On Pause (Blog #1084)

Today I’ve mostly stayed at home. This afternoon I went to my aunt’s house to help her with a computer problem and borrow a card table, and this evening I went for a walk (exercise is good for your immune system), but that’s it. Otherwise I’ve been around the house. Eating. Reading. Eating some more. Ugh. Pandemics are stressful. As one of my friends lamented on the phone yesterday, “I’m going to gain weight. I’ve accepted it. It’s just going to happen.” Alas, there are so many things happening right now that we need to accept. That are so hard to accept.

If you don’t know what they are, turn on the news. Or check your bank account.

This afternoon, from home, from a distance, I spoke to my therapist. In terms of COVID-19, she said everyone’s life has been put ON PAUSE, that it’s clearly time for all of us to slow down, slow the fuck down. “I feel really sorry for people whose identities are wrapped up in being productive or being social for the wrong reasons [so they can post about themselves online],” she said. “They’re about to get a serious reality check.”

“Right,” I said, “because if your self-worth is centered around doing things, what happens when you can’t do them?”

This is a serious and valid question, one, I think, we’re all being given time to consider. Along these lines, my therapist referred to this time in history as “a gift.” Not because people are terrified, sick, and dying, but because our collective go, go, going has come to a serious halt. Perhaps because we haven’t been able to do it for ourselves, life has pumped the brakes for us. Consequently, we HAVE to slow down, gather around our families, search our interiors, and think about the things that really matter: life, death, what we prioritize, the way we treat each other. Of course, all of this is not only scary as shit, but also a lot to handle at once. My therapist said, “Everyone is real crazy right now. So when you go to the grocery store you have to be psychically prepared to walk into a wall of fear.” In other words, tits up. Life right now ain’t for sissies.

As if it ever was, is, or shall be.

Joseph Campbell tells a story with this moral. Something about how little baby turtles that are born on a beach come crawling out of their hatched eggs and head straight for the ocean. And not only are there the waves to deal with, but–bam! right off the bat–there are seagulls swooping down to eat them. So like, this planet isn’t for the faint at heart. You gotta be tough. But not too tough. Because you don’t want to become bitter. Ugh. This is the challenge that Jesus talked about. To be wise as serpents (look alive, little turtles!) and–at the same time–innocent as doves (don’t hate the seagulls for being seagulls; they know not what they do).

I borrowed the card table from my aunt’s today because I have some editing work to do this week. And whereas I’d normally go to the library to work, thanks to COVID-19 and social distancing, I now need to work from home. Me and the rest of the world. Alas, the only table or workstation we have here is our kitchen table, and that part of the house is way too noisy for concentrating. So I set the card table up in my room as a makeshift desk, and now my room, more than ever, has become my little corner of the globe. True, the card table bounces a little with every keystroke, but it doesn’t suck. Indeed, as I look around my room, I think, I like it here. It ain’t the library, but if I absolutely had to, I could get sick and die here, content.

Not that I want to die, and not that my chances of dying are high. But as I’ve said before, at some point you have to consider your own mortality and what you’re really all about. For me this looks like asking myself if I can find peace no matter what. When I’m being productive, when I’m lazing around. When I’m healthy, when I’m sick. When I’m being embraced by others, when I’m alone. This is no small task, of course, and is the undertaking of a lifetime. And yet I’m proud to report that significant progress can be made in a fairly short amount of time. Having sat down every day for almost the last three years with the express intention of meeting and coming to know myself, I’ve realized I actually like who I am. And that I don’t need anything out there to make me feel good in here. Sure, chocolate cake, a load of money, and a hot lover wouldn’t suck, but there are increasingly more days when, in the absence of all that, I’m totally elated. The mystics say this is the big cosmic joke, when you finally get that everything you thought was important isn’t. That you don’t need “a thing” to make you happy.

What? My bank account is empty, and there’s not a roll of toilet paper in sight?

Hilarious.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

"We all have inner wisdom. We all have true north."

Pump the Brakes, Junior (Blog #370)

Oh hey, it’s three-thirty in the morning, and I’m so ready to go to bed it’s not even funny. To be clear, in the above photo I’m yawning–not writhing in pain or having an orgasm, although I personally think it looks like some combination of the three. Anyway, I just got home from my friend Justin’s house. We decided to catch up after I taught a dance lesson this evening and somehow got stuck in a six-hour-long conversation. (We both like to talk and both like to listen.) At two-thirty, right about the time Justin began talking about world politics and the fabric of society (I’m not kidding), my brain started shutting down. Then I thought of the blog. “I’ve really got to go,” I said.

Now I’m at home, trying to string two thoughts together. For as difficult and challenging as yesterday was, today was a gem. A decent night’s rest did me a world of good, and yesterday’s daunting troubles seemed to have shrunk down to manageable sizes with a little slumber. This afternoon I saw my therapist, and when I told her about yesterday’s visit to the immunologist and subsequent phone conversation with the insurance company of the guy who read-ended me last year, she said, “It was a lot of information.” I laughed and said, “Yes, it was A LOT of information.”

This is one of my therapist’s deals I’m not sure I’ve talked about before. She often refers to things that happen as information or data. Like, if I met someone I really liked, and they stopped returning my messages or let it slip that they hate children, my therapist might say, “That sounds like an important piece of information.” What I like about this way of looking at things is that it’s neutral. It doesn’t judge a behavior or situation as right or wrong, but simply as a fact (he lied to me, the doctor said we needed to run more tests, the insurance company offered me a low sum of money to settle). Also, it implies that as we gather more information, we can (and should) adjust our behavior and attitudes accordingly (I’m moving on because I don’t date liars, okay–getting a diagnosis is going to take longer than I thought, I may need to speak up for myself or consult an attorney).

Anyway, I guess yesterday was information overload, more important facts than I could handle at one time, too many adjustments to make. What I’m learning in situations like these, to borrow another phrase from my therapist, is to “pump the brakes, Junior.” In other words, when I’m overwhelmed, I absolutely have to slow down. In terms of my health, no matter how much I want an answer, I have to be willing to adjust to the speed of the situation. My therapist said it was a matter of patience, which she said was a tough muscle to work out, but absolutely worth the effort. “I hate being a Debbie Downer,” she said, “but you’ll probably be working on patience for the rest of your life. It’s just the way life is.” She paused. “But it does get better.”

I guess pumping the brakes and patience go hand-in-hand. I’m usually rushing around, thinking I need to find answers “now,” but what I like about these ideas is that they suggest I don’t have to hurry. Rather, I can take my time, take in new information, and adjust accordingly. Now it’s four-ten in the morning, and part of me is “rushing” toward my typical thousand-word word count. But my eyes are heavy, and my ears are starting to itch, historically a pre-cursor to my breaking out in hives. (I just took some Benadryl, so I should be fine.) Still, I know I need to respect this “information” and adjust my behavior. I need to pump my brakes and cut tonight’s post short, trusting that I’ll still get to wherever it is I’m going even if I have to move a little slower to get there.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

"

Healing is never a straight line.

"