joyfinderhero: (Default)
 We got up at 2 am to drive to the airport. "Be there two hours ahead," it says on the airline's website, so we dutifully pulled up out in front of the terminal at exactly 3:45 am. Dear Husband pulled his bags out of the trunk, handed me the winter jacket he won't need in the tropics, hugged me goodby and trudged into the airport. Where, as I had predicted but been unable to verify ahead of time, the airline counter was actually not open yet.

I drove away and left him to it. Presumably they opened at 4:00 or 4:30, plenty of time to hassle process the passengers for the first flight of the day. I know he arrived in Guatemala City this afternoon. Tomorrow a long bus ride, and then he'll be at the boat. 

I'm sticking around a couple more weeks, finishing the post Thanksgiving cleanup, weaving, spending a little bit more time with hospice and yoga, friends and family. Celebrating Yule with coven and CUUPS group.

Day by day I notice myself not yet going to the airline website to book my flight. Partly because I haven't finished choosing just which day I'd like to leave, of course. Partly because I know it will turn out to be appreciably cheaper to book round trip but I've no idea yet when I'll be flying back ... or even, if I'll be flying home from the same airport or from somewhere else altogether. Maybe even Miami?

But partly because, for really the first time, I'm afraid.

A couple of years ago a boater was murdered on the river. It was scary and upsetting, but there was at least a little bit of feeling that the boater's own decisions might have contributed to the situation. Something about getting too much cash at one time at the local bank, something about anchoring too far from shore, about raising a weapon when his boat was boarded. We were all upset at losing "one of us" -- especially the folks who had known him personally -- but mostly not frightened for our own safety.

Last week, though, another boater was murdered. Not on the river, but in one of the few coves where a sailboat can hide from bad weather along the coast of Honduras.

The man was someone we had sailed with, a calm and serene person whose philosophy included sharing whatever he had with whoever needed it. A man who made it a point of principal not to carry weapons, who lectured other boaters on the necessity of nonviolence, of offering no resistance. A man whose Spanish was fluent, whose compassion for the have-nots in the poorer countries of Central America was palpable. A man who habitually went out of his way to buy from the locals rather from the gringo middlemen, who conscientiously paid good prices.

The robbers boarded his boat in the dead of night. They shot him four times before raiding the boat of food, electronics, money. 

I'm surprised at my fear. I've never thought of my life at home as especially safe, nor as immune from theft or assault. In my 30 years in NJ I've been burgled twice, had my car broken into at least twice. I've never thought of boating as especially safe or of the Pax Americana as especially compelling. Yes I knew that the national government in Guatemala wants our tourist dollars and that gringoes get a free pass on lots of things that the locals get hassled about, and also that the police presence is nearly non-existent and that the organized crime faction is much better organized and trained than the organized police groups.

But just now I feel that this is a wake-up call. Just now I'm feeling that I should know better than to disregard this evidence of danger. That I should give up any notion of Caribbean sailing. Maybe we should just head for home. Maybe I shouldn't go at all this year? Maybe I should encourage DH to hire a couple of knowledgeable buddies to bring the boat back to the states and I should go join him there instead? Why do I think he will be so much safer than I would be -- especially since the robbers seem to kill men but only injure women?

My dreams are vivid, powerful, full of signs and portents, hard to understand. Everything seems to say: You have lost your compass. You are not seeing clearly. Communication has broken down and meaning is missing. Pay attention!

Everything is murky and dark falls far too early just now.
joyfinderhero: (Default)
Way past time for an update. Sometimes I think this screen before me is an amazing time-suck; sometimes it's an amazing assistant.

Relationships
 
Talking better. Talking more. Lots better boundaries. More of the elephants in the room are getting talked about, acknowledged, even taken out for some exercise. And their detritus is getting shoveled away, too. More clarity in the household around what's working and what isn't. More motion on some of the old stuck crap.

Something must be in motion elsewhere, too, because in early September, in fact only days apart, two of our kids announced impending divorces. Both seem to be doing much better having come to those decisions; we'll see what the future holds.

And, in our household there's more acknowledgment that some of the stuff that we'd like to happen, won't. Or won't until next summer. But at least we're being honest about it.
 
Writing

Last two semesters I wrote about 120 pages of usable memoir. Getting better at writing / reconstructing dialog that sounds like the way my family members actually talked, back in the 50s and 60s. Getting better at unearthing some of the buried feelings, the mistaken conclusions. Getting much better at making that stuff clear to readers, once I can see it myself. Still nowhere near a saleable MS, but I'm putting it on the back burner for a year or so anyway.

Chaplaincy

I've served a couple of times as hospital chaplain for a CUUPS member who was having surgery, and a couple of times I've officiated or facilitated at a rite of passage for a friend.

Dropped the ball on dealing with my local hospital this summer; spent my energy getting ready for the first-ever Master's degrees at Cherry Hill Seminary instead. In the spring, though, it'll be a high-priority item. The response, as recently as last week, to a patient saying their religion was "Wicca" was still, "We don't have that here. I'll put you down as 'other'." (sigh).

Medical

I feel pretty good, but will be getting a chiropractic adjustment and a gynecological checkup before I leave for the tropics anyway. Vision good, hearing fair (slowly fading, probably age related). Some carpal tunnel symptoms when I spend too much time on my Macbook.

Celebration

This is birthday month in our house; three of the four of us were born in October. This year all celebrations are low-key, no big ends-in-zero birthdays and lots of productivity going on. But a few presents are good.

Magic

Getting to spend the weekend doing several things -- possibly that's an overdose, we'll see.

This year most Full Moons have been celebrated solitary or not at all, instead of my usual practice of getting to circle together for about half of them in the year.

I missed celebrating Imbolc with anyone atall, but went to Pantheacon and got to speak to lots of people and participate in some lovely trancework. I celebrated Ostara with open public ritual, missed Beltane altogether, celebrated Litha once in open public ritual and once in invitation-only coven space, on consecutive days. Then I went to Starwood and Sirius Rising, came home and celebrated Lammas on two consecutive days, one public, one invitation-only. Then Mabon twice, two days apart, and now Samhain on two consecutive days ... and possibly on the following Sunday morning as well.

So why am I feeling deprived? Looks to me like I've been well-companioned for, really, all but Beltane and Imbolc. I will miss Yule, which I will be celebrating alone in a Roman Catholic country where I don't speak the language. And my Dear Husband is a muggle; probably we will get invited to Christmas festivities instead. But I am, anyway, eager for the weekend's opportunities coming up.

Sobriety

Since getting back from Guatemala I've sometimes had many days of no alcohol in a row, and sometimes a few days of alcohol daily. The few times I've run into any of the folks from the meetings I attended last year it has felt like pressure. Mostly I'm noticing that there's a huge difference between having a beer at dinner out, when everyone is and there's no big deal, and having a beer, and then another, when home for the evening. Mostly I'm noticing that the desire for a beer seems to mostly be code for "I don't want to be doing what I'm doing, having the conversation I'm having, pretending there isn't a conversation I'd rather have instead" or something like that.

Mostly I'm noticing what it means and taking the opportunity to express my preference, rather than drink while doing something I don't want. Still pretty clear that meetings aren't it, especially with the presumption that "I am powerless" is a good thing to be telling myself daily.

Spiritual Practice

Daily meditation is averaging about 23 days/month. Just now working with the format from Servants of the Light. Feeling calm and centered.

Keeping Commitments

Doing pretty well at being on time, reminding myself what's coming up. The big exception has been appointments with my shrink; I've been late to more than three this quarter and actually forgotten all about it twice. Presumably this is more about 'stuff I don't want to work on' than any dissatisfaction with the therapist or the work we do.

Physical Reality

My bedroom is cleaner. Last month Dear Husband and I each unpacked almost ten boxes from the basement, went through their contents, got the bulk of the stuff out of here (trash or thrift shop), put the rest where it goes. Then I made the mistake of bringing four boxes of my mother's Archive into the living room to sort, where they have stayed for three weeks. I'll need to finish with them before I leave town in mid-November. (sheesh).

Plans

We've begun the process of talking about what we might want to do in later retirement. Is there a place we'd like to live, if we didn't stay here? Or what would it take to be able to stay in this house forever? We've begun laying out the things we would like to get done next year, too. Scheduled Thanksgiving 2010 for another huge bash here, warned folks it might be the last one. Started setting up the field to be pasture for one of our neighbors, arranging fencing and so on.

Overwhelm and Overbooking

Just now things look under control. I've had a couple of 60-hour weeks during the ramp-up to Cherry Hill's first semester of master's classes, and now the first-ever admissions process for degree candidates, but that looks like smoothing out about now. I've embarked on another year of school at University of Santa Monica, finishing a master's in Spiritual Psychology with an emphasis in Consciousness, Health and Healing; I expect that to be deep and time-consuming work with a fine payoff in improved health and gentler aging.

Love and light and lots of laughter

joyfinderhero: (Default)
Final capture for the year:

Spiritual Practice

     Turned in another Meditation Report just before departure. In the first 21 days of December I meditated more than 15 times. Several moments of meditation each day since, but no formal sitting. Today we resolved the chair situation, so tomorrow I'll sit again.

Keeping Commitments

     I continue to notice, and sometimes feel ashamed about, the narrow window within which I can successfully make and keep commitments. If I reluctantly agree to do something I don't want to do, I can sometimes complete the task with ease if I start at once. I can usually complete the task with much gnashing of teeth if I start it late. I continue to struggle with my own procrastination and choking about starting 'right on time'. If I take on something I would really love to do but am uncertain how to do it, or doubt my own ability, then right away I begin to choke, sometimes snatching defeat right out of the jaws of victory. Only in the middle, when I am promising to do something I find easy and deeply enjoy, does the 'keeping' part come easy. Something to work on in 2009.

Physical Reality, Plans, Overbookedness

     Much progress on my cluttered office before I left. Much progress on organization now that I've arrived. I continue to find that I need at least a little structure in order to stay in focus -- and that I enjoy staying in focus MUCH more than I enjoy 'drifting with the flow.' Not that I need to resist, mind; just that if I have one 15-minute task to do and all day to do it, I can postpone it indefinitely ... but as soon as there's enough in my plans to require planning, it can all get done.

     So this week has been a little too open. I've got some things done, but there's been struggle required to start. And, as has become customary, I find myself taking on projects that will fit fine if I start right now, but will become a potentially serious time conflict in another month when the new term starts for both seminary and memoir class. It's fascinating to watch myself do this, over and over again, especially since I really do cherish the first week of downtime. But by the second, I'm eager to take on more work.

     Round and round we go.

--

I want to close the year with some serious spellwork for 2009:

 In the year ahead, in the month ahead, in the week ahead, in the day ahead, in the present moment
 I find Love, Light, and Laughter wherever I seek them
 I give my attention with conscious intention
 I listen more to those who love than to those who hate or fear
 I listen more to those who trust the planet than to those who believe they must rule her
 I speak truth to power where necessary and useful, and make room for those less powerful to speak to me
 I chose this incarnation for the experience and so
 I experience my participation
 I participate in my choices
 I appreciate my experience

 The Blessings are ever-growing
 And the Blessings already are.

 So mote it be.


---

And the Blessings of a Light-Filled, Be-you-to-Full Year to each of you!

Slightly Overbooked

Saturday, June 7th, 2008 11:00 am
joyfinderhero: (gateway to home)
It's June. Somehow I hadn't planned for this.

Sobriety

Today is 40 days. This morning I picked up my 30-day chip, a brilliant red one. Lots of applause and congratulations. One of my old selves would have judged this hokey, but I'm delighted with how much it buoys me up and assists me in sailing through things (instead of avoiding them).

Though there are moments of overwhelm, I'm doing okay with this, and with life. I'm surprised at the degree to which the many slogans are helping. Just at the moment, the ones I hear in my head most often are:

One day at a time
Easy does it
That's just my stinkin' thinkin' talking
Whatever's upsetting me, I don't need to drink at it
Just take a deep breath

My program today is:
Don't drink, and go to meetings, call your sponsor; keep a gratitude journal, notice what makes you wish for a drink, and don't drink. Add to your Step Four list when stuff comes up, but it's not time to sit down to work on it yet.

Relationship

My mate and I have spent less awake time in the same room this week than in most weeks of our marriage, and it's being much better than in a long while. Almost all of our conversations have been substantive, present to one another, honest. Each of us has given voice to feelings as they appear (rather than a pattern in recent years of trying to mask the feelings until we could plan how to express them). From my perspective, I don't feel that we are being as "emotionally close" as I would like, but we are much less "emotionally distant" than we've been in a long while.

Life is good.

My housemates, children, grandchildren, and friends are being wonderfully serene and patient with me. For the most part I've been enjoying more of the interactions we have, and have participated only in those gatherings I actually wanted to attend -- no more dutiful attendance at events I don't value.

There are some people I would like to spend more time with, but that can wait until there is a little more room in the schedule.

And, news flash: My grandchildren will probably be here most of the next month or so. Sometimes their father (my son) will be here too, sometimes not. We knew this was coming, but the dates are a surprise and, honestly, I thought it would be more like 2-3 weeks. We'll cope, we'll have fun ... and it's a lot to take on just now.

Writing

Back in April when I didn't have quite enough structure in my life, I booked myself into a class in Memoir writing. It's about halfway through now, I'm getting a tremendous amount out of it, I'm liking the work I'm doing, and I may have a structure for a real book -- one with a start, a middle, an end; an arc of situation, conflict, resolution, and denouement; lifelike and likeable characters whose quirks make sense; a theme ... I'm so excited!

In decades of writing (unpublishable and incomplete) fiction, I have at various times produced unfinished manuscripts with one or more of these characteristics, but never one with enough of them to be publishable. But this memoir is starting to look like it could grow up to be a real book. And, writing memoir, I have the advantage of already knowing the characters and the setting -- which is helping with my former tendency to either omit or fabricate what I don't "have" yet.

Chaplaincy

After skipping a semester, I enrolled in the summer semester at Cherry Hill Seminary. I looked at the scheduled commitments for the weeks of class and figured I'd only have to be off-line for a week, or perhaps two of those, so it was do-able. I didn't consider that the first month of the semester overlaps with the memoir class. I totally didn't consider that I would want to keep my momentum with the memoir and therefore might stack another memoir class back-to-back with this one. I didn't realize that my husband would choose the overlap month for his 'visit' home.

Medical

I'm fine. Probably. And, I'm waiting for two sets of test results. Somehow on consecutive days, I scheduled a dermatology visit and a gynecology visit, both pretty routine. Somehow both appointments discovered surprises.

I went to the dermatologist to have a keratosis removed from my face. I had another one 30+ years ago, they freeze off with a drop of liquid nitrogen, I recognized it, it's no big deal. In two weeks it'll be gone; in a month you won't know it was ever there. But as long as I was doing this, we did a whole-skin examination. The two things I thought could be problems weren't. But a mole on my chest, that's been there since childhood ... had, hmm, maybe gotten bigger. Maybe a little more blurry. She scooped it off and sent it to pathology. Results in 2-3 weeks.

I went to the gynecologist for a routine annual. But my uterus has a bend to the right that wasn't there last year. Probably this is a fibroid. But we're going to do an ultrasound in case it's something else. I'm calm. I'm okay. I'm symptom free. And I'm surprised at how often I'm thinking of Gilda Radner.

So I'm waiting to see.

Overbookedness

So now I have two graduate school classes, each of which ought to absorb about 10 hours a week. I have a writing class that ought to absorb 10-15 hours/week, depending on whether I'm "only" writing classroom homework or trying to make "daily progress" on the main manuscript under construction. In other words, I'm working "full time."

My husband is only home for a month, during which we have several joint projects and group-household projects planned. During which we both really want to spend time together, enjoying each other's company, renewing the closeness we have had in former years, making up for the long difficult winter and the two months apart.

My grandchildren will be here, starting this afternoon. Their parents are getting a divorce. They will be moving ... maybe to Florida with their mother and her new partner, maybe to New Jersey in a new location with their dad. But none of that will be happening before July.

Just take a deep breath.

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