Time On My Hands

It feels strange to have time on your hands when the majority of the world is running around in a state of mad confusion, trying to complete all the items on their holiday to-do lists as they fight the crowds, battle the elements, and deal with whatever nasty virus has invaded their body.  At the risk of being mauled by the crowds of revelers who find themselves in this sad and sorry state, I might even go so far as to say I've been a bit bored this holiday season. In Christmas past, I've been accustomed to performing all over town with one musical group or another at this time of year, running from one rehearsal to the next, traveling hither and yon with bells or choirs.

But that was then, and I don't do that anymore.

So there was none of that busyness this month. I was scheduled to accompany one school concert, which was cancelled when the director was injured in a car crash two weeks ago.  Now it seems we won't be at church on Christmas Eve, so I haven't even gone to church choir rehearsal for the past couple of weeks, as rehearsals are pretty focused on the events of that night's service.

What have I been doing then, with all that wonderful, sweet, free and unencumbered time?

I'd love to tell you that I've baked dozens of delicious and decorative Christmas cookies.

Or that I've festooned the halls of my house with garlands and lights, and smothered a ten foot evergreen with ornaments and lace.

I really wish I could report having spearheaded a campaign to raise money for Toys for Tots, or Meals on Wheels, or some other wonderfully worthy charity.

Alas, I have not done those things.

Mostly, I've just wandered around in wonderment that I have so little to do.

I've been to some parties, I've done a little shopping.

I've done a comparison test with Peppermint Mocha's (so far Bigby Coffee's is the winner).

There's been lots of reading in the morning, and even a nap or two in the afternoon (sinful, isn't it?)

In comparison with so many of my past December's which absolutely roared with activity and pressure, this one has been utterly tame and placid.  I'm considering it a gift, one I've unwrapped a bit more each day, peeking beneath the shiny paper to catch a glimpse of what I might want to do next.

The gift of time is a precious one indeed - in any month - but especially in December.

How about you?  What are you doing with your bright and shiny days this month?

 

Loose Ends

I spent some time (the operative word is some) cleaning the house today.  I'm certainly not the housefrau I once was, back in the day when I was on a strict cleaning schedule modeled pretty literally on the old nursery rhyme  - wash on Monday, iron on Tuesday...(do children even learn this anymore? I rather doubt it).  Anyway, today I did my desultory once around the rooms, gathering up the week's clutter, vacuuming the floors, dusting the tabletops, and washing the soap scum out of the bathroom sink. As I worked, I realized  just how much I crave things to be neat, to have all the loose ends of life settled away and tied up with a big bow.  I also realized that this desire is virtually impossible to achieve - hence much of my frustration and worry and generalized anxiety about life in general and my own in particular.  If  organizing my  life could only be as simple as putting my  sock drawer in order!  Of course it isn't - yet I seem to feel that not only is it possible to do so, but that I should be able to accomplish it all on my own.   I want to settle all our financial worries,  figure out what my next job should be, manage my whole family's health concerns, and plan my retirement.  And I want to do that now, please.  Let's get it all decided and written in stone while we're at it.

Ha.

Generally I can manage this condition of mine without undue distress - as long as life is moving along in at least a semi-normal pattern.  However, we all know life doesn't conform to pattern for very long at a time.  "Life's all about change" - that's my mother's favorite saying, and it comes with a rueful tone to her voice that I've come to know all too well over the past few years.

I wish I could be one of those people who revel in changes, who embrace the new and different, who look for opportunity on the other side of every closed door.  For me, change is too messy, it clutters up the neatly ordered corners of my life.

It creates too many loose ends.

The biggest problem with loose ends is that they're frightening - they come surrounded by a huge unknown which is fraught with the possibility of disaster.  So if I keep the loose ends neatly sorted and tied, keep change at bay, then I might be safe for a little while.

Then earlier this evening I read this quote, and it sparked some new and interesting thoughts:

"When you try to put your life in a box and keep it the same all the time, you're making something dead out of it," writes Joan Borysenko, PhD, in her book Saying Yes to Change. "When  change happens, say yes to it, learn and grow from it."

Suddenly, the image of  life being sealed shut in a huge steel casket popped into my mind.  Is my need for order and safety actually preventing me from the joy of new, fulfilling experiences or relationships?  Is my compulsive need to maintain the status quo closing the door on new opportunity?

Those are momentous and rather messy thoughts.  Perhaps rather than try to clean them all up, I'll just let them lie around on the table for a while where I can ponder them.

While I'm at it, I'll try to muster up the courage to say "yes" to some of the changes coming down the pike.

How about you? What's your relationship to change?  Do you like the loose ends of life all neatly tied up, or are you willing to let them fly free?

 

 

 

 

Blue Christmas

My friend's church held a special service last night, at which I completed my only musical assignment of the Christmas season.  The service was called "Blue Christmas", and it was designed for people who weren't especially merry this holiday season, for people who were mourning the loss of a loved one, of a job, of their health. It was for people who felt blue, instead of red or green or sparkly gold.

I'll admit up front that I'm not always a "happy Christmas" person.  Even as a child, I felt some poignant sadness about this season.  The whole birth of Jesus story kind of upset me (how awful to make that long trip and be turned away at the inn, forced to have a baby in a barn!)  Even looking at photos of the lovely virgin mother and her baby made me sad, knowing what would happen to her child just 33 years later.

And though I'm a pretty regular church-goer, I'm not a terribly religious person.  I'm not sure I'd even call myself a spiritual person anymore.  After five and half decades of living in the real world, my capacity for wonder has diminished somewhat.  Still, the burnished hues of autumn, a canopy of sparkling stars in the night sky, even a perfectly turned melody or a smartly crafted sentence can stir my passion.  And whatever your religious beliefs, or your feelings about the divinity of Jesus, who can dispute the miraculous influence of this simple man whose legacy created the largest religious movement in the world?

As the song goes, Jesus was a man who was acquainted with grief.  Reading the Bible, you get the sense that here was a man who knew what hardship was, who understood that suffering took its toll on the common man, but that also believed there were ways to mitigate life's inevitable sadness with hope and love.

The minister at last night's service was very reflective of those ideas.  He, too, obviously understands sorrow and grief - he described it to a "T."   The sense of being stuck in one place, unable to move, as if you're mired in quicksand.  The way it  hits  you in the face every morning when you wake up, struck fresh with the memory of your loss.  Most of all, the way it saps your strength, the bone breaking weariness of carrying such a heavy burden, of being so tired and weary of it all.

Since we were in church, this was the place in the story where Jesus entered.  "Come all ye who are weary," He says, "and I will give you rest."

Rest.

The sweetest word in the world to those worn down with grief.  When we're burdened by sadness, loss, despair, doubt, Christianity tells us that Jesus will walk beside us and carry that burden for a while.  "It doesn't happen in an instant," the minister said last night.  "It's not magic.  But it's possible, it's available, it's there if you reach out your hand.  You are not alone."

There weren't a lot of people in the sanctuary - at first just a handful, and then later, another handful, until it was finally a respectable armload of folks who scattered themselves along the pews.  There were young and old, an elderly couple who I heard had just lost their only son.  A young woman, all alone, who knelt and genuflected, even though this was a Presbyterian church where that isn't ever done.

The altar itself was adorned with about 50 small votive candles, and after the message, people were invited to come forward, light a candle, and speak the name or names of those persons they were holding in their hearts. I was a bit skeptical whether people would feel free to do this.  In the protestant tradition, we don't go in much for candle lighting or naming.  But the moment the invitation was made, people practically surged to the front, the elderly couple I mentioned earlier one of the first in line.

Arm in arm, they approached the altar, and with trembling hands, lit the tiny candle.  Leaning into the microphone, he spoke  -"Jeffrey David Prichard, our son."

There were people who spoke loudly and clearly, those whose voices were only a whisper. They hugged one another as they left the chancel and returned to their pews.  I had been asked to play softly during this time, and while I had prepared a lovely, simple version of Silent Night, I ended up quickly turning to another piece in the collection I had brought.  And at the close of that, still another.

I've been fighting a sinus infection for days now, and physically I'm tired.  I'm carrying some other sadnesses around too, so emotionally I'm tired.  Before I went into that service last night, I wanted nothing more than to crawl under the covers and stay there for days.  I craved someone to do something for me, to shoulder every burden and take care of me.

Truthfully, when I left the church last night, I felt lighter somehow, clearer headed, less likely to cry at the drop of a hat.  I give some of the credit to the heavy duty decongestant I swallowed before I went in - my head no longer feels as if it's going to explode.

But I wonder if there is more to it than that, if a spiritual force empowers people in community to bolster one another, if the energy created by commonly held beliefs creates a cushion of comfort for our weary souls.

Whatever the source, I feel more rested today, less burdened.

Not quite so blue.

How about you?  What color is your Christmas?

 

The Real World

A while back I wrote about making a conscious effort to wean myself from the computer, from my occasional obsessive fixation with social media and blogging.  I've continued in that effort, and I'm pleasantly surprised at the outcome.  On days when I can successfully limit my online meandering, I feel infinitely calmer, less rushed, and more productive.  It feels as if the day suddenly expands, and when I look at my watch I'm surprised that it's earlier than I thought (when I usually have the opposite reaction). Writer Anne Lamott talks about this very thing in a recent article for Sunset magazine.  "You have to grasp that your manic forms of connectivity—cell phone, email, text, Twitter—steal most chances of lasting connection or amazement," she says.  "Connection" and "amazement" being code words for living life to its fullest, for pursuing all those creative pursuits and real social interactions that make life meaningful for the long haul.  Although Lamott cites other things that share the blame for stealing our precious time - things like housecleaning, and going to the gym, and work - I think the internet is one of the most insidious culprits.   Housecleaning and exercise at least create a sense of personal satisfaction - you can see and feel that you've accomplished something.  Spending time on the internet - the few minutes that turns into an hour or more - actually leaves me feeling simultaneously drained and agitated, an odd state of disequilibrium that's peculiar to the 21st century human.  They've yet to come up with a name for this condition, but I suspect that at some point in the future, we'll see support groups developing to help those similarly afflicted.

The obsessive texting, emailing, Facebooking, and Twittering is surely indicative of the way we crave interaction with other humans.  We've all glommed onto this ability to "talk" to our friends and family at any time - while standing in line at the grocery, in a boring meeting at work, or even (God help us) in the bathroom (no, I have never texted, emailed, or talked on my phone in the bathroom, and I never will).   It seems kind of pathetic, and rather poignant too, that we all enjoy this remote connection so much.  Wouldn't it be so much nicer if we could meet our friends face to face every morning at the local diner and talk about what's happening in our lives, share our thoughts on the book we're reading, discuss the news of the day or comment on the weather.   Because that's really all the "social media" interaction amounts to in most cases - a chance to share our thoughts and relate what's happening in our lives to other people who might care.

Ah, but that kind of interaction belongs to another time and place, doesn't it - that elusive "Mayberry" for which I'm always longing.  For most of us, there is no local diner, only myriads of Starbucks and McDonald's.  And who has time to meet there in the morning,  with traffic and school and work and meetings, not to mention all those texts and emails to answer.

Lamott's final point is not only valid, but vital.  "What fills us is real, sweet, dopey, funny life," she says.  Don't wait until you're 80 to discover that all the time you spent texting, emailing, and checking the news feed, would have been better spent meeting a friend for coffee, or taking your dog for a walk, or visiting your elderly neighbor.

Don't become so enamored of the virtual world that you forget how to enjoy the real one.

Hmmm...I think I'll make that my Facebook status for today.

 

 

 

 

 

 

With Friends Like These...

One of my young friends was involved in a car accident last week, and though she wasn't critically hurt, she suffered some debilitating injuries - her clavicle is fractured, her knees are pretty banged up, and she took a rather hard hit on the nose.   Her little car was totaled, and from the looks of it, she was lucky to come out in one (somewhat broken) piece. My  maternal instinct kicks in when it comes to A., because she's about my son's age and she lives alone about 1000 miles away from her parents.  So I've been worried about her, and join the legion of her friends and supporters who are trying to rally around and help however we can.

Well, at least most of them are trying to help.

There is one "friend" whose behavior has been so outrageously self-centered that I'm dumbfounded beyond words.  A situation evolved last Thursday where A. re-injured her collar-bone, turning a hairline crack into a resounding, bone-popping fracture.   In the pain and confusion of trying to contact help, two friends were dispatched to the rescue - the girl in question, and a fellow teacher from the school where A. teachers.  The teacher friend arrived first, and finding A. nearly unconscious with pain, wasted no time getting her to the Emergency Department.

When the "other friend" arrived and discovered she had been "stood up," she became enraged.  She bombarded A. with angry phone messages, accusing her of being "ungrateful" and "selfish" and "inconsiderate."   She had "gone to all the trouble of rearranging her day" in order to help, and then A. simply "disregarded her."

It hasn't stopped there - despite A.'s attempts to apologize and explain, the girl has continued to send long winded diatribes over phone and e-mail.  She even went so far as to post a scathing comment on A.'s Facebook page, going into great detail about her "immature behavior."

Is it naive to find this kind of behavior appalling and irrational?  Please don't tell me this attitude is the norm for Generation X ~ if it is, I'll have to resign from the human race effective immediately.

The incident has left me thinking about friendship, and the way some people seem to attract the attention of needy, self-involved people.  I've had a couple of "toxic" friendships - those where I allowed someone to take advantage of my good nature and use it to further their own narcissistic intentions.  Because I'm a "people pleaser" at heart, it's easy enough for someone to use that personality trait to get what they want out of the relationship, with little or no consideration for what I might need.

Like me, A. is a young woman who believes in the "golden rule."  She plays fair, she works hard, she treats others with respect and kindness.  That's one of the reasons she's such a successful teacher.   It's also what makes her attractive to someone like the woman who has hurt her feelings so badly - she knows that A. would bend over backward to make the friendship work, would, in effect, pay homage to this woman and her needs.

So while A. is telling me all the ways she's attempted to explain what occurred that day, to convince her friend that she really does appreciate all the things that she's done to help, and to apologize profusely for whatever inconvenience she's caused, I'm thinking she should just tell the woman to stuff it.    It's about time someone brought this young woman to task for her kindergarten-ish behavior.  She's not a youngster, after all - she's in her late 20's, already the mother of a 2-year-old with another child on the way.  How can anyone so entirely self-centered face the demanding reality of raising children?  Why should she be allowed to railroad another person with this kind of unkindness?

Believe me, if there were police officers for bad behavior, I'd gladly turn her in.

Rather than continue to grovel, perhaps A. should take a hard line in her next e-mail or phone message to this woman.  What's to lose by telling her that she has hurt your feelings, that you consider her behavior unkind, selfish, and unfair?  That you're unable to continue a friendship with someone who could, in effect, kick you that hard while you were already down.

I doubt if she'd listen to a word of it,  but it might make A. feel better.  And right now, she can use any of that medicine she can get.

How about you?  Have you ever had a toxic friend like this?  How have you handled the situation?