As I Soften

As I soften, I realize life is so much more than the effort I put into it.  As I soften, I realize that love is all that matters.  As I soften, I am coming to love myself as I do my husband, my children, my grandchildren and my friends, treating myself as the greatest love of my life.  As I soften, I feel a tenderness toward myself and others.  I am cultivating a deeper appreciation of the differences that, rather than separating us, actually draw us into communion.  As I soften, I am listening to the other’s Soul rather than just hearing the words. As I soften, I have less fear and more joy.  I do not want to die, but I accept its ultimate inevitability.  I am, as we all are, infinite and, at the same time, mortal.

““We do not need to grieve for the dead. Why should we grieve for them? They are now in a place where there is no more shadow, darkness, loneliness, isolation, or pain. They are home.”  John O’Donohue

As soften, any illusion of a perfect world or perfect health falls away.  What is left you may ask?  The mystery of life filled with wonder, intimacy and compassionate forgiveness.

each day is a gift_life after cancer

forgiving myself

Lying in bed last night, waiting for the blanket of sleep to wrap its comfort around me, I noticed an almost rigid tension engulfing my body.  This was a feeling I did not want to carry forward into my future.  With each new exhalation, I envisioned my rigid being melting, releasing all holding, surrendering and letting go of all fear. Even now, as I write, I can feel my shoulders drop, my arms lengthen and my heart lift.  The next thing I remember is waking up this morning amazed that I was able to fall into the darkness.

In today’s meditation, I recognized a similar holding pattern, a pushing against the tragedy of reality, a desire to pretend that a perfect life is possible, that it just such a life only requires a gallant effort.  In her interview with the poet and philosopher, John O’Donohue, Krista Tippett explored the meaning life, of love and beauty.  John reflected on times he had sitting at the bedside of they dying and in particular with those who had lived staunch, unrelenting lives. John said that after two or three days he noticed these people literally softened and became visibly more radiant.  When Krista asked how he would explain this phenomenon, John said the dying person realized the way he/she had been living could not serve them now – that holding on and pushing away from the darkness only served to separate them from the light.

Annie Dillard describes just such a realization: “In the deeps are the violence and terror of which psychology has warned us. But if you ride these monsters deeper down, if you drop with them farther over the world’s rim, you find what our sciences cannot locate or name, the substrate, the ocean or matrix or ether which buoys the rest, which gives goodness its power for good, and evil its power for evil, the unified field: our complex and inexplicable caring for each other, and for our life together here. This is given. It is not learned.

Today I set an intention to notice when I am holding tension, when I am pushing away from the harshness of reality.  I choose to forgive myself and all others and most especially I forgive life for all its incongruences, its injustices, and its inherenttragedies.  I surrender into the unified field of love, “the house of belonging” -David Whyte

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Tuesday Morning – Breakdown

5:41 am morning pages. Fit full sleep awakening with bouts of coughing and nose blowing.  Wretched sinus drainage, a remnant of the terrible chest cold I had over a month ago.  I did dream I meditated which I am so looking forward to doing this morning.  We did not meditate on our trip to New Orleans and yesterday I went to Yoga Boot Camp at 5:45 am. I could have taken the time to sit when I came home, but instead I packed in preparation for today’s trip to Santa Fe.

Amelia, sweet little thing, was here all day.  I have to laugh.  When she first arrives, she knows who I am.  “GiGi.” she squeals and grins.  She even threw her arms around me yesterday and said, “GiGI, I miss you.”   But several times during the day she called me Leah, one of her other grandmothers.  “I go to Leah’s house.”  “No, Honey, today you are going to play with GiGi and Pops.”  ‘Where Pops.  I love Pops.”  How sweet is that?  “He will be home later.  He is with our accountant taking care of taxes.”  “Why taxes?” her eyes squint and she tilts her head.  Why?”  “Because we have to give the government money.”  “Oh.”  She soon realizes I am not Leah, which she already knows, but it finally registers that we are two separate people.  For the rest of the day I am strictly GiGi.  We watch “Callella,” play with every last toy we have including the legos, all puzzles and miscellaneous things we have collected since her birth.  It is as if they are brand new every week.  After lunch, we lie down together for a nap.  She is instantly asleep.  Curled up next to me, I feel her body breathing.

I have a client from  2-3:15 after which I make preparations for dinner, Pasta e Fagioli soup with Gnocci.  

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I taught my detox class at 5:30 pm.  Light attendance.  I have been teaching a detox class in that time slot for over a year now.  I am considering going back to vinyasa and meditation, similar to the class I teach on Wednesday nights.  Think I will do that in March.  I will still work with bandhas and agni sara, but incorporate more movement and inversions.  Yep.  That is the plan.  I will write Grace today.

At 3:00 this afternoon I board a plane for Albequerque where I will meet my friend, Cyndi Lee, for some sorely needed girl time.  I love my husband dearly and we are best friends.  Still I need the energy of other women.  I long for it and am grateful to have someone with whom I feel so connected, someone who inspires me and for whom I hopefully do the same.  If all goes as planned we will come away with a time and place for the workshop we plan to teach together.  Two days at a hotel, with facials, body scrubs and massages then off the Upaya to meditate and write.  Perfect.”

Thought for the day from John O’Donohue.  “A breakdown is often a desperate attempt by the soul to break through the weary facade of role politics.  There is a profundity to the human soul that the linear surface of the work world cannot accommodate.  When you remain in the rut, you become caged behind one window of the mind.  You are then not able to turn around toward the balcony of the soul and enjoy the different views trough  the other windows of wonder and possibility.”

Listening

That word, Listening, arises today again and again. Relentlessly it pulls at my heart-strings begging me to come closer, to be more aware of how much there is to hear.

ImageHenning Mankell

The sun calls to the wind, “blow me a kiss.  why are you so coy with me today?  Yesterday you tickled my toes and today you ignore me.”

I hear the tree outside my window.  It too has a voice, “My leaves grow with each word you type.  You please me beyond measure with your dreaming.”

And, of course, Amelia, the grand baby, “Gigi story.  Pwease a story.  I nap in Gigi’s bed with Gigi.”

Kali, our dog, just returned to us from the hospital, stitches and all, “How did this happen?  It was just a pecan.  I have eaten so many others.  It hurts.  I am glad to be home.”

The faucet in my bathroom, “Drip.  I said drip.  Does no one notice I am running?  I have been left as such since morning.  Drip.”

The collage over my computer, “Look at me.  Remember, the best thing after having control is having none.  Back to basics.  The walls are about to cave in.  We like women with gray hair.”

The authors of books strewn across my desk: Lao-Tzu, “How can you follow the course of your life if you do not let it flow.”  John O’Donohue, “the human person is a threshold where many infinities meet.”  Desikachar”We must expect cycles of clarity and confusion, recognizing that falls from clarity may be more disturbing that a state of no clarity at all.” Pema Chodron, “Always meditate on whatever provokes resentment.”

My desk plant, “I am forgotten again.  Dry and neglected I sit and wait for you to notice, to hear me.  Please, water me, now.

The miniature green flocked Christmas tree, “And why, pray tell, am I still about.  I should long ago have been stored away.  My season has long passed and I grow weary of passers by looking at me askance. May I go up to the attic now?”

My nose, “Blow me.  Blow me now or I will send mucous down your throat and make you cough.  I will.  I will do it.  I am so annoyed with you.”

My I-Phone,”I incessantly beep and you do nothing except peck, peck, peck away on that silly key board.  I am important.  I bring you news of the world, Facebook, text messages.  What would you do without me?”

The silence, “I hold the answer to all your questions.  Stop whatever you are doing right now and listen…..”

LISTENING- Rumi

What is the deep listening? Sama is
a greeting from the secret ones inside

the heart, a letter. The branches of
your intelligence grow new leaves in

the wind of this listening. The body
reaches a peace. Rooster sound comes,

reminding you of your love for dawn.
The reed flute and the singer’s lips:

the knack of how spirit breathes into
us becomes as simple and ordinary as

eating and drinking. The dead rise with
the pleasure of listening. If someone

can’t hear a trumpet melody, sprinkle
dirt on his head and declare him dead.

Listen, and feel the beauty of your
separation, the unsayable absence.

There’s a moon inside every human being.
Learn to be companions with it. Give

more of your life to this listening. As
brightness is to time, so you are to

the one who talks to the deep ear in
your chest. I should sell my tongue

and buy a thousand ears when that
one steps near and begins to speak.

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.

Janaury 16-One Year, One Day at A Time – Mindful

Writing this reflection on the morning of January 17.  Spent yesterday in the bed coughing, blowing my nose, reading, watching TV on my computer, writing and sleeping.  Darn cold took me down,  Like a lame horse, my legs collapsed beneath me and, as we southerners say, I “took to the bed.” I wrote yesterday of the effects illness has on my mind, of feeling despondent, non-productive, isolated, restless, a little paranoid, itchy self-doubt, and depressed.  Nothing particularly good about it, but n retrospect, lying up in bed was creative.  Stopping, dropping my agenda, and curbing my constant motion, revealed a softer part of me, a more fragile, less controlling, less opinionated Sarla, one who could practice gratitude.

My husband, Jimmy, made me navy bean soup with leeks and miso for lunch.  He roasted a mustard glazed chicken with parsnips, sweet potatoes, carrots and onions for dinner, and did the clean-up. This same kind, loving man came into my room throughout the day asking, “How are you feeling?  Can I get you anything?”  Standing next to me, he placed his hand on my forehead and shook his head “You do not feel warm. Do you think you have fever?”  Jimmy exemplifies loving kindness.  I admit that I am sometimes put off by his gentle, loving spirit.  Why you ask?  Honestly, I often feel harsh, driven, and selfish in comparison.  But not yesterday.  I simply said thank you.  I accepted his kindness and basked in his care.  It worked.

me and Jimmy rehersal dinnerAfter yet another night of coughing and nose blowing I do feel better.  I confess, I slept through spin class.  Missed the entire week. Okay good.  I accept who I am and where I am in this moment.  On the mend, fragile, pensive, at ease, receptive, compassionately mindful, and patiently awaiting the muse. Today is a day the Lord has created.  May I rest is the lap of the Lord.

Baby Ganesa Seated in the Lap of Mother Parvati in Kailash

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In his book, Anam Cara, John O’Donohue writes:

Natural wisdom seems to suggest that the way you are toward your life is the way your life will be toward you.  To have an attitude that is compassionate and hopeful brings home to you the things you really need.

Weed Be Gone

A vacant mind may be likened to a vacant lot.

2008-07-10_18-06-38If unattended it will grow over with weeds, the kind that root deep into the earth, are hard to eradicate, and choke off all other life.  The weeds of the mind cling to the past, to the unaccomplished, to the failures, the “what ifs,” and the should have beens.  My mind, when vacant, not empty and spacious, but woefully indolent, asks, “What’s wrong with you today?  You lack luster.  Your dullness bores me.  I want exuberance, a lively day to frolic in the sunshine.  But, you see, there is no sunshine today, only gray.  The air is damp and heavy, my mind spongy and wantonly fretful.  Nothing better than a good “pity pot” on a day like today, but I do not care enough to worry or despair.  The Buddhists might say I am in the emptiness of cool boredom, when the mind seeks nothing and is at rest.  It is hard for me to imagine a mind thus satisfied to be alone with itself, not grasping, or seeking or reminiscing, just idly watching the day pass by without fear or longing.  Odd to be in such a state, by myself with Amelia sleeping, the sleep only a child can trust, lying flat on her back, tangled in blankets, stuffed animals, surrounded by mounds of pillows to keep her on the bed.  Perhaps my mind finds ease knowing she is here with me, just a room away, safely tucked in her slumber.  Perhaps a vacant mind can be good, when the weeds that once grew there have been pulled out by the roots and all that remains is the fertile soil of wonder.

“Beauty likes neglected places.  Only in solitude can you discover a sense of your own beauty.  There is a lantern in the soul that makes your solitude luminous.  This is the eternal place within. us.  The deepest things that you need are not elsewhere.  They are here and now in the circle of your own soul.”  John O’Donohue

This Day, I Offer My Soul

“May this be the morning of innocent beginning, when the gift within you slips clear

Of the sticky web of the personal

with its hurts and haunts

and fixed fortress corners,

A morning when you become a pure vessel

for what wants to ascend from the silence

May your imagination know

the grace of perfect danger….”  John O’Donohue

“The grace of perfect danger,” a willingness to risk all to be authentic, to begin this day with a sense of innocence and wonder.  “We seldom notice how each day is a holy place where the eucharist of the ordinary happens, transforming our broken fragments into an eternal continuity that keeps us.” John O’Donohue’s words vibrate the wings of my soul.

I lie in bed, half awake and realize, as the day begins, I drank one delicious glass of wine last night, no more.  I offer myself to the Divine Mother, “Please guide my thoughts and actions today.”  I climb into my stained old robe and make my way into our kitchen. On the way, I make a detour to the bathroom, tongue scrapping and tooth brushing completed, I turn my mind to the morning “Joe.”   I look forward that first cup of coffee.  For years, as a yogi, I tried to give up caffeine.  Not today.  The warm, milking beverage slides down my throat.  Yum.  I open my journal, actually a notebook, and put the pen to the page, morning pages begun.  Life goes apace.  I read from Dani Shapiro’s Still Writing, The Perils and Pleasures of the Creative Life.  She reminds me, as a writer, how important it is for me to be a reader as well.  Good advice.  I spend more time watching TV than I do reading.  TV is more a way to pass the time, while reading nourishes my soul.  Dani writes, “Think about it: have you ever spent an hour reading a good book, and then had that sinking, queasy  feeling of having wasted time?”

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Upstairs to meditate.  I let my meditation practice lapse over the past two weeks, devoting the majority of my free morning time to writing until I began to notice that I was anxious, paranoid and restless.  All signs of a rebellious mind.  Jimmy and I, started last Sunday, sitting for 30 minutes each day.  What a difference it has made.  Like time spent reading a good book, sitting in meditation is never a waste.  Now here I am, at my desk, writing.  When finished, I will eat a bowl of oatmeal, prepared with love by my dear husband.  I will put on my yoga togs and go out into the world to teach.

I am truly grateful for this day.  Oh forgot to mention, I ordered two books by Virginia Woolf, both on the recommendation of Dani Shapiro:  Mrs. Dalloway and A Writer’s Diary. 

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Alcoholic Courage…..shelter from the storm

it is raining. 5:30 am Friday, November 22.  Where were you the day President John F Kennedy was assassinated?  I was walking up the steps to orchestra class at James Monroe School in South Bend, Indiana.  I loved playing the violin.  I alternated between first and second chair, trading weekly with a boy whose name now eludes me.  He was really the better player because he had a vibrato, a vibration of the strings created by the wrist moving at the neck of the violin.  I never mastered the movement.  Midway up the marble staircase, violin in hand, I stopped.  Someone below was screaming, “The President is dead.  They killed him.”  Today is the 50th anniversary of his death.

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Funny I remember what was going on in the world in November, 1963.  I remember being in school, playing the violin.  I was in the 7th grade.  Jill Small and Alice were my best friends.  We went everywhere together.  Jill came from a broken home.  Her mother, Ann, raised her and her sister, Patti.  Ann got child support and the girls saw their father with some frequency.  When he came for his weekly  visits, he always brought stacks of 45’s with him.  He put records in jute boxes for a living.  Boy, did we have fun dancing to the music he gave us, songs like The Locomotion, Sugar Shack, He’s So fine, Hey Paula and Wipe Out.  We danced all day on Saturdays and as many day as possible after school let out.  Jill’s Mom worked full-time at a pharmacy so we had their house all to ourselves.  Her mother even let us have slumber parties.  One night we got into a huge pillow fight and one of the down pillows exploded.  Picking up down feathers requires great patience.  During one of our weekly slumber parties. I pierced my own ears.  I went home the next morning with safety pins hanging from both lobes. Those were the days.

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Those were the days my friend
We thought they’d never end
We’d sing and dance forever and a day
We’d live the life we choose
We’d fight and never lose
For we were young and sure to have our way.

Then the busy years went rushing by us
We lost our starry notions on the way
If by chance I’d see you in the tavern
We’d smile at one another and we’d say

Those were the days my friend
We thought they’d never end
We’d sing and dance forever and a day
We’d live the life we choose
We’d fight and never lose
Those were the days, oh yes those were the days

Just tonight I stood before the tavern
Nothing seemed the way it used to be
In the glass I saw a strange reflection
Was that lonely woman really me

Those were the days my friend
We thought they’d never end
We’d sing and dance forever and a day
We’d live the life we choose
We’d fight and never lose
Those were the days, oh yes those were the days

Lyrics by Mary Hopkin

Alcohol, the word that next comes to mind, and lots of questions.  Had I yet met the first love, Mick Stilson, the boy who initiated me into daily sex and regular alcohol consumption?  I am not sure.  I do know that my life changed after the assassination of JFK.  Somehow the President’s charm, his charisma had given me hope.  Sure, I enjoyed dancing with my friends, pulling phone pranks, piercing my ears, playing croquet on warm summer days, walking to the drug store for coke floats, going to weekend end church  dances, learning to wear make-up, and all the other things young girls did in 1963.  But, and this is a big BUT, life at my house, at 524 Altgeld Street, continued to be a war zone. I would liken our home to occupied Iraq.  Nine of us living in a two bedroom one bath house. Me, at 12 years old, sharing a bed and bedroom with my grandmother.  My father and step mother sleeping in the attic with the youngest of their 5 children in separate cribs, side by side.  My other three brothers sharing a small room fitted with a twin bed and a trundle-bed.

I remember pictures of my three brothers lined up in stair step order, like little soldiers in our claw foot bath tub.  We all doubled up on baths to save on the cost of hot water.  My Dad did not work or if he did, it was sporadic at best.  He had a bad habit of telling people they were stupid and inept.  His attitude did not go over well with his cronies or his clients.  He sold insurance or so he said.  I remember him sleeping until 3 pm in the afternoon, grandma fixing his breakfast, him sitting in his robe, with coffee cup in hand, on the living room couch reading the newspaper until dinner time.  How much money could he have made doing that?  All the while, my step mother worked full-time managing a local department store.  She cooked, cleaned and did her best to mother her brood.  As a child I hated her.  I saw her as the woman who took my Daddy away from me.  Little did I know then that she probably saved my life.  Her presence made it for my father to sexually abuse me.

JFK died.  I started drinking, hanging out with the “wrong crowd,” the kids who drank and smoked cigarettes.  I quit violin, gave up years of lessons and practice so I could go to Mick’s house after school and have sex.  When Mick and I broke up, which happened with some regularity,  I went to the roller rink where the older boys, the ones who drove “souped up” cars and had duck tailed hair dos like John Trivolta in Grease hung out.

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I started shop lifting so I could have the clothes I thought I deserved.  I stayed away from home as much as possible avoiding the fights, the physical and verbal abuse, the arguments about money, and my father constantly picking on my brother Scott, who could do nothing right.  My friends did not come over to spend the night at my house.  They couldn’t.  Where would they sleep….with me and grandma in our double bed?  We did not play there after school.   Alcohol became an escape for me.  After a few sips of bourbon or a couple of beers, I felt invincible.  I dreamed dreams of getting out of South Bend, Indiana, of making something of my life.

I believe that drinking helped me survive those terrible times.  It gave me hope, it cushioned the harshness of a scary home life, and it helped me to have fun.  There is no doubt in my mind that the Divine Mother was looking out for me.  I somehow managed not to get pregnant, not to be involved in one of the many car wrecks that claimed the lives or bodies of my friends, and not to give up on school.  I continued, in the midst of all the chaos, to make straight A’s.  Because I was a good student, teachers took interest in me.  Their faith in me coupled with my belief that I could make a better life for myself gave me the courage to leave, to move to Memphis, to start a new life.

Alcohol traveled with me to Memphis.  In fact, she (I like to refer to her as Rose) made herself at home. My mother and step father drank daily and always included me in their cocktail rituals.  There was no turning back now.  I was hooked.  I loved the rush that first sip of booze gives you when it touches your tongue.  What would life be like without it?  BETTER!  I know that but I keep on drinking.  10 years of sobriety, 1900-2000, taught me many things. The memory of bliss lingers.  I remember learning that nothing in life is worth drinking over.  I want that again.  Thy will be done.  Even though alcohol promises safety, I know the promise is a false one.  John O’Donohue writes,

Blessed be the longing that brought you here

And quickens your soul with wonder.

May you have the courage to listen to the voice of desire

That disturbs you when you have settled for something safe.

Still working on it. I am stone cold sober and loving every minute of it.  I will not give up.  One day at a time.  Maybe this will be Day 1.