Thawed Out

“I’m sorry, sir, but we have no reservation under that name,” she said in a put-on pseudo-British accent to no one in particular just as the timer on the microwave turned over to zero and made its angry announcement that her TV dinner was heated through.

“You’ll have to make other arrangements for this evening’s repast.”

And with that, she delivered her meal with a sly, self-satisfied smile and a flourish to the folding tray at the Laz E boy recliner in front of the TV, eager to return to her beloved The Price is Right reruns.

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: reservation

Welcome 2018!

I may need to change the name of my blog.

You see, I am in the midst of doing some exercises that I do each year to help me let go of the passing year and welcome the new one with a clean slate, set intentions and get clear about how I want to feel in the coming year.

Two of my favorite exercises come from the work of Susannah Conway. She generously offers a free Find Your Word program each year, and this year I am deep in the midst of it. Some people do it before the year ends, but I do mine the first week of the new year, in tandem with another process I have learned from her: Unravel Your Year.

With her Unravel Your Year workbook, I go over the year and look at what happened. I celebrate the wins and I embrace the lessons. I identify the things I want to keep doing and the things I would like to change. I ask myself what I want more of in the year ahead, and what I want less of. I envision what I would like to be doing and how I want to feel in the year ahead.

There is so much in both of these free programs — I am barely touching on the content here. I get so excited about them that I just had to share them with you. I highly, highly recommend them! (Thank you Susannah Conway!)

But back to my blog and the name of my blog.

I am in the midst of these year end/year ahead processes and am choosing my word or phrase for 2018. So far words like SOAR, BELIEF, SHINE, GOLDEN, REAL, YES and RISE are coming up repeatedly for me.

I began this blog as an attempt to start moving myself out of my self-contained shell of introversion, secrecy and shame and into the world where I could be seen, known and heard as I really am instead of the presentations I had so artfully created and utilized throughout my survival years on this planet. Hence the “skinny branches,” as I was moving out onto the skinny branches.

But now, I am finding that I want to fly. I want to leap off of the skinny branches and soar to new places, new dimensions. I want to test my wings in the sky.

So I have a dilemma. I love the name of my blog and it has meant so much to me. But I am ready for more than just life on the skinny branches. Do I change the name of my blog, or do I just keep growing and writing about it and let the name stand?

That will be a question I live for the new year, amongst many others.

Maybe that will be my word for 2018: Question.

I am not afraid of living in these questions today, of being “in process.”

2017 taught me how to really allow for that. Unexpected events of the year got me questioning everything in my life. And I mean everything. It was scary at first, and I am still in the midst of it so cannot tell you where it has brought me exactly, but I can tell you tat I know in my gut that it is very important and that where I am going through it is very good.

So we will see what lies ahead.

More to come.

However you choose to usher in the new year, I send my very best wishes to the world and to you for much peace and love in 2018.

A gift I also want to share with you today on this first day of the year is a wonderful 2018 welcoming resource by one of my favorite people (and bloggers) on the planet, Lisa Adams.

Her post today was just too beautiful, inspiring and nourishing not to share. She is a chef amongst her many talents and gifts, so it makes sense that her blog posts are always nourishing.

Enjoy! And Happy 2018!

 

Over the Rainbow is Here

Today I bid thee farewell, my special unhappiness

You have been a steady companion lo these many years

You have held my hand and held me back

Kept me safe, yes, but also kept me on the outside

Looking in at my own life

I thought you were a force beyond my grasp

I thought you were put inside me

That I was a host and you had taken root

Turns out that like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz

I have had the key all along

All it takes is this: my decision to let you go

I am sovereign over my own self

And I no longer want  you here, in the driver’s seat

So farewell, my old friend

I am sure you will raise your voice now and then

But I choose to no longer recognize your power

So you may wish to find a new dwelling

My heart is full of other things now

There is no space for you here

Inspired By The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: finally

Well-Nigh

When almost is not good enough

When your best falls short if you are not the one who wins

I wonder

Who began the system of there being only one winner

That if you were not that one, you were out

A loser

Who started that way of approaching life

That there is only one who rises, only one who accomplishes

Why not

A system that allows for almost, for second place, for near enough

Wouldn’t there be more to celebrate, more movement for all

I wonder

Would we really all stop trying if there were no top prize valued above all

I wonder

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: almost

From Rags to Riches

Sometimes it can be difficult to spend money.

I am not talking about the difficulty of budgeting one’s funds.

Or flat out being broke or stretched way thin financially.

I am talking about these little pockets of things that I find it difficult to spend money on.

They often, if not usually, have to do with ordinary and necessary things.

Underwear. Bras. Curtains or window treatments. Towels. An air conditioner, a new mattress.

There were these things that I felt so guilty doing, such as buying new bras.

I often literally feel nauseous after doing so.

It is as if I am more comfortable neglecting myself than giving myself the “luxury” of having them.

There is a mentality that I absorbed somewhere along the way that to not be wanting is to be “bad” in some way. As in morally.

Those who do not struggle are extravagant. (This is a negative.) There’s a judgement towards them.

Those who earn and struggle, who often “do without,” are just better people than those who “have,” who didn’t work for it, who’ve had life handed to them on “a silver platter.”

There was a real disdain for people “born with a silver spoon in their mouth.”

And so living well, with all the creature comforts is something to be grateful for and be generous around (which I am.) But it is also something of an embarrassment, something I am ashamed of.

I am talking unconscious here. This is something I have been unraveling for some time.

It feels scary to have “enough.”

Now, putting fear fo scarcity thinking aside, for I do have that as well at times despite having worked on that for some time, I mean that it feels dangerous to be a person who is not wanting. Who has enough. Why is this?

I know I am the child of parents who grew up post World Way II and that certainly shaped their attitudes, which informed mine.

My father knew poverty, but he could also have been the poster child for The Great American Dream: a self-made man who took advantage of ROTC and Navy scholarships to get an education, he was by all accounts a hugely successful man.

Maybe he felt conflicted about his own success. I know I do.

I wish to embrace the abundances in my life, and I do: on a daily basis I practice gratitude for all that I have, in every way: love, health, family, friends, freedom, opportunity. Material comforts and luxuries.

I believe in being of service. In giving back to the Universe. I believe in circulating abundance.

And I feel guilty. And ashamed. And aware of the privilege of being a white, American woman who grew up middle class.

This is not at all where I meant to go in this blog. I meant to examine why it is hard to buy new socks to replace old, worn ones. To examine the little ways I find that I still neglect  and limit myself.

But here I am writing about all of this. And just now in this moment, I am attempting to suppress a desire to apologize for being so privileged that I can write a blog about my guilt around being white and privileged. I feel guilty around my own guilt, for that, too is privileged.

Is this just a reflection of the climate I am living in?

Are we given messages that it is wrong to have a “rich” life? (Rich in love as well rich in abundance.)

Is the only “valid” life one of being down-trodden, of struggling?

How do successful and abundant people handle their abundance?

How do successful and abundant people of color handle their abundance? Do they feel as if they are betraying something or someone?

What is extravagance? Is it a concept invented by moralistic religious groups to encourage tithing?

What is monetary currency really anyway? Is having it or not any indicator of anything?

I am confused. And I don’t think I got here on my own. (Meaning, I think perhaps we as a society are confused. There are certainly mixed messages in our media and pop culture.)

I clearly have a lot more unraveling to do! I would love your thoughts around any of these thoughts.

Inspired by The Daily Post Dsily Word Prompt: extravagant

Sacred Space

Snuggling against your body

I feel your warmth

The rise and fall of your breath

My own heartbeat

As I press my chest into your back

My face fits cozily

Between your neck and the pillow

This is everything, I think

This is everything

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: cozy

To the Grave

“I will never confess it,” she said to no one in particular as she put the secret ingredient into her famous Texas Candy recipe.

Many had tried to guess what it was; many had pressed her hard to tell.

She knew they’d never figure it out, and with that, she smiled a little self-satisfied smile and set them out to cool.

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: confess

No Trace

“Hmmph,” she said to no one in particular as was her proclivity as she looked down at the lipstick mark her lips made after the first sip of her first cup of coffee of the day.

With a little too much force, she wiped away every trace of Eldorado Red from the rim of her cup before taking the next sip.

And thus began her morning routine, sipping, swiping and then sipping again, which oddly gave her a feeling of extreme self-satisfaction every time.

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: proclivity

Cherished Objects

Happy holidays to all!

I am with my family in Texas, enjoying us all being together, laughing, talking, playing games.

My sister-in-love inherited all of my Mom’s many cherished collected holiday things.

My two favorites: my Mom’s manzanite tree that she decorated for every holiday, and a Santa that always sat under our tree at Christmas.

To you and yours, wishing you a wonderful day.

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Post: cherish

Wild at Heart

I was raised to be mild

All the wild in me tamed

Strong desires in me shamed

Made an adult while still a child

Now at mid-life, the end in sight

I’m awakening my wild

Reviving my inner child

Letting loose my appetite

Inspired by The Daily Post Daily Word Prompt: mild