Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Detaching

No, I still have done no yoga this week yet.  Well, not asanas.  I've been deep into reflection this week for sure. And I can feel the usual rise of guilt mixed with a little exhilaration at the fact that I'm breaking a rule.

Sidebar: When did that love of thumbing it to the rules kick in?  As a kid, I was the best rule lover, the most ardent rule follower of all time.  I loved me a rule.  Alright, if I'm being very deeply self-reflective, I still love rules and I know this because when other people break them it drives me insane.  Yet, somehow, I love the temptation of breaking a rule.  Maybe now I'm just a rule lover with a deep core of not following rules.  I think the day you realize rules are created by idiots just like you, the less it seems imperative to bend to them. Sidebar done.

Despite not physically practicing, what has surprised me is how much past yoga clings if you let it.  Though I've been resisting the physical practice (I'll need to dig more into that later...I'm still not so sure why that's such a problem for me), I'm noticing that I'm still practicing yoga in other ways.

Which brings me to detachment.

This is one of those ideals in Buddhism (and probably not something you'll find in your local Core Power class) that I find, at the same time, to be inspiring and perplexing with an ever so faint aroma of sadness.  We can all understand that detachment is ideal when you have to figure out how to not hold on to negative things in life.  "Like water off a duck's back," we might be inclined to say and that's truly what it is.  Don't engage it and if engaged in it, let it go.

I found myself reflexively practicing this this morning as I was making my way through a package of clothes I had ordered from that once great store, The Gap.  Shit was just not fitting.  In the past, this experience has completely wrecked my outlook on life for days (or maybe weeks) at a time.  "THE SIZES ARE ALL THE SAME AS THE ONES I OWN!!! HOW CAN I NOT GET THESE PANTS EVEN PAST MY KNEES???" I have wailed to myself in anguish right before doing a landscape scan of all the places I could get a donut I could consult about this horror.  Not good for mental (or physical) health.  So this morning, as the same goddamn thing was happening, I had to remind myself of what a huge win it was that my first reaction to the situation was almost neutral.  These don't fit.  They have to go back. No pain, no anguish, no derailing.  It was what it was and that was neither good nor bad...it just was. 

A win prior to 9am.  Always a win for me.

We can easily see how this practice is desirable.  It keeps us nimble, it allows us to truly flow with whatever life will send your way.  Even though it's an over-used word, I think this is awesome in it's literal sense.  The ability to move with life and not always in a counterpuntal reaction to it is an incredible gift.  Where I find myself challenged and maybe saddened by it a little is when it applies to things almost overly positive in life.  This same idea of detachment should apply to those moments when you feel most splendidly in love, satisfied, fulfilled, content.  Just as we can't hold on the the negative too closely, allowing it space in order to engage with it appropriately, we cannot become too enamored with the positive.  We need space there too.

I found myself struggling with this in the past week.  In my life I've had incredibly close friends for periods of time.  In those, there have been wonderful moments I would never trade.  But inevitably, these do not last and when things seem to come crashing down, I am devastated by them.  We might consider this a normal pattern but "normal" and "healthy" are not the same thing. Nor are "normal" and "ideal."  In each of these cases, I now see in hindsight, a little detachment would've gone a long way.

So, this past week, I caught myself gripping so hard at one of my friendships.  It was almost an actually destructive gripping.  It turned me inside out, making myself miserable (and I'm sure I was awesome to deal with as a result...see, bad use of "awesome" right there).  Finally, some tiny, breathy little voice from deep within me said, exhausted, "Katie, just let go of it.  It's not going to play out as you want it to.  Change the perspective.  Change the approach.  Do something other than you're doing now...which is slowly killing you." I grudgingly re-routed my approach (and I'm serious on the grudging...I was very unhappy about having to be the one who bent).  It was the right thing to do.  It made me see that my anger, frustration, and hurt really had nothing to do with my friend and everything to do with my own little orphan taking over (see my last post about yoga and hip opening...my orphan lives in my hips, I swear).

I needed to detach before I could see the forest for the trees.  It wasn't easy.  It never gets easier.

Detachment is one of those things that I'll always chase after (and I'm certainly not the only one).  I do think it's a worthwhile chase, though.  Even if I never master it (and I probably won't), the process of trying can only be valuable.


Tuesday, March 29, 2016

30 Days is a Long Time, Especially on Day Seven

In typical fashion, I've attacked my 30 days of yoga with gusto and I'm about ready to flame out.  It's been a week.  There are so many learnings there, of course. Here are the biggest and best so far.

1. 30 days is a long time. 
At some point in my life, I stopped being able to commit.  Actually, I take that back.  I'm not sure I ever learned.  I have grown up on a "project basis."  So now I'm faced with the question of what to do when I don't have an explicit project.  There are crickets there.  That is all.  I think this is why humanity has kids.  Kids are the ultimate project and only until they leave does that become apparent.  So I'm basically having an "empty nester" experience.  I am not yet 40 and I don't have children.

It's bizarre.  Not much of a peer network there, it seems.

2. Yoga will bring massive shit to the surface.
I hesitated to pick yoga as a project for this very reason. My commitment to restart a practice can be 30 days but yoga itself will bring up a lifetime of turmoil that you've unwittingly stored in the great void that, apparently, are your hips.  So, after about 4 days of a pretty light practice, I was a wreck: anxious, agitated, distracted, uncomfortable, sometimes inconsolable.  All because of yoga.  Not a bad thing; I see it as a "flushing out the crud" exercise but, geez.  I should've built in breathers (ironically) which I ended up taking as some days I just didn't want to couldn't seem to fit it in.

3. Amazing things can happen.
Where's there's massive shit, there's also the potential for great, great opening.  For the first time in a long time, coincidences or serendipitous things started happening again.  I think those things are a kind of manifestation of hope.  When you lift a little weight off or change things up, the world around you flexes to accommodate that in sometimes the most unexpected but spectacular ways.  It really can be a seeing with new eyes.  If you're keeping track, this paired with the last learning amounts to what could be seen as significant mood swings.  Ah well, can't win 'em all.

4. I thrive on novelty.
I think this is the key to my commitment hesitation.  I'm definitely a "when the newness wears off..." kinda girl.  I've not really ever seen myself this way but even this project makes it an unavoidable truth.  I was beyond enthusiastic about this for the first 4 days and then I started getting bored.  I haven't given up on it but I do have to acknowledge my growing "meh-ness" toward the whole thing.

5. Sense memory is everything.
I have always known about myself that I live in my brain's world.  I can outthink just about anything and come around to the rational conclusion that I want to come to if given enough time.  Commitment like this requires a quieting of that stupid, chattering "monkey mind" and a subtle but sound resolve stemming somewhere from the core area that, "No, we're going to do this today because the sun rises and sets with complete regularity every day and not just when it feels like it." What I've noticed more particularly now than ever is that the motivation for that gradual "slow and steady" approach has to come from something other than reason (which is where my motivation for literally everything else comes from).

In this case, I think that's sense memory.  I have to tuck away the exact feelings that I have at the end of the practice and go back to those to find motivation.  It's not what I think about it but how it feels in the process.  Somehow, I always get into the middle of a practice and think, "It's absurd that I fight doing this so hard every day."  It's that moment I have to return to.  It's the feeling from the core that has to drive it.  Because if it's up to my mind, I'd rather lay on the couch.

I say all of this with trepidation because I haven't even cracked two weeks on this thing yet and I can already feel the urge to just toss the whole plan.  Maybe that's part of a sort of detox in a way.  It's retraining what is ultimately impulsivity into a balance with longevity.  Both are good but impulsive is definitely winning right now.

Well, the urge and not the practice.

Monday, March 21, 2016

All There Is

My least favorite moment is the one in which I realize that I want something to happen one way and it's not going to.  Especially when I've tried really hard to bend in the direction I know is right.  It's actually a manipulative thing to do.  And always a hard lesson to learn that, regardless of what I think will happen, once I've put it out there, I cannot control what comes next.

But the movies always tell me I can.
They lie.

This is one area for growth that has so much potential (in that I'm not very far in my growth at all...).  Kindness will not always be met with kindness.  Generosity can feel overwhelming.  Love can befuddle.  And because all of these are true, I can't write the script on how I want them to be received.  Because with all of these, it's not really about me.  It's about these things.  In this case, intention is mostly everything.  But it comes with no guarantees.

Sometimes I want people to react in ways they never will.  I want to be validated for the good I've done.  I want to feel like it was worth it to me.  But in those moments, I always have to re-learn, I'm actually much farther away from where I need to be.   If I'm going to love, then I have to do it.  If I'm going to be generous, then that moment of generosity is everything.

And that will be all there is.

And that's the way it should be.

Sunday, March 20, 2016

30 Day Yoga Commitment

A couple weeks ago, I was talking to a unique friend about feeling a longing for the next big project.  She asked me a question that kinda stopped me in my tracks: "Have you asked God to help you find it?"

Um, no, no I had not.

But the notion wasn't bad.  In fact, I feel like I talk to the Universe all the time.  Funny that I somehow left out that I was looking for something new that maybe, you know, the Universe could help with.  A little.  So I did.  I point blank asked the Universe to show me something that would be true and good for me.

Aaand, I landed back at yoga by way of a re-commitment of sorts to...committing.

Admittedly, I have been adrift in a sea of new possibility.  Not adrift in the romantic, castaway sense.  Adrift like tattered, freezing, and my raft is coming apart with each second.  This feels like gritty, nasty adrift.  It's unsettling.

[Sidebar: what's going on with the dogs recently?  I've never heard barking like I have the past couple days....is it a full moon?  Seriously...I love dogs but there's a limit.  End of sidebar].

Alright, the other problem with being adrift is that you're working only on survival.  Stress is high for no apparent reason.  Fear rules the day.  There is no plan.  There is only chaos.  And scattered thoughts while you grasp at straws.

So, right after making my grand request to the Universe, an add for a pen-and-paper calendar/planner popped up that appealed so much to me it almost made me cry.  It's built around the idea of 30 day projects.  Now, one might say, "Katie, that's...a calendar."  Right, yes, I know.  30 days does a month make.  But this felt revolutionary to me in two distinct ways.  First, I hadn't thought much about it up until that point but writing words on paper feels much more real than writing things on a calendar in my phone.  That's fake planning.  I can change that it 2 seconds with a swipe of the delete key.  Pen, though, requires scratching out and a permanent reminder that a different plan than "lay on my couch all day playing games" once existed.  And it was better than the couch plan.  Second, it's taken those convenient pre-existing 30-day months and made them into distinct containers for finite projects.  This is one of those things that appeals solely because the last project I took on was a seemingly never ending 6 year nightmare.  You forget that you can do practically anything for 30 days and that's the only expectation out there.  

So, the calendar showed up at my door today and I picked it up on my way out this morning.  Since then, I've been thinking about it.  And it reignited my question to the Universe: "So now that I've got 9 months worth of 30-day projects, what should I do?" I then proceeded to have not such a great day and, frankly, felt pretty terrible upon arriving home tonight.  In search of something that made me feel better, I casually asked the Universe, "What should I do that would make me feel better?"  

Lo and behold, the answer was yoga.  And I did a practice that was way too hard (ironically or not called perseverance).  I did persevere which is all I needed to worry about there. Job done.  And of course, I feel so much better [EXCEPT FOR THIS EFFING DOG BARKING]. And it made the think while I was lying in savasana, "Why not make this your first 30 day project?"  

Done.

So I'm gong to do yoga and then I'm going to write about whatever comes up.  I'm committing to it for 30 days.  Let's see what happens.

No excuses.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Where the Past No Longer Serves

It's been an interesting couple weeks.

First, to report back on the reflection I was going to try during Lent: that was a total bust.  In fact, not only have I been less reflective, I've been much more irritable than usual.  I'm not sure if the initial reflection opened up Pandora's Box or there have been other things going on but, suffice to say, I've been concerned about this latest downturn in my own world view.

What is happening?

In part, I feel like there's some something brewing in the ether.  My annoyance is a symptom of perhaps the realization of something larger going on.  I generally believe this to be true: when I'm feeling really off-kilter, I start looking around to figure out what the pressure points are.  When I did this, I began to see, left and right, things changing in big ways.  People I have known for years just dropping out of sight.  People (and places) I once counted on suddenly folding or changing into things I no longer knew.  Roads closed where once they had been so unapologetically open.  Shifting sands.

Of course, that's the normal course of things.  I can't begrudge anyone or anything that.  But what I also realized was how sad I felt about it.  Truly sad. And my own ignorance or acknowledgement of that feeling, I do begrudge myself.  How could I have not listened to that al all?  One day in the shower, I found myself actually pining for what seemed like older, better days...before things had been scattered about.  Before people changed forever.  Before doors closed.

It was that feeling of loss that was actually causing the irritability.  Unaware, I was living in the past but dealing with the present.  Once I realized this and started trying to bring myself back into the present, I wish I could say I felt easier.  I did not.  I felt the ache of having to let go of the hope we could ever go back there again.  We cannot.  Back there is gone.  And when I knew I was starting to pull out of the initial pangs of letting go, righting my vision forward, I saw a path illuminated letting me know how to go.  What I also saw was how not perfect "back there" was.  How much of not great was contained there, softened in my own memories to be a gauzy time of only laughter and fulfillment.  I know for a fact that wasn't true.  Isn't it funny how the pressures of today make you want to believe that with all your heart?  Once I settled that score in my head, a weight on my chest lifted.  We can't go back but why would we want to?

I'd also like to say that I wished that path forward to be easier.  We have a funny way of assuming that once a path has made itself known, it becomes easier to traverse.  No.  What I saw was a path but not a road.  I could see the way but it still remains to be built.  And even then I could only see it to the horizon and not beyond.  This is a continuous cycle.  Maybe one I haven't paid enough attention to cultivating continuously in the past.  In looking backwards, I stopped building, developing, creating.  And so I'm back to some dirt and a plan.  In some ways, that's so frustrating.  In other ways, it's nothing but hope and light.

The last year feels like a bizarre cautionary love-letter to myself.  "This is what happens," it starts, "when you check out for awhile.  Things change and you don't notice it...until you go to find them and they're gone."

"Pay more attention," it warns.  "Enjoy today.  Tomorrow will offer that same chance then."

"Okay, I'm learning," I say back, making a swirl in the dirt path of today, planning how to cut it in a way that serves me anew.  At least until tomorrow.