essential to bringing about abundance in one’s life, the idea being that when we practice feeling gratitude we will attract more things to feel gratitude about. However another problem I have with this whole gratitude thing is that I’ve noticed that the people who are saying this have a lot to be grateful for, like Oprah who has a zillion dollars in her spare change drawer. I, on the other hand, am often scraping the bottom of my purse looking for quarters to do with laundry with. So I began to wonder: is gratitude an emotion that only the wealthy can experience, or is in experiencing gratitude that we create wealth? Which comes first… the gratitude or the nest egg?
Shortly after my son was born, I went a little nutsy. Officially this little time in my life is called post pardum depression, but I believe that my son’s arrival was like the proverbial last straw on the camel’s back. See, prior to his arrival I had managed to just barely be able to meet my own standards of what I thought was acceptable behavior. I could get the house clean before people would come over, I could make myself presentable when I went outside. I had time to return phone calls and money to pay the bills and energy to exercise. I could wash my car and make sure all of the take-out cartons were thrown away before anyone else had to sit in the back seat. I believed that being able to do these things was very important to how lovable and acceptable I was to everyone around me, including God. It was an anxious, scurrying dog-paddle fight to keep it all up, but I managed to do so.
However, when Jack was born I couldn’t keep it up anymore. I was barely able to keep him alive, much less keep my car clean. Suddenly the answering machine showed that I had 27 unheard messages and my email inbox was full. Dishes were piled up around my sink and my plants were dying from neglect. Piles of mail teetered ominously on any and all of the flat surfaces in my home. Weird, sticky, black grime had formed in spots on my entryway floor, and my Christmas tree was still in the lawn, even though it was February. Above all of this, I hadn’t plucked by eyebrows in several months and I was beginning to resemble a member of the Adam’s Family.
All of this was enough to make me a nervous wreck. My therapist told me that I needed to just make it okay that things weren’t perfect, that nobody expected my life or my house to be clutter-free. I tried to let things go, like the dishes in the sink, but then I found a cockroach in the kitchen which set me into a state of panic likened only to the catastrophic stockmarket crash in 1929.
I would wake up each morning in this state of utter panic at how messy my life was and how it had all gotten away from me, totally overwhelmed by the piles of mail and the sticky floors. I would rush to my desk and furiously write out a to-do list, often multiple pages long. It felt so good to write that list out, like how I imagine it must feel for a drug addict when the needle hits the vein. It was an almost instant relief from the anxiety, a delicious high. To see that numbered list, so neatly written, gave me a sense of control over what felt like such chaos and despair.
All I could think about throughout the day was getting that list completed. Having a completed list was like being flawless; there were no errors to point out. Somebody could walk into my life and I could feel safe. I could say, “Yes, you can come in! I have no flaws! I’ve got it all covered! My files are in order, my checking account is balanced, the diaper pail is empty, baby photos have been sent to all relatives, the plants are all watered on a schedule! I am a good employee! I am a good friend! I am a good mother! I am a good daughter! I am a good person! See!?”
The problem is that the list never, ever got done. Damn it, it never got done. I would check off number 14 on the list – Get the mail – but then the contents of the mail would add 5 more items onto the end of the list – call health insurance, research conference dates, call mom about babysitting, call H.R. about W-2’s, pay bills. It was so depressing to see the list growing instead of shrinking each day.
The worst part about this time is that I was so wrapped up in this totally neurotic pattern that I missed out on the first few months with my son. He became a nuisance to getting the list done that I would get so frustrated with him when he would require my attention (which was all of the time- he was a newborn!). I would nurse him or rock him to sleep or play with him in this sort of annoyed, distracted way, as if he was just another task to complete in the day. I remember wishing that he would just sleep all day so that I could have some uninterrupted, productive time.
The to-do list had become a problem. I would get up, make the list, and experience the exquisite relief of writing it all down, and then dread looking at it. I would ignore it all day, detest it even. Looking at all of those undone things, all of those reasons for self loathing, all of those imperfections and flaws, all of the “things that are in the way of you being worthy” would take away my buzz. And so I both loved and hated my to do-lists like an alcoholic loves to drink, giving me both relief and reason for self rejection in a single swallow.
God, those were dark days. They were anxiety- driven, heart-racing, brow- beating days where I couldn’t get away from the evidence of my imperfection. It showed up everywhere I looked until… well, I don’t know. I just…shifted. I mean, the evidence is still there, but I shifted.
I can say that at some point I realized that my entire day, yes even my entire life, had become about checking items off a list and that this was not how I was interested in living my life. I wanted to live a life engaged, a life with fullness and richness, a life with gratitude and appreciation. I wanted to feel human again, lithe and alert. And maybe it was just in the defining of what I wanted I created it.
And so I dropped writing to-do lists totally cold turkey. In its place I am now implementing a to-be list. Each morning I decide to be present, to be grateful, to be mindful. I wake up and set an intention to be compassionate with myself and my son as I move about the day, to be willing to trust that God is with me and that I am worthy of love- both God’s love and my own. And it really is a decision. I have to choose to be this way with myself because it’s not hard for me to write out entire lists indicating that I should have been left behind by God a dozen years ago. To be loving with myself is the most amazing task I can do because it requires that I embrace all parts of myself, even the lumpy, messy, awkward parts.
When I fall of the wagon and use the overflowing trash can as evidence of my unworthiness, gratitude helps me see that the trash is actually evidence of God’s favor in my life, that my cup runneth over, so much so that I have things to throw things away. Gratitude is by far the most effective cure to my overindulgent self-loathing. Similarly, when I see messy floors and piles of mail and dirty windows I tell myself that I it is a privilege to have floors and mail and windows to attend to. It is a privilege to live such an extravagant, abundant life where floors and mail and windows exist at all.
If I choose to make it so, something as simple as doing the dishes can be an exercise in appreciation. I don’t have to do the dishes, I get to do the dishes. I get the privilege of going over to the sink (my God, I have a sink!), turning on the hot water (hot water! I have clean, hot water at my command! And I don’t even have to pay for it!), putting on rubber gloves (can you believe that a person can buy gloves for only 99 cents?!) scraping the food (thank you, God, for such abundance!) off of my dishes (a gorgeous set) and placing them into my dishwasher (a dishwasher! Can you believe my fortune! I have a dishwasher!) And then there’s the dishsoap. Have you ever really looked at dishsoap? It’s like liquid jewelry, shimmering and luxurious. Iridescent streams of emeralds and opals pour elegantly from the bottle while bright bursts of citrus or pine fragrance meet your nose. All of these things are exquisite gifts to be cherished and held in the deepest places in our hearts.
When I move through life in this state of consciousness I can’t help but notice the ravishing beauty and ridiculous abundance of my life. It is awe inspiring, humbling and profound. My God, I get to change a diaper. I get to nurse life into a child, I get to feel his soft baby skin against my own. My God, I get to pay this phone bill. I get to receive love through this small mechanical device, my friend’s voice nourishing me like milk and honey. My God, I get to sweep my porch. How did I ever get such a lovely porch where the sun comes through the slats in the awning above in the most extravagant of ways, warming my toes as I walk upon it?
I hope that my son will see me living my life this way and it will rub off on him at least a little bit. I do suspect that we will scuffle some day as I tell him that, no- he doesn’t have to clean his room but he gets to clean his room, a clever way of shoving my philosophy down his future teenage throat. I’m sure that this will be followed with a roll of his eyes and a slam of a his door, which I then get to be on the other side of.
Sunday, March 18, 2007
The Church That Hates Babies
Finding a good church to go to is very similar to dating. You might be set up by a friend ("It's a great church, good music, fabulous children's program...") or you might find it online, or simply decide to check out the one that you've driven by every day for the past two years. You may have avoided church for some time because the last church relationship you were in left a bitter taste in your mouth. Or you might just be experimenting with it all, unsure of what your religious preference is. But at some point in your life you might find yourself thinking, "I'm going to get out there."
I'm at this point right now, and I have found that visiting a new church on a Sunday morning feels very similar to going on a date. Making a good first impression is important to me, and so there's the whole figuring-out-what-to-wear issue. I spend an extra amount of time doing my hair and make up and fantasize about clever and interesting things to say as I meet people. While driving there I check my teeth and my breath, and I pluck any stray chin hairs that I might have missed in my dim bathroom light. I circle the block several times if I get there too early, not wanting to sit alone reading and re-reading the church bulliten.
I am usually very hopeful about whatever church I am visiting very possibly being "the one." I do this to a fault, however, in that I often make the mistake of seeing totally bizarre and unacceptable behavior as "charming" or "quirky." This, of course, is totally disastrous and it's what keeps me involved in bad, bad relationships for much longer than was ever needed. I'm beginning to learn my lesson.
I had a date this morning with a church that will remain unnamed and I was optimistic about it when Jack and I arrived. I chatted with a nice couple in the parking lot about the beautiful
I placed my name tag on my sweater set and asked her where I should take Jack. She looked at me as if I had asked her where the aliens park their saucers and so I rephrased the question.
"Does your church have a nursery where I can take the baby?"
Still confused, she tilted her head to the side and said "I don't know."
I thought this was strange considering she was the welcome lady and it would seem appropriate that she know these types of things about the church that she's introducing visitors to. But I gave her the benefit of the doubt, thinking that she might be new to the welcome center or maybe just a little bit retarded.
I said, "Oh, okay. Well, hmm..."
"Most people just keep their children on their laps with them in the service," she finally said.
"Okay. That's great. He'll love that. Is it okay that he'll make little baby noises during the service?"
"I think it will be fine," she said, waving a bulliten in the air.
"Great! Thanks."
I was glad to know that there were churches out there that were kid-friendly like the one I had grown up in where kids weren't expected to keep still or quiet. I was getting excited again about the possibility of this church and I becoming a family that I was willing to overlook the crazy welcome lady, its one little flaw. After all, isn't it the crazies that the church is supposed to embrace?
Jack and I entered the church which I suddenly realized was actually a freemason's lodge. Now, you have to understand that the whole freemasonry thing totally creeps me out. I mean, I get a weird vibe about it all. And this started long before The DaVinci Code. It's mysterious, but in a creepy, eyes-wide-shut kind of way. I felt myself go cold as I walked beneath the compass and square emblem was hung above the door and past the walls that were lined with portraits of old men. Painted on one wall was an eye in the top of a pyramid with beams of light emanating from it, much like the one that's on the back of a U.S. dollar. On the other wall were glass cases filled with antiqued freemasonry aprons preserved in frames, sculptures of hands with bizarre things attached to the fingers, and other equally creepy items.
We walked past this freaky shit into the main sanctuary where a choir was singing and we found a seat in the back of the room. This room was quite a bit more inviting with beautiful flowers near the alter and silk fabrics draped behind the choir. Images of The Brotherhood began to fade away as the music lifted me, and new images of future church potlucks with my fellow choir members and Christmas pageants where Jack would be dressed as a shepherd played in my head.
Not long after we sat down the baby became restless, and so we stepped back out into the creepy Satan room where Jack played on the floor. A latecomer came in and said to me, "You should take him upstairs to the nursery! My daughter's there!"
"The nursery?" said
"Yeah, it's right upstairs. It's great. Hugh's up there today. He's a good guy. My 18- month old loves him."
"Thanks!"
Crazy welcome lady.
So we headed up the stairs and walked into the nursery where I found about 15 children engaged in a rousing rendition of the hokey pokey with Hugh, I presume, who happens to be at least 6 foot 11 and just about the lankiest, goofiest looking guy I've ever seen. He's leading the song, updating the words to fit a more spiritual agenda. "You put your love in, you take your anger out, you put your love in, and you shake it all about. You do the spirit pokey and you turn yourself about..."
Spirit pokey?
The 18-month old that belonged to the latecomer downstairs was toddling around up here by herself, not old enough to do the spirit pokey and turn herself about with Gumby and the rest of the kids. I stood there for a full minute or two, somewhere between mystified and annoyed, and left unnoticed by anyone but the 18-month old. No way was I leaving Jack there.
This date was not going well.
But I wasn't ready to give up on the church, yet. We headed back downstairs and into the mason room where I decided we would spend the rest of the service. From this room I could see the pastor through the door, and Jack could play on the floor and not disturb anybody. There were also some really comfortable, throne-like, velvet chairs that I could sit on that I imagined only the head mason guy was privileged to during their meetings where they did God only knows what.
The pastor spoke on the process of releasing one's attachment to the outcome of whatever situation it is that one might be in and trusting that God is good and will manifest what is for the highest and best. He was funny at times and the congregation would laugh, and he was serious at others and the congregation would take notes. The morning started to look better and fantasies of working together with the pastor on projects and creating a youth ministry program here began to bounce around in my head. My hope for this church and I having a future together was looking up.
However, this was quickly interrupted.
"Ma'am?" An usher popper her head out from behind the door, just inside the sanctuary.
"Yes?" I answered.
She looked at Jack. "He's a bit distracting," she said, wrinkling her nose in an effort to make her comment seem cute.
I looked at her, dumbstruck. Where did she want him to go? Gumby had his hands full upstairs and we were outside the door, in a separate room, at least 75 feet away from the last row of people. And besides all of this, Jack really wasn't being that loud.
I was over it. This was the final straw. Fuck this place. I suddenly hated everything about this church. I hated the crazy welcome lady and I couldn't believe I had allowed Jack to be anywhere near this crazy masonry stuff. I hated this usher and wanted to scream at her that this church was stupid and so was she. I thought about getting even with them by going upstairs and sneaking away with the 18-month old, just to prove that Hugh is an idiot.
Instead I scooped up Jack and his toys and said to him, "Let's go home." We walked back out the parking lot, he cooing at the sky and I laughing as I dial my girlfriends to tell them all about the crazy church I just met.
Saturday, March 17, 2007
Jack the duck.
March 17, 2007
I woke up this morning to Jack climbing onto my face, breathing his hot, baby breath into my ear. It was the best way to wake up ever. I could smell his little baby smell, all warm and sweet like bread baking in the oven. He grabbed fistfulls of my hair as he moved, his diaper crinkling as he crawled. He climbed higher and higher, until his entire body was on my head, pajama-enclosed feet kicking into the air propelling him to the other side of me.
When there, he sat up and began excitedly telling me a story. “Bob. Bob bob bob bob bob bob bob. Bob. Bob.” His eyes are wide and expectant as he tells me this, his hands gesturing wildly. I’m wondering what is going on in his little baby head when he suddenly grabs my face and lunges forward, burying his own face into my cheek. “Bob bob bob, bob!” he squeals, and then proceeds to make fart noises on my face with his mouth.
He stays there for a while, his face pressed into mine, his body piled up in the crook of my arm. I am nearly dying from my love for him, making it hard to breathe. I could cry a thousand times a day by just looking at him, if I let myself feel it every time. I wait for him to pull away, to move on to the next baby thing to do, but he lingers in this moment of embrace with me and I cannot help but let the tears come forward. The lump in my throat appears and then ebbs away, softening as I move through this exquisite pain, this exquisite joy.
There are so many moments like this in a day of being with Jack. There are so many little, tiny instants that look like nothing but are actually totally profound and life-changing. A smile, a sound, a new skill mastered like opening up cupboard doors. All of these moments, when captured, are divine moments of grace where love comes in and it transforms the day.
I watch Jack as he sits up and faces the room, his hands exploring themselves out in front of him. He reminds me of a duck gliding effortlessly in the water, head turning aimlessly, eyes seeing nothing. His little beak opens up and “Bob, bob bob. Bob. Bob,” escapes, quietly. I notice that his foot is near my hand and so I curl my palm around it, noticing his smallness.
He looks over at me, coming out of his duck gaze. “Bob?” I ask him. And he bursts out laughing.