Came to Believe

Came to believe that a power greater than myself could restore me to sanity.  Sane, soul , soulful, sound mind and body, spirit, immortal – words sprawled on a page, but to what end?  Is it not the meaning we attach to a word that gives it power?  For instance, catastrophe. I often hear this word in reference to the events of the past year. Whether they be political or personal, labeling any event as catastrophic pretty much seals the deal.  Once so labeled, there is little or no room for possibility.  Take the definition of catastrophe, a disaster, a calamitous event, especially one occurring suddenly and causing great loss of life, damage, or hardship and lay it over a life event, any life event like the loss of a loved one, a divorce, a diagnosis, a betrayal, an apparent failure and so on and what is left?  Bereavement, sorrow, irreconcilable resentment and anger, depression, insurmountable grief, and possibly utter and irreparable despair, (the complete loss or absence of hope.)   What is life without hope?  How can there be meaning without trust, without destiny, without the Soul?  I believe that our sole purpose to is discover The Soul our unique blueprint which was to us given at our conception and lies in wait for us to discover it, choose it and live it into eternity.  I find that words like disaster, sanity, catastrophe, and the like impede our Soul’s journey by denying limitless possibilities

I tried for years to adhere to the definition of sanity, (the ability to think and behave in a normal and rational manner; sound mental health), with little success.  I know now that I am not normal (conforming to a standard; usual, typical, or expected) nor do I wanted to be labeled as such.  I am supernormal, exceptional as are you and you and you.  We each have within us the power to choose our destinies.  This power is the extension of the soul and is not preoccupied with form.  On the contrary its sole purpose is to give us the courage we need to discover our deepest selves.  The soul accompanied by its innate power is not interested in making people comfortable.  “The soul is who you are in God and who God is in you. We do not make or create our souls.  We only awaken them, allow them, and live out of their deepest messages.” (Richard Rohr)

I heard my soul’s voice loud and clear _ “Stop chemo.  It is killing me.”  I did as I was told.  Does this make me sane?  Who cares.  Certainly not me.  I am more concerned with adhering to the urgings of my deepest self than I am to the meanderings of my wayward analytical mind which makes sensible decisions based on available information.  You know like protocol, statistics, studies, percentages, and cold, hard facts.3a4e7b30d4b6fc019f414a55e331536b

So to paraphrase, I came to believe that a power greater than myself could restore me to luminosity and depth of seeing, to the “light.”  May I welcome life on life’s terms and not deny “the wonderful underlying mystery that is everywhere, all the time.” (from Breathing Underwater). Every life event is a call to believe in a power greater than ourselves, to believe in the possibility of miracles, to believe that healing is the byproduct of loving self and others unconditionally.

Thus I came to believe that there are no disaters, no catastophes, no failures, only limitless possiblities to heal. By healing, I mean cultivating the capacity to live out of the clear, simple and uncluttered presence for it is in the present that we encounter The Presence, whether we call it God or not, matters little. What does mattter is whether or not we can learn to let life come to us trusting that God in us, our Soul, has called us, and that God, i.e. The Soul is incapable of failure.

 

wringing my hands

I just noticed I was wringing my hands.  Today I am afraid to die.  Some days I am not afraid,  This is not the kind of fear that takes the form of anxiety.  I do not feel anxious.  Yesterday I was angry.  Some days I want to play the victim role, but it really no longer suits my personality or my level of understanding.  Life is a gift and to spend it in the role of the victim is such a waste.  So depressing, self-absorbed, lonely, whiny, always complaining about how had life is and what a bad rap I had as a kid.  So what?

My childhood does not define who I am today.  If it did I would be sitting in some bar drinking my lunch or I would be living on the streets like my brother.  Wringing again.  I just did it again.  I stopped writing to wring my hands.  What is up with that?

As I was driving down Waynoka today on my way home from Kroger, I had an ah hah moment.  My life is a miracle.  It is a miracle that I am alive today.  My mother, step-mother, father, grand mother, brother are all dead.  So are Jimmy’s parents and his sister.  Life is fleetingly wonderful, one Hell of a roller coaster ride.  I am not much for roller coasters, the ones at the fair that go straight up and then straight down.  Not so much.  It’s a little easier for me to ride the ups and downs of life, which even when they are brutally challenging, are never as extreme as the rush you get when hit the top of the ride and start flying down at a million miles per hour.  Too much.  Too fast.

I am more of a Goldie Locks kind of girl.  I want things to be just right, even if only for one nano second.  Just to say, “Yes, this is the bowl of porridge that I want.  It is just right.  Yes, this is the bed I want to sleep in with you.  I love you and I love our bed.  Yes, this is the chair I want to sit in and read.  I love to read.”  Life is good.  Right now, in this very moment, with my belly full of my home-made corn bread, life is really good.

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Sunday afternoon – choices must be made

Why not?

My hard drive wants to get fucked up.

Fuck all you all.

That’s the way we say, fuck you,

here in the South.

Way down South in Dixie.

Doesn’t really mean fuck you, does it?

No, It means fuck me.

Why not it’s Sunday afternoon.

Ain’t nothing else to do.

Why not get fucked up?

It would be fun, right?

That’s what my history tells me.

We talked about this at brunch.

MIght call it fucked up family syndrome –

child becomes addicted to rush

engendered by abuse within the family

needs it, has to have it, to feel alive.

Yeah you see if i get fucked up

then tomorrow will be harder

and I can say to myself all day

“You do not have to do this again.”

Then I can imagine I am being reborn

coming back to life,

like Lazarus rising from the dead.

Like the foxhole prayer.

“God help me.

I swear, God, I will never do this again.

Just help me now.  I promise I will be faithful.”

Does pleading with God help?

Does it give life meaning?

Kind of . . .  sometimes.

Boy then that is really fucked up.

Look outside,

the sun is shining.

Do something besides sitting

around here getting fucked up.

Fuck you.

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Going to watch the Good Wife instead.  Happy Sunday to all.

 

Dharma, A Vehicle to Know the World

Dharma is a path of action, one that is embedded in the cells of your body.  My dharma is writing.  I have other gifts, other talents.  I teach yoga.  I am life coach.  I use the tools of yoga, my intuition and my life experience to help others over come tough obstacles.  I’s pretty good at.  At least that is the feed back I get from my clients.  But the one thing I love more than any other is writing.  When I write I know I am connecting to a part of me that lives in the very morrow of my being.  I am writing.  It is me.

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In his book, The Great Work of Your Life, Stephen Cope cites the Bhagavad Gita as the source of all teachings about Dharma, about or sacred duty.  He states that the Gita makes it clear that our biggest obstacle, the thing that separates most from ourselves and our dharma is self-doubt.  He tells us that the yoga tradition has called doubt, “the invisible affliction.”  He goes on to say, “We do not suspect the was in which doubt keeps us paralyzed.”

I spent 61 years of life doubting that I was a writer.  This is the face of every teacher I had telling me I had a gift for writing, for expression, for putting ideas together, and for understanding the human condition.  So what, I thought.  I need to make money.  Only famous writers make money and I will never be famous.  Oh, I wrote off and on throughout my life, usually at times when I felt most lost, most at risk, divorce, abortions, depression, child-bearing and rearing.  But I never sustained a steady practice.  I always gave up and got a job and boy did I have some awful jobs.  I was a clerk at Blockbuster.  I waited tables.  I worked for catering companies serving food at other people’s parties and taking home the left overs.  I worked as a clerk in a chauvinistic law firm.  I ran a cheese shop.  I sold kitchen equipment.  I worked for an orthodontist digging around in the grungy mouths of kids with braces who did not brush their teeth.  I worked in theatre as a props manager, a publicist, and a box office manager.

I did have one job I absolutely loved.  I worked for the man who is now my husband.  He opened and operated one of the first natural food stores in the mid-south, Squash Blossom Natural foods.  I was either his second or third employee and I worked for him pretty consistently for over 8 years.  People thought we were married and that we ran the store together, which we did, run the store, but we were not married, to each other.  Anyway, it was a great job.  I loved it until I could not do it any more.  Jimmy and I had an affair and as hard as we tried we could not keep our lives on track.  He remarried a woman who hated me and banned me from the store, and I went back to my husband and children.  For the longest time I believed I would never again have meaningful work.  Had I known then about Dharma, I would have told you that mine had been stolen from me.  I was wrong.

I opened a yoga studio in 2001.  All the great teachers came, Rodney Yee, Cyndi Lee, Richard Freeman, Shiva Rea, Doug Keller, Rod Stryker, and others less well-known.

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Midtown Yoga was and still is a gathering place in the heart of midtown Memphis.  Great teachers, excellent classes, very successful.  I hated it. I was miserable the entire time I ran the studio.  I worked too hard, worried too much, struggled to be the very best leader I could be, but I was not cut out for the job.  I made money, the studio did extremely well, but I suffered and suffered and suffered until finally I was diagnosed with breast cancer.  A lumpectomy, radiation and recovery required that I give up some things, but I did not quit working.  Anyway, that was then, this is now.  I sold the business in January, 2013.  What a relief.  I tried for so long to make something that I was really good at my dharma.  The Bhagavad Gita talks about doing that.  Pretty much says it is better to fail at your own dharma than to succeed at the dharma of someone else.   Each of us is unique in that way.  We each have a destiny, gift to give.  Mine is writing.  I see that now.  How do I know?

I know writing is my dharma because 1. I embrace it fully without reservation.  No more doubt.  2. Writing consumes me. I am utterly committed to this work.  I will never give up.  I am passionate about writing therefore, for the first time, I am passionate about living.  3. I have given up being famous or even successful.  I write because I must.  I have no idea where writing will ultimately take me, but I am going regardless.  4.  Because writing, my words, my inspirations, the energy I have to write all come from my Soul.  When words and ideas present themselves to me, I sit down and write.  I never know where it will go.  I love that about writing.  It is always an adventure.

My dharma, your dharma. . . . .it all boils down to the same thing and here I must, once again quote Stephen Cope, who I consider to be one of the world’s best writers. Of dharma he says this:

“Dharma eventually takes on  a life of its own.  It does things spontaneously that you had no reason to expect. It begins to drill down into the deepest parts of your mind.  Soon you begin to see that this dharma is not just any old stick of bamboo.  It is a magic wand.  A wish-fulfilling wand.  It is a way to know – to interact with, to be in relationship with – the deepest parts of yourself.  It is a vehicle to know the world.”

Writing is the vehicle through which I know the world.  What is yours?  Do not squander you life.

Impossible?

In the Artist Way, Julia Cameron suggests each participant sit down to write three uninterrupted pages of whatever spills out every morning.  These are my morning pages for January 18.  No editing to begin with.  I many go back and add a few periods and correct some  misspelling but the real purpose of these pages is open the unconscious or whatever and give it a place to light on the paper for this time.  Today feel better slept thru the night.  Slight head ache. Red wine often does that to me. I did pass over my two glass limit by one.  Still had a wonderful time at the Warren’s tree party.  Once a year they take all the furniture out of their living room and throw a big dance party.  It is a celebration of life.  During hurricane Elvis a tree crushed the back of their house, fell on their bedroom.  They could have been killed  i think they were out of the country.  i might be wrong.  Point is, they are alive and we danced.  Great dj.  Fun.  lots of people.  I mean lots, maybe 300.

Today is Saturday.  Another day to live life fully.  So grateful l to feel better.  just a hint of a sore throat intuition is to take it easy. Our dog, Kali, has been vomiting all over the house since yesterday.  I am just noticing that it smells like vomit in here.  Not good   Will have to revisit places on the carpet where she got sick and re-clean them.  Poor baby. I don’t know what she ate.

Book is going well.  I think  I am so grateful to Dani Shaprio.  Seems every time I get stuck, have doubt, i read something from her book Still Writing, that inspires me to go on.  Yesterday she wrote about courage.  The courage to spend it all every day.  Not to hold back.  To go for the win, dig deep, don’t hold anything back. Do you know how hard that is to do.?  John O’Donohue says there is a voice inside of each one of us, inside me that even I have not heard.  I want to hear it every day. to listen to find the connection to my soul.  No I want more than that. I want to write the great American novel.  Me.  I want to be a true novelist. I want to create real characters, the ones that move you to laughter and tears. that tear at your heart-strings, that compel you to live more nobly with more compassion, with a greater zest for life.  I want to inspire, to intrigue, to upset and to disturb, to heal, to undo, to invoke, to enlighten, to do what.  I do not know.  I know I am called to do this.  It is sometimes so lonely and can feel so futile.  Not like working retail and at the end of the day running the tape to see how much you sold.  Not like cleaning the house and seeing the difference.  Not like teaching a yoga class that has a beginning and an end.  Not like going to school to get a degree and then have important looking letters to put after your name.  There are no guarantees.  Only dreams, hours spent pouring out my heart and soul.  This is a choiceless choice.  Now that I have started, I cannot go back.  funny how that works.  No turning back.  Sometimes I think how great it would be to get a job at Starbucks or even at the glitzy new Whole Foods Store they just built here.  But when would I write.  I am so lucky to be a yoga teacher and to have students who want what I have to offer.

…..Divine mother please use me as a vehicle for your creative energy.  Help me to listen so deeply that I hear you move through me so that I can put on paper more than words.  Spill it, use it, give it all every time you write.  Do not hold back.  Spend it all.  Every day.  When do you hear that?   We are always told to save.  Save for a rainy day.  Save for the unexpected.  Sock it away.  Be careful.  Be a saver.  Do not be extravagant.  That sounds good.  I want to be an extravagant writer.  Not wordy.  I do not want to ramble on and on about nothing but I want to splurge when I write.  I do not want to worry about whether I will have anything left.  I believe that creativity is limitless. I want to go the limit every day.  Every time I sit down to write.  Spend it all.  Go for broke.  Empty my wallet.  Put all my bills on the table, every idea,  I want to vomit them all up.  Spill them out and not clean up afterwards.  Let the words, the sentences, the phrases find their way, their order, their reason for being on the page.  No control.  No idea of the shape, the beginning or the end.  Just do it.  Whew.  Sounds a little extreme,  but what have i got to lose?  Nothing and everything to win.  Work as if this is the most important thing I have ever done and let go of the results.  Surrender the fruits of my labor.  Words of wisdom from the Bhagavad Gita. 

In the Rodgers and Hammerstein version of Cinderella, the one with Brandy and Whitney Houston, Whitney sings the song Impossible

(Godmother)
Impossible, for a plain yellow pumpkin to become a golden carriage.
Impossible, for a plain country bumpkin and a prince to join in
Marriage,
And four white mice will never be four white horses!
Such fol-der-ol and fid-dle-dy dee of course, is— Impossible!
But the world is full of zanies and fools
Who don’t believe in sensible rules
And won’t believe what sensible people say.
And because these daft and dewey-eyed dopes keep building up impossible
Hopes,
Impossible things are happening every day.

My grand daughter Amelia loves this movie.  We watch every Monday when she comes to stay with us.  The words of the song dance at the edges of my mind through out the week.  Impossible things are happening every day. Jordan is alive and well.  He died and returned to us fully intact.  I am no longer a victim of my childhood abuse.  I do not suffer from depression. I am writing every day.   I have a good marriage, a loving, supportive partner whom I still find sexy after 14 years together.  Love that.  After two failed marriages who would have thought I could do it well.  I started and operated a successful business, one that I was able to sell.  Wow. I have friends whom I love and who love and care about me.  My life is an adventure today more than ever.  Who knows where I will be this time next year.  Krishnamacharia as quoted by his son Desikachar, in Yoga and the Living Tradition of Krishnamacharya, says “something that is impossible at this moment becomes possible through yoga.” We reach a point we have never reached before.  “Today I sit on the floor and can barely stretch my legs in front of me.  After several weeks of practice, I may be able not only to sit erect, but to stretch and bend forward easily, with knees straight, reaching toward my toes.  In stages the impossible becomes possible.”

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So I practice writing every day.  I have no idea where it will lead me, but I go willingly.  Divine Mother, I trust in your love and guidance as you create through me for the greatest good of all.  May I follow you blindly and without question.  They will be done.

What? What the World Needs Now

That is a good question.  What?  What is your name?  What do you do?  What are you feeling?  What is the weather like today? What’s going on?  What have you been up to lately?  What did you eat for lunch?  What color is your daughter’s hair?  What do you think about unemployment benefits for the long-term unemployed?  What is the impact of a global economy on the wealth of American businessmen?  What makes civilization?  What is anarchy?  What makes democracy better than socialism?  What long-lasting scars linger in the hearts of the children of Hiroshima?  What did you do last night?  What amount effort are you willing to put into getting healthy and staying that way?  What happens to your heart when you lie?  What does it take to get a book published?

What do you want to be when you grow up little girl?  What do I most miss about the world of commerce?  What drives me to write?  What right do I have to think I am good enough to be a writer?  What was my mother thinking when I told her I had remembered being sexually abused and her response was, “Get over it.  Everybody has a bad day.”  What do I think about getting older? What do I still keep hidden under lock and key?  What am I still afraid of?  What do I long to do?  What precipitates depression?  What drives a mother of three to walk into a lake and drown herself?  What is mental illness?  What about the library of congress?  What does retirement mean?  What is sin?  What is redemption?  What is Soul?  What is moderation?

What is the source of my eternal longing, my need for attention, my desire to be noticed, my drive to be seen and heard?  What crosses the mind of a poet like Mary Oliver when she sees the refracted light of the sun cast upon her bedroom floor?  What makes ice cream irresistible?  What complex sequence of events causes two people to fall in love, marry, have children, build a life together, and then, after thirty-two years together, divorce?  What happened to all the sea shells in Destin?  What drives one person to adultery, betrayal, vengeance, remorse, revenge, and retaliation, and another to loyalty, forgiveness, empathy, compassion and sympathy?  What is love?  What is the difference between the alcoholic and the social drinker?  What draws one man to God and religion and his brother to crime and misfortune?

say-what-titleWhat is enough?  What for?  What if?  What he bleep?  What difference does it make?  What did you say?  What’s that?  Now what?  What do you mean?  What do you care?  What do you think?  What do you have to say for yourself?  What is it?  What now?  What, why, where  and when?  What do you expect?  What else?  Now what?  What for?  What the heck?  What do you want?  What do you like?  What did he say?  What are you saying?  Say what?  So what?  What ever!?  What ….wait just a minute? What works?  What I mean is….What can I do?  What’s the use?  What does it matter?  What do I want?  What do you want?  What’s left?  What goes around, comes around.  What else?  What’s up?  What the world needs now is love sweet love, not just for some but for everyone. What more can I say?

Lay My Burden Down

Aside

Below is the piece I attempted to submit to The Sirenland Writers Conference with Dani Shapiro. The original draft was written two years ago.  I rewrote it in October of this year at which time I thought I sent it, along with a $10.00 application fee, through the airwaves to the place in clouds where it would be picked up, read and either accepted or rejected.  As it turned out, my transmission failed.  Oh well.   This writing reminded me how important my story is and why I write.  I am the manifestation of God’s love.  I create through the Divine Mother for the greatest good of all.

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                                                                      Sally

My Mother, Sara Ellen Kistler, aka Sally, was born January 27, 1931 in Kokomo, Indiana.  From the little she that told me about herself, I would say that she was an unhappy child.  She did not particularly care for her father, who she said called her a whore because she liked boys.  She was jealous of her sisters, who, according to her, had everything they wanted because her family was rich “before the depression.”  Sally, on the other hand, had only hand-me-downs and clothes sewn by Momo, her mother.

A serial monogamist, Sally first married at the ripe young age of 18.  He, who will remain unnamed, left after a few short months.  When queried about the short duration of this first marriage, she coyly answered, “Well dear, he was very handsome and I was very young.”

My father, Percy Carlton Sinclair III swept Sally off her feet.  They married when she was 19.  A man of small stature, Carl made up for his size with charm.   5 6 inches, he took obsessive pride in his appearance, coordinating ties, sport coats, slacks and hats in a manner not unlike a New York clothing designer.  Longing for attention and hoping for a rich husband, my mother was an easy mark for Carl.  Sally lacked sophistication, which Carl exuded.  Her insecurity played into his narcissism.  Together they created the perfect “cocktail.”  He was the vodka and she, a splash of vermouth, the one who could not help but shake the mixer.  Sally was a poker, a needler, a nudger, and a “get in your face” kinda gal.  And Carl always said, “It is my way or the highway.”

Sally wanted love and attention.  Carl wanted to be left alone to drink scotch, smoke cigars and pipes, and watch the fights.  Sally wanted to have pretty clothes, to go to parties, to mingle with the rich and famous.  Carl was a loner, a closet miscreant, who, without regret, verbally assassinated co-workers, friends, relatives and total strangers. His attacks were rarely warranted and always unpredictable.

Sally, too late, discovered she was no match for Carl Sinclair.  Unaware of his capacity for vengeance, she left alone in the middle of the night, thinking she would come back for her child, or so she said.  But Carl would have none of it.  He convinced the judge that Sally was an unfit mother, a drunk, and a pill-popper who abandoned her daughter to chase after a married man.  She did.  The court awarded custody of their child to the state of Indiana who in turn made Carl the legal guardian.

Where was my mother when I was a baby, a toddler?  My Aunt Liz later told me that her sister, Sally refused to care for me.  She lay, silently on the couch watching TV, while I lay, unattended in a playpen.  I guess my father called Aunt Liz, because she came and stayed with our family for two weeks right after I was born.  Then she had to go home to take care of her three sons.

I later asked Sally why she chose not to breastfeed me. She had an instant reply. “I never considered it.  Breast-feeding is so unsanitary and messy.  You never know when breast milk will leak and stain your clothes.  And then there is the thing of doing it in public.  How improper.  And what about your boobs engorging with milk and then shrinking back?  I did not want saggy breasts.”

Someone, perhaps Grandma, fed me diluted Carnation Evaporated Milk from a bottle. When I later asked, “why Pet Milk?” my Mom replied, “What’s wrong with that?  Look at you now.  You’re fine.  Besides, everybody did that then.”

I have so many questions. Did Grandma, my father’s mother, live with us then or did she live with her sister, Aunt Honey and her son, Uncle Don?  Aunt Honey had a cozy little bungalow on Napoleon Street.  The outside was yellow stucco. Carl occasionally drove Grandma and me to visit her sister.  Aunt Honey had converted to Catholicism and was quite devout. Her walls were stamped with brown toned pictures of Jesus, bright-colored ones of the Mother Mary and multiple depictions of the Ascension. She kept her rosaries within easy reach, on every one of her side tables and on her bed stand.  But I am getting ahead of myself.

Who changed my diapers?  Who cuddled me and kissed my neck?  The earliest memory I have of childhood is of me standing in a crib, wedged into the corner of a dark, secluded room.  The wallpaper is covered with pilgrims, Indians and colonial soldiers.  I am screaming, crying, sobbing in hopes that someone will pay attention to me.  No one came.

Sally left when I was less than seven months old.  She moved from South Bend, to Culver, Indiana to live with, her parents, my Momo and B0bo.

My Grandma must have come to live with us then.

“Grandma, please put the needle back on the record.”  At three, I had trouble getting the arm to set down in the first groove.  No matter what Grandma was doing, I nagged and nagged until she helped me.  “Listen,” I pleaded.  “It is Mommy talking to me.  She is at the State Fair in Texas.  She made this record just for me.”

Scratchy as it was, you could make out the sound of her high-pitched voice over the noise of the fair. “Hi sweetie.  This is your mom.  I love you very much.  I am here in a record booth at the Texas State Fair.  It is a beautiful day.  I wish you were here with me.  I just saw Big Tex.  He has on the biggest cowboy boots I have ever seen. The statue must be twenty stories tall.  I have to go now.  Ed is motioning to me.  Love you, baby.  See you soon.”  I played that record over and over, careful not to let Daddy hear.  He hated Mommy.

I am now 4 years old.  It is just before we move with Elaine, my stepmother, to Altgeld Street.  Our duplex has a screened-in porch that doubles as an entryway.  The porch spans the entire front of the house, but only half is ours.  I make the entire expanse of the porch my playroom.

Inside, I am sitting on the red leather chaise lounge chair feeding nuggets of food to my dog, Pinky.  “One for you and one for me,” I tell him popping a brown chunk in my mouth.  Grandma drops her stir spoon and waddles over.  “Give me that bag of dog food now!   What have I told you about eating dog food?  You know you will be constipated in the morning.”

“No, I know no such thing,” I mumble, crossing my arms tightly around my chest.   “You and Mommy are so worried about me going to the bathroom.  Why is it such a big deal?”

Exasperated, Grandma wags her finger in my direction.  “It is important to be regular.  You should have a bowel movement everyday, and you don’t.”

Little does she know that I do poop everyday, but I do it outside in the neighbor’s bushes.  Sometimes I forget to take toilet paper outside.  Then I have poop stains in my panties and Grandma gets really mad at me.  “You need to learn how to wipe your bottom, missy,” she chides.

I like the freedom of going to the bathroom outside.  I hold it as long as I can because I have to find a place where no one can see me.  One day I wait too long and it all comes out in my shorts.  Scared, I hide behind the lilac bush in the alley by the garbage can.  Maybe I can sneak in through the back door and take my clothes off without grandma noticing.  Then I can change and throw these shorts away.  I like to make sneaky plans.  I wait and wait, hoping Grandma will come outside to get the clothes off the line.  It is getting dark and my pants feel nasty next to my skin.

“I have to go in,”  I tell myself. Grandma is going to be so angry, but I cannot stay in these clothes any longer.  I sneak up the back stoop and peak in the kitchen.  Our duplex is really one big room with Grandma’s bedroom off to one side and my tiny twin bed stuck in a corner of the laundry room.  Dad sleeps on a bed in the living room.  “Where is she?” I say looking into the far corner of our tiny home. Then I see her coming from the bathroom.

“Where have you been?  What is that awful smell?”  Red faced, I look down at the dirty linoleum.

“Outside,” I say.  “Playing.  I tried to get home in time to use the bathroom, but I just did not make it.  I have been hiding behind the garage afraid to come in.  I knew you would be mad.”

She grabs my hand, pulls me into the bathroom and yanks off my shorts.  “You know that lying is a sin.  God will punish you.  I knew you had been going to the toilet outside but I had no proof.  Wait till your father hears about this.”  She practically throws me into the tub.  The water is too hot, but I do not say a word.  She picks up my soiled shorts and pushes them up and down in the toilet.  “We will just have to put you back in diapers,” she snaps.  “Yes, that is what we will do.  Won’t you be a sight playing with all your friends who have on big girl panties and you wearing diapers?”

I pretend not to hear.   I know how to shut out the voices that tell me I am bad.  I pretend to be a mermaid playing in the ocean.  I sing, “I see the moon.  The moon sees me.  The moon sees the one I want to see.  So God bless the moon, and God bless me, and God bless the one I want to see.”

The next summer, Mommy came to get me for our annual trip to the home of Momo, my other grandmother. I brought the record that Mommy had sent me from the Texas State Fair.  At 5:00 pm, the cocktail hour, Mommy made herself a vodka tonic and me a Shirley Temple.  We all sat around the kitchen table drinking and listening to Mommy’s voice coming through Momo’s stereo.  Momo laughed and said, “I think I can hear the cows and pigs in the background.” She was just teasing.  There were no animal sounds on the record.  Momo liked to make jokes.

That was the same year I did not go back to South Bend.   Mommy, snuggled up with me in the big, black, lacquered guest bed upstairs at Momo’s house, whispered  in my ear, “I have a secret to tell you.”   The fragrance of her Este Lauder perfume tickled my nose.  “You are going to come and live with me in Dallas.  What do you think about that?”

“What about, Daddy?” I asked.  “Where will he and Grandma live?  I don’t want to leave Grandma.”

Mommy grimaced, pushed me aside and reached for a cigarette.  Momo did not like for her to smoke in bed.  Now I knew she was very angry.  Taking a long drag, she stared a hole right through me. “You are coming to Dallas with me.  Carl can go to Hell for all I care.  He took you away from me and now I am getting you back.  Do you understand?”

I did not.  I loved my Grandma.  We shared a room and she read me stories from the Bible every night.  We listened to Jack Benny on the radio and played checkers.  I loved to imitate Jack saying, “Rochester.  Rochester.  Bring me my violin!” Rochester would groan and holler back, “Yessir, Mr. Benny.  Right now, Mr. Benny.”  Then Rochester would shuffle from one room to the next.   Jack Benny scraped the bow across the strings.  I laughed and laughed.  I couldn’t miss more than a couple weeks of that and I did not want to leave my friends.  I was getting ready to go to kindergarten in the fall.   My neighbor down the street, Debbie Hayes would be in my class.

“NO,” I said.  “NO.”  I am not going with you to Dallas.”

My mother eyebrows shot up to her hairline,  “Yes you are and that is final.  We leave tomorrow.”

Uncle Ed, as my mother had me call him, drove us all the way to Dallas.  They sat chatting in the front seat, taking turns driving, stopping only to mix drinks from the cooler that sat next to me on the back seat.  Mommy told Ed, “We need to teach the kid how to be a bartender.    Then we would never have to stop.”

I wondered. “Where is Uncle Ed’s wife?  Did he leave her?  Is he going to stay with Mommy now?”  I also tried to figure out how I could talk to grandma and what I would say when I did.  “Grandma, it’s me Sarla.  Mommy and Uncle Ed are taking me to Texas.  I don’t want to go.  Tell Daddy to come get me.”  That’s what I would say.

In Dallas I saw a different side of my Mother.  Her voice was as sharp as the lines of the ultra modern furniture in her immaculate apartment.  I did not have any clothes with me, just the ones I had packed for Momo’s house, and no toys.   The minute we entered the front door, Mommy dropped her bag and disappeared.  She returned with a box in her hands.  “This is for you.  She is very special because she came from Neiman Marcus and she cost a great deal of money.  Be very careful with her.  She can be your baby just like you are mine.” It was a Madame Alexander doll.  I named her Elizabeth.

And so it was that I came to live for 6 short weeks with “Mommy Dearest.”  We shared the same bed except on nights when Uncle Ed came over.  Then Mommy would put me to sleep in bed, only to later move me out to the couch.  She forbade me to enter the bedroom.  No matter what happened, I was to stay on the couch. 

I spent days at the house of sitter who looked like an alien.  She wrapped her hair into a volcanic bun and pierced it with a fork-like ornament.  Sometimes her grand-daughter came to play with me.  I liked her.   I had to take a nap every day.  Yuk!  And Lunch was awful.  The babysitter was Polish and loved to cook pierogies, sticky dumplings stuffed with sauerkraut, meat and potatoes.  They gave me a stomach ache.  I wanted to go back home and eat meatloaf with canned green beans.

At night, Mommy dressed me up and we all went out to a bar with Ed.  Sometimes my dress perfectly matched the one that Mommy wore.  My favorite was the red, black and blue smocked Mexican dress my Aunt Martha had made for us.  I liked going to bars.  The men gave me money to play the jukeboxes.  I always ordered a Shirley Temple with extra cherries.  I would sit on the tall bar stools, pretending to be a grown up.  It was lots of fun until I got tired.

Pulling on the hem of her dress, I pleaded, “Mommy, let’s go.  I am sleepy.”

Without taking her eyes off Ed, she whispered, “Hush.  Here is some more change.  Go play Moon River.  I saw the waitress look at Mommy and frown.  I don’t think she liked her.  We stayed really late and I fell asleep in the car on the way home.  Ed carried me up in his papa bear arms and laid me down on the couch. He smelled like Old Spice.  I recognized it, because my Daddy wore the same aftershave.

Every day was pretty much the same.  Mommy worked.  I played at the sitter’s until she came to get me.  Then we got dressed to go out.  One night, Mommy started an argument with Ed about his wife.  I overheard him tell Mommy, “Sally, I am taking Kay on a trip to the Bahamas.  We will be gone for 10 days.”

“You never take me anywhere,” Mommy screamed, slamming her drink on the bar.  You tell me you don’t love that Bitch and then you plan a trip with her.  I hate you.”  Her eyes filled with tears as she grabbed her purse.  “We’ll take a cab home.”

“No you will not.”  He snapped, and grabbed her arm.  By now everyone in the bar was watching.

I reached out for her hand, “Mommy. Mommy, please don’t leave me. Are you mad at me?  I ‘m sorry, so sorry.”

She yanked her hand away and slapped me across the cheek.  “Don’t touch me.  This is your fault.  Everything was fine between Ed and me before you came.  You are always in the way.”

Ed reached down and picked me up.  “She did not mean that honey.  Your mother is just upset.  She will be better in the morning.  Now, now, don’t cry.”  He carried me to the car. It was a long, silent ride home.  Ed stopped in front of our apartment and we got out.  I never saw Ed again.

I don’t know how he found me, but he did.  When the phone rang, my mother ran to get it. She must have thought it was Ed, but it was Daddy.  He and Elaine, my stepmother, were in Dallas and they were on their way to get me.  When Mommy opened the door, I jumped into Daddy’s arms.  Hugging him, I nestled my face into his neck, “Daddy.  Daddy.  You came to get me.  How did you find me?  I love you.  I love you so much.”   Elaine smiled.  I was happy to see her too.

I listened intently while Daddy explained to Mommy how much trouble she was in.  Because she had transported me across state line, the court in Indiana had charged her with kidnapping.  Daddy told her if she did not let them take me back, he would call the police.  White faced, my mother packed my bags.  We left.  Mommy cried.

It’s 2001.  I find a stack of letters I had written to my mother in a box at the back of our office closet.  They date back to 1954.   Each of the letters starts with an apology, asking my Mother’s forgiveness for not having written sooner and/or more often.  As I re-read the letters, I am shocked to discover how sorry I was and for how many years I atoned for failing to stay in touch, either by phone or mail. 

Memories flood my mind. I see myself in the past lifting the receiver to call my mother.  My stomach is cramping. I know she will be upset with me because I have not called in several weeks.  I dial the number.  Ring, ring, ring.  Maybe she won’t answer.  I pray to God she will not pick up.  If she is not there, I will call again later and say that I had tried, unsuccessfully, to reach her earlier.  That would sound good.  Perhaps my failed effort would cushion the blow.  Ring, Ring.  

“Hello,” her voice is sharp and terse.  

“Mom.  Mom, it’s me.  How are you?”  Long pause.

She sounds so distant, “Hello, how NICE of you to take the TIME to call.  WE know how BUSY you are.  TOO BUSY to call us.”

“Mom. Mom.  Please do we have to have THIS conversation EVERY time I call?  I have been busy.   And you know I have never liked talking on the phone.  I would rather be with you, but this is the best we can do now.  So what’s going on?”

“Well I just got out of the hospital.”  Her nonchalant tone is alarming.

“What!  Why didn’t you call me?  What happened?  Are you okay?’

“I didn’t want to worry you.  After all you are so BUSY.”

“Mom, I am not too busy to know that you have been in the hospital.  Please tell me what happened.”

“Doctor says it’s my heart.”   My mother has been on heart medicine since she was 36.  Never mind that she smokes 2 packs of cigarettes a day and drinks vodka tonics like athletes drink Gatorade.  “I woke with a terrible pain in my chest and could not breathe.  Your father (my stepfather) called an ambulance and they took me straight to the hospital.  Three days later, they let me come home.  I did talk to your cousin Linda.  You know she calls ONCE A WEEK.  She is such a good girl. I can count on her.”

I am dumbfounded.  “Mom, I am so sorry.  I would have come if I had known you were that sick.  So what did the doctor say when you left the hospital?  How are you feeling now?”

“Why do you ask?  You know you don’t really care.  If you did, you would call more often.”

My stomach jumps into my heart and hits the bass drum. I am breathless. The voice of reason silently warns me. Sarla, hang up now.  Tell her you love her and hang up now.  Nothing you say will please her.  “Okay, Mom, but please promise me that you or Dad will call if anything like this happens again.  I love you.  You know I love you.”  I want to love her.  I do.  She is, after all, my Mother, the only one I will ever have.  I want a mother.  I want to have a relationship with this woman I call my Mother, but I cannot seem to get there. 

“Do you want to talk to your Father? He is sitting right here.”  There is a shuffling sound as she passes the phone to Bill.

Jesus, why the Hell do I have to talk to him?  I am just going to get more of the same crap.

“Hi, Dad.”  I hear my voice, but I feel far away. I gaze out our kitchen window admiring the Japanese maple I planted in the back yard.  Silence.

“Well, we wondered if you would EVER call.”

I hear my inner censor weigh in.  Oh Great, just what I need now…another accusation.  I am not now nor will I ever be the perfect daughter.

And then, the Tasmanian devil, my angry, blustery self steps into the ring.  “Why don’t you ever pick up the damn phone and call me?  It is always up to me to do the calling.  I did not move away and leave my Mother.  No, she left me when I was just one year old.  Forget it.   This is useless.”  Silence.

I hear my inner voice screaming.  I hate him.  I hate them both.  So shaming.  What did I ever do to them?  I was born.  That’s what I did.   I somehow entered my Mother’s toxic womb and survived.  It is a miracle that I was not killed by all the smoke and alcohol she ingested.  I have tried hard to love them, but they just push me away.

I am appalled by my outburst.   My well-rehearsed guilt and shame chime in.  How do they always manage to make you so angry?  You tell yourself over and over to stay calm, but it never works.  You are such a failure.  When will you ever learn to keep your mouth shut?  Now you’ve done it.

Jump forward to Mother’s Day, 2003. 

I have been trying all day to reach my Mother.  She must be home.  Where would she go on Mother’s Day?  Is she purposely not answering the phone?  The Cuisinart of my stomach processes 51 years of abuse.  Pulsing up past my heart, I taste the rancid past in my throat.  Then worry replaces fear and I pray she has not fallen ill.

Finally she picks up.  “What!  Why are you calling?  Can’t you just leave us alone?”

“It is Mother’s Day, Mom.  I called to wish you Happy Mother’s Day.  What’s wrong?”

“Okay, you called.”

“Mom, I don’t know what to say.  Have you had a good day?” Rage, fear, dread and self-loathing color my cheeks. Self doubt whispers in my ear.  Now you’ve done it.

“You said that already, in your Mother’s Day card.  You made it quite clear.  You have nothing to say. Let’s just leave it at that.”  Click.

Demoralized, sobbing I descend the stairs to the kitchen.  My husband, Jimmy, and my son Jordan, look up from the TV.  “Mom, what happened?”  Jordan’s eyes show his concern. 

Without speaking, I open the fridge, and reach for a bottle of sauvignon blanc.  I hear the voice of “Gimmeashot,” my alter ego who avoids pain at all cost.   “I do not have to deal with this now.  Just have a couple of glasses of wine.  That’ll make you feel better.  Forget the old bitch.  You’ll be better without her.”   The wine warms my throat.  It speeds through my central nervous system and spells instant r-e-l-i-e-f.  We eat a quiet dinner.  I retire early, thinking by morning I will have put all this behind me. In bed I practice listing all the things and people for which I have gratitude.  I thank God for my life.

The very next day I receive a letter from my Mother post marked the day before yesterday.  Shaking, I tear it open and read:

Sarla:

     The reason you don’t know what to say is that there is nothing to say!  At one time or another you have stated about all the nasty, mean things you could dream up.  Let’s just forget this whole fiasco.  You don’t really like me and I don’t really like you.

     We keep trying to put on some kind of pretense & it just isn’t there. You, with your whims, changes of mood & affection have made my life a living hell for the last 36 years & life is too short.  I have too many people who truly love and care for me to bother with you & your self-centered demands.

     We have done everything in our power to make you happy to no avail.  You think only of yourself and your needs and desires.  As you travel the road of life we have been a way station always there for you & allowing you to walk all over us.  Well, the station is closed & we are going to enjoy what we have left of our lives without the tears & heartbreak you have caused.      

Goodbye, Mother

My mother is dead.  She died four years after writing this letter.  I did not see or speak to her in those years prior to her death.   Just before she died, I had a phone conversation with my stepfather..  He said, “Your Mother is in the hospital.  She is in a coma. The doctors do not know how much time she has left.  She is on life support.”

“Oh, Dad.  I ‘m coming. I’ll get on a plane today.”

“No.  She does not want you here.  She made that very clear.  She does not want to see you.”

Sobbing,  “Dad, please, please let me come.”

“No, do not come.  I just wanted you to know that she is dying.  I will have to decide when to take her off life support.  You are no longer a part of our family.  Stay away.”

I did not attend the funeral.  Did I grieve my Mother’s passing?  I grieved the loss of a mother I never had.  I struggled to process the realization that her death killed all possibility of reconciliation.  My Mother and I will forever have unresolved business.

In this present moment, I take solace knowing Sally cannot reach me from beyond the grave.  She can no longer shame, ridicule, demean, and slander me. Nor can she poison me with her negative beliefs and her fearful projections.   I am grateful every day for the life she gave me, a life filled with limitless joy.  Without her womb, I would not be the mother of my two children, Katie and Jordan.  Neither would I be the grandmother of Amelia Grace, the light of my life.

My life is a miracle, one to be treasured.  I have, through countless therapy sessions, hours of prayer and meditation, and a determination to never give up, managed to move beyond the horror of being rejected and abandoned by my Mother.  I will never be free from the stains of her legacy, from the booze, the lying the cheating, the selfishness, the denial, the co-dependency, the abuse, and the neglect, but I will know moments of joy. 

                                            Image

It’s heavy, lay your burden down.  
It’s heavy, lay your burden down

Can’t you hear the angels screaming?
  Is it, is it, is it, is it in my head now?
  Can’t you hear the angels screaming?
  Tell me, tell me, tell me, is it in my head?

I’m looking out my window, sky is blood-red
.   Sky is blood-red, yeah
You got to lay your burden down.  Lyrics by Chuck Girard

Sally, may you have peace.  May you be free from suffering.  May you never be parted from freedom’s true joy.  I apologize for any part I played in the demise of our relationship.  Thank you for the gift of life.  I release you.  I forgive you.  I surrender for by surrendering, by ending this struggle, I set us free.

Sobriety: More information…. Day 8

I miss my friends.  I said that last night at an AA meeting. Actually, I said, “I miss my drinking buddies.”

As one man passed me on his way to the bathroom, he leaned over and whispered in my ear, “We are your drinking buddies.”

He’s wrong.  The people in AA are not my friends.  I have a long history with my friends.  We have traveled together, gone on cross-state bicycle trips.  My friends come to my house for dinner and I go to their homes in return.  My friends attended the wedding of my daughter. One special friend, threw a bridal shower for her.  They came to my daughters baby shower, to Amelia’s birthdays, to my and my husband’s sixtieth birthday bashes.  I have friends across the country, some drink, some do not.

Desperation drove me to AA for the first time in 1990.  I considered suicide.  I practiced yoga.  I meditated.  I went to therapy.  I attended church and prayer group, but nothing relieved my suffering.  I drank daily to get smashed.  My then husband kept cases of wine and beer in our basement.  I see myself now, bending over to avoid hitting my head as I walked down the steps into the bowels of Hell returning with a bottle, any bottle.  Sometimes I would drink champagne.  On other days, I chose wine.  Red or white it did not matter.  I wanted to get drunk.  I hated my life.

After I quit drinking, depression set in with a vengeance. I went to treatment, not for alcoholism.  I went for bulimia.  Food was my lifetime drug of choice.  Later in life, I drank to avoid eating, anything to stay thin.  My mother trained me well.  As a child, if I did not have a daily bowel movement, which was rare for me, she gave me enemas.  Looking back, I see her like a mad scientist filling the enema bag, me lying on my side on the bathroom floor.  Christ, what a psycho drama.

Anyway, I got sober.  I quite taking laxatives.  I saw a psychiatrist who prescribed Prozac.  I did yoga.  I meditated.  I learned to take care of my two children.  I worked.  I got my first full-time as the administrative assistant at a day care, but I was still miserable.  The man I loved, truly loved married  another woman.  We were together briefly in 1984.  He and I both left our spouses and  tried to make a life together.   We lived together for three months.  My love’s wife destroyed his relationship with his daughter.  On the recommendation of his attorney, he moved in with his parents.  I returned to my husband, got pregnant with my second child and made a life for myself.  I did not drink for 10 years most of which I spent in misery.  If you see pictures of me from that time, I never smiled.  I went through the paces.  I learned how to be a responsible grown up, but I was never really happy.

In 1997, I made the break.  After four unsuccessful attempts, I left my marriage.

The death of my lover’s father the previous year opened his eyes and heart to the fragility of life and to his unhappiness.  Unbeknownst to me he began planning our reunion.  He  sold his business of 20 years.  A few months later, we had a brief but fateful dinner together in Nashville.  I returned home to Memphis and told my husband I was leaving to live with Jimmy.  My children disowned me.  I cannot blame them.  I had left so many times before.   Jimmy, his name is Jimmy,  left his wife to live in a condo his cousin kept in Memphis.  My husband and I divorced somewhat amicably.  In July of 1997, I rented a duplex.  Jimmy moved in.  We began our life together in our first home.  Thirteen years later, we are still together, happily married.  My ex-husband remarried as well.  We are now all one big happy family.  Funny how things work out.

DSCN0027Why am i telling this story?  Drinking today is not the escape it was for me in the late 1980’s.  I am abstaining today because I want to really see myself.  If I drink again, it will be because I make choice to do so, not because of some nameless inner demon.  This is so f_ _king complicated.  But then life is a mess, a grand and wonderful mess and I love it.

Pema Chodron says,  “The humor of practice and the beauty of practice is that going from one extreme to another is not considered to be an obstacle.   Basically, once we have some sort of joyful curiosity about the whole thing, it’s simply all information, gathering the information we need to find our own balance.”

She goes on to say, “Learning to be not too tight and not too loose is an individual journey through which you discover how to find your own balance: how to relax when you find yourself being too rigid; how to become more elegant and precise when you find yourself being too casual.”

Trungpa Rinpoche, the Buddhist teacher says, Buddhism doesn’t tell you what is false and what is true, but it encourages you to find our for yourself.”

I have tried labeling myself an alcoholic in hopes that the name would bring some relief.  It has not.

My first yoga teacher, Felicity Green told me, “Avoid labels.  They imprison you.”  I am gathering information.