Thursday, November 22, 2012

My Thanksgiving Prayer



As with most of us, I have so many things to be thankful for that I take for granted every day.
Too bad for us that it takes a holiday to remember
to be content and grateful for the blessings we have.

My gratitude is going to take a different turn today.
I have more blessings and love than I can fathom.
I have family and friends, a home, good kids 
I can eat this holiday.
I won't be hungry.
I wont be in pain.
I won't be cold.
That in itself is enough.

My gratitude today is for things like this...

I am thankful I have had my feelings hurt,
it gives me empathy.

I am thankful for loss,
it gives me perspective.

I am thankful for death,
it gives me reverence for life.

I am thankful for pain,
it makes me humble.

I am thankful for suffering,
it makes me more spiritual.

I am thankful for sickness,
it makes me appreciate health.

I am thankful for hatred,
it allows me to understand love.

I am thankful for war,
it makes me crave peace.

I am thankful for what is messy and chaotic,
it makes me seek calm.

I am grateful today that I have seen all kinds of ugly in this world,
for it makes the beauty more vibrant,
more important,
more sacred.

Yes, count your blessings today dear friends...
but thank your troubles too.
They have a purpose. 
They teach us to search  for OUR purpose.

It's all in how you look at it.

Happy Thanksgiving 2012





Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Sanity in Sweat


(This one's for you Emily!)

Yoga has become my Xanax.
Absolutely critical to this girl's sanity.
My family  has gone so far as to say
"Ummm...we like you so much better on yoga"

Nice.
But, it does make for easy leaving the house
when I say I am headed to a yoga class!
They're all like
"Go! Really! You don't want to be late! Go, go!"

Am I really that bad without it?
Apparently so.
I have said it here before
(and this isn't original by any means)
that my mind is a dangerous neighborhood,
and I shouldn't go in there alone.

In yoga...
hot yoga, to be exact,
there is no time to meander into that neighborhood.
Too much brain power is focused on 
remaining standing during balancing poses.
Stretching further, shifting focus,
 and breathing.

Breathing through discomfort.
 Not pain...that's a no go.
But discomfort is where you grow in yoga.
And the breath is 
critical to improving.

The breath is critical to everything.

Sounds positively torturous, I know.
But in getting so deep into yoga,
you get out of your head.
It's almost magic.

Left with nothing to do but focus on balancing on one foot,
the mind is both focused,
yet unbelievably freed.

These past two weeks I have only been able to get in two
yoga classes per week.
Trust me...the family is getting impatient.
They discreetly ask if I am going to yoga each day.



Yoga began as the exercise done to tire the body
prior to meditation.
To wear the body and the mind out so it could finally be
quiet.

Those early yogis were on to something,
and it is no wonder we seek the calm that comes from 
an hour and fifteen minutes of pure sweat and 
supine twists.

I know what you are thinking...
the same thing I used to think when runners said
they got a "high"...from running.
I was thinking "You're high"

Now I get it.
I get that no matter what your "thing" is,
yoga, running, knitting, reading
whatever it is that gets you out of your head
 and into your soul

That's the thing worth doing.

Us yoga junkies and running fanatics,
triathletes and bodybuilders,
girls in the knitting circle and eight book clubs...
we just found a different way to escape the mind
and find the peace.

One. Breath. At. A. Time.

Watch out big pharma!









Wednesday, November 7, 2012

How About Giving This Snowball A Chance In Hell




There is an old zen saying that goes something like this... Whatever you are for, strengthens you and whatever you are against, weakens you.

I had no intention of sitting down today to write.
Frankly, I cannot read any more political posts.
From the gloaters or the poor losers alike.
  I certainly don't want to add to the
collective eye-rolling occurring in front of computer screens everywhere,
but I just couldn't get this out of my head
and it had to come out somehow...
that is just how a writer's brain works.
My apologies in advance if you are at the edge of the cliff, but give it a read until the end...
You might have a change of heart.


As if we all weren't tired enough of the months (that felt like decades) of
really awful political ads and fear-mongering from both sides,
today we get to see people either melt down
or do the social media version of
"Na na na na na na!"

My children...
Time out.

Life. Goes. On.

Here is my challenge today.
However yesterday came out for you
(and please be reminded that I am sitting here, the wife of a candidate 
who lost a local election so I  do kind of get it...)
Sit with your good self and think about this...

What are you for?
Not what you are angry about.
Not what you think is going to happen to our great nation,
or state, county or city.
Not what mistakes have been made,
and how the other guy is going to mess things up.
Not how mad you are and how you got cheated and need revenge.
Nor how awesome it is to see that other guy lose,
and how vindicated you are that your guy won.
Don't give any more thought to lies that were told on either side.


Think instead today about this...
What are you for?
That which we are for strengthens us.
That which we are against weakens us.



Go out today. 
Make a little shift in that thinking brain of yours...
see what happens...

Really, what do we have to lose?


Consciously become  pro-peace, pro-freedom, 
 pro-love,  pro-happiness, pro-health,
pro-abundance,
pro-infinity 

Pro-all of us together.

I am no pacivist  nor misplaced hippie child, but I 
do believe that what we are doin' just ain't workin' 
and it can't hurt to try something a little bit different.

Advocating for instead of fighting against might really give
some good things a chance in our little corner of the world.

Like attracts like,
and the snowball grows and
starts to roll downhill,
building momentum,
gaining speed,
gaining good...















Friday, September 28, 2012

Bitch, please...



I have been somewhat dismayed as of late
with members of my gender and their behavior.
When did it become okay to be a bitch?
When did it become acceptable to be mean girls...
as adults?

 I am at a loss.
I have heard things and witnessed things recently that make me ashamed to be
female.
And I am not talking about the crap on TV like Real Housewives.
This is stuff that happens every day without any cameras rolling for effect.

I have many female friends who are lovely, kind, compassionate
human beings.
Women who go out of their way to be nice,
who are the first to help out a friend and who live the golden rule.
These women inspire me to be a better woman.
A better person.
So I know it is not every woman, and I am not trying to make a sweeping generalization,

but, if you would allow me to take a few minutes to
...bitch about bitches
I would like to get something off my chest...

NO
it is not okay to belittle, demean,, back stab and complain about other women
because you feel that bad about yourself.

NO
it is not okay to spread hurtful gossip just because it gives you something to talk about
and you think it makes you sound interesting.

NO
it is not okay to act like a spoiled 14 year old when you are 44.
YOU. ARE. FORTY FOUR.

NO.
It is not okay to take out your personal insecurities on other women, men or children,
for God's sake.

AND NO...

it is not okay to use social media to passively-aggressively
work out your issues with other women.
Stop "unfriending" and "blocking"
Stop posting sarcastic quotes and having little inside jokes online with the rest of
your witchy friends.

Stop texting your grievances, stop bullying and badgering.
Stop acting like you are entitled. Stop assuming.
Stop being righteous and pompous and rude.

JUST STOP.
Enough all ready.

You are making us all look bad.

We all do enough damage to our own egos on a daily basis.
We don't need your help destroying them any further.

And, frankly, it is hard enough to raise a daughter and get her through her teen
years unscathed, that I really don't want her to think she is going to have to 
put up with this crap her whole life.

So...
if you are a bitch.
Or have been bitchy to someone
(except, of course, during a certain time of the month when, let's be honest, some of it just can't be helped but is usually reserved for our husbands...poor guys)
KNOCK. THAT. SHIT. OFF.

Do me a favor...
Read the Prayer of St. Francis.
Aspire to live in a way that assumes we are all struggling and all could use
a kind word, the benefit of the doubt, and 
some general compassion now and then.

Lift up other women and show our daughters that as a gender,
we can be the strongest force in the universe
when we use our power for good instead of evil.

And the next time you are the target for some 
she-dragon spewing fire
say a little prayer for her soul.

She must hate herself something awful,
to be spreading so much toxic energy.

She needs as much love as you do, and probably more.
Steer clear of her path, for sure,
but send her blessings from afar.

And last, but by God, not least...

look yourself in the mirror and make friends with that girl.
She needs you and you need her.

And maybe if you are best friends with her, you won't feel so alone 
and ready to do battle with the rest of our half of the 
human race.

okay...I'm done bitching.
















Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Busy Signal



So...
I haven't blogged in awhile.  A long while.
I took the summer off.
Had good intentions, but summer got in the way.
Well...vacations, driving children, camps, pool time etc.
And then came August. And September.
And...what the hell!!
One kid in high school, one in middle school,
one "part time" gig that kind of took over,
a husband running for county office,
a house on the market
and...
I am being punished for my summer of fun.

SO here I sit with nothing of importance on my mind
except that I am tired.
And sniffly (allergies...baaaad allergies)
I am not trying to wear my worn out like a badge of honor,
because, frankly, we are all that way.
We are all tired,
We are all a little bit sick, or stuffy.
We are all frazzled and wondering why we do this to ourselves
yet have no idea how to stop.

It is the norm.
And I don't think it it going to get better in our lifetime.
Our kids don't know any different, so maybe we are just that 
in between generation.
The generation who is still looking around ourselves like
"what happened?"
The generation who grew up without cell phones, computers and
call waiting and answering machines.
If you called and got a busy signal, you had to waaaaaiiiitttt
to call back and hope they were still home when you did.
Remember that feeling when you kept dialing and getting that annoying busy tone? Agonizing!
We are the confused and teensy bit resentful crew.
The ones who love the convenience of our "time saving" devices,
but who can't understand why our children have no patience or ability to plan and think ahead more than 15 minutes.
When have they ever had to? 
When has everything not been right at their little fingertips and happening in real time?

In high school, we actually had to make a plan at the school for weekend activities...when we actually saw our friends face to face because we would have to call their house after school, and unless they had a teen line, chances were that we weren't getting through.
Or we drove around on the weekend until we found someone out doing the same thing we were...sometimes that took hours. 
But we were perfectly content to hang in there and wait in case
something came up.
 So do we give it up and quit complaining about this frenzied
life pace. Keep up the race pace and just hope we don't puke right before the finish line,
or do we try to buck the trend and slow it way down.
There just are not enough hours in the day to do everything we have to do, let alone everything we want to do,
so why try?
Just do what we can and the rest be damned.

Yep...I feel like doing that every day.
Will it ever happen?
Not a chance.






Monday, June 25, 2012

It's Complicated


It's messy.
People get sick, people hurt each other.
We fail ourselves, we fail classes and jobs.

We assume motives and create stories
that might not be real.

We become addicted to things...
alcohol, people, technology, 
drama.

We blame, we envy, we pretend.

We all do it, and we all have it.
The complicated stuff of life.

Yet we insist on assuming that other people's lives
are so much easier than ours.
We look at them with longing for how joyful and simple 
their existence must be, when we really should remember
that everybody is struggling with something.

How much happier would we be
if we all could find a way
to uncomplicate
the complicated.

To assume no motive.
Instead forgive the inner struggle.

To give up envy
and water our own gardens so we can
have gratitude for
what is beautiful about our own life.

To love ourselves enough
that we don't have to try to
find it in a bottle, a bag or a bum
 because we
are always going to 
come up empty.

To be brave enough to be real.
Even though real
isn't always pretty.

And to remember
that we are all just trying to
find a dream.

We all have been put here
with lessons to learn.

Our job of life is to learn them.
Not blame others for them.
Not cry and whine because it isn't easy.
Learn them and move on.

Learn them and live.
Learn them and 
thank your lucky stars.

As unfair as it is,
I think those who are dying
are some of the most blessed.

Faced with death, 
life becomes amazingly simple.
Love is all there is.

The rest is just....
complicated.



Saturday, June 16, 2012

Same Story, Different House


I...am tired.
Like, really, really tired.
What happened to the lazy, hazy days of summer?
It may be hazy, but there ain't no lazy happening here.

I blogged about the absolute tornado that May was,
but I was anticipating things would slow  up a bit in June.
Not so much.

This week it has been one thing, after another thing, after another.
Meaning, I am running to and fro,
my kids are hither and yon and my husband is just confused.

We pass each other in the hallways
and give a little nod of recognition.
Like..."Hey, you look familiar. We're in the same family, right?"

Not that I have any room to complain,
because it seems like everyone I talk to  is in the same boat.
We keep paddling away.
Hoping to reach the shore for a little respite,
but the more we paddle, the further the land is from view.
We just row harder and harder and harder.
Pack more things into the boat and pray it doesn't sink before we hit land.

It is June 16th, and I don't think I have cooked 
a meal where we all sat down together and ate since 
before the end of May.

That's sad.

I know there are some people who thrive on this kind of overdrive.
Who seem to have an unending source of energy, who have every minute
of their day planned.
Every minute, every hour, every week.

Somehow I missed getting that gene.
Which is kind of a rip off, because my mother is one of those busy's.
The ones who are thriving.
Basking in the chaos.
Taunting me with their status updates.
Bastards.

No...
I missed out big time.
I am the girl lying on the scorched pavement behind them.
Gasping for air and tattooed by the tire marks
they left as they drove over me,
Cooking Light casserole in one hand and scrapbook in another.

Were I not maimed by the hit and run, I would have time to notice 
that I forgot to feed my family, yet again.
That I left the vacuum sitting in the middle of the living room floor 4 days ago, and there are 3 newspapers sitting on my front porch.
That we can't close the hamper because it is so full,
and that I can't recall the last time it was actually not that way.

This is nuts.
This frenzied life we lead is a little nuts.
Burnout for me is certain at this continued pace.
This poor little introvert, who needs her downtime to function properly
(don't judge)
Is going to come off her hinges soon and it's not going
to be pretty.
I'm just warning you.

So...if you don't hear from me for a few days,
 send in help.
Preferably a housekeeper, a chef,
a secretary and a chauffer,
if I can be a teensy bit choosy.
Oh yes...a sommalier would be nice too.
Because it is going to take a village, people.

My husband would be so appreciative.
He's really getting tired of wearing my underwear out of necessity, 
and not fun :)
(I'm totally kidding! Oh boy...can't wait for the comments on this one!)


It's time the pendulum started swinging the other way.
They say everything is cyclical, and I am 
advocating for the cycle of slower, simpler times to come on back around.
I don't even need a whole lazy summer. A lazy hour would be blissful!


Who's with me?
Shall we stage a revolt?
Organize a movement to bust the busy-ness?
Hell no...
that's just one more thing to do.

























Friday, June 8, 2012

An Iowa Rant (Or Rave...You Decide)


I spend a lot of time thinking about why we get such a bad wrap for living in Iowa.
No respect from the rest of the country, I  tell ya!
Don't ask me why. There are plenty of more relevant things that could occupy my brain,
but it has a mind of its own sometimes :), and this is where it goes.


Were it still 1977, I could see how us midwesterners could be 
viewed as backwards, behind the times and just plain, not cool.
Or, not as cool as those right and left coasters.

But this is 2012.
We do have the internet, and even TV (gasp!)
in little ole' Iowa.
An airport that allows us to travel to other places to discover...oh my goodness...that the
more different we are, the more we are the same.
So let me set the record straight...

Yes, there are farms, and pigs, and cows.
Okay, a lot of them.
No, we don't all live on one...a farm I mean. Not a pig.
We have small cities and large towns.
Suburbs even.
No, we don't drive tractors to school or work.
We don't all wear overalls, we don't all rope steer.
We don't tip cows for entertainment,
and every road is not gravel, 
despite how movies like to portray it.

What do we have?
Bear with me...I am a girl who loves fashion and style, so this is where this is going.
Sephora, large department stores (okay, no Nordstrom yet), Whole Foods,
nearly every chain clothing store you can think of and nearly every chain restaurant too.
Strip malls and soccer fields.
Starbucks and super stores.
Large universities and small private colleges, respected around the world.

Does that make Iowa special? Nope!
It makes it just like every place else.
What makes it special is the people
 (laid back, friendly, unpretentious)
Farmers, yes. But also entrepreneurs, yogis,
industry leaders, small business owners, writers, singers, artists and more.

Wide open spaces.

Big yards, grass, trees, green space, fertile fields and clean lakes.

Incredible schools with high functioning students who are attractive to colleges all over the 
country because of their midwest work ethic.

Wonderful local restaurants from small town diners
 (my personal fave, I'll be honest!)
to 5-Star fine dining.
Eclectic boutiques and galleries, quaint farmers markets and festivals.

Not too different from where you live, I presume.
Unless, of course, you dwell in the middle of a city.
Even then.

Today, one town is every town.
Parts of the country have their own feel, but people are people
no matter where you put them.

So please stop asking me if I have electricity.
Don't ask if this is the state that has the potatoes (that's I-da-ho, not I-o-wa)
Don't call it the fly-over state.
Don't call me a hick or think because I live in a small town that I am small minded.

Stop in.
You might be surprised.
Best do it in the summer, though. Only the strong can take the winters.

My Iowa peeps...I hope this helps.
But I imagine you get the same thing if you are from Nebraska, Minnesota, Missouri,
North or South Dakota, Wisconsin, Kansas, Oklahoma and any other midwest state.
So consider this one for you too.
You're welcome :)











Friday, May 11, 2012

Mother's Day?


My friends...
I will not be winning any mothering awards this year.
Let's be honest...I was never even in the running.
My children have been annoyed by me, upset with me, and, on more than a few occasions,
have probably hated me.
I have yelled at them. I have cursed behind their backs at them.
(I whisper it to myself so they can't hear, but it's not very nice...half credit?)
I have pretended not to hear them when they call me to get them something.
I have forgotten to make them lunches.
I have opted out of chaperoning field trips, and complained that they are 
ungrateful to my friends.
Nope. No awards for me this year.
But...
I have ached for them when they are hurting.
Sat in rain and spitting snow under fleece and plastic
(not a good look for me) to watch them play sports,
rubbed their backs late at night, and spent more hours waiting in a car for them that I think I spent in college.
I have hugged them when they cried, told them I loved them over and over,
and prayed for them every day.
Not even that is going to get me that award.
That...that is the easy stuff.

What, then, is the hard stuff?

The hard stuff 
is the hundreds of millions of times I have agonized over decisions I was making for them.
Is it right or is it wrong?
Is it selfish or selfless? Character building or character damaging?
Will they thank me someday or thank their therapist?
Every day I have these decisions.
Help them through their frustrating math problem or let them work through it on their own?
Rescue them or let them learn the lesson that comes from consequences?
Love them and reassure them or love them and let them go?
When to hover and when to hold back.
When to be the crutch and when to kick it out from underneath them and let them stumble but eventually walk on their own two feet?
And then...as if that isn't insanity-making enough,
add in worrying about what all the other mothers think about what you are doing.
Or worse, the one's who tell you what you are doing wrong or right.

 That my friends, is the real stuff of parenting.
The stuff that keeps you up at night.
The stuff we've got to ease up a bit on ourselves about.

One of my favorite sayings of late comes from those funny cartoons that are all over Facebook and Pinterest
(yes, my children have also been on my case about my social media addiction FYI)
It says something like,
"I will love you and nurture you, and give you just enough dysfunction to make you funny"
What does it say that both my children have a rather wicked sense of humor?

On this Mother's Day, I will be sitting at a weekend-long soccer tournament
(that I just found out about at 11pm last night...missed an email somewhere.)
I will get no glory.
I will get no thank you's from the coaches for sacrificing the one day a year that is supposed to be all about me.
There will be no tiaras and no band. 
No, I will be sitting on the sidelines of yet another game, watching my son play.
I may have a teensy moment of annoyance because I would rather be planting flowers and reading on the deck.
But then I will get a giant dose of perspective.
This is all a privilege.
All of it, and it is fleeting.
Just sit back and enjoy the game sister.

Let's go easy on ourselves girls...the kids will be okay.
Heck, they will probably be better for it.

Happy Mother's Day



Monday, May 7, 2012

Tornado Warning



Every year I know May is going to 
be a tornado.

I love everything about this month except that part.
I love that school is almost over,
 that feeling of summer anticipation in the air,
going to the little white greenhouse tents to pick out potting flowers, graduation parties and the like.

What I don't love is that it always feels so frenzied.
And for some reason, this year, in the Midwest,
it has been going on since the end of March.
Maybe because of our early spring we all got ahead of ourselves
and instituted the frantic pace unconsciously.

It is about this time that I am longing for sleepy, lazy, summer mornings and relaxed evenings on the deck.
When getting dinner on the table sometime between 6pm and midnight is a perfectly acceptable goal,
and everyone falls into bed at the end of the daywhen they get around to it.
poolside reading, vacation, whatever.
I love those days...

 I wish May came with a watch and warning system
like real tornadoes do.
"It is May 1st. Possibilities of  over-booking, social overload, inability to say no and over-extension for the general population. Stay tuned for warnings and seek shelter in a bathroom or interior room or closet  where no one can find you, should severe activity overload occur...take wine"

With this constant buzz of activity,
I seem to invite an unfriendly visitor...anxiety.
Not sure why. 
Maybe it is that I am always certain I am forgetting something
because there is a LOT to forget this month.

Maybe it is that I know that I am going to have to figure out what to do with my children all summer.
(don't get me wrong...I love having summers with them!)
And I know it will fly by too fast, 
but in the middle of it I won't be able to wait for it to end
and for these kids to have some routine again!

I practice yoga (often), and I meditate (not often enough)
and it helps. It helps a lot.
However, even implementing these wonderful de-stressors
into my routine can cause me a little angst.

I feel guilty for taking the time I could be doing something else.
Even when I try to quiet my mind, tasks pop into my brain 
in rapid succession. 
It seems the only time I seem to "remember" everything I am supposed to be doing, is when I am attempting to empty my mind of all thought.
A frustrating paradox.

And so, a decent blogger would have great words of life-changing wisdom to expel, and after reading this, 
you would undoubtedly feel gratifyingly peaceful and serene.
The rest of this month, and every May hereafter, you would 
float through with detached ease.
Unfortunately for you, you have read the wrong blog.
I'm still looking for the magic.

Until I find it, I will keep on keeping on
with the rest of you.
By the end of the month we all have the same dazed and confused look on our faces,
only to be wiped clean by the look of sheer annoyance
that will appear as soon as these darling  children are out of school for half a day and start whining
that there is nothing to do.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

On a Wing and a Dime




Many of you know of our dear friend Barb,
who died from pancreatic cancer in September 2010.

She was larger than life, in life.
She commanded a room at a party.  Talked and had more energy
than a bus full of five-year-olds on a field trip.
Seriously, she could have put them to shame.

Still,  19 months after her death, I still find it hard to believe she is gone.
She fought her cancer valiantly.
She never gave up her will to live.

So, it is no surprise to me that she would remain as vibrant in her after life as she did in her human life.
Barb believed in signs.
Especially in coins.
After her first husband died, she often found coins in her path and took it as Kevin's signs that he was still with her.
Just from another place.
She told all of us these stories so many times.
With Barb, if you heard it once, you heard it ten times.
And that is exactly what was so endearing about her.

My first "sign" from Barb came the day after she passed away.
The song from her wedding came on the radio in the afternoon.
The song I always identified as "Barb's song"..."I Hope You Dance"
played just as I was alone in the store I used to run.
The scary thing...I expected it.

But her best sign of all came the night of her funeral.
The night the sunset glowed a deep shade of purple..
Barb's color...the color of pancreatic cancer.
A color she wore every day since she discovered her cancer.
I cannot look at purple still to this day without thinking of her.
That is how much she embraced it.

I put my suitcase on my bed to pack it.
I was flying out to Phoenix the next day to meet up with Ty and the kids and visit
his mother, who was in the hospital fighting her own pancreatic cancer battle.
As I opened the suitcase on my bed, I saw, smack-dab in the middle of it,
a  heads-up dime.
A dime. A shiny, thin, pretty 10-cent dime.
I knew instantly it was Barb.
What other coin would she leave?
Of all coins, the dime was most like her.
And it was worth 10 cents. Her birthday was on the 10th of September.
Since that time I have found no less than 20 dimes.
All at times or on days when I could really use a little love and support.
All in unexpected places...like in the far back of and under sink cupboard I was cleaning out
so workmen could re-model the bathroom.
Or under the microwave when I pulled it out to clean the counter.
I am far from the only who who finds dimes from Barb.
She is notorious.
A few weeks ago I opened the dryer to take out towels. 
On the tiny ledge, next to the lint trap, was a perfect, heads-up dime.
No sooner had I found it, my phone rang.
It was her husband calling to ask me a question.
Coincidence? I know that it wasn't.

Soon after I found my first dime, her mother told me the entire family
had been finding dimes.
So many of our mutual friends find dimes...only dimes,
and we all know who is leaving her calling card.
Even people she didn't know, or didn't know well,
have told me a dime story.

The other morning Ty woke up with a purple golf ball clutched in his hand.
I have never seen it before, and he didn't remember it being in our room, let alone anywhere near the bed.
But nonetheless, he was clutching a purple golf ball.
I told him Barb was speaking to him in his language...golf.
We aren't sure what the message is, but he got one!

I keep all of Barb's dimes in a special jar.
Proof (as if I needed it) that our lives never really end.
They just take on different forms.
Some days I feel closer to Barb now than when she was alive.
I know she is doing magnificent work in heaven.
And just as she did on this earthly plane,
she is making her presence known.

Each dime I find is a precious gift, a hug from beyond,
and comfort in a sometimes confusing world.
 A world where good people get cancer and  die before we think they should.

I have learned to be open and to notice the signs.
I believe because of it, I am sent more and more.
 I gasped when I opened the dryer door.
Then I got a little teary.
But I always say thank you.
Thank you Barb, for reminding me about the preciousness of life.
Both the sorrow and the sweetness of death,
and the fact (and in my world, this is fact)
that we never really end.
Our souls and spirits live forever.


But most of all...that
love never dies.




P.S. What's your "dime story"? I'd love to hear it. Even if it isn't a dime. Any "sign" will do :)



Saturday, March 31, 2012

Good Friending





I have friends of all kinds.
Friends who are always there for me,even when I disappoint them.
Friends I can not talk to for years, but call at the drop of a hat.
Friends who feed my soul and spirit, 
and friends who are just plain fun.

The common denominator?
Unending support and positive energy.
I am lucky that way.

Don't get me wrong...I have had my share of friends
who chewed me up and spit me out.
Fortunately it has been a long, long time since I have 
played that friend game.

To me,
friendship means, simply, lifting each other up.
Realizing that the petty jealousies, the things that
supposedly "offend" you about the other
(please don't get me started on the whole "I'm offended" thing)
are really, and only, about you.
Not them.

It takes so little to be kind.
It eats you up to be envious and cruel.
Yes, cruel.
To me, cruel is a harsh sounding word for things people do every day
to so-called friends.
Back-handed compliments and passive aggressive comments.
Cruel is "unfriending" someone and not telling them why, but making sure everyone else knows.
Telling them what "bothers" you about them and what they are doing.
Or being nice to their face and turning around and ripping them to shreds behind their back.
OMG...are we in Junior High again? 
Cruel is injecting your past issues and hurts into the relationship and expecting them to fix them for you
and being angry at them when they don't.
Taking your self-loathing and disappointments and blaming them for them somehow.


In full disclosure...I know I have done some of this in the past.
I am not sitting on any high horse here.
Maybe I didn't know any better, or maybe I did but I didn't know
how to DO any better.


I have found that my world is a much happier place when I think and act abundantly for all.
When I assume no motives and believe everyone is doing the best they can given what they have been given.
Naive? Maybe.
But I will take naive over pessimism and suspicion any day.


We all have expectations and old wounds that we project onto our
current relationships. 
We all take things personally that were never personal
in the first place.
And that is what gets us into trouble.
Causes all of our heartache.
Causes all of our pain an poor self-esteem.


Sure, I may get hurt and trampled on from time to time.
Sure friends may be mean and nasty.
Hurt my feelings and snuff out my spirit some.


But I know that is really their own pain and it has little to do with me.
It gives me some compassion for their struggle,
and reminds me to balance the scales
by choosing grace and gratitude.


It's a short life we have...
We can choose our experience here...good or bad.
We can't always control what happens, but we can choose
how we live through it.


I am choosing the good stuff...
Here's to good friending.