It's All About We...

a reincarnation of the now-defunct "It's All About Me! (the column)" series by SereneBabe

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

she pulls out her hair

But when she twists her hair and pulls it out, it hurts me. At first, I thought it was because it annoyed me. Then I thought it was because I was totally powerless over the behavior. Then I thought it was because I felt I was a failure as a mother -- how could a child with such a loving, consistent, healthy, and attentive family be so anxious that she'd give herself bald spots?

I had to trim one side to even it out after she'd pulled out so much she looked lopsided.

Now I realize it's not that I'm a failure, or Josh, or that we're not meeting her needs somehow. What hurts me about her habit is that it's so public. People can *see* her anxiety. It took me a solid 15 years to be almost okay with sharing my own fears. And here is this beautiful, happy child walking around with a flashing billboard that says, "I'm actually really, really worried."

I wish I could wash away every worry.

The pulling started just a few days after we told her she was going to have a new baby brother or sister. It's completely understandable.

I've Googled it, and the OCD-related habit also happens to run in our family. So, I'm almost able to understand she just can't help it. I talk to the other twister/puller I know and have learned more. I try to let it go, have faith that she will find other ways to help herself with her anxiety. But when I see her worries in those bare patches it's all I can do to not sweep her up into my arms, maybe put her in a sling, and keep her close to me forever.

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Saturday, March 15, 2008

Those Crazy Haters!

When Becca Mayes beat me up in ninth grade, there was almost a reason for it. In that case, I actually did something inconsiderate (asked her boyfriend if it was true she was a slut (I wasn't one myself, yet, and I was sincerely and naively curious about a rumor I'd heard)).

Becca stalked me for about a week. Stood outside my classes, glaring through the tiny windows on each door. The day finally came. After homeroom, Becca, Lisa Ryan, and another girl started grabbing me, pulling me into the bathroom. All I could say was, "what about my books?" (The big pile of books in my arms, where to put them down.)

Once she had me in the stall (yes, I tried to stop them dragging me there) most of it is a blur. I remember ducking the punches. I remember the loud echos. I remember using all my strength (successfully) to stop her from flushing my head in the toilet. But, I mostly remember the ridiculously civil, even therapeutic (for her), conversation we had.

Me: "Why are you doing this, Becca?"

Her: "You called me a slut!"

Me: "I'm really sorry about that. I asked John about what I'd heard. I am really sorry!"

(Thud. Thud. Whack. Some punches grazing off my face, some landing on the stall wall behind me.)

Me: "But we were friends last year! What is so wrong that you're doing this to me now?"

The little chat (Thud. Whack. Thud!) actually moved into how unhappy she was, how she hated me for being "so perfect," and how it wasn't fair that I got my life and she got hers. I felt sorry for her as she tried to beat the shit out of me (successfully).

The other girls, the door-watchers, participated in some parts of the conversation -- I was sure the unnamed girl's sister couldn't be pregnant if she had her period, the unnamed girl was sure her sister was pregnant.

Surreal? Yes.

The only time this sort of insanity happened in my life? Nope.

The next major time I recall was Gina someone spitting... no Lori Matarazzo spitting in my face at a dance. For this exchange I have no recollection what I might have done to spur the sputum. Perhaps I again said something stupid or naive. Or, perhaps I did nothing.

No one has physically beaten my up in a lot of years. But, I'm still a magnet for people hating me. Really, seethingly hating me. Almost every time it sneaks up on me. Almost every time it hurts my feelings at first. Almost every time I do some crazy dances to try to fix whatever's wrong.

Then I remember the pattern.

It happens.

Over the years I've gotten used to it. Not in any sort of "oh poor me" martyr kind of way, but, just a sort of an "it's the cost of doing business" kind of way.

When I'm in a group setting, an advisory board, for example, my style bugs a lot of people. I don't like to dabble with what-ifs. I like to decide and do. I like concrete achievable tasks, not theories and considerations.

The best groups generally have another strong-personality/leader type to balance me out. Someone who recognizes the value of detailed planning and consideration before taking action. Almost always, though, I ruffle feathers. It's okay. I also get things done, and that's more important to me than being liked.

The last time I was in one of these messes, hooo-boy, did she hate me. Seriously hated me. I'm talking piercing stare-downs with the strength of lasers. All I could do was giggle with nerves, it was so insane. Emails like, "Did you enjoy your vacation? I sure did." It was brutal. The worst was, though, how she sucked me into insanity. She accused me of theft, of power-plays, of dishonesty, and all sorts of almost-criminal acts. I prayed like a crazy person, as I had become nuts wondering what I'd done to make her hate me so. Crying over it one night, I asked Josh why these people latch on to me. "You're outgoing, you don't hold back." That's really what it is most of the time.

A wise soul explained that particular situation this way. Some people take on leadership. Others see those leaders with bull's eyes on their chests. Just looking for that best shot. Take 'em down is their call.

My style and personality aside, there are people out there looking for targets. I can't try to become someone these sick people don't notice. It doesn't work that way.

My best spiritual guides have always told me to pray that the people who drive me most crazy, who hurt me most, that I should pray they get everything I want in my life. Simple. I pray they find peace. Remarkable what praying for them does. I usually move directly into forgiveness.

When I'm most healthy, I treat these people with respect. I consider what my role in the relationship is. I find what my part of it is, if there are things I've done that need amending. Then, I promptly ignore almost anything they say. I pray for them. I feel sorry for them. And I move on to the next thing.

It's my natural tendency to isolate. Part of why isolation soothes me so is I don't have to deal with the Haters. But I do like to make things move, so I don't stay alone for long.

Last night I was honored to speak to a large group of people about issues near and dear to me. As the words came out of my mouth I knew my positions were strongly held. I knew it was likely I was really, really pissing off some people. I also knew there would be others who would just as passionately value my message.

Dancing around trying to make people happy is one of the most miserable ways to live. I know. I used to do it all the time. Being my authentic self, my considerate and caring authentic self, I can only hold fast to the knowledge that I am well-intentioned and well-meaning. When those crazy Haters come at me, I say, "hey, what's up? I'll duck your slugs today, but go ahead and throw them if it makes you feel better."

I'm no punching bag, but, if I took everyone's opinion of me more seriously than my own self-assessment, I'd be in quite a bit of misery. Here's to doing enough good in the world, being courageous and strong enough, that I keep pissing people off.
"i can be changed by what happens to me. but i refuse to be reduced by it." -- Maya Angelou

"
Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great." -- Mark Twain




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Saturday, March 01, 2008

Gut knots in the clearing

It's dark and wet. Full of steam and tears and desperation. Sometimes my fingers lose all sensation as I fumble for the keg tap. I'm fourteen, fifteen. I'm sixteen, seventeen. I'm on a field, in someone's basement, in an old mansion with the parents away, or in the woods of someone's farm. I'm staring off into another room, knowing he is watching me.

There is a simple science to being beautiful and young. Attracting one only requires convincing him he doesn't exist to me. Inside, I am a hummingbird of awareness. All he sees is my face, my body, my smile, and my slow strong confidence. I know I'm lovely. I know I'm good at it. I am all powerful.

What strange paths of dark memory. Keeping my feet grounded in the now where authentic confidence and love connect and support all things. I'm out of practice. Visiting those places from before, I haven't done this more than ten years. The raging pain, loneliness, confusion, and trauma are all mixed in together with normal teen angst and anxiety. Today, I begin clearing out the clutter. Sort through the typical and file it away. Uncover the damage, clean the wounds that still fester, hold tight to the now where all is safe.

Who are these people now? What do they remember?

Only scraps of the most humiliating, flagrant, and rank behaviors of mine are resurfacing. Were there good times? Were there any real connections?

Hovering over the well, staring full force down in to the darkness, knowing it goes to the center of the earth. I'm diving in. I'm falling down. I am immersing myself to reclaim and know. I will scrape away the lingering filth.

What will be left when this is over? I have all I need, now. There are no visions of retribution. There is no blame.

I begin recalling smells, sights, sensations. Pick up a can. Check for carbonation, be sure there are no ashes. Good enough to drink? The haze and tunnel vision, the crowd as a blur, hearing voices, knowing they are talking, but I'm not able to move. Smiling to show I don't care. Oh, how not caring was the ultimate goal. I see it in young kids these days. I don't care. You don't affect me. I am going to show you so clearly that I am unimpressed by you. Perhaps, and likely, I was just as transparent.

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Sunday, January 27, 2008

Waking Up.

The late-night drive-through attendant passed me two cheeseburgers without judgment. Her emotionless (empathetic?) gaze was better than therapy. Finding myself camped out in the middle of the king-sized bed, computer on my lap, remote in one hand, 3 Musketeers in the other--it took two hours of dazed terror before I realized I'd been there before.

This time, I was in a hotel without my husband or daughter. That time, over ten years ago, I was alone heading toward the worst of my drunk and stoned life. This time, life was mostly full of joy, balance, and serenity. That time, chaos and loneliness led me in endless dark mazes.

I had no idea being away from my daughter overnight for the first time would be so brutal. It kicked my ass for those two hours. When I recognized where I had arrived (desperation, lack of clarity, obscured reality) it was an easy shift into pleasure. Ah ha! Look what's happened! And, immediately: a bubble bath; guilty-pleasure television with the volume up; doing what I wanted, when I wanted, how I wanted. And, most of all, sleeping harder and deeper than I had in years.

It's as if life is a continuous set of spirals, lines flowing up and around, higher and higher until the coil is too tight. With each forward movement--it's always moving forward--the next unspringing is more gentle. Ten years ago every lesson devastated me, as I believed in perfection and an impossible ideal. These days, I usually recognize the signs of an impending challenge or lesson and I just hold on and breathe.

Four and a half years ago our daughter came into our lives through a gash in my abdomen. She wanted to come out feet first. There was no convincing her to turn. On that first night, she lay among my IV tubes of antibiotics for the post-op infection and Pitocin to stop the hemorrhaging. She nursed enthusiastically. She slept with us then and has ever since.

Sleeping in our grand king-sized bed is full of reconnecting, snuggling, giggling, and love. Sure, she'll sleep in her own room someday but, for now, we all love our arrangement.

So, for all of her sweet little life, any time she's needed me at night, I've been there. I am breathing with her, laying with her, and always within reach.

As we work on less dependence on me and more acceptance of comfort from her Daddy, we realized the best thing for us was me spending a night away. I was desperate for a good night's sleep (being needed throughout the night had finally caught up to me), and we were both desperate for Josh's chance to be "the one" she needed. My physical presence, because of the patterns and habits we've set over the years, was problematic. Maya didn't believe she would be okay without me. What a terrible lesson to teach a child: you'll fall apart if I'm not there. So, it was with some anxiety but mostly excitement and confidence that I packed my bag for this overnight.

A massive burlap sack filled with wet sand smashing me across the room was how I felt when I first left our house. I actually thought I might vomit because I was "leaving Maya." My perception of my importance, and ultimately Josh's ability as a father, was skewed. Twisted. Distorted. Reality was again obscured.

Thankfully, it just took that bit of time for me to recognize just how fucked up it all was. As if Maya would fall apart without me. Intellectually, I was sure I didn't believe that. But those two desperate hours were close cousins to the last few months of my darkest drugging and boozing. This time, I had solutions at my disposal. Easy tools to use to fix this mess. I simply said, "Oh, hey, god? Shit, I'm totally fucked up again. I think I'm way too important and I think I'm a piece of shit. Would you fix all this?" And POP up I sprang from the bed to run the bubble bath.

Clarity. Clearness.

It's all so simple if I don't make it complicated. And, holy crap, did I sleep well that night.

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Monday, December 17, 2007

Christian with a lowercase c.

My four year old says, "I'm Mary and this is baby Jesus" and proceeds to sing all the words to "Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel." The time has come for me to explain why I'm christian. And why I'm not a Christian.

"I'm a Christian" vs. "I'm christian."

First let's be clear. I'm not "a Christian." The right-wing fundamentalists have taken over that term with disturbing voracity. It makes me sick to my stomach to risk being grouped with such generally hateful sorts. Christian (with a C) now means to me, and to so many I talk with, an almost drug induced state of bliss (denial of questions or doubts), glazed eyes (from crying tears of joy when someone is "saved"), rigid rules. Mostly, Christian with a C requires following the strict-father model of living. It means a woman has no right to say what happens to her body. It means taxing the wealthy, stripping social services to nothing, and expecting the poorest among us to support it all. It means same-gender love is wrong. I want nothing to do with Christian with a C.

I am christian, though. I strive to live like Jesus did. That's the essence of it, how I explain it to my daughter. In four year old terms, it's pretty simple. Love everyone. Do whatever you can to help rid the world of injustice. Forgive yourself and others for our human frailties. Know that all you can do is your best and that is enough.

The magical fairyland of miracles.

But what about the "miracles," the loaves and fishes, the healing blindness, bringing people back from the dead? Or, as Maya asked today at lunch, "Are angels real?" My answer is also pretty simple. I don't get hung up on whether or not those things are literally true (it might lean into the sort of magical fairyland kind of thing, would it not?) or if they are only metaphors and lessons. I recognize that humans wrote the Bible, so the stories are most likely stories. I take the lessons from them and move on.

But what about the rising from the dead? Again, I don't get hung up. Literal or not it isn't a huge deal to me. The lessons that we're all Okay, that we are always forgiven for our mistakes, and that the power of god is bigger than any human -- that's enough for me.

The truth is, though, at this moment I believe Jesus literally came back to life. When I'm in my "maybe it didn't literally happen" times, it doesn't scare me. Those thoughts fit perfectly in my faith, believing the truth of it as miracle or metaphor doesn't change the message.

I recognize being raised by a minister and faithfully christian mother has a great deal to do with the likelihood that I'll not find the story of the resurrection in the land with dragons, trolls, and fairies. Then again, as we all know, it could have pushed me farther away from believing the story. And, again, while I do happen to believe it actually happened, it's not the biggest part of christianity for me.

I believe christianity is a religion of social justice. Jesus ate with and talked with women. With tax collectors. With sinners and untouchables of all sorts. Talking seriously with such non-people was rebelious enough, but to wash their feet or share a table with them was truly radical. He told poor people that they were the most special of all. He said people should love their enemies. He was a teacher.

After
the sadness and revulsion I feel for those people I feel are butchering Jesus' messages, those cap C's, I realized there was another great obstacle preventing me from embracing the christian label.

I don't believe Jesus would want our worship. The Jesus I understand would not want us to bow down to him. He would not want to be treated as someone more special than any other person. He certainly wouldn't want me calling him "Lord." Teacher, sure, but Lord, no way.

So, how could I be christian if I won't pray to Jesus? That's the question I grappled with for about the last ten years. But my truth has found me and I know now that, for me, being christian means I want to be as much like Jesus as possible. I want to be bold, courageous, and intelligent. I want to stay centered in my connection with god in all times of my life, as much as I can. I want to forgive myself and others every minute of every day. And, most of all, I want to help change the world. I want to help my neighbors near and far. I want people who are suffering to find justice, and I want to help make that happen.

What about Jesus as 100% god and 100% human?

The other hangup I had when I didn't consider myself christian was the stance that Jesus was 100% God, different than us humans. As with so many of my understandings of my christianity, I realize it's an issue of translation. The miracles were probably story telling tools. Jesus was a great healer (this is historical fact, not religious belief, though the ideas of what kind of healing he did are disputed), but was he as powerful as god? In my view, no. In my view, Jesus was astoundingly good at staying connected to god. He was clearly "centered" as we might say today. Serene. At peace most of the time. In no great hurry.

Again, I find Jesus to be a role model for my spiritual life. I know from my own experience that staying connected to what I call god keeps me relatively sane. I know peace when I am strongly connected to that strength. It's my view that Jesus really
got it -- he found a way to stay connected more often than he was distracted by daily life. He was the ultimately god-connected person. Whether that was through prayer and meditation, through yoga, through great conversations with loved ones, or through times of quiet, I don't know. But from what I know of the man named Jesus, I can tell he wasn't easily distracted from his source of peace and strength.

But surely, you won't stand for the Father Lord King garbage, will you?


No. I won't stand for it. Mostly. My conception of god is not at all paternal. I certainly don't think Jesus would dig that kind of reference in this day and age. But, in those days when women were dismissed and not counted, using paternal references to describe power and strength makes sense. In the days of rulers like Kings and Emperors it makes sense that Jesus and others would use the language of the day. Shortcuts, if you will, to explain they believed that god was extraordinarily powerful.

When I go to church with my parents, or continue our search for a church that meets our own family's needs, I spend a lot of time translating so I can tolerate the paternal and inegalitarian concepts and language used. I usually don't even like to use a capital letter G on god, it's too high-and-mighty for me. Through the translation, though, I can still hear the message:
  • Be kind.
  • Be just.
  • Be brave.
  • Care for those who need help.
  • Don't put up with shit from hateful people.
  • Love yourself and others.
So as Maya plays Mary, sings the Christmas hymns with all her might, and hears a bit more of the Christmas story every morning when we sing Oh Come, Oh Come Emmanuel at breakfast, I feel good being christian. I feel honored that our child asks such probing questions, forcing me to articulate in the simplest terms what I believe. I always begin by saying, "Well, not everyone believes this," or, "Some people believe that is true, but I don't." But I almost always end up telling her the truest truth I know. The most important thing is that we try to love everyone in the world and help people who need it most.

Later that day she was playing store and announced, "I work for the giving store. We prepare food to give to people who don't have enough."

I believe Jesus would be glad.



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Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Ophelia's Ride

Lately, the evils of four year olds has me losing perspective. I keep telling myself, "they're four, they're only four, they're just four year old little kids!" But, when my sweet daughter Maya tells me a classmate said, "you can't play with us" within some particularly nasty context (playing doggy, no one would be her owner) I want to rip out the classmate's hair and throw her into a locked dark closet. Would that be inappropriate?

Life is like ocean waves. My self-awareness and understanding always reaching and finding new sands, new treasures. Always uncovering new old rubble. I've come to love The Ride even when storms make it scary. The Ride always rocks and rolls me. I'm always safe.

From this perch, I've been revisiting what it was like. What it used to be like. My happy tendency these days is to live in what it's like now, finding the past an ordinary place with the present full of mystery and joy. Then these little brats came along. These little excluding and nasty and superficial little crap heads.

I've started reading Reviving Ophelia. No matter what parents do, Pipher reports in Ophelia, young girls risk losing their authentic selves. It's only by being "high in acceptance and strong in controls" that we parents have a chance to find our daughters reclaiming themselves in their later teens. Apparently, our daughter is doomed to begin hating herself and hiding herself at around 11 years old, just like every girl I've ever known. The parents are not to blame.

Overbearing parents, absent parents, cool parents, geeky parents, they're all facing the same thing. Girls who used to be outgoing, unabashedly intelligent, confident, and creative turn into little puddles of quietude, bitterness, or fear. Everything the girls are is wrong -- their hair, their bodies, their thoughts, their words.

Early on, I was entirely a Good Girl. I didn't get in trouble, I followed the rules, I did my homework, I was Responsible. Before junior high, I was an artist. I wanted to be an architect, among many other things. Then on career day, an older woman groaned at me when I told her this and said, "Oh, no you don't, dear! You'd have to major in math and science!" She said this in an honors seventh grade math class. Not only was she not accurate about the "majoring," but she was talking to someone who (at the time) loved math!

In the seventh grade I decided to become popular. I set about it like I would any homework assignment, I read books, magazines, studied up. I realized I'd have to drop the friends I had, even the ones who were hoping to climb the social ladder with me. It would only be by publicly rejecting them that I'd move into the cool crowd. I did what it took. I began flirting with boys, too, and found them flirting back. My life began revolving almost entirely around how others perceived me and I did, as Pipher reports as so common, lose track of my real self.

In the 9th grade I wrote a play in AP English as a class assignment. I have no idea why I thought it a good idea, but the play ended with me, standing alone in front of the class saying, "I'm lonely." It was meant to be a Waiting for Godot flavored performance, but I look back now and see that I was speaking the truth.

There are other pivotal moments that shoved me into the typical self-hatred so many of us experienced in the brutal years of junior high and beyond. For a while in my 20s I blamed my parents, of course. But I think Pipher's on to something in her position that it is our culture, our misogynistic surroundings that damn girls (and boys, I could argue in another essay) to the Hell of self-annihilation. Blaming the culture may sound like a cop-out. But now that I'm living life as a parent of a child, and now that I'm reflecting on my own history from this perspective, I see no other explanation.

Now I'm examining my role as a grown woman, a mother. How can I help Maya survive with her Self intact? Or, help her have a chance of reviving her true self when the storm of adolescence calms?

I've already strayed. When Maya went to a summer camp (mornings doing crafts and music) I began to pack little "treats" in her lunch box that felt inconsistent with who we are. I bought the little sugar drinks (claiming to be yoghurt, with Disney characters on the bottles) or pre-sliced cheese. I included bits in her lunch bag I knew "all the other kids" would have. Already I was concerned about her experiencing the ostracizing that comes from having the "wrong" foods in a lunch bag. I was giddy doing this, knowing I was "helping her" be one of the "cool" kids. Oh my god. What was I thinking?

Last week I again packed a lunch for Maya, but this time I was grounded. I was joyful and held true to our family's priorities. I did pack a little treat, but it was some plastic spider rings we got at the dollar store last year (the lunch was on Halloween) rather than some crap food that would only make her feel tired. The environment for this lunch was also not typical -- I knew that in this group "cool" was actually healthy and wholesome and genuine. Authenticity and kindness are the norm and the children are much less likely to say, "eeeew" to Maya's lunch choices (as they did when I once included a box of carrot juice).

Just as I am revisiting this insane pressure to be what others expect -- the same pressure that forced me over the cliff into self-hatred as a young girl despite my loving supportive family -- I'm finding my own life to be a comfortable, firm, and perfectly fitting shoe (is there a prettier more accurate metaphor? I'm sure there is...). I am coming into being myself, fully accepting and pleased.

As a mother, I think I've caught myself early enough -- I'll do my best to focus on being true to myself, modeling the self-respect I want for Maya. I don't need to buy the Disney. I will also focus on supporting Maya's choices, encouraging her to realize that she has choices, that she alone determines her value -- no matter what those around her say.

Acceptance is the answer to all my problems today, I've read. What I got from the Ophelia book wasn't despair or hopelessness. I got guidance. The book recalls a study done on strong and successful women like Eleanor Roosevelt. She describes a common theme for all the women was intellectual curiousity about something and a generally lonely adolescence filled with solitude or social rejection. Armed with this information, I feel encouraged. If Maya turns out to be a girl who loves horses, or a girl who loves Broadway musicals, or a girl who loves field hockey, I'll be overjoyed. Passion for something, no matter how unfamiliar or even distasteful to me, will be her go-home-free card. I also won't let myself get sucked back into the "if she's liked, she'll like herself" trap. As I begin experiencing the pain and joy of watching my daughter work her way through the system, I'll try to remember to let go. I'll practice having faith that everything will turn out okay.

Tonight a friend asked Maya who her best friend at school was. Wouldn't you know her answer was that very same girl who had so wretchedly spurned her before? I can't say I'm pleased about this since I am still nursing a tidy resentment. However, I am more comfortable remembering that not only is she only four, she's out there practicing life. She's learning about who she is just like I am. All I can do is just hang on for the ride.

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