Monday, February 27, 2012

Falsehood

The silent observer of self is powerful.  To watch (without judging) one’s actions is amazing.  I recently watched myself react strongly to something in essence small, washing dishes.  It happened while reading Thich Nhat Hanh’s The Miracle of Mindfulness in which he suggested one could wash dishes mindfully, simply for the act of washing the dishes and not for any later moment but for simply being there, doing dishes!  Luckily I was reading for a yoga weekend which offered opportunity to move toward what motivated my anger.  I realized I had attached a falsehood, a non-truth for me, to daily dish washing. 

Dictionary.com defines the noun falsehood.
1.  a false statement, lie.
2.  something false; an untrue idea, belief, etc.
3.  the act of lying or making false statements.
4.  lack of conformity  to truth or fact.

Somewhere I stored a belief that dish washing is a menial task reserved for the subservient.  Where did I learn this?  Dunno.  How long have I believed this?  Dunno.  Is it true?  Absolutely not.  Turns out, after quiet listening, I don’t believe the idea I was clinging to.  Other falsehoods I have over time discovered in myself sound like this:  Boys don’t like smart girls.  I am not naturally athletic and therefore will never find any exercise I enjoy.  Cooking a fabulous meal every night is essential for being a good mother.  A big house will make me happy.  I don’t need sleep as long as there is caffeine.  If I have eaten one cookie I might as well go ahead and eat the entire row.  When someone is yelling it means I have done something bad.
Generalizations that we ingest and make our own sneak into our lives often unnoticed.  Perhaps from personal experiences or the media.  Perhaps from unhealthy relationships or too much time alone.  My dish washing dilemma is a superficial one in terms of what else is possible, but I use it because it is fresh and a reminder that we are allowed to (in fact I think supposed to) examine our beliefs and see if any of them lack conformity to our own truth or fact.  Leonard Pitts, Jr. recently wrote an editorial for the Miami Herald that was picked up in my local paper.  He offered the axiom, “if you repeat a lie long enough, people will accept it as truth — even the people being lied about.”
What falsehood about ourselves do we accept as truth?  Some are easy to find, others challenging and often painful in the actual story unfolding of ourselves. 

            Certainty
            Finding truth is labor.  Shoveling
            what lies atop layers of life, blood
            and guts, somewhere we have it
            the source, Truth, that which slices
            paper sharp edges thin and fierce
            found at last.  Real hurts and heals,
            soft seeking  finger pads, tiny cuts
            when touched throb for attention
            sting while being washed clean
            set soul free body breathing I am.



Monday, February 20, 2012

Monday

Seriously?  It’s Monday?  How did this happen?  In the un-normalness of this national holiday with no school offering a defined schedule to stick to, I forgot it was Monday until somewhere beyond the middle of the day.  Sitting with friends in a sunny spot I realized I had not pondered a term this morning!  At that moment I knew that since morning’s opportunity for musing passed there was going to be a first-time event this week – musing Monday evening. 
Monday is, as defined at dictionary.com, the second day of the week following Sunday. 
Indeed, today is such.  And my prediction six hours ago has come to pass.  I am typing a few final far-flung thoughts for the day after tot-tucking.  Life energy after bedtime is very different than at dawn.  Once the inertia of a day full of kids kicks in there is no stopping for shopping the shelves of my brain for thoughts of any substance.  Today’s middle was riddle with a Monopoly game, Polly Pockets, pizza, the park, and soccer practice.  Evening brought a failed attempt at a new recipe that resulted in cereal for dinner, flannel pajamas and some days’ end thoughts.



       Following Sunday
       Sometimes a whole day gets away
       utterly without wondering at all
       no thinking, just dance doing flash
       dash from sun salutes through snack

       fruits, a pizza buffet, friends come
       to play the mind found nothing to say
       busy being bit of a sunny social holiday
       whose history kids meant to look up

       empty dawn seated spot for choosing
       a word worked for a musing moment
       moved past living day fast, full, fleeting
       as it was:  the second day of a week.




Monday, February 13, 2012

Pile

The New Year verve leading to a totally clean desk has come to a sliding end.  Testament to this are slipping stacks of stuff scattered beside my computer and on the floor beside my filing cabinet.  Seriously, over the winter break after Christmas I went through and filed, trashed, or otherwise processed everything on my desk.  I was scrupulous!  It has only taken forty-four days for it to regrow!  And today, my friends, is the day I must again attack the pile. 

Dictionary.com offers the following entries for the noun pile.
1.  an assemblage of things laid or lying one upon the other:  a pile of papers; a pile of bricks.
2.  a large number, quantity, or amount of anything:  a pile of work.
3.  a heap of wood on which a dead body, a living person, or a sacrifice is burned; pyre.
4.  a lofty or large building or group of buildings:  the noble pile of Windsor Castle.
5.  a large accumulation of money:  They made a pile on Wall Street.

I hear the good advice, “Only touch each piece of paper once.”  I believe it.  I don’t know how it is possible.  I go through the mail every day and kids’ papers when they come home every week.  I trash a ton of stuff, truly.  Yet there is still a mound of things laid upon one another that need to be looked at later or kept for financial files or stashed for story ideas.  All valuable, right?
The devil over my left shoulder would love to scoop the entire stack and stuff it ceremoniously in the garbage while offering an evil laugh at such rebellion.  The angel on my right will not, however, let that happen.  That guardian reminds me that I put those papers and things in half-processed places because I valued something about them or found them essential for keeping.  The invisible convincing goes on to say that considering how much I do throw away, far more than I keep, there certainly must be value in that pile – stuff I believe I cannot do without.  This is a mental situation as much as a physical one.  Removal of accumulated stuff suggests a life-long task, perhaps one on which we might lay a few sacrifices to burn.


          Unfinished Business

          adding pages and papers, properly paid
          partnered with perused articles that might
          some night need to be reread, receipts
          for things one could need, valued as what
          to keep and file, responsible pile
          grows deep and festers finally
          fetid with old ink and printed text
          telling worth or thoughts from Oz.

          Well-meaning think must keep the heap
          that climbs and slides, often moved aside
          so people can eat at the family-time table
          where junk abides rising higher
          the stack remains, old book reviews
          carried, carted, divided, parted
          sorted eventually when it masses
          too large to carry, hide or ignore.




Monday, February 6, 2012

Distraction


Today my thoughts are slow to arrive and coagulate.  Seems distraction descended about the time I got out of bed.
Dictionary.com offers the following definition for distraction.
     1.  the act of distracting
     2.  the state of being distracted
     3.  mental distress or derangement
     4.  that which distracts, divides the attention, or prevents concentration
     5.  that which amuses, entertains or diverts; amusement


Also listed were synonyms:  madness, lunacy, insanity, craziness. 
At my computer simultaneously staring at and feeling a LARGE whiteness, I review my morning seeking something to muse.

Alarm sounded from my new-fangled phone with a clock app.  I accidentally activate a flashlight when I pick it up.  Mind splits into three tasks – stand, stop alarm, stop blinding beam.  I wake two kids and make their breakfast while packing three lunches, assembling a quiche and talking about back muscles with my husband.  I kiss two kids out the door on my way upstairs to wake another sleepy head. 

Back downstairs while collecting crust crumbs I call the school for details regarding an athletic team try-out, check the weather, instruct regarding wardrobe for the day as it is twenty degrees cooler than yesterday and scramble an egg having forgotten to actually put the quiche in the oven.  While putting on my shoes and sweater, gathering my keys and replying to a text about today’s carpool, I decide quiche will be a nice lunch.  In the van, strapping my seatbelt, sipping tea (when did I make tea?) I start the engine and drive to school. 
I enjoy a phone chat, gather trash and an empty water bottle in the seven minutes it takes to return home.  Once inside I realize I forgot to take the quiche out of the oven.   It is, gratefully, slightly browner that I would have chosen but certainly not ruined.  I eat some quiche while getting my vitamins and clearing dishes into the sink.  It is now 8:30am.  I microwave my cooled tea and sit at my computer to check my email (which I have ignored for two days – yikes!), update online banking, print some necessary forms, and try to feel creative.  By 11:00am I have not been able to even decide what I am musing because my attention is so divided. 

I suspect I am not alone.  In households everywhere mornings look like this or even crazier.  The madness seems weaved into my culture.  I was happy to be reminded by the fifth entry for distraction of an option.  Distraction can also be a thing that amuses and brings joy - fishing or reading or resting or meditating, a warm cup of tea or perhaps a bit of poetry.      


          Mental Divide
        wonder what is
          the disturbance
          words, duties
          money and mail
          electronic rings
          debts, ads for things

          we need

          the time, the food
          find or cook or eat
          the mind
          will wander
          often scattered
 
          salt through sea

          tossed by waves
         
churn, burn energy
         
action and inaction
         
deranged
         
distraction.