I Can’t Believe I’m Not Better (Blog #923)

Phew. What a day. This morning I woke up at six to get ready for a wellness exam with my new doctor at eight. (My old doctor recently moved.) Oh my gosh, y’all, you should have seen the sunrise. Hell, you should have seen the early morning traffic. I had no idea there were so many people functioning before noon. Even more, I had no idea I could be one of them. Granted, it’s now ten in the evening and I can barely hold my eyes open. But still. I made it through the day.

Miracles never cease.

Speaking of miracles, this afternoon I got a haircut. Well, a trim. Regardless, I don’t remember the last time this happened. Talk about a delight. My friend Bekah got me fixed right up. She even straightened my hair, added some magic product, and somehow–as my sister said when I sent her a picture–made me look like Fabio. (I can’t believe it’s not butter.) Now, if only I can reproduce this look on my own.

Something that’s been on my mind today has been the idea of integration. Recently I had someone suggest that when you’re on the path of personal and spiritual growth–you know, reading every book you can get your hands on–it’s a good idea to put all the damn books down every now and then. This is tough for me, but the thought is that just because you’ve completed a chapter in a book doesn’t mean you’ve completed a chapter in your life. Said another way, the things we read about, contemplate, and discuss with our therapists need time to integrate or synthesize in our lives, and this can’t happen if we’re always shoving new information in. Rather, we need periods of rest to let things take root and grow.

Personally, I have the hardest time with resting. For over a week I’ve been fighting an upper respiratory something. And whereas it’s gotten a lot better, I’m still cough, cough, coughing, especially at night. I wish I could wave a magic wand and make it go away. I realize, however, that I’m simply going to have to slow down, to stop pushing. I’m going to have to let my body heal at its own pace.

Its own slower-than-Christmas pace.

As a result of this upper respiratory something, something else I’m having to wait on is my weight loss. That is, a few weeks ago I started a diet and exercise program, but it quickly got derailed thanks to this illness. Now, I’ve still been eating at least eighty percent healthy and exercising some. Yesterday I went for a walk. This evening I did a light workout at home. It’s just not the balls-to-the-wall, Richard Simmons sweatfest I originally planned. But I’m telling myself that I’m in this for the long haul, that it doesn’t matter that all the weight I lost at home suddenly reappeared this morning at the doctor’s office. Of course, this was thanks to my clothes and shoes, but still, it was terrifying seeing THAT number.

On a positive note, the nurse said my blood pressure was “really good.”

Probably better than yours.

As I’m writing, a word that keeps coming to mind is patience. So often when I’m not feeling well I put pressure on myself to heal. I think, If I were doing everything right, I wouldn’t be sick in the first place. Of course, this means I suffer twice–once from the physical problem, once from my thinking. Along the same lines, many times since starting therapy I’ve been in situations with someone else and absolutely knew in my gut that something was off. Like that I was being manipulated, condescended to, or judged. More often than not I let it go in the moment because I didn’t know WHAT to do. Only later would I think, I could have said this. I could have walked away. Unfortunately, these thoughts usually end up being less of an impersonal evaluation and more of a personal devaluation, a making myself wrong for not having handling things in a different way.

I end up thinking, I can’t believe I’m not better.

Sometimes you simply need time.

As I think about it now, one of the reasons I don’t fix my hair like Fabio is because until today I haven’t really known how. Why WOULD I know now? This is the first time my hair’s been this long. Likewise, why would any of us know how to handle ourselves confidently and with grace in every moment? As my mom recently said, “They don’t teach that in school.” Amen. Speaking from experience, even if you have a badass therapist and have been at this thing for a while, it’s still tough when you’re caught off guard. Sometimes you simply need time to accurately evaluate a situation and decide how you want to respond. To grow and to change. To integrate.

And yes–I’m sorry to say–to lose weight.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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You’re exactly where you need to be.

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On Integration (Blog #860)

Yesterday (Tuesday) when I spoke of having thrown up Sunday night, I said, “Hey, if it takes a week to get better, what’s the big deal?” Well, apparently my body took this as permission to not only stay sick, but also to get worse. That’s right, this morning at five-thirty The Big D showed up (and I don’t mean Dallas). Y’all, it wasn’t pretty. My stomach wouldn’t stop gurgling. Every thirty to sixty minutes I was on the pot. I’ll spare you the details, but it was like, evacuate the dance floor. Talk about miserable. The only good thing is that I think I went down a dress size.

“You’re getting the poison out of your system,” my dad said.

“How much poison IS IN THERE?” I said.

“Apparently a lot,” he said.

Everyone’s a comedian.

Thankfully, after seven hours of running back and forth to the bathroom, something in my tummy shifted. Not that I’ve felt like a million bucks all afternoon, but I have been able to keep down (and in) applesauce, yogurt, bananas, and even chicken noodle soup (woo). Going forward, we’ll see what happens. My body is a wonderland.

This afternoon and evening I lay in bed and watched three movies–My Own Private Idaho, Whoopi Goldberg Presents Moms Mabley: The Original Queen of Comedy (a documentary), and 42 (the story of Jackie Robinson, the first African American to play major league baseball). And as much as My Own Private Idaho (starring Keanu Reeves and River Phoenix as two hustlers) was, um, okay, the documentary about Moms Mabley was absolutely fabulous. If you don’t know Moms Mabley, one of the first female (and African American and lesbian) stand-up comedians, check her out. She was both smart and hilarious (my therapist says funny people are smart people). Plus, like my grandma, she rarely wore teeth. As one comedian pointed out, this helped her promote the idea that appearances don’t matter.

As for 42, I can’t say enough good things about it. Simply put, it’s a beautiful story (I cried, a lot), a reminder about what’s really important–the inside, not the outside. Harrison Ford plays Branch Rickey, the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers and the man who hired Jackie Robinson and, thus, pushed the issue of integration and forever changed history. Talk about a man with balls (no pun intended). At least as he’s portrayed in the movie, the guy wasn’t afraid of anybody. Gruff, he was both level-headed and firm. His no meant no and his yes meant yes. In short, he was a man of character.

While watching Ford’s portrayal of Branch, I thought about how much we admire men like him and Robinson, how much we admire anyone who stands up for what they believe is right. And yet, as one character in the movie said, Robinson just wanted to play ball. What I mean is that often our heroes aren’t doing anything huge. They’re just doing something ordinary in a huge way. That is, it wasn’t a big deal for Robinson to play baseball. He’d been doing that most of his life, just like Rickey had been hiring baseball players most of his. It was a big deal, however, to buck the unwritten law of segregation in baseball, since this took being able to withstand being spit upon, threatened, and called names.

Among other things.

In the movie there’s a scene in which a teammate of Robinson’s comes to Rickey because he’s been threatened and called names (like a carpetbagger) by his “friends” back home. Consequently, he’s embarrassed, afraid to play with Robinson. “What will they think of me?” he says. “What will they do?” Of course, it’s easy to look back decades later and say, “Screw those guys,” but this is the cry of the ego–What will they think?–and it’s just as present today as it was back then.

I’ll explain.

Once as part of a personal/spiritual growth class, I was asked to make a list of all the people in my life that I had to run my decisions by. You could do this. Make a list of all the people whose approval you’d need if you of all a sudden decided you wanted to get married, get divorced, pierce your ears, get a tattoo, quit your job, move, or–hell–eat a candy bar. Who are you afraid would judge you? On a scale of one to ten, how much do THEY control you? For me, at the time, I had a few people who were a six. (I’m happy to say that years later when I revisited the list, they’d dropped to a zero or a one.)

Recently I blogged about personal power and empowerment, and this is the same idea. That is, if anyone else (a friend, relative, or even an organization) gets a vote in how you behave, this means that you’ve handed over part of your personal power to them to manage for you. Honestly, that’s what marriage is–a sharing of power. This is okay, of course, if it really is a sharing. But if one person gives up their power and allows the other person to constantly make decisions for them, this creates an imbalance, and that’s not okay. It’s never okay to not be personally responsible. Of course, being personally responsible means you can’t blame anyone else for your life. You never get to say, “But my husband told me to,” or “But everyone else was doing it.” You don’t even get to say, “It was their fault.” This is why being personally responsible is no fun and why nobody wants to do it. It’s why we’d rather HAVE heroes than BE heroes.

Because in order to BE a hero, you not only have to be personally responsible, you also have take your power back and stand it in. Often you have to stand AGAINST the crowd. This requires being INTEGRATED within yourself, which means that your head and your heart–your mind, body, soul, and spirit–are all on the same page, all working together. It means your energy system isn’t segregated, isn’t SEPARATED, isn’t spread out and controlled by a dozen different outside influences. It means you’ve “gotten yourself together,” that you’re whole, at least more whole than you were before. This work, of course, is difficult and lonely. But it’s not THAT difficult and it’s not THAT lonely. It’s certainly nothing YOUR soul can’t handle.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

"No one's story should end on the ground."

The Best Way to Heal (Blog #832)

Earlier today I started a new 1,000-piece puzzle–a Van Gogh painting. I’m almost done with the border. While working on the puzzle, I listened to a lecture about healing trauma by a hypnotherapist (Isa Gucciardi) in California. One of her contentions was that our symptoms (addictions, relationship issues, and even some physical symptoms) are our teachers, that if listened to can lead us to the heart of our problems.

For example, one woman who couldn’t (and didn’t really want to) quit smoking knew that she used smoking as a form of escape. Her life was busy–she had a bunch of kids–and smoking gave her a break and acted as a boundary that kept others away. What she realized in hypnosis, however, was that her desire for both escape and boundaries began when she was molested as a child. One man realized in hypnosis that he used chewing tobacco as a way to “be quiet,” a message he’d gotten as a teenager from his mother. For both people, once their root issue was recognized with compassion, they were able to give up their addiction (or symptom).

Based on everything I’ve read and studied, compassion for every part of yourself is a huge component in healing. There’s an idea in shamanism that when we experience trauma (which we all do and can take the form of something dramatic and physical or seemingly ordinary and psychological), parts of our soul splinter off because they can’t take the stress. Like, Deuces! However, thankfully, the can be coaxed back into the fold–with compassion. By listening to their story of what they went through (what YOU went through) and assuring them that you’ll take care of them (of yourself) from now on, they’ll gladly integrate.

This was a point the hypnotherapist made, that there isn’t a part of your personality or soul that doesn’t want to integrate. According to Jung, wholeness is the goal. Not because anyone can truly put Humpty Dumpty (all your broken pieces) back together again, but because the deepest, most true part of you, your soul, isn’t capable of being broken in the first place. In other words, that’s a part of you that’s ALREADY WHOLE and that knows how to heal, that knows how to gather up all your scattered pieces and get them working together again.

This, it seems, is the journey of a lifetime. Also, like the putting together of a puzzle, it’s apparently something that can’t be rushed. Personally, I get really eager for projects (including myself if I can rightfully refer to myself as a project) to be completed. I think, Let’s heal–today! Let’s solve all our issues this afternoon. But my therapist says I or anyone else would go nuts if their subconscious unleashed all its secrets at once. “You’d crack up,” she says. And so it seems that the best way to heal is a little bit here, a little bit there. One piece at at time.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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We always have more support than we realize.

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