Thursday, June 21, 2018

I Have a Soft Spot for Strays

Ten years ago I moved an interesting woman in with our family. I’ll call her K. 
I’m very attracted to crazy energy; my theory is that these people
 vibrate at the same frequency as my mom and it’s somehow comforting to me.  
It was supposed to be a pit-stop while she waited for an apartment 
to become available, two weeks tops. 
Two weeks dragged on and soon we reached five weeks with K. 

Those five weeks were filled with all kinds of interesting moments.
Salmon was frequently left out. Our dogs quite appreciated
 the pungent aroma wafting through the house; 
it was reminiscent of the docks at San Pedro. 
K had decided a device that she called “a molecular disrupter” would help with her 
physical ailments. It was a small, square, electronic box with a knob on the top that 
was attached to a needle that you could turn up or down. 
In order to use “the molecular disrupter” one needed to wrap foil on their feet, or 
sometimes the foil was wrapped around the crown of the head.
 I never quite figured out what the different placement of the foil was all about. 
K had many routines. One of these routines was to brush her body when she woke in 
the morning and before she went to bed at night. 
One morning she swept off a ‘spot’ while brushing her skin. 
She was convinced this ‘spot’ was a tick. 
In a panic, K insisted I rush her to the entomology department at
UC-Riverside to have the offending ‘spot’ identified. 
I’m not even kidding here…it was a bread crumb.  
K felt our family life was so “Leave it to Beaver-ish” that she entered our name
-unbeknownst to us-
for the Trading Spaces reality tv show. 
We didn’t make the cut. 

Pete and Jayne eventually gave me an ultimatum, “Either she goes or we go.” 
I think they meant it. 

I pushed as aggressively as I could for her to find a place…and she did.
When moving day came I was surprised to see her lying on our sofa 
when I came downstairs in the morning.
 Something felt wrong.
If I were a dog (I spend a lot of time with dogs) the hair on the back of 
my neck would have stood on end. 
These were her words:  “I’m afraid I’ve gone blind. I can’t see.”

I sat. 
I thought.
 I didn't speak for a long while. 
Then, as though the Buddha came to intervene, I found the words. 

I drove K to her new place. 
The next day her eyesight miraculously returned. 
She came to retrieve her 1998 Volvo that was sitting in our driveway.
For years the oil stain that was left behind on the driveway was a reminder of 
how patient my family is with me and my idiosyncrasies. 
They love me through every adventure that I drag them through…
that’s the only birthday gift I need! 

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

The Cowboy

I was told it was going to reach the nineties yesterday by Ruth in the office and there’s no air conditioning here in Chimayoglobal warming will be changing the air conditioning situation here soon I suspect. 

The door to the balcony is open to allow the cool mountain air to circulate. 

I drank sangria with abandon this holiday weekend, my head is a little fuzzy and I think I should go and take an ibuprofen. No clock, no electronics of any kind in this throw-back New Mexico B & B, so I’m not sure what time it is. It’s dark and it has the feel of early A.M 

I press myself up and walk around the huge, old bed; the pine floor squeaks with each step I take.  Cringing, I hope not to wake Pete. As I make my way to the bathroom a sliver of moonlight is thrown across the floor at my feet. I grope around in the medicine bag hoping to find what I’m looking for without turning on a light. Finding the meds I quickly swallow two and head back to bed. In the distance I hear howling, it starts with one animal and then he is joined by several more. I think at first that itcoyotes and I smile, but soon I recognize the barking is actually my domesticated friend the dog. I crawl back in bed and the barking goes onmaddeningly, all night. The hooting and howling stops as the first rays of daylight burst from behind the mountain and I drift back to sleep.  

I wake (maybe) an hour later to the sound of a cowboy singing, literally a guy in a cowboy hat is playing guitar outside in the courtyard. I roll over and ask Pete to check his watch; its 7:15. My head is throbbing and I lay still. The “Johnny Cash” wannabe had played all the previous night, he was well received by the other eight guests, mostly grey haired and pretentious. After each set they would applaud and he would drop a little anecdotal fact about himself, “yes, yes I have been playing a while, I started when I was six years old, and (haha) I’m nowhere near that anymore.” Then he would begin to smoothly croon his next tune “ice cream on my lips, chocolate, vanilla…” and this went on for the next couple of hours.  

My head has moved to a low thrum and I roll over and snuggle into Pete’s chest. As I listen I begin to snicker. Pete pulls back and looks down at me. What a quintessential New Mexico experience. What are the odds that we would be in this moment having this experience with these complete strangers? 

Always looking for the good moments in each day is something I strive to do, kind of like an art form I want to perfect, in any case it was a quirky moment that I appreciated. I must go now and change the bedsheets in the extra bedroom as I await the arrival of an artist that we met at the B & B who will be staying the night with us before she catches her plane back to Texas in the morning, but that is a whole other story.  

Friday, June 8, 2018

Move a Muscle, Change a Thought

   I’d like to present myself as a fully enlightened being after all these years of meditation, self-reflection, thousands of dollars spent on therapy, 
but still, I’m human…
and lately I’m struggling hard with aging and 
the effects it’s having on my body. 
Some days my training kicks in and I know that I’m strong and healthy and that aging is a privilege that some don’t get. Yet, there are other days that I have to fight to suppress the negative language that pushes up from deep within my 
subconscious about my body.

I realized last night that some of the thoughts that are sprouting up are not mine, 
but seeds that were planted long ago by others.
 Even at this age I’m still fighting the messages I received having
 grown up in a misogynistic family: 
“men can carry extra weight so much better”, “she’s a homely girl”, “do you really need that second helping?”, “that makes you look like a slut”, 
“aren’t you pretty when you put on make-up and fix your hair”, 
“you’re too thin”, “you’ve put on some weight”. 
There was always some kind of critique about my looks and 
this critique was always given because 
“they cared about me”. 

 No matter how much work I do to further my spiritual growth, by that I mean becoming more and more detached from worldly bullshit, 
I believe that I will always struggle with this to some extent. 
However, I need to pay closer attention to which thoughts are mine 
and which have been planted by loving, 
but very flawed human beings. 

My hope is that this blog will get each of you thinking about what you carry that might not be yours? Once you discover the answer to this question 
I hope that you too might begin to change your thought process. 
To paraphrase the Buddha, 
“ the less that I suffer the less suffering I will inflict on others.”