Thursday, June 6, 2013

The Power of Momentum

I’ve spent time journaling my stream of consciousness this past week. I am happy I am writing, but I am aware that I am avoiding something. I had a great suggestion from a writer friend about how to come up with good blog ideas (of which I thought I had many).  He suggested I have friends ask me questions like, “how I met my husband,” or, “how I met my best friend”. These are interesting stories and I see where he is going with this. I got the sense he wants me to write more about myself instead of me writing about the fear of writing about myself.  So now I am writing but I am writing much about nothing. I have some real substance to write about, yet I’m reluctant to share. I’ve always used writing as an outlet, something that fed my soul and healed my spirit. I keep saying I want to be a writer so I need to stop dancing around the stories and just tell them.

This new online mentor group I’ve signed up for to help keep me accountable to achieving my goals: “Check in, Not Out,” I’m finding is all about building momentum. At the end of the second week I am closer to completing my goal of writing three hours a week and I can see how the momentum builds and really takes on a life of its own. It is the starting that takes the most effort. Showing up is half the battle, right?

So,  (gulp…) I’m going to share a bit more of myself with you. 

I am 45 years old. The other day I couldn’t remember how old I was. I have finally become the age that forgets how old they are. I am a mom, who is married to a man who is not the father of my son. I was never married to my son’s father.  I have two dogs, Jersey and Dakota, who are a bit mischievous.  I like to refer to myself as the bad pet parent. We really let them get away with a lot but they are so full of love. 

My son is 11 years old. I am one of nine children—I am number 5. I never refer to any of my brothers or sisters as only half-siblings, I think that is silly and my mother was the kind of woman who made sure we understood that there isn’t half when it comes to family.

I received my High School Diploma in prison. I now mentor a woman in prison. I went to community college to become a better writer when I got out of prison. I still work for the man that gave me one of my first jobs. He hired me back when I got out of prison and I really love him. As I embark on a new career path, it is hard to move into doing less of my day job and more of this deeply gratifying work. My fear is part financial security, but mostly it is the fear of failure and success. I still have ingrained in me the only way to survive is to have a day job whether you like it or not. The “job”  will always be me more than I am worth. I should be happy with it. I don’t want to keep this belief system, but I know I still have it. 

I spent a season getting certified to jump out of planes. I jumped 14 times by myself. I am still afraid of heights. I spent a winter living in Colorado as a ski bum. I lived in the highest elevated town for two months, Leadville Colorado. I’ve traveled across country twice.

I believe in love at first sight. I also believe it can end. I love purple roses even though they are unnatural. I am on the verge of tears every time I smell Gardenias. My husband planted over 200 hundred tulips as a surprise and didn’t tell me until they bloomed. I have a special affinity for trees. My husband and I got married in front of a tree. One of my favorite books is the giving tree. I guess I am melancholy, by nature.

I wish I could say what was on my mind. I wish I had a different childhood. I am grateful for my childhood, but I like irony. I don’t like the fact that my teeth are changing so rapidly. 

Between the ages of 17 and 25 I lived in over 10 different homes/apartments. I used to write very dark poetry. I turned some of my poetry into punk rock songs. I always wanted to be anyone but me. I now don’t want to be anyone but myself. 

I am sometimes very patient. I am sometimes very impatient. I like coffee. I gave it up for 6 years.  I drink coffee now. I want to stop drinking coffee. The desire is not great enough.

I don’t think about my mother that often. I think of how much I am like my mother. I try to grow the things I love about my mother. It took me a long time to find forgiveness for her. I now can ask for forgiveness from others. I am grateful I now know how to ask. I was with both of my sisters when they died. I have experienced death a lot. I am still afraid of dying. I loved my grandmother very much. I was her second favorite. She had 14 grandchildren. I am of Italian/Irish descent. 

I love Uma Thurman. She is my girl crush. I would really like to handstand in the middle of a room. I wish I had my son’s confidence. The three words my son says to me the most are: I got this. 

I wanted to be a rock star. I am dramatic enough to be an actress. I lived in Santa Monica California for three months. The only time I ever asked my father for money was to get home from Santa Monica, California.  My father died a month after my son was born.

There are friendships I have let go of. I am happy I did. I am sad I did. I have known my best friend since we were 10. She knows everything about me. She loves me. I love her. I am grateful.

My husband is very sentimental. He cries more than most men I have known. That is one of the reasons I married him. I cry a lot too.

I feel deeply. I forgive easily. Sometimes… I want to forgive easily more of the time. I am silly and serious. I can go from silly to serious in a split second. 

I am not sure if my greatest fear is rejection or being hurt. I am sorry if I have hurt you. I have to practice being a more patient driver but I am getting much better.

Purple is my favorite color. I look great in red. I wish I didn’t have cellulite. I don’t love my thighs but I don’t hate them anymore. I have nice eyes. I remember my mother’s hands. I remember her smile. It was big.

More will be revealed.

Monday, May 20, 2013

To Write or Not to Write...

To write or not to write, that is the question...

It certainly isn’t for lack of ideas that I don’t write.  I realize it truly is the discipline to sit down and put pen to paper that is the craft of writing.  I’d like to be a great accomplished writer straight out of the gate, but accomplishment comes from practice.  The only way to get good at anything is to do it over and over again.  There are reminders everywhere in my own life and the lives of those around me that show me this. It is funny how I have those built in forgetters or think I should be "different".  One of the things Ann Lamott posts over and over is that if you want to be a writer you just have to sit down and write.  It doesn’t matter whether it is good or bad, just make the time.  So, again, here I sit and thank Ann for the courage. 

The next questions that nag at me still are, why am I writing, to who am I writing for, why do I feel inspired to write???   I know inspiration is something inherent in each of us.  Each time you breathe, you fill with inspiration, literatlly and figuratively.  The breath is such a simple analogy and one I use quite often as a yoga teacher.  It is the one thing we can always come back to, it simplifies and defines life in that it conspires to not only give us physical life, but inspire us to greatness, to vulnerability, to truth, if we pay attention to it, if we practice paying attention to it.

As I have struggled these last four weeks (when I started this blog it was only two) to write and have come up with tons of ideas for blogs (at least a dozen good ones) I always have something better to do.  It took me years to find a steady meditation practice, not because I didn’t feel great affects from it, but because I couldn’t find the motivation or drive to do it daily.  Sleep seemed more valuable, spending time with my son, doing my asana, walking the dogs, going to work, making homemade meals, helping friends, ad infinitum.  These are all very valid strong life affirming activities, but in my heart I know I needed to meditate daily.  I can still be a moody person, with a tendency to react in anger over the slightest injustice to me or in the world.  Meditation created space and allowed life to come to me, rather than knee jerk react my way through every situation.  After trying for many years and coming back to the practice over and over again, I began to see the value and recognize how it enhanced my life, made all the above activities richer and allowed me to be more “present” within them.  I now have a daily meditation practice.  It was a joy, a struggle and many come to “Jesus” moments, but it found and devoured me. It has its peaks and valleys like any other relationship, but now I am committed to it.

So… with that written and me figuring out while I am writing this what one practice has to do with the other, it seems much clearer.  I have already put myself out there once, you have begun to hear me clear my writing throat and nothing imploded and temples didn’t crumble under the heresy of my voice.  The demons of fear have been quieted a bit, so now what is my excuse?  Still a bit of that fear, but really it is good old fashioned discipline, not a punishment, but literally being a disciple of my desires answering the call of making meaning of my life.   I hired someone to coach me, she suggested I write a couple times a week and that doesn’t seem so hard, right?  Yet, here I am at the end of the two weeks (ahem, four weeks) since our session and I am just taking my first 20 minutes to write this.  I am enjoying it, I will go back and edit and re-read many times (I have now put more than a couple hours into editing/rewrites) but really was that so hard (nope!). 

Everything in life teaches me, when I am willing to learn.  My yoga and meditation practice (one is not really separate from the other, but that is for another blog) have taught me the benefits of taking the time to do what makes me feel good, do what lights the fire of inspiration inside of me.   I literally feel lighter in my physical body and mind and everything seems to come together when I answer to my desire.  The key is to do it, whatever inspires you, it is important to recognize your desires but more importantly answer to them.  The only difference between successful people and ones that feel “stuck” is the ability to just do it (for Pete's sake!).

 I feel free when I write.  With freedom comes vulnerability, and yes, I know, when I expose myself there is the chance to be hurt.  I will end this post with one of my favorite quotes by Anais Nin  “and the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom".   

The answer is clear… To write.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Number One



So, here I am. Putting myself out there. What am I afraid of??? I don't know, is it the boogie man? I laugh at the thought that he actually lives in the dark cavernous space of my nostrils (like all good boogies) and has been saying "boo!" to every blog idea I've had. Now I take out the metaphorical Neti pot cleanse out the "boogie" and begin my journey into writing. Why am I so afraid, what will happen??? Perhaps you won't like my blog, you'll be onto me and recognize me as a fraud right off the bat, maybe you'll just read two sentences and think "she is so full of herself". You'd be right, I am full of myself... FINALLY! THANK GOD!

I realize my fear is not my voice, it is the voice of many people who most likely had my best interest at heart, but never even took the time to invest in their best interest. You know, the kind of people that have rules and boundaries for everything. Don't get me wrong, rules and boundaries can be a very good thing, as someone who has taken the better part of 45 years just figuring out if I had a voice to begin with. I've spent a whole heck of a lot of time not using good old fashion discipline and focus and do understand the value of rules and boundaries. But... I have found that the same rules and boundaries that someone sets up for me, might not be what's right for me. I can't live in dark cavernous nostrils of anyone else's fear any longer, I have to be willing to listen to the sound of my own voice. I have to recognize its sound, cultivate its power and let it be free.

I know this sounds like some hippie, free lovin type of s**t, and maybe it is. One thing I do know, it is mine and though most that know me will probably agree, those that really know me, know what a hard a** I can also be. This isn't the first blog I've posted, I've guest written on LYN (http://www.loveyourselfnaturally.com/) and at the studio's website where I teach yoga www.sarasyogajoint.com,. The difference now; this is mine, for me and for you if you choose to indulge me with your heart and mind as often as I choose to share with you.

My name is Vicky. I'm probably half way through my big beautiful life (I didn't always recognize it this way) and have experienced many triumphs and tragedies. Each by themselves enough for one person's lifetime, but cumulatively have created insight and experience into how to truly live a life worth living. How to feel pain and joy and keep moving on, how to just intuitively know that everything will be OK, even when it is not.

I plan to talk about many things, some may not be for the faint of heart, but all will provide inspiration, because I am here now, I am happy, I live a big beautiful life (in case I haven't mentioned that before) and I finally can share my voice because I believe it is worth sharing. I have a voice, it is here.