Sunday, July 18, 2010

The Art of Dealing with Mother Issues, Part II: getting over a pundit


It only took a few days to get over my visit with mom.

Not bad considering the collateral damage she tends to inflict in the course of a single conversation (and this was no exception).

She's like a wasp that leaves its stinger inside your skin. You swear you're okay after the attack because you can't find any blood, but it's still releasing poison into your system for days afterwards.

By the time you figure out where that stinger is embedded (and use Gestalt therapy to pull it out), it's already caused nerve damage.

And my nerves were shot.

Early in our conversation, she asked me what I would be teaching in the fall.

I said: Grade 3.

Her reply?

Why so low?

Gee thanks. But I get it.

The woman is a pundit and always has been. I should be used to it.

pundit def: a person who makes comments or judgments, esp. in an authoritative manner; critic or commentator.

Unfortunately, that was just the beginning.

She started asking me questions about my ex because she was "concerned for his well-being".

When I replied that I knew little about his current condition and did not know his whereabouts, she proceeded to berate me for not visiting him (as he is now bed-ridden due to MS). Then she pulled out a book of quotes from Mother Theresa, found a spot that was highlighted and read:

"Of all the illnesses and poverty I've seen, loneliness is still the worst thing of all".

You see, no one visits him anymore. And no one visits her.

Both are mentally twisted, both believe in revenge and holding grudges for all of eternity, both possess a superiority complex that makes the Nazi movement pale in comparison (no pun intended). As a result, both have successfully alienated everyone who loved them over the years with their words and actions.

And I mean everyone.

It's one thing to be mentally ill, but add insidious cruelty and you have a winning combination sure to discourage even the most resilient of visitors.

And both are equally capable of heinous violence. The only difference is that I experienced it first hand with my ex. And most of it was directed towards me. With my mother, it's all in her eyes. They're cold enough to send a shiver up the spine of the Abominable Snowman.

But my mom was adamant about how I should be more understanding. She raised an eyebrow and warned me that "God only accepts the merciful" and sealed my fate with authority as the personal pundit of Yahweh.

I smiled politely and patiently and said (only slightly sardonically I might add):

"I hear ya mom, and you know I don't wish him badly or anything, but I wasn't a big fan of taking those hits, so..."

To which she quickly replied,

"SO WHAT if he hit you?!"

...and proceeded to defend his honor.

That's right. My own biological mother chose my abusive ex over her own daughter.

Now at this point, I must make something clear. Some people have redeeming qualities but not my ex. There was absolutely nothing honorable about him. And to this day, there is nothing about him worth defending. It's that simple. And it's a fact.

He never worked, he never saw a doctor for his psychosis and to this day, he still feels justified and thinks his behaviour was normal, considers himself superior to the plebians in his midst and thinks everyone else missed the mark.

But there is beauty in all of this.

Now I finally understand why I got involved with him in the first place.

He's the male counterpart of my mother.

I could never fix my own mother so she could be a real mom because I was just a kid. But as an 18 year old girl, I figured I could fix someone who showed all the early signs of what she must have been like at his age - energetic, smart, full of big ideas and attractive, but arrogant and lazy.

You know, fixable potential.

There are still things I admire about my mom. The same as there always were. She's sharp (even if illogical), she reads with a vengeance and she's tough as nails. She won't let go of old stuff even if it kills her. Which is really too bad, because if she could she might stop hating everyone so much and that would improve the overall quality of her life.

But then again, it's probably what's kept her alive through three suicide attempts, years of alcohol abuse, pill popping, and that plastic surgery she had at the age of 72.

She's one helluva character.

When I finally looked at her with eyes wide open and realized that she was only defending my ex because she was sticking up for herself, I finally let something go...

I forgave myself for getting involved with a man who was beyond horrible and decided that I didn't need to beat myself up for that choice anymore.

It was over.

Another layer shed. Another shadow faced. Another riddle solved.

So when she kept at it, insisting that she needed his address so she could visit him, I finally said:

"Do you want me to take you to see him? Would that would make you happy?"

And when she nodded yes, I said, "I'll see what I can do" and smiled the genuine smile of someone who was finally released of the heavy burden associated with fixing the impossible.

Then I hugged her, told her I loved her and that it was time for me to go.

She gave me a necklace of black pearls from Tahiti as a parting gift, and walked me out, smugly thinking that she had just convinced me to be a better person and then rewarded me for it.

Little did she know, the gift she gave me was far greater than that...

Thanks mom...

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

The Art of dealing with Mother Issues - Part I - what's the big deal anyway?


I want to create a lengthy, detailed, no-holds-barred bucket list, spend my life checking off as many items as humanly possible then when I'm 95, turn to my partner (whoever that may be) and say:

"Goddamnit that was fun! Wanna do it again?" with a wink and a wicked smile.

Then I'll keep my fingers crossed at the prospect of another life so I can finish up what I started in this one.

But first, I have to deal with...

mother issues

Ah yes, those lovely, debilitating, mom issues.

Because if I don't remove the old emotional blocks that hamper my progress (in all areas of my life from career to relationships) then I have to factor in the extra time I will require for therapy with friends (over beer n' nachos) when I'd rather be spending that time talking about boys (and ordering good wine and fresh oysters).

It's as simple as that.

Because those darn childhood/parent issues have a habit of impeding the energetic flow you need to make your dreams come true. ie; They get in the way.

I'm not saying you need a cohesive nuclear family to make it work. But it sure makes it a lot easier if your mom (or any primary caregiver) loved and wanted you.

But mothers are people too. And not all of them are white-picket-fence/Martha-Stewart/stay-at-home-moms-or-career-women who fiercely love their children. I for one, have many faults, (not the least of which were my motherhood techniques), but mess with my offspring and I'll kill ya. And my kids know it. (At least they've got that).

Some people just never wanted to be mothers. It's not that they hate you (not really), it's just that without you around, they would have liked their life way better and they don't do much to hide that fact from you.

Sometimes, they even tell you.

Ouch.

So to make up for it you spend your life trying to be worthy enough for someone to love you but there's no end to it because you've only got one mom and if you miss the boat on that one... well... that can get you into a whole whack o' trouble because if you're starting at the bottom (ie; your mom doesn't want you) then you don't exactly have to reach very high to raise the bar now do you?

Get my drift?

But the good news is, there is an end to it.

At some point you have to accept, you have to forgive, and you have to find ways to love yourself the way your mother never could.

And the tricky part is, that validation can't come from anybody else but you. In a way, you have to be your own mother.

You have to do for you, what she couldn't.

It's a good thing I like beer n' nachos...

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

The Art of the Bucket List


We've been doing the Bucket List project at school this week. 100 things to do before you die.

Nice way to wrap things up. Or so I thought. You know, get my walking hormone pack to think about something besides bikinis, six-packs and beaches.

I thought I was making progress with them until someone asked me if "Sleep with Drake" was an appropriate goal.

I looked up quizically and squinted my eyes at her as if that would improve my hearing or change what she said and finally realized with some dismay that she was dead serious.

"Take a wild guess" I said dryly.

"Uh, no"?

"Good guess".

Wait a minute, I thought, Who's Drake?

So I asked her.

"Who's Drake"?

"A rapper", She replied casually.

That figures, I thought as I shrugged my shoulders and she crossed him off her list.

But apart from those kinds of responses and the predictable "win the lottery", (ie; I'm too lazy to think this through) as time went by, most kids began to take the list more seriously. And watching that happen was very cool.

100 things to do before you die.

It can be pretty daunting.

Once you hit about 30 things, it gets tougher unless your goal is to visit every city in the world and then all you have to do is get an Atlas and you're golden.

But that's cheating. (There's honor in writing the list).

Making a list however, becomes more manageable if you break it up into the seven categories I've mentioned before based on Canfield's Principles of Success;

personal relationships, finances, career, health and fitness, self-improvement, relationships, and contribution to society.

And the idea is not to overwhelm yourself with so many damn goals at once that suddenly you feel like you won't do any of them.

That would be like a writer giving themselves a deadline of 2000 words a day (ahem) knowing the pressure to do so would probably force them to clean their bathroon instead so they could avoid it entirely.

And we've all been there.

A good bucket list takes a long time to make. Not just one afternoon, or even one day. You have to stew on it. It has to simmer in the slow-cooker of your mind until all the flavors come together and the gravy starts to look like gravy instead of a cornucopia of veggies, meat and stock.

And what feels like individual pieces of an incomplete puzzle begins to come together and resemble a docket of your life.

And the things that excite you are the very things that begin to define who you are.

As you write the list, you get to know yourself. That's one of the subtler benefits.

You get to know what your priorities are, whether you're a risk-taker or more conservative, whether you choose security over freedom, whether you embrace a white picket fence or the gypsy within.

You start to feel the extent of your comfort zone or even the self-imposed boundaries of your existence.

And the list becomes an entity that grows into more specifics as your vision expands. And you expand with it because self-understanding is one of the keys to experiencing the richness of life and somewhere along the way, you figure that out.

Somewhere along the way, you become more specific about what you want.

You go from writing "I want to go to Europe" to:

"I want to say 10 'Hail Mary's' while kneeling in the first pew of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris after first sipping an espresso in a neighborhood cafe".

But these things take time.

That's why these lists must be reviewed periodically. As you change so do the things on your list. Some things are crossed off because either you've done them, or they no longer serve you, or they just don't make sense anymore.

It's all about self-discovery.

But everybody's gotta start somewhere - even if that somewhere is, "Sleep with Drake".

In the words of Margaret Young:

You must first be who you really are, then do what you need to do, in order to have what you want.

Monday, June 21, 2010

The Art of the Mini-deadline

I was rereading my headline and realized that I haven't done much shenaniganing or even manifesting lately as I've been preoccupied with my fair share of those little things called 'obligations'.

And without shenanigans (or manifesting), I dare say there isn't much to discuss unless I want to blog about my daily schedule which goes something like this;

I get up around 6:30 am every day for school. Do the usual morning routine (minus the coffee as I'm basically a tea and carrot juice drinker) and head to school.

I now spend my days with the same Junior Highs because I took a year-end term position. And they've been great (who knew?) but lo and behold, I'm still drained when I get home.

And it's interfering with my other life.

(My guess is that I need some sort of hormone-proof vest or shield to dissipate the energy they exude because it acts like Kryptonite on my whole body).

In any case, as a result I always need a nap at the end of the day but choose instead to open the fridge door and 'tilt' while simultaneously tuning into Cesar Millan, Dog Whisperer for more sage advice.

Not good, (but highly satisfying in a shallow, momentary-satisfaction kind of way).

In any case, once I have settled down into my more balanced self, (around 6ish) I catch up with friends and family, go for a walk, maybe do a little art, read, and then head to bed early for no other good reason except that I tell myself it's necessary in order to be awake and alert the following day.

(Which I've discovered is not true because when I'm engaged in activity that propels my soul forward, I'm not tired at all).

What has become incredibly clear since this life experiment began almost one year ago is that I need a revision.

It’s one thing to write up a list of goals and quite another to see them through.

I can write “I want to climb the Inca trail to Macchu Piccu” until I’m blue in the face but if I don’t set a date to do so, set money aside for the trip and make sure I’m healthy enough to handle the altitude, then it might as well be a pipe dream.

And the difference between a pipe dream and an intention is the emotional charge. There is a negative charge with the pipe dream – it's always perceived as a joke, something that will never be - while an intention carries with it, a positive, pro-active charge.

And I don't want to be a joke.

But intending is only the beginning.

First there's intending, then writing things down, then taking baby steps to see whatever it is you want manifested through to fruition.

And although on many levels I'm quite pleased with my own progress both internally and externally, there is still much to do and it's high time I did a re-evaluation of PROCESS - not so much of the actual goals as they largely remain the same - but of the manner in which I accomplish them.

And manageable, broken up into segments, I-can-handle-this-mini-goal-without-falling-into-a-deep-depression-at-the-magnitude-of-it-all, is the key to succeeding.

Here's an example...

A friend of mine just today, called for some moral support regarding his writing. He wants to get a novel done he started a couple of years ago. It shows much promise IF ONLY HE COULD FINISH IT.

Sound familiar?

In his case, it's a matter of re-editing to death before he can bring himself to move on. And since we all know that perfection is an illusion, seeking after it is like chasing those water-like mirage puddles you see on a highway in the intense heat when you're driving your car on a freshly paved highway.

By the time you get to where you thought each puddle was, it's just road again. And your eyes look to the next one hoping you'll get to see it up close this time and prove it's not a mirage, but to no avail. And you have to start all over again because what you thought you would see doesn't actually exist.

There's no bloody end to it.

So we came to an agreement.

I told him I would check in on him tonight at a certain time to see how much work he got done. Eight o'clock to be specific. He wanted a word count goal for motivation

(I don't believe in word counts any more than I do using scale when I go on a diet but whatever, it's his goal).

He was thinking 2000 words. I was thinking he was out of his mind. I'm all about mini-deadlines.

"How about 500"?

(That's roughly 2 pages).

I could almost smell the relief at his end - I always imagined relief would smell like lavender flowers if it had a scent...

"Think about it. If you produced one page a day, (not even two) at the end of a year - IF YOU WERE CONSISTENT - you'd have a 365 page novel".

Busted.

That's when I realized I needed to take my own advice. If I want to write this other book, I must set smaller goals and be held accountable for achieving them.

So I told him what I thought I could do between 4 pm and 8, which was our re-evaluation time. All I have to do is flush out one sectionof my new in-progress book proposal.

It's now 7:37.

This might be more like a micro-deadline...

Sunday, June 20, 2010

The Art and Beauty of World Cup Soccer


Another gorgeous day...

... especially if you're Brazilian.

Or if you're a Kiwi. I know it was a tie but seriously... The no. 1 team (Italy) against no. 78 (New Zealand) TIED?

My condolences to the descendants of the Roman Empire.

And my heartfelt congratulations to the new kids on the block who haven't participated in world cup soccer for the last 27 years, until now. What feels like a loss to Italy, felt like a win to New Zealand.

Like everything else, it's all relative.

Or paraphrasing the commentators "A team who basically only gets to practice against a bunch of guys from the Solomon Islands, just tied the no. 1 soccer team in the world... WOW..."

Wow indeed. Kudos to the underdog.

Ya gotta love world cup soccer. While numbers vary, it is believe that somewhere between 800 million and 1.1. billion watch the Fifa World Cup Soccer games. My boys swear it's 3 billion but actual numbers are impossible to verify. But I bet my soccer shoes they're right. (If I had any that is).

And I'm certain that like any good fishing story, those numbers will grow before it's actually over and somewhere, there will be proof that every man, woman, child, infant and fetus will have witnessed (or heard) a goal-induced scream celebrating either some team's victory or another's crushing defeat.

I know people who snub the winter olympics, but embrace world cup soccer as a religious holiday.

In fact, some countries - like Brazil - shut down so nobody has to miss a Brazilian game. That never happens with the Olympics. Here's part of an article from the online Brazil Global that describes just that:

Understanding why Brazil “stops” during the World Cup is understanding how Brazilians relate to pride and joy.

It might sound like a contradiction. A country that is a star among emerging economies, just about to leave the reductionist image of being the country of “samba and carnival” suddenly becomes exactly that.

Everything will stop.

Most (probably all) companies will allow staff to go home early today, when Brazil faces North Korea. Banks have permission from the central bank to close early on the days Brazil is playing, the currency market will operate on shortened hours, and most government agencies will shut down.

The economy will not be the same during these days. Televisions and beer have an extra boost while other segments will halt.


Okay, so we know that soccer is BIG. And that it's disproportionately popular in Brazil (and they have, arguable the most beloved team), but it's huge EVERYWHERE. So my question still remains...

Why soccer?

Why is it bigger than the Olympics? I know they both take place every four years, but with soccer there's less sports variety. So what gives?

The answer came from my own boys... and when I heard it, it was plain as day...

"Because anybody can play soccer. Even poor kids. But you have to be rich to play some of those other sports. I hate to say it, but some sports are elitist and we don't think that's fair. But not soccer, and not running. So those are the two we watch."

I get it now.

Soccer is an everyman sport. It's an every kid sport too. And with soccer, the possibility of super-star success crosses all socio-economic boundaries. You might play with a crappier ball and holes in your shoes (or barefeet for that matter) but if you have talent and you practice there's always the possibility...

HOPE. (noun, verb) def: the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best

So it's more than pride. Soccer is the embodiment of an even playing field. Like running. If you're fast, you're fast. And you don't need money to prove it.

That's what makes soccer special.

And everybody needs hope. Why? Because in the face of adversity, that's all anybody has.

And we need people that can prove to us that we didn't hope in vain so that maybe someday we too, will rise above our own circumstances.

And if that proof comes from an underdog?

Even better...