Monday, March 31, 2008

More on the Next Steps

My friend and I went to dinner this weekend. We talked about what it is to look for a next step. She doesn't crave a career and values having flexibility and freedom. Working isn't the definition of her so she doesn't crave next and new and challenging and such. She's doing that in other areas of her life. She just needs the money coming in.

And this has made me think of all the different ways I could be thinking about my next.

* By location
* By tasking
* By trade
* By industry
* By salary
* By steps to another future

I wonder what will be the most important factors for me. Right this minute I would say money, but I'm in my bell jar today thinking there is little hope. That'll change.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

I Might Be Really Old

I just went in to edit something in my profile, and it listed my date of birth as 3/10/1756. Shows that I'm 252 years old.

What does the blogger.com know that I don't know?

I think I might just leave it that way for a while . . .

I Need a Moth

This week I have been having the most vivid and twisty turny dreams. None have made themselves very clear. But the one that echoes in my head is one that ended in a snap, after a man that was sort of shaped like Will Farrell was holding something and declaired "I need a moth." Snap. I was awake.

So, bored and resentful at work (it was a hard focusing week), I went on line and found what a moth totem is all about. Google brought me here: http://www.sayahda.com/cyc3.html. I'll reprint some of the important bits:

The Moth
Moths live in all but polar regions. The wings, bodies, and legs of the moth are covered with numerous touch hairs that come off if it is handled. Because of this the moth is highly sensitive to touch. They can feel, smell, taste and determine temperatures with their feathery antennae. The tiny pegs upon them serve as receptors. This gives the moth the ability to perceive everything with clarity. Those with this totem usually have strong psychic and healing abilities. They must be careful not to pick up other peoples problems and carry them around in their own energy field. If this happens confusion and irritability can set in.

The process of metamorphosis is part of the magic the moth holds. The egg stage symbolizes the birth of an idea. The larvae stage indicates the laying of a foundation. The chrysalis stage represents the process of creating, and the winged stage allows it to take flight and explore new territory . . .

When the moth appears in our life it is asking us to pay attention to issues of sensitivity. Are you overly sensitive or insensitive to those around you? Are you involved in a situation that needs to be reevaluated? Are you honoring the integrity of all concerned?

The transformative qualities of the moth are numerous. It shows us how to develop and refine our psychic gifts. The moth is an optimist and an opportunist. It can teach us how to release unwanted influences and fly into the discovery of our personal joy.


"Lives in all but polar regions." I wonder what this is all about. Moth dream.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Heaven's Here on Earth

The other month I was hanging with my mom and my auntie and something my auntie said stuck with me. She sort of suddenly turned to us and quoted some thing she had seen that day. I can't remember the little phrase, but it basically implied something like, won't it be so wonderful to die and be in heaven? My mom nodded her head and sighed. Yes. And the way she said it . . . she was so completely convinced by it's truth . . . it made me realize something about my auntie's faith. She honestly and truly, down to her very core, believes there is a Heaven run by her God, and that this God is waiting for her somewhere else. And, (the most important bit), that He is saving up all the bliss and happiness and will give it to her there.

As opposed to here.

And that made me look at the way my auntie lives . . . and the way my mom lives. They don't have the panicked burning hunger urgency to make their heaven here. They are contented with the things that make them comfortable. They accept what happiness comes, but they don't seem to demand it. They also accept what hardship comes, because it's all part of Some Guy's plan, and He must know what He's doing. And if they keep in contact with Him, well then He'll throw the party when they die.

And this is REALLY different from how I see it. I don't think there is another step. I think this is it. And I do have a panicky burning hunger urgency to grab at some heaven. Make myself happy now. Do good works here. Surround myself with interesting, loving, uncrazy folks. See what they have to say. I want to keep throwing the party here.

When she said her phrase and I realized the glisten in her eye, my first thoughts were "What a pity. She's blowing her life! She's not kicking the door in! She's being a door mat instead! She should demand better!" But, now I don't think I can judge her so harshly. Come on. She's living a pretty good life.

And isn't that interesting? There are a million ways to see the world, even inside our close family. Billions of little glass jars of belief in which we all bounce. She's just chosen the one that feels true. The one that works for her. And it really doesn't have to be the same as mine.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

What's Next?

Oh God.

The best boss I've ever had just resigned. Depending on who they choose to replace her . . . I may need a next. What the heck will be the next?

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Demons in Madison

Bendy time is getting bendier.

I'm at my sister's new house in Wisconsin. I came up here to help her move in and get settled. She's been here for months, but her stuff just arrived from overseas. We met for an urban girl weekend in Chicago and then I went to Madison for meetings with the Cube and then I drove up here. And I have been having very big emotions. I haven't really figured out all the reasons why . . . but I may have stumbled across one.

I think I am revisiting the places where I used to dream . . . but left. And now I'm back in those places, returning empty handed, and all those dreams are flooding back.

I grew up visiting Wisconsin because my grandparents were all here. I would spend my days daydreaming, transporting myself into my adult future for hours, while feeding the fish on the dock, or wandering around the woods, or walking up the road or floating around in the lake. Always dreaming of an grown up life with great successes and dramas.

I went to college my Freshman year in St. Paul. I was clueless and scared and poor and spent my time dreaming of a time when I could rent an apartment and cook and have money. When I would be confident.

I transferred to a college in Ohio, where I dreamt of having a car and driving away -- off to my New York Actress Life -- where I would be greatly respected and internationally acclaimed. Where I had enough money to buy cigarettes and clothes and stay in nice hotels.

After college, I would come to Chicago to visit my old friend over Thanksgiving. Chicago would be overcast and cold and everyone would be in fantastic hats and coats and boots and they would be bustling to their important jobs and I would have no money and be hanging around with my friend who had less . . . and I would LONG for a warm, fancy restaurant and good food and a taxi instead of waiting for the bus. I would long for my hipster apartment where my friends would gather and they would be funny and accomplished and confident.

I feel like I spent a lot of young time longing. Longing for money enough to be independent. Longing for confidence enough to have a job I loved doing and that actually contributed something more than answering some salesman's phone. Longing for interesting companions who had things to talk about. Longing for my own interesting and confidently told stories to tell.

After college, I moved back home -- to the west. Where it never feels like this. It is never dark and cold and snowy. Wool and long coats and hot chocolate never make sense. It isn't gray in the sky like this. And it is never this cold. Anywhere.

And I think, after living in the west in my life that I live, these location specific longings just disappeared. Why long for your cool, covered in dark wood apartment in Chicago, when you will never live there or visit or go back or even think about it? Why long for an ice-covered street of old, pointy roofed houses when you will never live in one?

When you could never live in one.

(See? There's the rub, now, isn't it? "Could never." These dreams were dreamt thinking I "could never.")

On this trip I came back to visit and all the failure came back with me. All the dreams I didn't make come true. I should have moved to Chicago after college and had the wood apartment. I should have stayed in St Paul and bought one of the pointy houses. I should have moved to New York and tried to act . . . but I didn't because I couldn't because I was clueless and poor and untalented and uninteresting. Because I couldn't figure out how.

But then, in Chicago, after the first day, I started to beat off the demon of poverty. Swatted away the failure of choosing the way I did. When I was there before, I used to have to eat cheap and figure out the subway because I couldn't afford anything else. This trip my sister and I stayed in an absolutely over the top hotel and ate dinners that cost $300. We went to the museum and had lunch there. Because we could afford it. I even had on a great hat and sexy boots. I was independent and free from the heart breaking limitations I felt the last time I was in Chicago. I feel like I reclaimed the place for myself. My new self. Not the one my old friend used to boss around. I was able to be the self I wanted to be and that I currently am. Without any shame.

In Madison -- where I never dreamt a dream but which looks and feels just like St. Paul -- I attended parties, and ate with my well traveled, quite accomplished friends who told confident stories -- and who laughed at mine. Who laughed at mine . . . because I had some to tell.

Now I'm in Appleton, helping my sister . . . and we drove around a neighborhood with pointy roofed houses. Houses which, after a bit of planning, she and I could both afford.

And so my big emotions have been bending in on me. I am back to the snowy middle where I haven't been for a long time. All my old dreams and longings are returning, painfully at first. I thought I returned to them empty handed. But what I realized this morning is that I haven't. I have independence and sexy boots. I have a great hat. I have money enough to go out to lunch, rent a car and blow $400 on dinner. I met with my internationally traveled, professional friends who like me. I had interesting stories to tell over drinks. I could drive downtown here and, with a bit of planning, buy a pointy roofed house, for fuck sake!, and adopt a dog, and make my friends some dinner.

For the first time in my life, I am being forced to realize I am finally the grown up woman I longed to be.

Poof.

So, I guess, the next question is . . . what next? What do I want to do with all this independence, confidence and money?

What are all the things I want to do next?