Friday, December 31, 2010

Hey There Delilah

I don't think the radio gods & goddesses could've picked a more perfect song for me today, day one of in-person-total-loving-turned-long-distance-question-mark:

Don't you worry about the distance
I'm right there if you get lonely
Give this song another listen
Close your eyes
Listen to my voice, it's my disguise
I'm by your side

Oh it's what you do to me
Oh it's what you do to me
Oh it's what you do to me
Oh it's what you do to me
What you do to me

I'm not sure though, whether giving this song repeated listens will make me feel better or worse.

Here's what I do know: a new year is dawning and I'm pregnant with possibility. It ain't a baby, but it's a start!

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

When I'm Sixty-Four

Probably one of the hardest things to confront in new love after a divorce is the fear that despite the fact that it feels like something you can trust, something you can believe in, you're coming off an experience where something you once trusted and believed in blew up in your face, or died a slow death, or whatever metaphor fits. Doesn't really matter -- none of them are pretty.

You want a guarantee that it won't happen again. You want the answers to all the questions the Beatles pose in this classic:

When I get older losing my hair,
Many years from now,
Will you still be sending me a valentine
Birthday greetings bottle of wine?

If I'd been out till quarter to three
Would you lock the door,
Will you still need me, will you still feed me,
When I'm sixty-four?

But there are no guarantees. It just takes time to get to the point where it feels worth the risk. I'm there now -- but six months ago -- I wasn't. I don't think it is something you can rush, despite the desire to do so since it sucks so much to be in that lack-of-faith space. The surprise for me is that I didn't get there alone. I didn't get there through therapy. I didn't get there by talking to friends. Don't get me wrong -- all those things helped. But what really did it was opening myself to love again...

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Hold On

It was inevitable that at some point during the visit, we'd have to confront the tough questions about what comes next. As it turned out, I think we did a pretty damn good job of mostly staying in the moment while also taking the opportunity to contemplate what future moments might hold for the two of us both separately and potentially together. For me, those discussions were often tearful -- and so today I dialed up my main-man for wallowing -- Tom Waits -- who had this beautiful offering to give us both some added comfort:

Hold on, hold on
You really got to hold on
Take my hand, I'm standing right here
You got to hold on.

Sometimes, I reckon that's all you can do. Lucky me, after holding on for what sometimes seemed like an eternity on my own after my divorce, to get to hold on with another soul, at least for a little while...

Monday, December 27, 2010

Medication

Thank goodness for Modest Mouse -- hearing this song today saved my blog from an official Huey Lewis and the News post.

Love-as-a-drug was a big theme I discussed with my visitor today, prompted in part by a still-in-bed-at-noon reading of a short story in the New Yorker by George Saunders -- an excellent, if a bit trippy, author. The story explores, among other things, how feelings of love can be brought on (and taken away) by drugs.

Love and lust do seem like drugs sometimes, and maybe they even are, to some degree. Maybe the key to being able to continue to enjoy them is, as with other drugs, to come to them from a place of knowing you are on solid ground and feeling good without them -- so that enjoying them is just an enhancement rather than something that feels necessary for survival.

I don't know, but I'm damn grateful for this recent opportunity to touch the place MM is singing about in these first two lines:

This is the part of me that needs medication
This is the part of me that believes in heaven

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Where No One Stands Alone

I've got a good life. I've got two beautiful kids. Countless beautiful friends. And the resources -- financial, intellectual, physical, emotional, spiritual -- to truly enjoy both the big and the little things in life. Technically speaking, I don't need a romantic partner to enjoy much of what makes my life satisfying.

Take movies, for example. I love movies. I enjoy taking in a movie by myself and completely surrendering to the experience, and I've got some fabulous movie buddies who are only too happy to enjoy them with me and then analyze them afterward over a cocktail and some tasty victuals.

But can all that take the place of the feeling of getting to see a great movie intertwined (I'm talking hands, arms, legs and heads here, just to clarify, not serious PDA) with a lover? I'm going to have to say no.

As featured in the trailer linked above, this powerful little song written by Mosie Lister seems to come down on the same side as me on this issue:

Like a king I may live in a palace so tall
With great riches to call my own
But I don't know a thing
In this whole wide world
That's worse than being alone
Hold my hand all the way, every hour every day
Come here to the great unknown

Take my hand, let me stand
Where no one stands alone

Now granted, it isn't possible to hold someone's hand every hour every day, and at times, we all stand alone (with the possible exception of those who believe Jesus is always with them).

And I'll also grant you that it is possible to have had that powerful feeling with someone and then lose it -- my ex-husband and I used to love seeing movies together, and one of the messages I got that it was really over came to me while watching a movie.

Yes, that sucks. And it's really, really hard to get over the fear that it might just go away again if you let yourself love again. It is the great unknown -- but I reckon all of life is -- and it's so infinitely sweeter shared with a lover.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Crash

You've got your fading and you've got your crashing -- and sometimes, you're lucky enough to find someone with whom you get to do both at the same time. Which is fabulous, in many ways, but it makes for some really inattentive blogging. Over the last six days, I chose and saved a song to blog about -- but never got around to actually writing and posting them.

Now, with my lover back in the arms of his beloved Northeastern U.S. mountains, I've got a latte and my favorite sea salt and dark chocolate almonds by my side, and I'm in need of every bit of therapeutic goodness that writing does for my soul.

I don't have a lot to add to Dave's lyrics -- they do a pretty damn good job of describing my feelings on the first full day of the visit. I only have to take issue with one lyric -- it ain't just a boy's dream, Dave. I dreamed it too, and then, I got to live it:

Sweet like candy to my soul
Sweet you rock
And sweet you roll
Lost for you I'm so lost for you
You come crash into me
And I come into you,
I come into you
In a boy's dream
In a boy's dream

Touch your lips just so I know
In your eyes, love, it glows so
I'm bare-boned and crazy for you
When you come crash
Into me, baby
And I come into you...

A very merry Christmas, indeed!

Friday, December 24, 2010

Fade Into You

I am one lucky woman. I've had a fabulous day today celebrating Christmas with my kids and my parents. So many thoughtful emails, texts, calls, cards and gifts have arrived. And to top it all off, I have a man on his way to visit me who told me that Fade into You is the song he'll be hearing tonight when I pick him up at the airport:

I want to hold the hand inside you
I want to take a breath that's true
I look to you and I see nothing
I look to you to see the truth...

For a grown-up like me, the opportunity to fade into another person for a few days is the most exciting gift I can imagine unwrapping -- Thanks, Santa!

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Christmas Lights

So many Christmas songs, but this is the one that is speaking to me tonight, because it seems to be about the mixed bag that Christmas can be. It's true -- the lights are pretty -- and they can help light a fire within:

Oh Christmas lights
Light up the street
Light up the fireworks in me
May all your troubles soon be gone
Those Christmas lights keep shining on

But on the other hand, they sometimes seem to illuminate what's missing along with what is here:

Those Christmas lights
Light up the street
Maybe they'll bring her back to me
Then all my troubles will be gone
Oh Christmas lights keep shining on

As for me, I'm not really missing anything that isn't already here or on its way. But I am feeling overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of the task of preparing for this magical holiday. I've got a few more tasks to complete tonight -- I'm celebrating with my kids tomorrow -- and before I go to sleep, I think I'll sit and enjoy those christmas lights for a few more minutes and see if I can feel more of the magic and less of the mayhem...

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Better Days

I heard this beautiful holiday song in the car yesterday, and as the Goo Goo Dolls launched into it, I was with them 100 percent:

And you ask me what I want this year
And I try to make this kind and clear
Just a chance that maybe we'll find better days
Cause I don't need boxes wrapped in strings
And designer love and empty things
Just a chance that maybe we'll find better days

It's true. As happy as designer jeans make me for a fleeting moment, they don't come anywhere close to the gift of love. I didn't always have that understanding, so I'm especially grateful to have it now. With this understanding, I feel quite sure that if we could all come back to our heart space, we would find better days.

This week I was fortunate enough to be able to have a conversation with someone who has been tremendously successful at doing very similar work to what I was trying to do by bringing yoga to teachers in schools -- support teachers from the inside out. We talked about the challenges ahead in education reform and he recommended I read a book called Love and Power. I love that someone has written a book with that title, and I definitely intend to read it. I'm hopeful that it has tips to help ensure actions come from that vast, all-powerful heart space.

Speaking of vast, all-powerful heart spaces, for the Christians among us, Christmas is a natural time for moving back into that space. But even for those who do not celebrate the birth of a savior on Christmas Day, the holidays offer a reset button in the form of a New Year. So whether it's Christmas or New Year's that puts your finger on the button, let's make sure we reset it to love for 2011:

Take these words
And sing out loud
Cause everyone is forgiven now
Cause tonight's the night the world begins again

And it's someplace simple where we could live
And something only you can give
And thats faith and trust and peace while we're alive...

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

If I Could Turn Back Time

Heard this song today, and as Cher sang out:

If I could turn back time...

I thought: "I wouldn't." And I marveled that, at least for today, I have no desire to turn back time or change the past. I feel content being in the here and now, with all of its complications and (seeming) lack of perfection.

This might not seem like a big deal, but coming from a woman whose favorite movie was once Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, which is all about erasing the past -- it's a pretty big deal.

I wouldn't have said the same thing a year ago, and I may not be saying the same thing tomorrow. But for now, I'm going to enjoy being right here in this moment, content with everything, just as it is...

Monday, December 20, 2010

Rehab

I was contemplating using a holiday song today since Christmas is getting so close -- and I probably will over the next few days. But when my ipod fired this feisty number up this morning, it spoke to me. For the past couple of years (since this fully loaded ipod came into my life) it's been a song that makes me reach over and crank up the volume, but this is less because of the subject matter and more just because I happen to love Amy Winehouse's emphatic wail. She seems to inspire strong feelings -- people seem to either love her or think she's pretty ridiculous -- and somehow, I feel a kinship with her.

Anyway, this morning as I was flitting around trying to make sure I was all lined up to do the 50 things on my list for today (made longer and more complex by holiday preparations), this song came on and I really heard the rehab part. It reminded me, once again, how hard the holiday season is for a lot of people. I was first introduced to this concept when I started going to Alanon -- up to that point, I thought everybody else was happy during holidays and it was just me that felt overwhelmed and weighed down by the ghosts of holidays past. I'm so grateful to that program, because it creates a space for people to be real about the really ugly parts of their lives - -and the unburdening that comes from sharing this and knowing others feel the same way goes a long way toward allowing people to co-create more joyful holidays in the present.

I remember when my sister first suggested to me that my Dad was an alcoholic and I should go to Alanon -- I was 15. I finally walked through the door of my first meeting when I was 34. What took me so long? Well, part of it is a very human piece of not wanting to reveal the messy feelings to others that Amy articulates here when she talks about her resistance to rehab:

It's not just my pride
It's just 'til these tears have dried

The other part is that it was a club to which I had no desire to belong -- and I guess somehow I thought if I didn't admit how profoundly I was affected by being raised in an alcoholic home -- it would somehow not be true. But in fact, all of my relationships were being affected by the past and without having an understanding of how this was happening, I really didn't have a shot at getting beyond it.

Probably the most profound lesson I learned in that program was how to check in with myself about what I am feeling and then understand that I always have choices about how to deal with those feelings. I was talking to a friend today who has also come to this get-to-know-your-feelings space later in life about just how huge this revelation is.

Take, for example, how I treat holidays now. I go out of my way to do all the things that help keep me feeling good -- yoga, acupuncture, meditation -- I am clear with my family about what my boundaries are -- and, to the best of my ability, I express my needs and surround myself with people who are willing to hear what I'm feeling and respond accordingly. And as you can imagine, this makes for a much more peaceful holiday season...

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Wishlist

One of my partners in crime last night was kind enough to create a playlist for her ipod that we fired up during the journey to and from our party destination this weekend, some of which she'd taken from these pages, and some of which will be showing up here in the future posts. That's one of the things I'm enjoying most about this blog -- how it encourages people to share their music with me.
Anyway, so we're driving along this morning, and one of my friends was telling a story when this song came on, causing me to exclaim: "Pause the song or pause the story, but please don't talk over my Eddie!" Fortunately, all three of us find something sacred in this sound, so after my friend finished his story, we drove across the winter scape while this song transported us somewhere else entirely.
So many things I love about this song, but first and foremost, its sound

And as usual, I don't just like the sound, but the lyrics he is singing. There are those that are seasonally appropriate:
I wish I was a sentimental ornament you hung on
The Christmas tree, I wish I was the star that went on top
Those that just work for me -- evoking a powerful image:
I wish I was the full moon shining off a Camaro's hood
And those that are brilliantly simple, yet forcefully resonant messages:
I wish I was as fortunate, as fortunate as me
No more wishing over here, if I can help it. I am, in fact, as fortunate as me. Thanks Eddie!

Saturday, December 18, 2010

It's the Girls Night Out

You know those things in life that you talk about doing all the time but then never quite get around to doing them? You can always find a reason not to -- too busy being the primary reason. So it was for months when it came to taking a road trip to visit a friend who, though she lives in the Dells, has stayed in Madison after work to party with us many times. She's been asking us to come basically since we met her over a year ago -- and today we made it happen.

When we first started planning the trip, I thought it was going to be a girls thing -- but then we decided to bring the lone dude from the group that we're all really close to too.

When this number started cranking up on the internal jukebox as I got ready to go, I hesitated before settling on it, since, as I explained, it wasn't just a girls night after all. But then on the drive up there, when our (honorary wo)man held his own in the girliest of conversations, I decided it was fitting.

I really dig a dude who can hang with the ladies, you know? Especially a dude who, later in the night, joined me on the karaoke stage in a rousing rendition of Sweet Child O' Mine. I hadn't had enough booze to sound like Axl, and he didn't sound much like him either, but it was our night to play indeed:

It's the girls night out
N-n-night out and there's
Nothing you can say, baby
It's the girls night to play
Our night to play
Don't wait up for me...

Friday, December 17, 2010

Faith

My friend called me up yesterday morning, and I shared with her some confusion I've been trying to work my way through. The confusion stems from two things I'm working on cultivating that are seemingly in conflict with each other. I think George is struggling with these in this song, too, or at least, it started playing (in my head) right after my conversation with my friend.

On one hand, I am trying to live in the moment and fully enjoy the present without letting the past pull me back or the future pull me forward. That goal leads me to the enjoyment of the temptation George sings about here:

Well I guess it would be nice
If I could touch your body
I know not everybody
Has got a body like you

At the same time, I am working to cultivate faith in love. I really think that more than any other element, this is what I didn't have going in my first marriage. And I'm beginning to think that it's a prerequisite for a happily ever after type union.

But how, when it comes to my exploration of new love, can I manage to both remain in the moment and have faith in love at the same time? Doesn't the faith in love part necessitate a contemplation of the future? Nope, said my wise friend. "Faith in love requires believing that two people come together for a reason, to love each other. Maybe that leads to happily ever after and maybe it doesn't, but if it doesn't, it doesn't have to erode your faith in love."

I hear what she is saying, but it scares me a little bit. Ok, a lot. There's a huge part of me that is with George on this:

But I've got to think twice
Before I give my heart away

And wants to shut down when it encounters the uncertainty created by being in the moment rather than talking/thinking in a way that involves more certainty. (Not that there is such a thing as certainty, anyway!)

But then I go back to the other thing I'm working on, and affirm:

Yes I've gotta have faith...

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Tangled Up in Blue

Last night I was reminiscing a little bit more about my outspoken British boyfriend, which explains why I woke with this song in my head. It was such a long time ago now, but it seems like yesterday that he played it for me in his dorm room, singing along with Bob:

Early one mornin’ the sun was shinin’,
I was layin’ in bed
Wond’rin’ if she’d changed at all
If her hair was still red...

I like to think that when he hears this song now, he thinks about me, too -- and I'm guessing he probably does. Besides the general excitement of being with him -- he was in a band, he was super funny, he had a really sexy northern-England accent (of the un-moneyed variety), he spent a few hours in "the clink" one night for assaulting someone that he caught looking at my ass (at the time it seemed romantic, now it seems like a sign of a rage disorder brewing) -- we had a really great connection. He came to visit me in the States after I got back home, and we had some good times; I have one particularly fond memory of being up at my cabin, out in the sun on the dock with his guitar, helping him write songs. But he started distancing himself from me pretty much from the moment he got here, declaring: "I'm not going to be waitin' by me mailbox every day, Sarah, just livin' for your letters. So you can forget about that."

Yep, the summer of '92 was the last time I saw him in the flesh -- but to this day I get a little bit of the same excitement when I see someone who shares his essence. My friend and I have long referred to these as "TW sightings" -- TW are his initials.

And although I would quite like to see him again -- I have some regrets about stones left unturned -- it is probably better that I both carry with me and continually encounter these positive aspects of him in others -- since the chances that I would still be able to see and enjoy them in him are not good. My friend told me she saw him a handful of years ago. He'd become a bobby (police officer) and was humorless and unfriendly, at least the night she saw him. That broke my heart a little bit.

More years have passed now. Maybe, like me, he's got his joy back now, or maybe he's still tangled up in blue. I don't know. I'm hoping for the former -- and enjoying Bob's variation on our story:

She turned around to look at me
As I was walkin’ away
I heard her say over my shoulder,
"we’ll meet again someday on the
avenue,"
Tangled up in blue.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Just the Way You Are

My daughter is starting to discover pop music, and when I heard her singing this song, I was really grateful for its message. I tell her all the time that she is beautiful, but as these lyrics articulate, there's a huge difference between hearing someone say that and believing it yourself:

Yeah I know, I know
When I compliment her
She won't believe me
And it's so, it's so
Sad to think she don't see what I see

It's hard to imagine the hottie in this video having moments of self-doubt, and yet, I don't think anyone is immune to sometimes having difficulty with their reflection in the mirror.

Why is it so much easier to relish all the features of someone you love and so easy to find fault with ourselves? Part of it has to be lack of self-love. I also think part of it is cultural. I've been recently reunited (thanks Facebook) with some dear friends from the year I lived in England (1991-1992).

One of the most striking things about British culture for me was that it is significantly less superficial -- and there isn't so much emphasis on weight. I gained 20 pounds the year I lived there and I remember one of my British boyfriends proudly proclaiming to me: "you're alright looking and you've got a belting personality!" and fully believing that was a compliment. At the time, I believed it was, too. When I got back home, I was appalled and repulsed by my body and immediately started trying to change it. Some of that was positive -- I wasn't healthy, I didn't have as much energy - but some of it was negative -- suddenly I was back to equating being thin with being attractive or accepted or desirable.

One of my long-lost British buds posted this on my Facebook wall the other day: "Gosh! You look just the same!" And my first thought was: "Is she crazy?" And then I marveled at that ability to look and see a person's essence -- not whether or not they have one less chin -- and set the intention to cultivate that ability in myself:

When I see your face
There's not a thing that I would change
Cause you're amazing
Just the way you are

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Daytime Friends

My book group had a rousing discussion last night of Graham Greene's The End of the Affair. If you haven't read it, I highly recommend it. Masterfully written, it deals with all of the big questions of belief, faith, love, lust, commitment, marriage -- you name it. We talked a lot about what love is, and about whether one can love someone and not be jealous if they are with someone else. Most agreed this was not possible -- that to share the intimate space you occupy with your lover with another without being jealous just doesn't work.

For my part, I've tried to be a grown-up participant in an open relationship, believing I had the magnanimity to be ok with it, and was unpleasantly surprised to find myself wicked jealous. The lone (brave) man in my group thinks he would be ok with it too, and wondered if maybe my reaction would be tempered with time and repeat experience. It very well might be, but I'm also not sure that sharing my man is something I particularly want to get good at. Another friend with experience with open relationships says that the key is not to know. But then something is necessarily lost in terms of the intimacy with said loved one, and then we're back to square one.

What is love? What is a successful marriage? What is the right thing to do if your needs aren't being satisfied within your marriage? The Catholic church has one answer, and Dan Savage another. I'm not really sure where I fall, except that I know I cannot abide deception. Without honesty, I don't think you can have intimacy. At least not in a meaningful way.

Contemplating all of these questions, the song that played internally was one from waaaaaayyy back -- probably because it was the very first song I heard that dealt with some of these same issues. I was 6 when "Daytime Friends" was released, and my Mom being a Kenny Rogers fan, I remember hearing this song playing often in our house:

Daytime friends and nighttime lovers -
Hoping no one else discovers
Where they go - What they do -
In their secret hideaway

Daytime friends and nighttime lovers -
They don't want to hurt the others
So they love - In the nighttime -
And shake hands in the light of day.

And I remember not really understanding it - wondering what did they do in their secret hideaway? Now that I'm 39, and I know exactly what two people do in a secret hideaway, the lyrics that particularly strike me are these:

And when it's over - there's no peace of mind
Just a longin' for the way things should have been.
And she wonders - Why some men never find
That a woman needs a lover and a friend.

The woman in the book, whose name is also Sarah, definitely doesn't have a man who understands that -- so she goes outside her marriage to find it. Is she right to do this? Is she wrong? I don't know. I only know that this Sarah is entirely capable of choosing a man who can fully embody both roles...

Monday, December 13, 2010

Kingsport Town

Yesterday a big old winter storm blew into town and seemed to hit me on both a physical and emotional level. Today I'm feeling grateful that once again, there's a song that articulates my pain -- written, as they so often are, by Bob Dylan -- and performed hauntingly by Cat Power:

The winter wind
Is blowing so strong
My hands have got
No gloves
Wish to my soul
That I could have
The boy I’m dreaming of

And it's an especially good thing, on these dark, cold nights of the soul (oops, I mean of December) that I've got music to help keep me warm...

Sunday, December 12, 2010

(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman

Today is a day upon which, for many years, I celebrated the birth of an incredible man. Why should this year be any different, just because we're no longer married?

This song came to me as the tribute to him for several reasons:

1) He was the first man to truly make me feel like a natural woman.

2) He loves this song, and used to sing it to me frequently. He has a beautiful singing voice, and can even hit all the high notes.

3) This song was co-written by Carole King and was recorded on Tapestry, the first album he ever purchased. This, I think, is one of the most awesome things about loving someone -- learning these little facts about their lives.

It's true -- he stopped making me feel like a natural woman -- but all of the things that made him marriage material for me are still there -- with a little extra sprinkling of wisdom and yeah, a few more wounds. May this be the year he finds someone else to whom he feels like belting out this beautiful song...

I'm afraid youtube lacks a recording of my ex-husband singing this song, so you'll have to make do with Aretha Franklin, Mary J. Blige, or Carole herself, back in the day...

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Like a Prayer

On the last night of Hannukah, we had some friends over for dinner, one of whom was surprised to learn that I celebrate the holiday even after leaving my Jewish husband (who didn't heavily identify with the religion of his heritage anyway). I explained that I really get that ritual and tradition are huge for kids, and I feel like this is part of the traditions of their ancestors so it's worth carrying forward. Plus, I really like it.

At the same time, without a devout faith, our celebrations of both Hannukah and Christmas can feel a little devoid of meaning and sometimes start to feel overly commercial. I try to explain to my kids that for me, these holidays are about getting to spend special time together doing fun things (which can include but isn't limited to playing with new toys). Most of the time I think they get it. And hopefully they can feel it -- because that's so much more important than hearing someone say something anyway.

What I'd like to understand myself, and teach my kids, is the importance of having faith. It doesn't have to be faith in a deity, but I do think it necessarily involves faith in something you can't readily see or explain, which I think includes love.

Probably the most wondrous part of having children for me was immediately coming to understand and have faith in love beyond what I had ever felt or understood to be possible before they were born.

I know there is no more powerful force, but as I work to embrace this powerful force in my lovelife, there's more opportunity for my old wounds to get in the way.

The ipod shuffled onto this number this morning, and listening to it, I've decided that having faith in love is what I want most to cultivate this holiday season and into the new year. I'm going to have a perfect opportunity to practice this, with a man arriving on Christmas Eve to spend part of the holidays with me. And not just any man. A man for whom it is true that the very first time I heard him say my name, it felt like home:

Life is a mystery, everyone must stand alone.
I hear you call my name and it feels like
Home

Remembering that moment and all that has transpired since, having faith in love doesn't seem so hard. And I don't feel like I'm standing alone, either...

Friday, December 10, 2010

Love Takes Time

Earlier this week, when I showed up at Speed to teach my yoga class, the instructor before me was cooling down her cyclists with this tune playing in the background. It's been with me ever since -- I mean it comes and goes, but it hasn't gone away.

How to explain this? It could just be the insipid lyrics and catchy, pop tune. But I'm inclined to think there's more to it than that.

Feeling into it this morning, this is what I'm getting: although the healthiest, loveliest part of me knows that love is abundant and I'm just as worthy of it as anyone else and that all I need to do is be clear about what I want and it will come, there's another less lovely, less healthy part that sometimes likes to have its say. And that part tends to use language like "I shouldn't have..." and "What if I hadn't..." and "Maybe if I just..." and other such phrases that feed into the idea that things need to happen a certain way, what I do controls (or helps control) what happens, and that there are right and wrong choices and if you make the wrong one, you're left alone with only your regrets to keep you company.

Seems to me that is largely the voice that Mariah is listening to here:

Love takes time
To heal when you're hurting so much
Couldn't see that I was blind
To let you go
I can't escape the pain
Inside
'Cause love takes time
I don't wanna be here
I don't wanna be here alone

Sorry, Mariah. Although you and your voice are beautiful, your message doesn't help reinforce the beliefs I want to have about the world and what is possible in my own life. I have to trust that if I let go of someone, yeah, I might be lonely, and I might be blind to what is coming next, but I can have faith that if I'm following my heart, love will find me in no time.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Sweet Child O' Mine

When this fave o' mine came on in the car today, both kids simultaneously asked me to change the station -- complaining that they didn't like the screaming. Really? Is it possible not to like Axl's screaming?

I'll tell you who's screaming I don't like -- mine. But this morning, the combination of a mom who hasn't been as focused on her serenity and a sweet child o'mine -- a 10-year old boy with long hair that he sometimes refuses to comb -- made for a not-so-pretty scene in the bathroom before school.

Walking to school with my daughter, I told her that I didn't like it when I scream (she said she doesn't either) and that I'd grown up with a screaming mother and really don't want that for my kids. "Well," she reassured me, "Daddy doesn't really scream, but he does say the F-word." Yep, we all have parenting moments of which we're not proud. It's part of the deal.

Tonight, long after he should have been asleep, my son came downstairs while I was working on this post and the song was playing in the background. Funny how much more curious he was about the song and its singer when it meant putting off bedtime. I didn't mind too much, though -- after the way our day together started out, I can't really think of a more satisfying ending than having a moment where I could bury my face in his shoulder-length locks while singing:

Her hair reminds me of a warm safe place
Where as a child I'd hide
And pray for the thunder and the rain to quietly pass me by

Whoa, oh, oh, sweet child o' mine
Whoa, oh, oh, oh, sweet love of mine...

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

This Woman's Work

I woke up early this morning, head pounding after one two many two-hearted ales (which for me means two) last night, with this song floating through my subconscious and landing in my conscious mind.

I think it's here for a couple of reasons. One, I've been recently made aware of the need to allow more feminine energy into my life, and was led last night to a yoga class that was taught by a woman who is powerfully harnessing her goddess energy. That woman has found her work. I can only imagine what would have happened if I'd walked into her class a year ago -- I wouldn't have been able to stay present to it and absorb it the way I did last night. (Though my level of discomfort might have something to do with the multiple imbibing that took place during my meal out after the class.) That's alright though -- I don't have to do it all at once -- baby steps...

Which is a good segue into reason number two. Before I got married, I always saw myself with four children, but I married a man who wanted only two. We compromised on three, but by the time we had our second child I was feeling the need to close the baby factory for repairs.

It's back in action now though, and the universe has been letting me know in big and small ways that I can indeed have another baby -- all I have to do is put it out there that that's what I want -- so that's what I'm doing. And I'm trying to do it not by having regrets about the past or by needing to control the future:

Of all the things we should've said,
That were never said.
All the things we should've done,
That we never did.
All the things that you needed from me.
All the things that you wanted for me.
All the things that I should've given,
But I didn't.

Oh, darling, make it go away.
Just make it go away now.

Sometimes I'm more successful at doing that than others -- and once again I see where the second ale came in last night -- my very own little effort to make it go away...

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Why

Yesterday I had the somewhat surreal experience of sitting at a cozy coffee shop in front of a fire explaining why I got divorced to someone who herself went on a couple of dates with my husband while separated from her own husband, to whom she has since returned. Yes indeed, that was one complex sentence -- but modern love is pretty damn complex.

Why, she asked, did we decide to split up? There were a couple of levels of discomfort for me in this conversation -- one of them being the difficulty in finding authentic words with which to answer honestly but not in a way that villainized my ex-husband -- and the other being the difficulty in hearing another woman say: "I just couldn't leave my child(ren)."

In response to the second, I said, simply: "I can understand that. It was the hardest thing I've ever had to do."

And in response to the first, well, I tried to explain that what it came down to, for me, was the fact that when we were first together, he SAW me -- in that beautiful way that enabled me to be an even better version of myself -- and then it seemed to me that he wanted to keep seeing that exact same person, and when that wasn't what he saw -- when I changed -- he, out of fear, disappointment, old wounds -- who knows? -- but for whatever reason he stopped being able to really see me in a way that felt life-affirming to me.

This song was huge for me when I split up with my husband -- and apparently I'm not alone -- Annie's introduction in this video talks about how this song resonates with people who've been through a divorce.

I love all the lyrics to this song and have, on numerous occasions, screamed them, tears streaming down my face, usually while driving in my car -- but this part of the song contains the real emotional catharsis for me:

And these are the years that we have spent
And this is what they represent
And this is how I feel
Do you know how I feel?
'Cause i don't think you know how I feel
I don't think you know what I feel
I don't think you know what I feel
You don't know what I feel

Monday, December 6, 2010

Train Song

Listening to music last night before I fell asleep, this somber tune came on, and I was instantly transported into the magical world of Tom Waits.

As I listened to the chorus:

Well it was a train that took me away from here
But a train can't bring me home

I thought just how profound a statement it was. Just having finished the memoir about drinking, it seemed particularly fitting -- and though I've ridden the train taking me away from me driven by booze, I've also jumped on a few other trains in my life -- the most addictive of which, for me, has been men.

Obsessing about them has been really effective at keeping me from feeling and dealing with my own stuff, but as Tom says, that never led me back to me.

As I've worked to put down this obsession, making more room for real experiences (most of which exceed my fantasies since most of those were based, at least in part, on my previous experiences), I am finding myself again.

Still, I find that even a relatively healthy relationship with a man can lead me away from me -- and the more willing I am to jump on the train that brings me home -- which for me is most often yoga, meditation, running, rest -- the more at home I am in my own skin, the better I feel, and the more I have to give to others...

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Flashdance... What a Feeling

This song has long been a perennial favorite, and from time to time I've used it as my "theme song" to help motivate me to live the life I want to be living, even if it means making some significant leaps from the one I find myself living:

First, when there's nothing but a slow glowing dream
That your fear seems to hide deep inside your mind
All alone I have cried silent tears full of pride
In a world made of steel, made of stone...

But I've never had the pleasure of understanding it on the literal level until Saturday night, when I went to see my friend's creation -- a dance theater production -- and performance:

Well I hear the music, close my eyes, feel the rhythm
Wrap around, take a hold of my heart...

I felt so lucky to have, literally and figuratively, a front row seat to the manifestation of the pictures in her head coming alive. And while I get to observe this friend's strength, creativity, grace, and beauty in other aspects of her life, it's never quite so purely expressed as when she's on the dance floor, taking her passion and making it happen:

What a feeling, bein's believin'
I can have it all, now I'm dancin' for my life
Take your passion, and make it happen
Pictures come alive, you can dance right through your life

This is the gift of the artistic world, I reckon: It allows us to witness this power in others and get in touch with the fact that we all have that same power within us, we just need to find where we can most purely express it.

Friday, December 3, 2010

I Had A Real Good Mother and Father

My relationship with my son has always felt, despite his own particular set of challenges, pretty easy -- solid -- steady. Not so with my daughter -- we tend to have higher highs and lower lows. She's like a little version of me -- and sometimes I want nothing more than to embrace that version wholeheartedly, and other times it involves me having to face something in myself that I may not really want to face. If I don't, though, she'll just show it to me again.

I noticed something with her today that I've noticed before, but today was the day I was ready to really take in the lesson, you know? And here's what I noticed: The more welcoming I am to my own parents, the closer my daughter seems to feel to me. Or maybe the easier it is for me to feel close to her? Or both? It's probably both. I know it's all connected.

And so, for her, for the little girl in me, and for the grown-up woman and mother I am today, I'm forging ahead into what has been, at times, a precarious relationship with my parents.

I love this Gillian Welch song, and I know that whatever pieces of history I could bring up as evidence that its title does not hold true for me are only some of the pieces. When I'm willing to look at the whole picture -- I see two human beings doing the best they can do in this life.

So while Gillian laments the loss of her parents, having already passed on, and hopes to meet them in heaven:

I know that if I can not meet them on high
Then how lonely I will be
For what good is my journey
If I miss out on eternity

I'm going to keep trying to meet mine right here on Earth, knowing, as my daughter reminds me, that embracing them is, to an extent, necessary in fully embracing myself.

For what good is my journey, if I can't do that?

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby

My babydaddy's out of town at the moment, and my kids requested to take care of the pet menagerie at Dad's house in his absence. Since they're too little to go it alone, that means I'm on the hook for taking them over there, to my former marital home. No big deal, I thought. Enough time has passed, and besides, I've recently found love in other places.

Now granted, I was feeling angry when we arrived. Somehow the festival of lights had become, for my kids, all about what gifts they get, and that didn't sit well with me. Neither did the fact that they really didn't eat the dinner I made them and protested mightily when I asked them to clean up the mess they made making me a Hannukah present (what kind of present is that?).

Even so, walking through the house, I really wasn't prepared to burst into tears as I looked at all the pictures, particularly of our firstborn when he was a wee lad. Pictures, mind you, that I'd lovingly framed for our family. Sigh.

The song that came back to me as I fell to the floor and cried (the kids were off with their pets so I was free to let it all out), was this one:

Is you is or is you ain't my baby?
The way you're actin' lately makes me doubt
Yous is still my baby-baby
Seems my flame in your heart's done gone out
A woman is a creature that has always been strange
Just when you're sure of one
You find she's gone and made a change

There is, of course, a layer of meaning related to the fact that I is no longer his baby. But the main reason this song is so strongly tied to my feelings about my former husband goes back to the day our son was born. He had a very traumatic birth, and his grayish-blue body was rushed to the NICU almost immediately after he came out. I had lost a lot of blood and was pretty out of it, so it was my husband who went with him. Later in the evening, my sister and my mom managed to get me into a wheelchair so they could take me upstairs to see my newborn baby. When I got there, his Dad was rocking him steadily while he sang:

Is you is or is you ain't my baby
Maybe baby's found somebody new
Or is my baby still my baby true?

He was never one for children's songs, and this Louis Jordan number really charmed our distressed babe. When he tried to hand our son to me so I could hold him, he started to cry in such a heartbreaking way that I just handed him back to his Dad and listened and watched while he sang, heart bursting with love and sadness and gratitude. Which is not unlike how I feel right now...

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

We are the World

This morning I had the pleasure of starting my day by having coffee with a beautifully brilliant and brilliantly beautiful young friend (I told you I'm prone to using superlatives but take my word for it -- he's deserving of them). We talked about his career trajectory (which he appears to be launching while still an undergrad), my career trajectory (which I didn't launch quite so earnestly but which is evolving in pretty awesome ways nonetheless), politics, the fate of America, not being responsible for your partner's happiness in a relationship, delayed gratification, why so many people start out idealistic and end up jaded -- yep, we left very few stones unturned.

The theme we returned to -- more than once -- was that the only real solution to many of this country's problems is to do a better job than we currently do at educating our populace. Having enjoyed a couple of months of underemployment, I'm about to dedicate myself full-time to that task. And I'm going to do it by being willing -- no, insisting -- on finding common ground with all the parties involved -- no matter their political or interest group affiliation.

I can think of no better lyric to underscore this sentiment than Cyndi Lauper's portion of the original We are the World tune, written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie:

Well, well, well, well, let us realize
That a change will only come
When we stand together as one...

I love this song. I love so many of the artists who participated in the original -- Stevie, Kenny, Tina, Michael, Bruce, Bob, Ray -- and I love the sheer magnitude of all of these artists raising their voices together, knowing they could make a difference (their cause was aid to Africa).

Twenty-five years later, some musicians -- many from the current generation -- remade this song to help motivate people to come together in the wake of the earthquake in Haiti. I don't recognize as many of these artists as I'm sure my coffee date from this morning would -- but it occurs to me that the difference between he and I -- and the difference between the artists in the original and those in the remake -- is just on the surface. Underneath, we want the same things: a peaceful country to both live and believe in, the satisfaction of making a difference, and love.