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Byproduct of a recent creative jag

Byproduct of a recent creative jag

Work in Progress

July 11, 2019

It appears that all the messy, painful, ugly emotional work I’ve been doing over the past several years is finally starting to pay off.

I’ve been trying to write a book for over two decades. My attempts followed a pattern that went something like this:

  1. Inspiration strikes

  2. Inspiration goes shopping for and procures the perfect new journal to hold the masterpiece

  3. Once home, Inspiration gets a fresh cup of coffee, smokes a Marlboro Light*, and sits down to face the blank page.

    *Two decades covers almost 50% of my time on this planet, including my descent into self-destructive madness via nicotine, alcohol, and bulimia.

  4. Inspiration really wants to get that first sentence right — and that string of words now staring back at me from the page, well, it’s clearly shit.

  5. Deep exhale. What should I wear when Katie Couric interviews me on the Today Show? I wonder to myself.

  6. I light up another cigarette while I ponder this important question.

  7. An acquaintance happens upon the writer mid-process (i.e., arrives home, enters the coffee shop, calls on the phone, etc.) and I deliver the most satisfying answer I can give to the question “What are you up to?”:

    “Oh, just working on my book.”

    I say this as though I were cradling a black pipe in my left hand, little trails of grey smoke emanating outward. (So basically, it would be like if Sherlock Holmes and Sylvia Plath had a love child… who was pretending to write a book.)

  8. Time for work/school/bed already?! My god! Where does the day go?! I can’t wait until I win the lotto/get rich/marry well so I can actually have time to devote to my writing…

Thank the gods and glory hallelujah — that is no longer the case today!

I’d love to tell you more about it — but unfortunately, I’ve got to get ready for work.

In Self-Acceptance, Surrender, Inner Critic
Blurring the lines of church and sport with an addition to my altar: A foul ball from the Cubs

Blurring the lines of church and sport with an addition to my altar: A foul ball from the Cubs

The Accidental Fan

October 24, 2016

Living in Chicago, I’ve met legitimate Cubs fans.  My laissez-faire attitude toward a particular team’s performance doesn’t match the dedication I see them embody.  As Cubs fever intensifies in our city — and oddly, in my own consciousness these days — I want to thank all those gracious souls for allowing fair-weather fans like myself to join in the celebration, even though I’ve not been around to equally share in all the disappointments and dark days that traditionally accompany allegiance with a team.  Especially one that’s seemingly cursed, like the Cubs.  They've endured decades of pain to take part in this triumph, and I stumbled upon it by complete accident, yet the ticker tape falls equally upon us all.

In 2005, I was heading to Chicago to visit my then-husband, who had just started his graduate program at the University of Chicago.  Having been accepted to the University of Michigan, a dream come true for a girl who had dropped out of college and become a hair stylist, I had recently started school myself.  After spending the week in Ann Arbor, I’d taken the train to Chicago to meet up with my partner.  I emerged from Union Station and followed the directions to get on the bus to Hyde Park.  Traffic was impossible.  Chicago traffic can be a shock to anyone from out of town, but the parade celebrating the White Sox World Series victory turned congestion into mayhem.

My backpack, stuffed with a laptop, textbooks, and a weekend’s worth of luggage weighed heavily on my shoulders.  Heat began to build underneath my coat, forming beads of sweat on my upper lip, and dampening my hairline.  Voicemails began to accumulate, my ex clearly annoyed that that I hadn’t arrived on time.  I was always late.  (I still struggle to get places on time.)  But the people were packed in so tightly that I was at the mercy of the crowd.  

I don’t remember much else that happened, but I do remember thinking it was really amazing that I happened to be there, on that day, in the middle of this celebration.  Without even trying, I’d ended up on the parade route, and got to see the bus as the players went by.  When you find yourself in the middle of a claustrophobia-inducing crowd, cheering on their hometown team, you can stress about the fact that you’re not going to make it to your destination on time, or you can join in the party going on around you and cheer like you’d planned it that way.  So that’s what I did.  My body continued making its way toward the bus stop, but my spirit joined in on the celebration happening around me.

The tug to join others in their misery, in their frustration that things aren’t going to plan is still very powerful for me.  My body and mind are hardwired to take on responsibility for their lack of acceptance, and turn that into guilt inward, thinking that somehow I could have taken different action and prevented their unhappiness.  This usually results in shame — the belief that that I am flawed, and that my being a “bad girl” is causing their distress.  

Good girls plan ahead so they don’t get caught in parades.

Good girls don’t make mistakes.  

(But if they did, they’d express remorse for those mistakes — not begin clapping and cheering along with the crowd as the parade passed by.)

To which I can now proudly say:

Fuck that fucking shit.

I can only see this growth in the rear view mirror, but I can see the changes taking root.  This impacts all my relationships, especially those at work.  Frankly, that’s the most challenging place for me to flex this muscle. In the five years following my divorce, I’ve been much more selective about the people I surround myself with.  By forming relationships with people, especially my female friends, who are committed to accepting life on life’s terms and learning to accept ourselves, in all of our “perfectly imperfect” humanity, it’s much easier for me create new pathways in my brain and know I’ll be okay, even if though I'm not perfect.

Work is still a challenge, though.  Even though work cultures vary, and sometimes changing the environment is the best option, as long as the workplace is made up of humans, I will need to learn how to deal with those folks that don’t share my view of the world.  My work today is learning how to not get sucked back into that kind of thinking. Right now, that looks like acting like I believe the saying, “I am enough, I have enough, and I do enough.”

Once again, baseball is helping me out with this life lesson.  Last year, I caught a foul ball at Cubs game.  That was my third baseball game ever, and my second time watching the Cubs.  I assumed that it happened frequently enough that anyone who wanted a foul ball likely would catch at least once in their lifetime.  I learned later that it’s actually kind of rare.  (Again, my apologies to those die-hard Cubs fans!)

On my bookshelf, I have an altar: a place where I keep all the things that have significant spiritual meaning for me, as I keep putting one foot in front of the other, building a life that is true to who I am at my core.  This morning I added my baseball, so that it’s now alongside the flower crown my friend gave me at Camp Grounded (birthplace of my Gold Dust namesake) and some surf wax from my last trip to Costa Rica. 

After the Cubs won the pennant, I heard Cubs' manager Joe Madden expressing themes in his post-game press conference that resonated with me and how I want to approach my life.  His perspective on the importance of being authentic is especially evident in this reference to Javier Báez:

…And when (Báez) goes out there, man, you saw him before the game sitting on the bench, saw him waving into the camera, he's just being himself. I love that.
I love everything about that because when he goes out there he's not afraid of making a mistake, and that's a big thing when you get players that are en masse not concerned about making mistakes, really good stuff can happen.

I'm not a professional athlete, but I do aim to be the best version of myself I can be, in the personal and in the professional sphere.  That is how I want to be: Completely unapologetic about being myself, and not being afraid of making a mistake.

In my personal life, I’ve got a bunch of supportive people in my corner, encouraging me to be true to myself, to do my best, and to trust that that’s enough.  However, that isn't as common in the workplace.  So when I bump into a naysayer, I want to be able to give myself that kind of permission internally.  I know I’m at my best when I’m present and allowing things to unfold naturally.  In those moments when someone tries to convince me otherwise, Gold Dust is going to take a line from Maddon’s playbook and remind herself that when you get a bunch of people who aren’t concerned with making mistakes, “really good stuff can happen”.

The next time someone tries to convince me that success demands I be someone other than who I am, I plan to channel some of the bullet-proof faith of a Cubs fan.  For decades, prevailing wisdom said it couldn't be done.  (I remember a professor in graduate school walking us through his financial argument that the Cubs could never make it to the World Series, based on the size of Wrigley Field and its inability to generate enough revenue to pay for the talent necessary to compete at that level.)  I understood the logic then, and yet, here we are.  We made it to the World Series.  I understand the logic of playing it safe, but if this is all just a game anyway, I'd prefer to at least enjoy the ride.

In Self-Acceptance, The Workplace, Personal Development, Inner Critic
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Surfing (with Sally)

November 19, 2015

Growing up in the Midwest, my surfing credentials included shopping at Pacific Sunwear and watching “Blue Crush” with a pint of Ben & Jerry’s in hand.  The closest body of water was Lake Michigan.  While I believe she’s deserving of her title as one of the Great Lakes, her temperament is more suited to swimming and boating, and the cultures of the communities surrounding her shores agree.  There are mavericks who don wetsuits and have the skill and patience to harness the energy in the swells she does offer (often during freakishly inclement weather), but as the exception and not the rule, I concluded that surfing was not in the cards for me.

Thirteen years later, I posed for the picture above.  On the last night of my week-long trip to Surf Simply, a technical surf coaching resort in Nosara, Costa Rica, we paddled out one last time to watch the sun sink into the Pacific.  In surfing, the gear used to capture images of the action is almost as the important as the board and wax.  Scott, a primary care physician from Oregon (pictured above) and his wife Kate were members of our group. Having brought a drone and a GoPro from his photographic arsenal, the surf coaching staff (mostly the boys, actually) got giddy over his tech the way the way we student surfers turned into kids the minute our eyes spotted the breaking waves. 

As we smiled for Coach Jessie Carnes, in the back of my head I knew if this picture turned out, I’d be in possession of Facebook profile picture gold.  I’ve already introduced you to my inner critic, Sally, and it’s no surprise that she had plenty to say throughout the trip. The main reason I’m downright evangelical about helping myself and others turn down the volume on the inner critic is because if I followed Sally’s advice I would have missed all of this!    
    
The big lie we tell ourselves is that by playing it safe we don’t have to assume risk.  In this instance, “playing it safe” would have looked like continuing to accumulate vacation days, afraid to take them for fear of what my team members or clients might think.  When I’m in my workaholic martyr mindset, my frustration comes out sideways.  If I breathe easier when I learn a whirling dervish is going to be out of the office, I’m sure others have felt the same way about me.

Pushing past my physical and emotional limits with 11 other strangers — all while wearing a swimsuit — is about the furthest away from playing it safe this girl can get.  If Sally would have had her way, I’d still be doing some "bikini countdown" diet, waiting to book the trip until I matched my mental image of what I thought a surfer “should” look like.  

In this case, my opportunity cost would have been missing out on the ecstasy that comes from doing something I previously thought was impossible.  The ripple effect of such a powerful life lesson continues to benefit me today by giving me the confidence to challenge other perceived limitations: from speaking truth to power, to becoming a yoga teacher, to launching my own business.  Not only have I drastically underestimated the opportunity cost of playing it safe — I’ve also failed to factor in the compound interest.

The best part of all, is that with the right perspective, there is no actual downside to challenging the inner critic.  Even if the results don’t look like what I’d hoped would happen — if I speak truth to power and they retaliate, if I attempt crow pose while practice teaching and land on my face, if my business fails — as long as I learn from the experience of having attempted it, I’ve got wisdom that will continue to benefit me for the rest of my life.  

This is where Sally chimes in to say that wisdom doesn’t pay the bills.  My response is that in 35 years, I’ve never gone without a meal or a roof over my head.  If I had to be anyone on the planet when the chips are down, my money’s on me.  When it comes to navigating the hostile terrain of personal growth, I’m Bear Grylls.  

If my perfectionism and people-pleasing kept me safely tucked away in a box on the shelf, I’d never have taken the tumbles that taught me tenacity and resilience are some of my most valuable character traits.  If I can do this, you can too. If you insist that you can't, grab your pocket knife, some flint, and let Gold Dust show you how.  If you've experienced this yourself, please share it here.

When have you been grateful you ignored your inner critic?

 

 

Photograph by Jessie Carnes/Courtesy of Scott Schieber

In Personal Development, Inner Critic, Calculating Risk
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