Thursday, December 31, 2009

Goodbye to Bad Rubbish


My Nana, (the woman for whom I am named) said "Goodbye to Bad Rubbish" whenever we lost something we cared for that wasn't good for us...stuff, habits, people. It was a saying meant to show that we were better off somehow for the loss. She was right about some of the stuff, most of the habits, and a few of the people.
As this year and decade draw to a close, I am compelled to repeat her words, with a few notable exceptions. The decade was not a happy one for me, not that I knew I was unhappy through most of it, just the way it played out...apparently I was miserable. So, goodbye to bad rubbish...and farewell to some really good people.
Several goodbyes were tough, my sister, my marriage, my home...several hellos were a salve to those wounds...God and Newsong and all of the wonderful people there; Sage Elizabeth Holden, my beautiful granddaughter; Roxanne... I don't know how we just met this decade as we have travelled in the same circles since we were teenagers, but so glad we did... I know I am leaving out so many wonderful things and people here, but the point is, that whenever we lose something, it empties our hands to recieve...that is how awesome God is...so on to 2010 and the new decade...and a new chance to overcome the past.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

This Year


Every year I get the blues in late December and they last straight through the end of January (sometimes even longer). The devastating personal events of the past few years have done nothing to alleviate this problem, in fact, quite the opposite. This year, however, I am making a conscious effort to resist jumping into the abyss of loss and regret and instead will take an inventory of the top ten reasons I have to be grateful and happy this year.

1.God in my life (I have learned this one has to be first and it is the reason I am able to resist my past wallowing).

2.My Children and Grandchild ( a constant source of laughter and joy).

3.My Family and Friends (many of whom have saved my life at one time or another).

4.A Job to go to every day (did not have one last year, and life is better with one).

5.A warm safe inviting home (love my new home...thanks to all helped me get there).

6.My healthy body (such as it is) Chris Reeve would understand this one.

7.Music (If you don't get why, then there is no sense in explaining).

8.Writing (sometimes,if I do it just right, it is transformational).

9.Reading (see above).

10. The ability to forgive (anger is so crippling).

Monday, December 21, 2009

She's a Gift

Yesterday I celebrated the 17 years I have been lucky enough to be called Mom by one endlessly amazing girl. She's a beautiful person, inside and out...she's funny...smart...loyal...honest...she's simply a gift that I am forever grateful for.





Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Where Were You When...?


29 years ago today John Lennon was taken from us by a deranged fan in front of his home in NYC.
I was at a downtown hotel with musician friends of mine who were performing. The show was interupted by the awful announcement. We all shuffled, stunned and speechless out of that hotel lobby a while later into the night air. We were all holding hands, and we walked through the common following the sound of the sweet clear voice of a black man who sat alone on a bench singing one of the most poignant and moving versions of Give Peace a Chance that I have ever or will ever hear. I will always remember that night...where were you?

Monday, December 7, 2009

Everything Old is New Again


I am smiling right now because the gift I was going to surprise my daughter with arrived early and she called begging to open it...I caved, as she is a persuasive child. And then moments later I get the exuberant phone call that she has "made a record work!" and in the background I can hear the chorus of Mrs. Robinson...cucu cachoo...my old LP's will find new life as she tranfers them to CD with the Music Writer she asked for and I was only too happy to buy. I did warn her that many of the old records she found in the basement have been played to within an inch of their useful life...but I can't wait to get home and share these scratchy memories with her...

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Pendulum... a work in progress


Prologue

“He’s off his damn meds again, that’s what the problem is for chrissakes!”
Jack could hear the self-righteous whine in his sister’s voice as she launched into her typical rant about how all the doctors in the world were responsible for her unhappiness.
“You’d think after all this time you people would have figured out that he just can’t be left on his own. And, don’t even think about suggesting he come stay with me, I have enough problems. I have a job to go to everyday.”
Jack rolled his eyes, he could just imagine the expression on Monica’s face; her lower lip protruding ever so slightly in what she thought was an attractive pout, her blue eyes filling with crocodile tears as her long fingers twisted a damp Kleenex.
From the relative calm of his emergency room cot, protected from the world by a blue and green plaid curtain, Jack pictured the face of the unlucky resident who had made the rookie mistake of asking Monica what the problem was. By the time Monica had dissolved into calculated tears, she was alternating between berating the young doctor and his entire profession for being totally inept and blowing her wet nose into the ragged Kleenex.
Jack leaned back into the pillow the nurse had placed behind his head and closed his eyes. Monica meant well, he knew that. And he had given her quite a run for her money this time. In fact, he had even scared himself. Usually, he could slip away and get back before anyone even noticed he was gone. But, this time had been different. His landlord must have come by for the rent money and found him…well, the way he got when he was gone…only worse.
Judging from the IV fluids they were pumping into him, Jack assumed he had been dehydrated, probably starving to death, too. He remembered getting a heavy dose of Haldol when he first regained consciousness and thought he was still in the Mire fighting for his life. That had been hours ago…how many? Time was different here, but not so different that he didn’t realize what might have happened in the Mire in his absence.
Jack tried to remain calm. The more agitated he got, the more crap they would load him up with. It was bad enough about the Haldol, but he knew the regimen of mood stabilizers and antidepressants they would force on him if he had to stay in the hospital for any length of time would all but seal the fate of the others he had left behind. He had to get back to the Mire!
The most important thing right now, and the only thing he had any control over, was remaining as calm and as sane appearing as possible. Monica would raise hell, but he could convince this tired emergency room doctor that he was a problem to be put off for another day.

The first time Jack ever heard about the Mire was when he was seven years old and Abra told him a bedtime story about the dark and dangerous place where men who dared to enter were enslaved and tortured for all eternity by the Miren. These creatures were not the warm and fuzzy forest animals most seven year olds want to fall asleep dreaming about, but rather, they were hulking slavering beasts with foul smelling fur and yellow eyes rimmed in blood red. With her vivid story, Abra succeeded in both keeping Jack away from the Mire and giving him fitful nightmares for years to come.
Jack enjoyed being with Abra more than anyone else because she loved him with no conditions. She had seemed much older when she had cared for him when he was a boy and had helped him to overcome his initial fear of being in Pendulum. Now he was almost thirty-five and she seemed somehow younger than he was.
Jack thought about Monica and the price tag of guilt and penance she put on her love. Everything Monica did was calculated to net her the best possible return. Abra was different, but then, so was everything and everybody in Pendulum, including Jack himself.
Jack could not recall the exact moment he realized that he did not belong here, but he knew he had been quite young, almost incapable of formulating the thought. He had been what his mother and older sister described as a “difficult child,” but in truth, he had been the best child he could be, under the circumstances.
When he was four and a half years old, his mother brought him to the pediatrician and spent an hour detailing the oddities of his behavior to poor old Dr. Cross. The man was in his seventies, and had presided over thousands of infancies, childhoods and adolescences, but he had never been presented with the type of symptoms Jack’s mother was describing.
Looking up from the chart on his lap to peer over the top of his reading glasses at Jack’s mother, Annette, Dr. Cross had asked, “Are you saying that he loses consciousness?”
“Not exactly…” Annette said. “It’s like he is there one minute, and then the next…” She made a “poof” sound and snapped her hands open in front of her face. Dr. Cross started back in his chair a bit, startled at her response.
“He doesn’t actually disappear, does he Mrs. Grenier?” The doctor’s words had taken on a decidedly different tone as he addressed Jack’s mother. She recognized it at once. It was the same condescending talking-to-a-crazy-lady tone that she had endured each time she brought Jack to the ER.
“You know what, Dr. Cross? Forget it. I made a mistake in coming here for this. You can’t possibly understand… you are never there when it happens.” Annette Grenier then gathered up her son and her purse and pushed past the doctor and out of the examining room. Dr. Cross followed her to the front door of his office and handed her a prescription, patting her shoulder with sympathy… the prescription was for anti-anxiety medication… for her. Jack’s mother tossed the small blue square of paper with Dr. Cross’s chicken scratch on it in the trash receptacle on the sidewalk before she got into her car.
After that, Jack’s mother stopped bringing him to the ER when he went “poof.” In her defense, Jack thought, she, at least, never tried to have him institutionalized, which was what Monica wanted.
Abra always chided Jack to be patient with Monica and his mother. They didn’t have his special talent and so, could never understand. It wasn’t their fault, she told him.
“Your daddy knew, Jack. He was just like you. He lived here most of the time…until he went to the Mire.”
Abra sometimes got depressed when she talked about Jack’s father, so Jack never pushed the topic. Abra was the reason Jack kept coming back to Pendulum…he never wanted her to be sad… ever.
But as a young boy, Jack had wanted and needed to know about his father, and since he couldn’t talk to Abra, and his mother refused to talk about her late husband, Jack had no choice but to turn to Monica.
“He was crazy, just like you.” Monica told him when he was only seven, never taking her eyes off the mirror in front of which she seemed to live. “He said nutso stuff and acted like a retard most of the time, but then sometimes…” Her voice had softened then, and she sat back in her chair and looked at Jack like she had never seen him before. “He could be so… normal… y’know?”
Jack did not know. “Normal” was as foreign to him as selflessness was to Monica. His idea of normal was skipping his meds for weeks at a time so that he could return to Pendulum, the only place he’d ever felt safe or wanted.

Chapter One

Jack was not sure when he first became aware that Pendulum and the world his mother and sister inhabited were not the same place. As a toddler, he would cross back and forth with ease from one reality to the other. No one ever seemed to notice; no one except Abra.
It was as if she anticipated his arrival each time. When he was little and frightened by the intensity of Pendulum, she would be there to greet him when he arrived with warm hugs and soothing words. As he grew more and more comfortable in his strange new world, Abra would be waiting for him with a mischievous twinkle in her eye that signified a grand adventure awaited them. Her imagination was bounded only by Jack’s enthusiasm for her ideas.
Pendulum became an addiction for Jack. The medication that kept him sane and functioning in this world, served only to keep him from entering his magical universe; so he would not take the pills. He suffered the horrible black depressions in exchange for the miracle of mania. When his mind was racing with a thousand disjointed and disturbing thoughts that spilled out of his mouth in an unstoppable rush, when he felt so confined by the limits of this mere mortal world that he thought he might implode, Jack went to Pendulum. In Pendulum, he was limitless. His wild thoughts, improbable and fantastic, became reality in Pendulum and he struggled to stay there forever.

In his hospital bed, Jack closed his eyes and with the colors of the blue and green plaid curtain that separated him from chaos firmly in his mind, he pictured the brilliant blue sky and rolling green meadows that framed the banks of the Cymban River that flowed through the very heart of Pendulum. He imagined himself stepping onto the barge that awaited him there and felt the familiar bounce and sway as the ever-silent bargeman poled his way out into the current.
Jack breathed in the sweet, heavy scents of lilac and wild rose as the barge moved steadily downstream. The meadows soon gave way to thickening forests and Jack pictured the tiny flashes of light that flickered in the dusk as the wood sprites made ready for night.
He was almost there. Jack fought to keep his mind focused on Pendulum and his destination. Willing the effects of the Haldol away, he felt himself slipping into the intense, sensory laden world of Pendulum. He was desperate to return to the Mire and rejoin his companions. They needed him and he would not let them down, not again.
The Cymban meandered in a wide arc west where it narrowed until it seemed Jack could almost touch the opposing shores with his arms outstretched. This was where Abra would be, where she always greeted him, joy and gratitude for his return shining in her amber eyes. This time, however, Jack did not see her. He was stunned and confused. She had never before failed to meet him. Jack felt a sudden panic rise, and the barge jolted, hitting something beneath the water with enough force to send Jack staggering toward the bargeman, arms pin-wheeling for balance. Then he was falling over the edge of the barge, impossibly far, into the chilly depths of the Cymban.

“Mr. Grenier, Jack…Jack, can you hear me?” The doctor’s insistent voice cut through the sound of rushing water that filled Jack’s ears and he opened his eyes to find himself once again in the emergency room at Champlain Hospital.
“No!” Jack wailed before he could control his emotions. Please, he begged himself, hold it together, don’t let them see you this way…relax, damn it!
Jack brought his focus back to the world he so wanted to abandon and looked into the eyes of the resident who seemed eager to speak to him, happy even. Jack guessed that any conversation other than one this unfortunate young doctor had been having with Monica was a welcome relief.
“Well now, there you are.” The doctor said, in a tone Jack knew he must reserve for very young children, befuddled elderly, and the occasional kook that rotated through the ER. “Do you know where you are, Jack?” he asked.
“Hospital,” Jack croaked, surprised at how weak he sounded.
“That’s right, Jack.” The resident nodded his approval at Jack’s cleverness. I don’t know what gave me the first clue, Jack thought, my ass hanging out of a paper johnny, or the tubes running out of my arms.
“Do you know what day it is Jack?”
He did not. He had been in Pendulum for two days before he went to the Mire, and he had spent at least a day and a half there…maybe today was… “Monday?” he said, trying and failing to keep the uncertainty out of his voice.
“Jack, it’s Thursday.” The young doctor said as he leaned over him and shone a penlight into his left eye, one latex thumb pulling up Jack’s lid by the eyelashes. “It is Thursday,” he repeated as he straightened, “and you haven’t had anything to eat or drink for several days it seems. You are dehydrated and weak. Your sister tells me that you are also delusional. Have you been taking your…” The doctor paused to look at Jack’s chart, “Aripiprazole?”
He had not. Jack could not recall the last time he had taken his medication other than the anti-depressant. He purposely took the anti-depressant and omitted the other in order to bring on a manic episode…it was the only sure way he could find into Pendulum.
For many years, before he had been diagnosed, Jack could pass in and out of Pendulum with no more effort than just thinking about it for a while. Then, once he had been loaded up with mood-stabilizers and antidepressants by the doctors his mother had forced him to see, he found it virtually impossible to go there, or to even call up an image of the place in his mind. Those were the lost years, Jack thought. He would never relive them. He had been flat, a blank space, a void.
The snap of latex as the doctor finished his examination and threw away his gloves brought Jack back to his surroundings. “Well Jack,” the young doctor began, “we can do one of three things.”
“Or we can do nothing.” Jack interrupted and looked the other man square in the eye as he spoke. “I want to get the hell out of here. I promise I’ll remember to eat and drink something every day. I have important shit to do…I need to get out of here.” Jack wrestled with his emotions and fought to keep the desperation he felt from being so evident.
“I’m fine, really doctor,” Jack tried again, sounding almost reasonable this time. “My sister worries too much. I promise to eat and take my meds…I know how important it is to my stability to not miss any doses. I just lost track this time is all…honest.” Jack turned the corners of his mouth up and hoped it looked like a reassuring smile and not the grimace it felt like.
“As I was saying,” the young doctor continued, “We can do one of several things, Mr. Grenier, we can keep you here in the ER for awhile, rehydrate you, and then see how you are before we make any further plans, and personally, that’s what I’d like to do. Your sister, however, is putting a great deal of pressure on me to bring in a psych consult and have you transferred to the facility in Carlisle. I must say that she has some valid points…”
Jack stopped listening. He had no desire to hear this doctor, who was probably only one or two years older than he was, recite the Book of Transgressions According to Monica…Damn! He needed to get back to the Mire! Abra would be worried about him by now and Jack did not want her going to the Mire to search for him. She would not be careful if she thought his life was in danger, and he could not, would not, be responsible for any harm befalling her.

Abra believed Jack to be hunting sprites, a pastime she disliked, but did not discourage. He had been doing it for nearly a decade and had gained quite a reputation for cunning and agility, of which he knew Abra was secretly proud.
The sprites were notorious for being able to lead their pursuers into many a dangerous trap, but Jack seemed always to prevail. And unlike other hunters, he never ever killed or tortured his prey. As wily and vicious as sprites could be, Jack always found the ones he caught to be delightfully full of the spark of life and vitality that, to him, was emblematic of Pendulum.
Abra would allow for the mishaps that could occur when hunting sprites; the tricky, tight mazes many hunters became hopelessly lost in, or the paralyzing sting of their touch at dusk. She would calculate a reasonable time for his return, and when that had passed, she would not wait much longer before looking for him.
Jack swallowed his fear and turned his attention back to the doctor. He was surprised to find the young man staring at him in silence. Shit, Jack thought, did I just think any of that stuff about the sprites out loud?
“Jack,” the resident began, running a hand over his bleary eyes and stubbled face, “I know you don’t want to hear this, but I think you might be better off in a facility, just for awhile.”
Out loud…definitely out loud, Jack thought.
“No, no…I’m fine, really. I just go off sometimes…it comes with the territory. Listen doc,” Jack said, spreading his hands and shrugging his shoulders, “I am a nut case…obviously…but I am no danger to anyone, myself included. I just see the world differently than most people. This little episode this week notwithstanding, I do pretty well for a guy who takes ten pills a day.”
“That’s just it, Jack. Your blood work shows that you have been taking considerably less than ten pills a day.” The doctor was starting to sound exasperated and Jack could not risk him calling in a psych consult.
“Okay, you win. I’ll stay here for as long as you want and then you’ll see…I’m fine.” This small concession on Jack’s part had the effect on the young resident that Jack had hoped it would.
“Good, settled then?” The doctor smiled at Jack and slipped out between the sliver of space between the two ends of the curtain, leaving Jack alone to contemplate his escape back to Pendulum.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Losing the Moon


On a brisk night ten years ago when I was sitting on the beach at Nauset, wrapped tightly in motel blankets and my husband's arms, I don't think I could have ever dreamed that I would end up where I am now.

We had many nights just like the one I am referring to; many embraces under the stars near the ocean, the waves sometimes crashing, sometimes kissing the shore. On this night, the moon was full and hung against the black sky like a luminous plate on the wall of the diner where we would eat the next morning, smiling at each other across the formica table top.

On this night we sat huddled together craning our necks at the stars that spread out above us, waiting for one of them to shoot. Laughing, one of us would say they saw a streak of light and the other would ask where?...There...See? To the left of moon...See?

Sleep took us after awhile and when we stirred, chilled and damp, the moon was gone. I remember how we laughed then, thinking how absurd it was that in a few short hours we had misplaced an entire moon. But now I know that losing the moon is not only possible, it isn't all that hard to do. All you have to do is stop paying attention.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Decisions Decisions

Today I have a choice to make...it appears on the surface to be a rather simple choice. In truth, however, it is a choice about who I am, who I want to be and how I want to live my life. It is also a choice about what I am willing to accept in my life and what is just unacceptable. If I had just myself to be concerned about, I would not hesitate...no choice necessary...the choice was taken out of my hands by the actions that preceded it. But I am not alone...and that is where this becomes complicated. By choosing to accept the unacceptable in order to provide...what sort of lesson does that teach the person I am trying to provide for?

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Great Writing

This space is for writing...my own writing mostly...but every once in awhile I am reminded why I love to write, what inspires me to try to be a better writer everyday, and that is other people's words; words that are strung together with such grace and beauty that we just have to sit back and say..."Damn that is good!" So today, I am going to post someone else's words...enjoy!

Lost in the Flood

The ragamuffin gunner is returnin' home like a hungry runaway
He walks through town all alone--"He must be from the fort," he hears the high school girls say
His countryside's burnin' with wolfman fairies dressed in drag for homicide
The hit-and-run plead sanctuary, 'neath a holy stone they hide
They're breakin' beams and crosses with a spastic's reelin' perfection
Nuns run bald through Vatican halls, pregnant, pleadin' immaculate conception
And everybody's wrecked on Main Street from drinking unholy blood
Sticker smiles sweet as Gunner breathes deep, his ankles caked in mud
And I said, "Hey, gunner man, that's qucksand, that's quicksand, that ain't mud
Have you thrown your senses to the war, or did you lose them in the flood?"

That pure American brother, dull-eyed and empty-faced
Races Sundays in Jersey in a Chevy stock super eight
He rides 'er low on the hip, on the side he's got "Bound for Glory" in red, white and blue flash paint
He leans on the hood telling racing stories, the kids call him Jimmy the Saint
Well, that blaze-and-noise boy, he's gunnin' that bitch loaded to blastin' point
He rides head first into a hurricane and disappears into a point
And there's nothin' left but some blood where the body fell, that is, nothin' left that you could sell
Just junk all across the horizon, a real highwayman's farewell
And I said, "Hey kid, you think that's oil? Man, that ain't oil, that's blood"
I wonder what he was thinking when he hit that storm, or was he just lost in the flood?

Eighth Avenue sailors in satin shirts whisper in the air
Some storefront incarnation of Maria, she's puttin' on me the stare
And Bronx's best apostle stands with his hand on his own hardware
Everything stops, you hear five quick shots, the cops come up for air
And now the whiz-bang gang from uptown, they're shootin' up the street
And that cat from the Bronx starts lettin' loose, but he gets blown right off his feet
And some kid comes blastin' 'round the corner, but a cop puts him right away
He lays on the street holding his leg, screaming something in Spanish, still breathing when I walked away
And somebody said, "Hey man, did you see that? His body hit the street with such a beautiful thud"
I wonder what the dude was sayin', or was he just lost in the flood?
Hey man, did you see that, those poor cats are sure messed up
I wonder what they were gettin' into, or were they just lost in the flood?
Bruce Springsteen
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Thursday, October 29, 2009

"All with love...L... O... V... E." Michael Jackson, after correcting mistakes by his dancers in rehearsal


Last night I attended the release of THIS IS IT, the Michael Jackson documentary that reveals that in the last days of his life, Michael was as fit and fine as he'd ever been. His dancing was, as usual, phenomenal, his voice spot on...his attitude upbeat and professional. The weird thing was how not weird he seemed. Yes, his face had a Jokeresque look about it, the tattoos on his eyes and lips accentuated the weird jaw and prosthetic nose...but truthfully, he didn't look as weird as I'd seen him in recent years. He was so ON...I can't imagine that the man at these rehearsals was the same man who had insomnia so bad he needed anesthesia to fall asleep.
Two things jumped out at me...1.The dancers and singers involved in this production must be DEVASTATED...the chance of a lifetime...they had it in their hands...and then...they didn't. Reminds me of a baseball game I watched recently.
2. Michael Jackson was a really sweet person...patient and kind and giving in his performances...I don't want to get into a big debate about his sexual proclivities...he did not come off as the type of person who would harm another person if he could help it...that is my take on the guy...you can have your own opinion.
The one inarguable fact about Michael is that he was unique. The world lost an amazing artist who cannot be replaced.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Wound Care


Back to that "first fresh cut of pain" thing...this morning I was reminded by a sudden stab in the heart and hot tears springing up without warning, that it takes a long time to heal some wounds. A casual remark about an inconsequential topic, and I was transported instantaneously through time and space to a moment a couple of years ago that I never wanted to revisit. My apologies to the unwitting tongue that let slip the remark...my issue, not yours.
The question I am posing is, do we ever really heal from that kind of hurt? Years can go by and then, phfft!, phfft!, phfft!, our heart is freshly filleted and ready to be served with some fava beans and a nice Chianti. I guess all we can do is keep the wound clean and dry, change the dressing often and avoid pouring salt on it whenever possible...it may never fully heal, but at least we won't bleed to death.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Newsong, New Life...some of you have heard this before...for those who haven't I am Sharing my Good News


As a child who would someday grow up to be a writer, I could not get enough of the “story” of Jesus Christ. It was, in truth, my favorite story. Movies like The Robe and The Greatest Story Ever Told, and King of Kings and musical stage productions like Jesus Christ Superstar and GodSpell captured my imagination: but not my soul.
I was raised Catholic by a non-practicing mother. I went to Sunday school, and attended confession on Saturdays. Each week kneeling in that confessional, I would think about the foolishness of having the priest tell me to say a few Hail Mary’s and a couple of Our Father’s to atone for my sins.
At Mass, I would find it difficult to pay attention to the service. It wasn’t reaching me. God seemed to be talking to all the older folks; the blue haired women running rosaries through their fingers, lace doilies pinned to their heads and the stooped shouldered old men who mumbled and crossed themselves a hundred times.
One Sunday the children were instructed to go to the church basement for a “youth service.” A young man with long hair wearing jeans and a tie-dyed tee shirt sat in a chair in the middle of a circle of chairs. He had a guitar and was singing something by Peter Paul and Mary…really. For six exciting Sundays after that, we all got to hear him sing and talk about God…it was the first time in my life I looked forward to church. Then, as soon as he appeared, he was gone. A few years after that, I stopped attending church. I was eleven years old.
As an adult, I would watch the old religious movies when I stumbled across them on an off night or rare day off, and they still managed to enthrall me. Movie Jesus was handsome, mysterious and…entertaining. I fit him when I could…in between working and trying to acquire more and more things and money. My life was not really my own.
In 2004, I followed the media hoopla surrounding Mel Gibson’s Passion of The Christ with interest. I was happy that another Movie Jesus was going to keep me busy for a few hours. I didn’t get to see the movie until years later. When at last I rented The Passion, it was almost 4 years after its release and my carefully constructed life was crumbling around me. My husband of many years had lost faith in us and left me, my sister had lost faith in herself and committed suicide, my finances were in ruins, my job was about to be eliminated and I had lost faith in myself and was on the verge of giving up.
I had spent the year and a half before all of this happened searching for some meaning in my life. I spent hundreds of dollars on self-help books and writings by spiritual and metaphysical gurus. Wayne Dyer told me to manifest my own destiny…Deepak Chopra asked me to find the Godhead within me…Ekhart Tolle chided me to abandon my ego based consciousness, and The Secret told me I could have the world at my fingertips if I just asked for it…hmmm…that’s where things got funky. Every one of these books I was reading had something in common…they all supported parts of their philosophy by showing how Jesus had been teaching the same things.
Now I was intrigued…I started reading the Bible and then found my way to Lee Strobel’s The Case For Christ and something started to click. I had been looking for what I needed in all the wrong places.
In John (14:20) Jesus says to Phillip, “On that day you will know that I am in my Father and you in me, and I in you.” Clearly this is what Deepak Chopra meant when he said that the discovery of God was one of self-discovery, and what Eckhart Tolle meant when he spoke of the single consciousness of the universe. This is further evidenced by Jesus’ words: (Luke 17:20-21) “The kingdom of God does not come visibly, nor will people say, ‘Here it is,’ or ‘There it is,’ because the kingdom of God is within you.”
And in Matthew 21:22 “And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.”…certainly this was the essence of The Secret.
I finally watched the Passion of the Christ alone on a Thursday night and Movie Jesus was forever erased from my memory. I can’t explain how deeply watching that movie affected me. But I was different afterward. I appreciated the story of Jesus even more than before, but now it had reached my soul. I was so profoundly grateful for what He had done for me…I knew it was the Truth and I wanted to tell someone.
I think though that the most persuasive influence has been Anna. She is my “Letter from Christ”. And I am so grateful for her.
So now I am attending New Song service regularly, engaged and moved every week by what I hear and see and so glad to have met the wonderful people here. I am praying each day for strength and patience and giving thanks for the gifts He has given me. The worst time in my life has become the most joyful, creative and blessed of any other. I have renewed optimism and I know that my life will no longer be ruled by the things of this world, but by the knowledge of my eternal life with Him.
Thank you Jesus.

Monday, October 26, 2009

"a glimpse of the familiar"


A couple of days ago I was writing about needing to talk to my sister. By her own choice, she's no longer here on this earth...at least that's what I thought. Then, I happened across this relatively recent photo of her baby...and talk about that "first fresh cut of pain." It shouldn't hurt to look on the beautiful face of my own niece...but damn... it does...and that makes me angry with her mother all over again. Paige, I love you.

"...the stars look very different today"


It was brought to my attention recently that we all are just hanging on to this spinning ball of gas and minerals and magma by our fingertips, and any little thing can send us spiralling off into space. Sometimes the little thing is a big thing from our perspective. Life-changing, mind-blowing, and unavoidable... these types of "things" have to be confronted.

The problem with our perspective is that it we always view the world through the prism of memory and emotion. We can't stand back and look at anything, let alone something that is about to turn us into Major Tom, with a dispassionate eye. We must, because we are just human beings, pull from our vast memory banks of joy and loss and pain and pleasure in order to put the "thing" where we think it belongs.

I tried to put myself in the shoes of someone who is struggling to hang on while facing just such an upheaval. I wondered what I would do if my "thing" suddenly confronted me...I have to admit, it would mess with me something fierce.Of course it would be exciting, and for a time it might seem like nothing else mattered. My grip would certainly loosen, but I hope that I would hang on. Who can say? I'll only find out if it happens, and I certainly can't judge anyone who wants to check out what the weightlessness of space is like.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Off with Her Head!


Last week I took another trip down the rabbit hole, not unwillingly, mind you...
but,in fairness, I had been coaxed.
I ate a mushroom laced with all the right words and happily followed a carrot dangling from a stick all the way down.
The tea party was in full swing when I arrived bearing gifts and a hopeful spirit. The Mad Hatter was oh so pleased to see me.
The beautiful blond Princesses in attendance were but a foreshadowing of the wise and lovely silver-haired matriarchs around the table.
The conversation bordered on a small-scale military offensive, and I became surprisingly aware of my moderate nature. I enjoyed the insanity of it all.


The boy with the magic wand had a song on his lips and he serenaded me on the ride home. "Till now I always got by on my own. I never really cared until I met you."

I didn't realize I was about to lose my head at the whim of the Queen of the Mad Hatter's heart.


This time the climb back out of the hole has proven to be a bit less rewarding than my last ascent over a year ago. Then, I could not wait to be back in the real world and to leave the pain of failures and lost loved ones behind me...this time, not so much.
The Mad Hatter is not quite mad, just a little freaked out and damaged in places. The Boy has magic in his heart and the Princesses rule their kingdom with light and laughter.

I hope the effects of the shroom don't wear off too quickly...trips like this one have a way of reminding you that you are alive.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Morons and Mental Cases


I need to break out of the asylum I call home for roughly 60 hours a week. Bedlam has nothing on this place. Why is it that the profession I have been in for close to twenty years is, and apparently always has been, a safe haven and refuge for all manner of miscreants, and borderline personalities?
Monday: Boss is 2 hours late for work and then proceeds to sit and nod and drool at his desk for 40 minutes.
Tuesday: Same boss has a conversation on the showroom floor that consists of expressing his surprise at the "articulate" nature of black customer's speech...the guy was from England...and thankfully had left before this cretin began his monologue that started there and moved onto the English term for cigarette and, well you can imagine.
Wednesday: Depleted sales force, like a too-often beaten dog cringes their way through the day. They lie to avoid the beating, they resist performing even the simplest of tasks lest their boss should decide to zero in their activity.
Thursday: My day off...not long enough.
Friday: Spittle in the corners of his mouth, and crumbs flying out when he speaks...please, someone save me.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Missing Persons


Yesterday I wanted to talk to someone to whom I used to turn when my life seemed like it was running off the rails, when I was sad or upset about something too personal to discuss with anyone else. No matter how busy she was or how messy her own life may have been at the time, she always made herself available to me, listened and then told me exactly what she thought. She never minced her words or placated me by agreeing with me for the sake of agreeing. I needed her then, and I need her now.
She is not here, and for the first time in a long time I have allowed myself to feel that loss without the anger that usually follows thinking of her.
Losing people we care about is never easy, when they choose to remove themselves from our lives...whether permanently or just for awhile, it hurts. The pain is a selfish pain though, a self-pitying kind of thing that settles in our gut and twists until we groan with the pressure of it. It is not something that ever really leaves us, either. We think we are okay and then a word, a smell, a song, a glimpse of the familiar in a stranger can set us back months, years even...right back to the first fresh cut of pain...I don't have a remedy for that other than to just keep moving...keep negotiating the road of this life like it actually leads to something...keep moving forward.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Does it get any better than this?


When I look at this face, it makes me happy. The happiness is deep and satisfying. I look at this face and the world of deadlines and deadends disappears. This happy little face is what life is supposed to be about. Find a face like this, or borrow this one if you want, but look at that face everyday...at least once...you'll smile and the endorphins that the brain releases when you do will cure a lot of ills...try it...go on...that's it...smile.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

losing ground


I thought the view from where I am, looking back on where I'd come from, was pretty damn good...then I realized I was looking in my rear view mirror...and objects in the mirror are closer than they appear.

Monday, October 12, 2009

You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you are going, because you might not get there-- Yogi Berra


It's the top of the eighth and the hometown boys are up by an insurance run and the guy everyone wants on the mound is there...we got this one...we do...and then we don't. The air sucks out of the stadium and the only sound is the collective jaw of Redsox nation hitting the floor. We are surprised, but not really. Disappointed to be sure, but its nothing we have not experienced before.
A single baseball game is such a great metaphor for life...even when you think you have it in the bag, something out of left field snatches defeat from the jaws of victory...in a blink it is all different.
When we think we know where we are going and the path ahead seems bathed in sunshine, its best to remember when you get to the fork in the road, you should take it...because you never know how quickly that sunshine can turn into a threatening storm that delays your game.
Remember, too, that there are only so many at bats in this game...don't waste them.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Boning a Duck


Okay, I'll admit that I have never boned a duck before. But I have managed to do a lot of things in the past couple of years that I never did before...
I smelled death.
I despaired.
I fell all the way down the rabbit hole and climbed back out again.
I said goodbye to people I loved.
I found out that alone isn't lonely.
I hated someone...and forgave them anyway.
I found God.
I felt joy...really felt it...savored it...learned to live in it.
I let go of what doesn't matter.

So boning a duck...not so scary. What boning the duck is a metaphor for...that is scary. We all have something that we are good at, something that makes us unique. Living up to that whatever it is, being who we are truly meant to be...that is the challenge. It is a lot harder than boning a duck, but certainly not impossible. Just follow your own recipe, don't deviate, don't substitute fresh ingredients with the same old stale ones you are used to, be fearless, and bone that duck!

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Gifted Child


I met a man a few weeks ago who I thought I might like to see more than once or twice...then I met his son. It was then that I realized that while the man was pretty special, his son was absolutely gifted.
This boy smiles and you can not help but smile back. His joy bubbles out of his mouth and shines out of his eyes. His imagination zaps you as he waves his magic wand in your direction. With a snap of his fingers he has you laughing and wanting to be around him. He is special in more ways than I have discovered yet...I hope I get the chance to find out just how many.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Michael who?

I remember many years ago when I was about 7 years removed from my first disastrous marriage I bumped into an old acquaintance I had not seen in forever. She asked, "How's Ed?"
I squinted my eyes and cocked my head like the RCA puppy and asked "Ed?" She replied, "Ed... you know...the guy you married?"
OOOOH...that Ed!
That was a great day. That was the day I realized the scars were gone, my life was my own again and I was me...really me.
I am happily anticipating the immanent return of that feeling. The day I wake up and remember that I am no longer defined by being whatshisname's wife. It is fast approaching, in fact it could be today...yes...today is a good day.