Archive for April, 2009

nowhere to run

April 29, 2009

It’s true — you can’t run away from your problems. 

I know this because every time I take off running, I find a million little things wrong. 

Problems I didn’t even know I had —

Until I started running.

My keys are making a clanking sound.  An extremely irritating sound — one that  can be heard over my iPod. 

And my god, my sock is slipping.  Now I can feel my shoe rubbing against the spot where my sock should be.  Ughhh.

Why oh why can they not make a sports bra that actually works?   This is cruel. 

Inhuman.

It may even be biologically justifiable for me to quit right now and never bounce another mile.  I mean, do you think it’s a coincidence that most of the women running by me have figures that are closer to men’s than —

Mine?

Ok, now I’m whining.  I know.

But still —

The new arm band for my nano is completely stable — jiggle resistant.

There’s just gotta be a better mouse trap — er — bra strap.

revived

April 24, 2009

It was 85 and humid in Minneapolis yesterday.

Outside sipping wine with a friend — back up against a stranger and right shoulder inches from the passing cars and buses — I was delighted to feel what I have not felt for so many, many —

Many months —

Alive.

The irregularity and unpredictability of the contents on the corner of Irving and Lake. 

The murmurs and blurts. 

Sirens and skirts. 

Bare legs and boots. 

Tattoos and bikes. 

Glasses clinking.  Doors and blouses opening. 

Ideas spilling over.  The unjamming of thoughts and feelings.

Ahhhhh —

Revived.

thinkability

April 24, 2009

Oh, I like the way you think.  (I like you.)

Let’s just not think about it.  (I don’t want to deal with this.)

Don’t think.  Just do it.  (I’m afraid you’ll change your mind.) 

Can we think about this another way?  (I don’t like where this is going.)

Won’t you just think it over?  (I hope you’ll change your mind.)

Give me some time to think about it, ok?  (I am not sure how to respond.)

I can’t even hear myself think!  (I’m utterly distracted.)

Think, think, think.  (Oh god help me there’s gottta be another way.)

You can’t think your way out of this.  (Just accept it the way it is.)

There’s no time to think.  (You must act now.)

You think too much, that’s your problem.  (You’re not giving me the answer I want.)

Do you THINK?  (That’s so obvious.)

Stop and think about it.  (This might not be such a good idea.)

What do you think?  (I value your opinion.)

letting go

April 22, 2009

I’m not sure what I’m about to say.

My head is empty.  Dark nights of the soul.  Soul searching with no end in sight. 

It’s been unbearable.  Because despite numerous interventions —-

I cannot change it.

Cannot will it to change.  Force it to change.  Or politely ask it to change. 

Won’t help to put a smile on it.  Or choose my attitude.

I’ve tried — all of these tactics. 

It persists. 

And I cannot accept it.

But I can accept that I cannot change it —

And that it has now changed me — in ways I regret —

My god, why do I always hang on too long?

i’m fine

April 17, 2009

Indeed — what a difference a day makes!

The 24-hour waiting period, thankfully, is behind me by 48 hours. 

Sigh.  Good sigh.  Sigh of contentment and gratitude.

How we wait — how I wait — is a topic that has my attention today as I reflect on the journey my mind took in the 24-hours between when my doctor found a suspicious mass in my right breast —

And the abrupt insertion of a next-day trip to the breast center for an extra special squishing session with an ultra sound bonus.

It occurs to me now — I took the news kinda like an emergency briefing on a breaking market opportunity. 

Doctor’s hands hesitate and come back, lingering longer, probing deeper — second guessing the terrain—

And before she compares the tissue on the other side,  I’m already into the first round of scenario planning —

Something’s different.  This could mean disruption.  What’s on my calendar for the rest of the day?  Tomorrow?  What are the odds?  How old was my mother when she had it? 

When she speaks, I’ve already accepted the possibility on some level. 

I just want to know.

Accepting the next appointment from the nurse, I leave the examination room in a haze.  What to do while I wait?

Who will I tell?

No one.

And so I decide to run. 

I run, thinking about how strong I feel.   How many people I know felt strongest right before they found out.  I think about turning 50 wearing a wig — because my hair is gone — and then I laugh to myself because I realize this is not a problem —

I love wearing wigs!

I run, keeping a steady pace, and watching up ahead for my favorite tree —

The one lovers often rest in eachother’s arms against.

I run, happy to feel the sweat running down my back, and wondering if this is going to happen — well —

What will change?

I run, quiet with a sense of calm, and bringing myself around the lake, through the neighborhood, and home —

To myself.

Then I wait —

Oddly, without fear or any attempts to bargain with my fate. 

I wait — knowing things will be different in 24 hours —

No matter what.

I will be more committed —

To living and loving —

Either way.

trippy little dog

April 14, 2009

Today I started running —

For my life. 

It’s a good thing and it’s good for me. 

See how much fun I am having!

The day is amazing though still brown and I don’t detect a single bud. 

I walk briskly swinging my arms like a mental patient because — well, the upper arms just can’t get enough of this motion — and yes, I’m too old to care what people think of me.  Well — my walking, that is.

When I hit the lake, I begin to run.  For encouragement and because it makes me feel like a 10th grader who’s never been kissed, I chose to blast “Build me up Buttercup” through my green nano.  Very sassy —

I run for about 2 miles — I think — before I must walk for a little bit.  Next time, I will go further — past the dog park at least, I tell myself. 

I pick up the pace again, less than half way through “The Chain,” and it’s not long before I come upon a cluster of three women crowded together on the path—-

All on their knees — huddled over something of interest, I assume.   Perhaps a wounded bird?

I veer right, leaving the path —

And just as I’m about to clear the mass, a little wiener dog darts out in front of me —

Like a tiny cake jumper!

My reflexes — which passed with flying colors in the doctor’s office this morning —- send my sneakers through the air, avoiding collision with beast and/or chain entanglement.

I live to run another day.

the world is silent

April 10, 2009

At the fifth station, Simon helps Jesus carry his cross.

In my years of the stations, this year, this day —

The fifth station speaks loudest.

Because I cannot understand why —

I google it to find an explanation:

Jesus even experiences our struggle to receive help.  He is made to experience the poverty of not being able to carry his burden alone.  He enters into the experience of all who must depend on others to survive.  He is deprived of the satisfaction of carrying this burden on his own.

And I know now why this is my station.  I am moving into a unique time —

When I may be called to help carry another’s cross.

I know I am blessed with the strength to be able to do this. 

And I know —

I will not be alone.

he’s mine

April 7, 2009

A good Catholic wedding always comes with a generous gap between the wedding mass and the formal reception — one that can be filled with — oh, any number of things that come in a glass or a bottle.  And sure as the Pope wears red shoes — there’s no shortage of cheap talk to go with whatever you’re havin’.

“I’ll tell you,” she says,  “some women can be a little aggressive —”

“What are you talking about mom?”

“Well, I’m talking to this woman last night when she motions across the bar at your dad and says,  ’wow, is he good looking — I wonder who he is’ —”

“Oh this is gonna be good,” I think, leaning in with an interested “yeah — soooo?”—

“Well, it’s not like it’s never happened before, but really —”

“Yeah — so?”

“So, I told’er—

“He’s mine — and —

“You’re not gettin’ him!”

Well — ok then. 

This is a side of my mother I’ve not seen before.  I mean, you’d think 50 years of marriage might entitle a woman to some sort of competitive ”immunity” — but —

It appears the stakes are even higher in the over 70 crowd. 

Of course!  The competition fueled by male mortality rates alone is reason enough for a razor sharp manicure —

But a 72-year-old woman — one without a gym and surgery habit — and a “good looking husband” of 50 years —

Now that’s advanced play.

This I gotta see!

Fast forward three hours or so to the Chicago History Museum and the dinner dance when I’m introduced to a nice group of women.  One of them suddenly makes a connection and belts out —

“Your father is very good looking  — I mean, he is soooo —”

“Please don’t say ‘hot’,” I say to myself and smile a polite but suspicious little smile.

“Does he have any single friends that  — you know — look like him?”

Ooooooh—-I’m feeling protective now and begin nervously scanning the room to locate my mother.   It’s just that — well —

This is suddenly becoming very personal and although I’d put my money on my mom in any race any day — this is no longer —

Any day.

Just 15 minutes ago she had half the family tree turning the dining room inside out looking for her missing purse —

The one she left back in her hotel room.

And she knows she’s forgetting more and more.  And she’s starting to doubt herself — question her worth —

And in the process —

Her humorous edge — and biting wit — have dropped a few notches. 

I’m trying not to think about what happens when coyotes (her name for older single women) smell blood, when I remember —

My dad and —

His devotion.

And at that moment, my eyes find my mother out on the dance floor struttin’ her stuff.  My dad seated in a chair with a clear line of sight.  Watching her.  Then in an instant she stops dead.  Takes the Tina Fey shot gun pose.  Aims.  Makes eye contact with my dad and finishes it off with a come hither that gets him on his feet.  He takes her in his arms and —

They dance. 

His 6′ 4″ frame towering above her five-foot-four-inches of — confidence she will never forget.

And I make a point that night not to forget it myself —

As she stands on her toes and tips her head back so he can lean down to give her the kiss that shows everyone —

She’s his.

love one another

April 6, 2009

God heals the world two by two.

I’ve always believed this on some level —

Actually romanticized it more than anything —

But last Saturday, within the ”architectually significant” walls of St. Clements Catholic Church in Chicago’s Lincoln Park —

I felt it.

And I know I wasn’t alone.

That afternoon — helped by the solemnity of the space, the music, the words, the occasion — 

And in no small part —

The intentions of the couple being united —

An entire community of souls swelled with love for one another — in the obvious and expected ways —

And in places once so broken —

That the return of love could only be experienced as —

Divine.  

These sacred moments remind me that while people — myself included — often make choices that turn us away from love — 

Love never leaves.

We always have a choice —

To let God heal the world. 

Two by two.

 

“I promise to be true to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health.  I will love you and honor you all the days of my life.”