Sweet Tyler Shea “I say the knife, Professor Plum, Billiard Room,” Tyler proudly announced. Ty played his first game of Clue last week, deciding that he could read well enough to play by himself. The funny thing was, he had seen the card for Professor Plum (who was his sister) so knew the good Professor wasn’t the killer. He just decided he liked annoying his sister by preventing her from getting anywhere she wanted to go. He literally called her into every room he entered. Every time he called Lillie into a room, she would shriek and he would howl with laughter. Ty was not playing to win. He was playing for fun. What a concept, one that most of us need reminding of. To her great delight, the purple scholar rolled a six, escaped into a nearby room, and made a guess that won her the game. But in a way, Tyler was the winner. I would play Clue again with Ty any day. Here's Ty playing Chess with Jack-Jack. He doesn't play to win. He plays to have fun. However, Tyler has yet to meet a donut or video screen he doesn’t love, and want more of. When we enforce any sort of boundaries, such as, “No, you’ve already had ice cream today,” we get met with, “Why do you hate me?” If we say, “No more time! You’ve been on Roblox for an hour already,” he replies, “I want to kill myself.” Where is he learning this? We try to rationalize and reason and explain to no avail. Man, parenting can be hard. I was venting this to my friend Barbara (herself adopted), and she suggested I attend a free monthly zoom webinar for adoptive parents. Desperate, we tuned in. Thankfully, we were the only ones on the zoom, so we were given a whole hour with the adoption counselor. We had been through mandatory counseling when we adopted Tyler, but it focused on how to parent, never mentioning how adoption plays into parenting. Nothing we said surprised her. “He’s suffering from loss,” she said matter of factly. “And he’s probably not even conscious of it.” “But what did he lose?” I asked. “Afterall, his birth mother wasn’t even quite sure what his birth father’s first name was. He’s the product of a drunken one-night stand. And through us, he gained a family that he never would have had.” “Absolutely true,” she agreed. “But he doesn’t look like anyone else in your family. He doesn't know his heritage. And there’s always a sense of loss with any adoption.” She recommended a book about the seven core issues of adoption. “There’s always a sense of loss with adoption,” she emphasized, as she shared this screen. The circle explains a lot. It was obvious that “Why do you hate me?” questions this feeling of rejection, kind of an “I’ll call you out on rejecting me (for not giving me what I want) so I don’t have to feel this alone.” Likewise, he suffers tremendous body shame, refusing to swim without a shirt, refusing to change clothes if anyone is nearby. His manipulation/control issues center largely around food. “Oh FOOD!” the counselor shook her head. “We polled adoptive parents as to what issue they most want us to cover, and the number one issue was….. HEALTHY EATING!” Wait, I thought we were the only ones to battle daily with Tyler over when to eat, what to eat, how much to eat.... Don’t they say that most eating disorders are about gaining a sense of control (which is part of the above circle)? Other friends who were adopted spring to mind, as a few also have interesting diets. As for intimacy, Ty’s the boy who loves everyone. When you ask him who his best friend is, he replies that he has so many, he can’t name them all. The circle closes with grief and identity, issues we all engage with sooner or later. I grew up without this shadow of loss, but perhaps that made me as a youth callous, careless and centered largely on myself. Loss found me, as it does all of us at some point. Loss has been a powerful teacher. It has broken me, opened me to others’ pain, and gifted me a sense of gratitude for all that I still do have. I have befriended my loss, and I hope to help Tyler to do the same. The loss that comes with adoption is not for us to judge. Recognizing it only means that we can acknowledge and work with it for what it is. As the saying goes, it’s not bad, it’s not good, it just is what it is. With abortions becoming harder to obtain in our country, adoptions will inevitably increase. We can only hope that there are more people open to seeing the joy in expanding their families this way, and to have the willingness to explore this loss with their kids. As for my little guy, this loss he cannot verbalize lives inside him next to a fierce loyalty and kindness. His teachers have written home how they love having him in class because he stands up to bullies. He loves to referee disagreements between his sisters (much to their annoyance) because he loves peace. When he grows up, he still wants to be a firefighter, the profession he claimed as soon as he could talk. He wants to rescue cats from trees and save other people. He remains unaware that he has already saved his family members in ways he cannot begin to fathom. He turns 8 on Friday. Happy Birthday dear Tyler.
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Thanks to all who sent birthday greetings. I spent my birthday/Memorial Day weekend in a gorgeous handcrafted New Mexican rustic cabin with my family and friends Marcia and Larry. It was the best weekend I’ve spent so far in the almost four years we’ve been in NM. Thank you Marcia and Larry!! As birthdays often prompt, I've made some time to think. Here 5.5 thoughts from my birthday…things I thought I knew but wish I had truly understood when I was 28. 1) CHANGE – I always intellectually knew that “nothing stays the same”, but from childhood, I've had the tendency to cling to what has been, to save, to preserve (some may say hoard?). I’m not advocating turning one’s back on the past, but just letting go of things that I don’t use anymore, clothes I don’t wear anymore, and, even, when it’s no longer a fit, letting go of people whose energy or choices brings me down, no matter how long they've been in my life. Human nature is to avoid change when possible, to keep things "just in case", to keep things to make others happy, all of which are a recipe for disaster in an ever-changing world. Instead, I must stay open to all the new things that intimidate or overwhelm me. One of the last lessons I learned from my parents is the emotional price one pays for avoiding change. Everything changes, from technology to our relationships, to our bodies. I am learning to greet each new day with acceptance and openness for whatever it brings, with no judgement attached (which isn’t always easy!) 2) SHARE – I always knew that it was important to share, but now, I find, it’s gone from “a good idea” to “that’s why we’re all here.” In the end, we can keep exactly ZERO of what we have. When I’ve finished books, I’ve begun sending them to friends, as it sparks great discussions. I’ve become strategic about sharing my time, my energy, my talents, our home, and some beautiful things that we’ve enjoyed and now want others to enjoy as well. 3) CONNECTION - As the realization that my parents’ generation is leaving us, I have a new conviction of the importance of cultivating both old and new friendships. I am carving out time to see friends who initially were my parents’ friends (see March’s blog). On the other end of the age spectrum, thankfully, I genuinely enjoy some of my kids’ friends, and their parents. In writing this, I realize that in all four of my different freelance jobs, I work with people whom I genuinely enjoy and respect, and actually consider to be friends. Friends always make a place more special, an event more special, life more special. Think of it this way: which is more fun, visiting Paris or visiting Paris when you have friends there to connect with? 4) YES – The word yes can take us places. This point is also “the importance of being open to the people and opportunities in front of us.” Every single one of my freelance jobs has come from word of mouth/referral, because I said yes to the people in my life. 5) LAUGHTER – My kids tell me I laugh a lot, and they like that. Yet, there are many reasons not to laugh. From our political mess, to this marking a year of unemployment for my husband, to trying to figure out where one of our kids will go to school next year (she left her independent school due to unremitting bullying), it seems I encounter despair and fear daily, in great doses. And yet, I’ve learned that this anguish is exactly why laughter is so important. We don’t laugh because our lives are ideal. We laugh to connect, to plug into and enjoy the present moment, because it’s really all we have. 0.5) THE POWER OF YET – Gone is the belief that I have to be good at something to do it (karaoke beware!). Gone is the belief that “it’s too late”. Join me in the power of yet, as in “I’m not good at decorating cakes…YET”. And even if "yet" doesn't arrive, it's the journey, always the journey... Here's to another year ahead. Thank you for sharing this ride with me. Ty and the beloved Ms. Camera ; Lexi loves to make TS bracelets There was great joy and excitement this morning in our home. Of course, I needed to figure out why (can this be duplicated? Cloned? Frozen like Ted Williams?) After some caffeine, I figured out that it’s the result of excellence. Not our excellence – I wish! Rather, it's thanks to the excellence of two women: Lynzie Camera and, yes, Taylor Swift. Ms. Camera is Tyler’s first grade teacher, and in his eyes, hung the moon (a position I used to hold, but lost, because apparently I don’t grant enough iPad time). This evening is the Spring Fling at school, and there will be two booths: a photo booth and a dunking booth. Ty learned that Ms “Cwamia” (he still cannot pronounce "Camera" despite 9 months of practice) will be at both. On the walk home yesterday, that is ALL he talked about. He awoke an hour early this morning, needing to know what time Ms. Cwamia will be at these booths. He bugged me until I finally broke down and texted her (at 7:04 AM) as if it were some emergency, because in his eyes, it is. Even though he will be in her class all day, he cannot miss her tonight. She graciously texted back with her times – no small feat considering she has a middle-school aged son of her own and a job to get to! Teachers still matter. Ms. Cwamia (we all call her that now in my house) is the reason Tyler wants to go to school in the morning. Tyler is the kid in her class with the IEP, whose hand never goes up first, unless someone is handing out food. But she sees Tyler as more than that, and he knows it. He feels he matters to her. He wants to thank her the only way a 7-year old boy can: by dunking her in cold water tonight. Across the hall from Tyler, our 13-year-old daughter awoke two hours early (at 4:30 AM) to listen to The Tortured Poets’ Department, Taylor’s latest. I wasn’t even aware a teenager was capable of waking up this early on her own. Lillie Grace and Lexi have had a count-down since the Grammys, when Swift announced the release of the album. The songs (I’ve been told by our in-house experts) are GOOD. At midnight (10 PM here), the expected 17 songs dropped (we would NOT let them stay up). Then two hours later, Swift released an additional 13 songs, shocking everyone. That is the mark of excellence. Clearly, Swift doesn’t need the money. She just gave her fans double the value because she wants to. So why are there all these Swift haters again? That both of my daughters chose a role model who over-delivers, is a savvy businesswoman, and a hard-working creative known for her generosity brings me joy. If they can tap into a passion as she has, develop their craft daily, learn how to monetize it and be known as givers, I’ll buy every TS item around for them as long as they want me to. It was a stellar morning. Everyone got out of the house on time (a victory not to be downplayed). But it was more than that. Thanks to these two women who go above and beyond what is asked, we all awoke inspired. Lillie Grace, our oldest, set off today on Ex Ed: a three-day/two-night camping trip in the Sandia mountains with her classmates and instructors. I will miss her. This is slightly ironic. The irony is that this is the first week since March 15th that we haven’t had someone on a never-ending “spring break”. (It’s what you get when you put three kids in three schools.) Of course, with a three-week vacation from school in the wings, that meant that things finally warmed up for me on the job front. After months of waiting, I was hired to ghostwrite a quick polish, headhunt three positions for a phenomenal independent school, coach two juniors through their common app college essays, and start the quest for an agent for our book Dear Oliver: A Grandmother Shares Tales of Love, Loss and Hope. (This is the amazing Young Adult book about a French Jewish family that I’ve been engrossed with since August.) I But did I mention “Spring Break “? It’s a never-ending aria, interrupting my work, with solos mostly from my 7-year-old. His voice fills the day with, “Mom, I’m bored!” and “I’m hungry!” and “Mom, mom, can I please have Ipad time?” and “Mom, Lexi’s being mean to me!” and “I’m hungry!” and “Do you not give me more Ipad time because you hate me?” and “You’re not listening. I don’t want to do my chores, Mom. I’m bored!” and “Is it time for lunch yet?” I organize play dates for him every day, only to find that I’m either supervising them, or back in the car to pick him up before I know it. Is it any wonder I’m just getting to the March blog? Over her break, Lexi provides the bridge to Tyler’s blues, “Oh, this is just great. I have nothing to do today.” No matter what I come back with, she gives the common Middle School refrain, “But I have no friends.” Or “I know what you’re going to suggest, and the answer is NO!” It was my oldest who did me in, with a single verse. She looked at me sadly and said, “I haven’t been anywhere since last July, and I’m getting texts from my friends in Turkey, Hungry, Budapest (same friend), Scotland, Mexico and Oregon (different friends). I feel so stuck here.” “Me too!” I realized, gazing at photos of friends exploring the Australian coast, skiing in Austria and visiting Paris. The first thing on the chopping block with unemployment was travel. Ten months of unemployment and the atmosphere can get a little…anguished shall we say? So instead of traveling these past few months in my spare time, I’ve been hunkering down and decluttering. Slowly sifting through the final boxes of my parents’ things, over two years after their deaths. It’s mostly photos, which, along with lots of nostalgia for trips made in a former life (and boy did we travel), I’ve felt a great sense of isolation. We are raising our family far away from extended members, with little physical interconnection. I’ve been feeling this isolation for a while. Over the holidays, I reached out to one of my uncles, who still lives in his big house. I asked him if the kids and I could plan a visit this summer and connect. I wrote, “One of my biggest sorrows is raising my kids without them really knowing Mom and Dad. I would love to have them hear your stories of Nana and Grandpa, and of my mom growing up. I would love for them to get a sense of family.” In response, I got a definite sense that while we’re family, there is his family and there is my family. In fairness to him, I grew up mostly seeing him (and his family) only at holidays, then funerals, weddings and memorials. How can I be missing a connection that never really existed? My 2024 theme of surrender is the gift that keeps giving. One of my closest friends Michele sent me Michael Singer’s book The Surrender Experiment. It is eye-opening (to say the least!), and has taught me much about acceptance. Do not wish things were other than they are. Accept. Otherwise, your energy is frustrated. Accept. I keep up with my friend Jack because he is a role model to me. The week before the everlasting Spring Break began, I called Jack (Tyler calls him “Jack-Jack”). For Jack, life’s glass is not just half full, but since it’s half full, let’s make a toast and drain it. Jack is one of the most joyful people I know, despite being widowed, childless and a cancer survivor. He had a few weeks before his trip to Mexico to get dental work done (last year’s chemotherapy did a number on his teeth). He wanted to see us, could we spare a few days? Well, actually...I mean, what are the odds? That is why, the day after Tyler’s teacher conference, Lillie Grace, Tyler and I jumped in the car. (Lexi looked at me like I had five heads, “I will KILL Tyler and Lillie if I’m in a car with them for 7 hours, are you kidding?”) The journey itself was a destination: through stunning scenery like the Apache-Sitgreaves National forest, the El Malpais National Monument, and the Acoma Pueblo. At 84 years young, Jack lives in a 55+ community. Cue Lillie giving me pointed looks. (“But it’s a dump!” Jack laughs). We swam every day in one of the two large (and clean) 85 degree pools, then jumped in one of the saunas. One day, Jack drove us out in his pickup truck (Tyler bouncing around in the back) and we all hiked Box Canyon. We did scavenger hunts in the town of Florence’s two Western museums. We played Clue, Fantastic Mr. Fox, and Spoons. We laughed. Oh, did we laugh. The craziest part? Unaware of my desire to have my kids hear stories about my parents, Jack spontaneously talked at great length about them. Jack and my parents had survived the isolation of COVID by becoming each other’s “pod”. Having to seclude in their adjacent apartments, they became so bored they told each other their life stories several times over during the months of co-sequestering in their Independent Living facility. Four days later, on piling into the car for the beautiful ride home, Jack looked at me and said, “This whole thing really is synchronicity, isn’t it? From my becoming so close with your parents, to you now visiting.” Synchronicity. It is, I think, closely related to acceptance, ease and joy. All part of Surrender’s family. “Ugh, your blogs are just so depressing!!” a well-meaning friend confided to me in a phone conversation earlier this month. This took me aback. “What do you mean?” I asked. “I intend them to be upbeat.” “Oh, come on! You’ve been hanging on by a thread for almost a year now, living in limbo, canceling vacations and other plans while hoping Jory gets a job. You’re living off the money your parents left you and this is not how they intended you spend it, you know.” In fairness, while I am all too well aware of the stress I live under, I am unaware that my blogs have been downers. This is probably because I have been spending hours every morning for the past few months consumed with writing a book about a man who snuck letters out of a Nazi internment camp to his wife and children in the winter of 1942. Therefore, my frame of reference has been: no Nazis, no starvation, no hypothermia, no separation – we’re good. A low bar, but one we are crushing here in Albuquerque. Except then, the woman who found and translated these letters decided she wants them buried. She thinks to publish them would be to court danger. I am stunned by her reversal. These haunting letters reveal such hope, such optimism, such love in the face of brutal hatred. I have wept over them, and feel that to silence his voice will be to enable the haters. It’s like erasing Anne Frank because her diary isn’t convenient. But this woman is the man's granddaughter, and she is genuinely afraid of the obvious growing anti-Semitism around the world, especially in France, where she lives. What I know to be true is that fear is never a good motivator, ever. I try to verbalize this, but am told that I am unaware of how bad things are. To argue that you are aware to someone who says you don’t understand is to dive into a pointless rabbit hole. Thankfully, the man’s other granddaughter, who is American, is incredibly wise and patient. She listens to her anxious cousin, holding back judgement. It takes a lot of courage and strength just to listen. I take a breath and focus elsewhere. Easy to do, as there are so many other situations clamoring for my attention. I decide not to worry about the broken washing machine (which costs the same to fix as buying a new one), and spotlight my middle child, who continues to struggle socially. She texted her birthday invitation to some friends. They all said they love the invitation, but not one of them said they want to attend the actual party. Having received help from her school, I now go to the library, seeking books on how to help tweens and teens make friends. I check out the first book I find, written for teens. I expect it to be full of social etiquette, stuff like: ask others questions. Smile! Give compliments. Instead, what I find blows my mind. (I love the book; my daughter feels it's weird.) The first chapter says the best way to make friends is to live mindfully: in the present moment, and without judgement. Living with one foot regretting past scenarios and another anxiously awaiting the future doesn’t allow us to see the people in front of us. Furthermore, the judge and jury that play in our heads certainly doesn’t allow us to listen to what the people in front of us are communicating, both verbally and non-verbally. Is this why it’s so challenging for us to make new friends? Living mindlessly, on autopilot, has become both a default and a defense for us, even at a national level. To bring it to the family level: it’s my 7-year-old, so afraid of boredom that he craves constant food and screens to escape the present moment. It’s me walking the dogs, feeling great that my son will be at school on time with his backpack AND jacket, only to realize that I forgot poop bags (I go back and pick up the poop in penance). It’s my oldest getting out of the car at school and giving herself a concussion by hitting her head as she closed the car door. It’s my husband not noticing this happened. (Yes, she got a real concussion. She had to miss days of school, and still is needing lots and lots of rest. But I digress.) To live mindlessly is to go to the movies for the popcorn and miss the show. Franciscan priest and author Richard Rohr puts it better: we must not confuse our life situation with our actual lives, our essence, our souls. So, to answer my friend, yes, the situation my family has been in for the last year has truly been discouraging, frustrating and scary. However, my actual life, from which my writing comes, has been one of discovery and connection. Our actual lives thrive on gratitude, intention, and love, because these things feed our soul. This is the reason those letters from the Nazi internment camp resonate so deeply with me. This man was in the absolute worst of life’s situations, and yet, he didn’t let it define him. In case you never get to read his letters, I will share that in the first one, he asked his wife to send him yellow shoe laces. This is because the Nazis confiscated shoelaces and belts, to keep French inmates from using them to kill themselves. But why yellow? The answer appears two lines down, when he asks her to send yellow shoe polish. He was wearing bright dapper yellow shoes in a Nazi internment camp, and he intended to keep them looking their best. This to me is a symbol of joie de vivre, of resistance, of hope. So now matter what daunting circumstances life may be throwing our way, let us not confuse our current situations with our lives. (Take that, mountains of laundry and broken washing machine!) Let’s find our equivalent of yellow shoes, walk tall, and even dance when we are mindful enough to hear life’s rhythm. Let's call January Lillie Grace month....the rest of us just showed up If you don’t become the ocean, you will get seasick every day. - Leonard Cohen As the first month of 2024 comes to a close, I hope that we’re each finding our own ways to keep hope alive. When I was younger, I used to make “resolutions” that lasted maybe until Valentine’s Day if I were lucky. Now, I carefully select a word that represents a concept I want to grow in, one that will hopefully enhance my life from this point on. After much consideration, I chose “surrender”. Bono used it to title the autobiography of his fantastic life. Oprah swears by “surrender” as much as she does “intention” and “gratitude”. Contrary to pop culture, surrender is not a dirty word. It doesn’t mean giving up, or waving the white flag. It seems that successful people know the secret to surrender. They put forth 100% effort, until there remains nothing else to add, no one else to contact, no other angle to try, and then let go. It takes understanding that if it is meant to be, it will come back to you. If it does not come back, the Universe/God will give you something better. It’s a belief I’m willing to test. Because of course, the minute I chose this word, I knew I would be tested. Oh Lordy, yes. But tired of hanging on to things I want that never materialized, I was ready to surrender. So far, who knows? All I can see is what I've let go of. However, in believing something better will come, surrender takes away a lot of the suffering from what would otherwise continue to be an anguishing thorn in my side. Oh, the examples? I was perfect for a remote job coaching college essays this summer. The person hiring agreed, and I was a finalist. Poof. Inexplicably went to someone else. (“Now you know how I feel,” my grumpy husband groused.) I asked for feedback, but all I got was, “we so enjoyed talking with you too.” So, I must be on to something better this summer… And it won’t be going back to the summer camp at which I taught six classes a day last year. My students are always my North Star. Always. When my teen counselors had their lunch periods routinely taken away, were yelled at, and tasked with teaching classes (with no pay bump) after other teachers quit, I spoke up. My counselors asked me to. Result: mysteriously, not only was I not offered a position this summer, but most of my classes are not even offered. I applied anyway, but was told I was not needed. So, I must be on to something better this summer… I’m throwing down the gauntlet: Does surrendering things you wanted open you up to better opportunities? Stay tuned as the experiment unfolds! In the meantime, I continue to write this amazing book in the mornings and am a search consultant in the afternoons, filling three teaching positions for a phenomenal elementary school in LA. I love my days. Finally in my “spare time”, I’ve been treading the bipolar path of having one family soaring to new heights, with the other in the depths of despair. Jory started January as a finalist for three marketing jobs. Job #1 finally said he was overqualified. Job #2 (a company run by 5 women) eventually went to a woman. Job #3 at last enthused that he is their #1 contestant, and they’ve…decided not to fill the position at this time. Cut to: Jory in the ER with blood pressure at 220/110. His heartbeat often races. He’s on medication. Really, could he just get a friggin’ job? Some kind of break? It’s been 9 months… Thankfully, Lillie Grace is living her best life. Today she is the lead prosecutor in the grade’s mock trial. She is proving that Billy the Kid deserved to die, despite the fact that both sides in the Lincoln County War were corrupt. This past weekend, she was an alto in the New Mexico State Choir. Kids from all over the state auditioned through their schools (over 100 kids auditioned at her school alone; 19 were selected). Man, did they sound phenomenal!!! To top it off, she is rocking some beautiful studs after she went to a tat parlor and got her ears pierced . In her spare time, she’s deciding between committing to francais or espagnole for the rest of her school career. Let’s just call January Lillie Grace's month. Let's see who gets the February award... Happy Holidays....why does Tyler look like he's posing for a mug shot with Santa? Courage is not having the strength to go on; it is going on when you don't have the strength. Teddy Roosevelt
2023 taught us a lot about courage (code for buckle your seatbelt). Jory gets the gold medal here. His dream job with the XFL vanished in May with the XFL, thanks to its merger. Since then, it’s been a daily adventure of applying for jobs, interviewing, and facing a sheer wall of rejection. Add to that the violent death of his father the week before Thanksgiving, followed by the discovery that his stepmother (with his father’s prior blessing) cut him out of their will, since the fortune technically belonged to her. It’s been a year of having to cancel trips, vacations, shows, and outings. It’s been a year of Plan B, sometimes Plan C, and sometimes all plans have come to naught. A year of courageously showing up. Lillie Grace’s dreams of a future in dance were shattered in February, when she snapped the articular cartilage of her right knee in half. At first, we were all in disbelief, but two surgeries later, with most of the year on crutches, she courageously accepted that her dancing days were over. She had begun dance seriously at 3 years old, and now was retiring at the ripe old age of 12. Showing tremendous resilience, she picked up a guitar, taught herself basics, then took lessons and placed into her school’s highest class of guitar performance. Seventh grade has been a much better year for her, with her finding her tribe of “ride or die” besties, quality girls whom we love, and often have over the house. She has thrived this year, being selected for the NM state choir, lead prosecutor for the Mock Trial down in Las Cruces, and the sole singer with the school’s jazz band. On top of this, she is a full-fledge Swiftie teenager, perfecting the eye roll, door slam, and the snark. In continuing with the courage motif, Lexi changed her name from Ali, graduated from our public elementary school, turned down admission to her sister’s elite academy and chose to attend a small prestigious prep school. It’s time to ask the question: Have things changed much since we were in middle school? As far as micro-aggression from the “it” girls, sadly, we may as well be back in the 1980s. Brutal exclusion, ignoring, and subtle put downs are quietly rampant, even augmented by texting - and this is everywhere. (My visions of Jane Aliband in 7th grade still make me shudder.) What has changed is the way this school has responded. Thankfully, the administration has formed a team with us to help Lexi develop what she is lacking: self-confidence, skills, and hope. It will not be an overnight fix (say, like Jory suddenly getting a job) but it will ultimately result in a self-assured fun-loving child. We love her school and are so grateful for their partnership and concern. We also added a sweet new puppy named Windsor to the family (never dreaming Jory would lose his job, oops). Despite now having holes in every blanket we own (dogs chew blankets – who knew?) Windsor has joined Otis in giving daily comfort and companionship to Lexi when she has needed it most. In the “I believe in miracles” department, Tyler Shea has made it to first grade! While academics still challenge him, he adores his teacher Ms. Camera, and has lots of friends, thanks to his high Emotional Intelligence and easy-going nature. He loves to help his sisters by sharing gems such as “how to handle ‘bollies when they bolly you’“ and "you should be nicer to Mom, Lillie Grace.” Because his unsolicited free advice is quietly dismissed on a good day (and met with worse other times), Ty goes to jiu jitsu three times a week, in the hopes that someday it will make others take him more seriously. His favorite room in the house is the kitchen pantry, not a room, but to him a whole world of fabulous food. He also does soccer and chess once a week, which is our effort to fight the losing battle of getting him away from screens. He is a staunch believer in Santa, except when it comes to picking up his dirty clothes from the floor or making his bed. This may account for his terrified expression in the above photo. As for me, I have found sanity and humor with all the above by keeping in touch with close friends (many of whom are reading this: thank you!), meditating, working out, and writing, writing, writing. My alcohol consumption has gone way down (because it turns out wine and stress are not friends) though my chocolate consumption remains robust (I need at least one vice). Mercifully, I stopped teaching because coming home depleted from class was not good for the family, or for me. One of my best friends hired me to write a book based on her family, and it is one of the most compelling projects I’ve written in my life. I believe it will be published next year (if you have connections to a publisher LMK), and it has given me such joy in which to immerse myself. 2023 has challenged us to the hilt, but, as I keep reminding myself, it’s not 2021. That was a year of bone-crushing loss. Not only were both Jory and I in a post-pandemic complete state of unemployment, but I lost my beloved Mom and Dad, my cousin Gary, and Homie, my dog of 15 years. In comparison, 2023 has been a year of building courage, and at least I showed up to get a Christmas letter out – first one since 2020. The silver lining of flexing courage, of course, is growth and expansiveness. One of my tutoring clients recently wrote me, “The way you see people reminds of what Blake wrote, ‘To see a world in a grain of sand, And a heaven in a wild flower....’. It is what I strive for (key word here being strive), to approach the world and each person I greet with openness and wonder. I wish that for all of us. At my husband’s recommendation, I’m reading the best-seller The Untethered Soul by Michael Singer. It’s a book about establishing inner peace. Since the Universe has a great sense of humor, yes, that means all sort of s##t is has come flying at me from all directions since I started reading about inner peace. The book urges us to stop resisting what is. Accept. I like that idea. The gist is that to feel peace, we need to relax and let energy pass through us. Do not push events away/deny or cling to them, but just simply be present, witnessing and experiencing things as life taking place. It is our need to fix and control that stresses us out, because, he says, it’s impossible to do either. Singer emphasizes that events belong to the moment, not to us. On further reflection, it sounds a tad hippie utopian, like we should just check out and sing the Beatles “Let it Be”. Sure, there’s wisdom in that song, but aren’t we here to make a difference, to act against so much evil in the world? Didn’t the Holocaust happen precisely because people “let it be”? Singer says we can deal with events first by taking away our fear and desire because they block our energy. We need to see things not as problems, but simply as stepping stones on our spiritual journey. This is where I am reminded that those monks who achieve such enlightenment have no children. Realistically, fear and desire are pretty much the meat in a job search sandwich, not that monks search for jobs either. During my husband’s five-month stint of ongoing unemployment, he has come super super super close to three more jobs since I last blogged. So if I am to observe our unemployment from a place of no desire or fear, instead of feeling peace, I feel anger. For there is a new trend: ghosting. Apparently, ghosting is the new black. Remember how 20 years ago, all the kids got trophies just for showing up? Well, these kids are now in the work force. “Rejection” is not a concept they remotely recognize. So should they want to “go in a different direction” (even after multiple rounds and hours of interviews) they actually tell you, “We’ll be in touch!” You believe them, send the heartfelt thank you email and believe they’ll “be in touch”. Then they NEVER contact you again. Not a reply (or God forbid, feedback!), or even a polite email acknowledging your connection, or a thank you for your time. This has happened with jobs in Arizona, in California, even from the Governor’s office in New Mexico after three hours of meetings. It’s the rage. I even got ghosted by one of my oldest friend’s cousins, a recruiter in Boston whose marketing person told Jory he was “perfect for a job” and then asked for $350 to submit his resume. The cousin had been responsive until I told her I genuinely wanted to understand what the charge was for….and…..then (wait for it) she ghosted me. Ghosting is flat out inconsiderate, entitled, rude. It implies that you do not even merit the dignity of a reply. It leaves you checking your phone and email for days hoping for some reply, some explanation, some closure. After all, the hardest part when someone goes missing is the uncertainty. You have hope, and this hope keeps you on pins and needles. When you learn the missing person is dead, at least you can begin closure, and ultimately move on. Not that death is easy, as I keep getting reminded…. So yeah, remember how I’m reading this book on inner peace, trying to not get sucked in to life’s drama? Mmm hmmm. Three days ago, the American Embassy in Rome calls Jory. They ask him if he has a minute for an urgent matter. Is it a scam? No, they need to speak with him as the emergency contact on his father Gary’s passport. It is “The Call”. Gary was just killed a few hours ago in a freeway accident. Jory’s stepmother (who has no kids) was in a hospital. They had no other information at this time, but will call him “the moment they do”. Shock. Gary was in Italy? Gary was dead? From online Italian news reports, we learned that an American tourist (later identified as Gary Rosen) had been a passenger in a van of ten people and had been hit by a truck that transports cars. Kind of like a mac truck - wait - what? People can actually get hit by a mac truck? The shock keeps coming. The crash was so bad that 118 emergency personnel responded. Gary had been killed instantly, and four people (Jory’s stepmother among them) were airlifted to a hospital in Rome. An investigation is ongoing. Horrific. Yesterday, crickets from the Embassy. Were they ghosting us? Jory called them to find out how and where his stepmother is. We got bureaucracy at its finest: because Jory was his father’s emergency contact, but NOT his stepmother’s, the Embassy won’t share information about her. Not even what hospital she’s in. The argument that she is a shell-shocked widow alone in a hospital in a foreign country who would probably like to hear from her dead husband’s only child made no sense to them. The violent departure of a soul, intentional or not, is seismic. It’s traumatic. If someone in your family has died violently, the trauma singes your soul. It’s different from other deaths - some of which can actually transform you even more. But the shock from a violent death is scalding. Here we are, a continent away, and processing. In the days since learning the news, I’ve been late to work meetings, forgetful of emails, neglectful of work, missed my street turns – and it’s not even my father! How my husband is managing to put one foot in front of the other, let alone continue to send out resumes and take interviews, I have no idea. None. It's surreal. Life in Albuquerque looks the same, but his family has forever changed. Again, you can chant along with the Beatles “Jai guru deva om, nothing’s gonna change my world”, but things change. All the time. And the more you don’t change with them, the harder life gets. Instead, my mind goes to the vibrant frenetic sounds of Bono: “I’m ready. I’m ready for the laughing gas. I’m ready, I’m ready for what’s next.” It’s the sound of acceptance, of showing up. I carry this exuberant song in my mind partly because my cousin Jenny took me to the brilliant Achtung Baby at the Sphere right before Halloween. This song of acceptance now carries terrific memories. Jenny and I had last seen each other at my parents’ memorial, and the time before that at her father’s funeral. So, it was overdue that we meet in a place like Vegas to have FUN. We were on the Floor, right next to the stage, dancing and singing and laughing, drinking in a feast for the senses. The band sounds amazing, partially because they accept where they are. Since all members are in their 60s, the running, falling to the knees, and backbends of the last Achtung Baby tour are gone. Now, they simply stand and sing, and let the Sphere do the work. And it works. As for the inner peace…well, it’s certainly a journey, and a long one at that. I think the best we can do is find serenity in acceptance, in gratitude, in joy, in friendships, in writing and, let's face it, in good chocolate and wine. For, as I was reminded this week, tomorrow is not guaranteed. Happy Thanksgiving. Earlier this month, Tyler fell. And fell. And fell. “I’ll never learn to ride a bike,” he said dejectedly. We have been trying to teach him to ride a bike periodically over the last TWO YEARS. He was actually getting worse. It was clear that his fear of falling made him more cautious, more discouraged (and frankly, more jaded, like an adult). “You can do this!” I kept telling him, to which he’d roll his eyes and scoff. Jory thought Ty needed training wheels. I decided Ty needed peer pressure. Nothing like a friend to help you through a challenge. His bike-riding 6-year old friend Johannes brought over his little bike, one that was actually too small for both of them. Johannes showed Tyler how to go down hills by balancing his body weight and not pedaling. By the end of the week, Tyler’s confidence had soared stratospherically. Tyler fell until he didn’t need to anymore. He could ride the bike, pedals and all. It was a huge victory of expansion: both for his body and for his mind. “The mystery, strangely enough” Deepak Chopra writes, “is how we manage to restrict the unbounded potential of our own minds.” I am reading Chopra’s Life After Death which I found in my mother’s library. (Amherst friends: Professor Thurman liked it so much he wrote one of the endorsements for it on the back). In this mélange of physics, metaphysics, Indian, Buddhist, Christian spirituality, and documented experiences, Chopra at one point makes a list of qualities of the mind that come either under “expansion” or “contraction” with the belief that we are either expanding or contracting. With the universe uniformly expanding in all directions, it would seem that we are made to ever-expand (and that does seem to be the case with our midsections in middle age). However, as we all know, one huge force makes us need and want to contract: LOSS. Loss of memory, mobility, balance, agility. Loss of loved ones and friends. Loss of finances, employment, security. And with all of that, comes loss of confidence, hope, dreams. In addition, mental illness: anxiety and depression wreak absolute havoc on our best intentions. According to Chopra, “Crave security” is contraction, while “Comfortable with Uncertainty” is expansion. Easier said than done. We’re going into our sixth month of unemployment for Jory. Hard to breath into expansion when circumstances feel so stifling it’s hard to breathe at all sometimes. And yet. As with Tyler, we must train the qualities of our overworked, fearful, anxious minds. What’s the alternative? I mean: what else can we do? Lillie Grace modeled a perfect way to expand despite her fears. She was rattled last week because she wanted to be part of her school’s Mock Trial. It’s a state-wide conference down in Las Cruces this year, wherein 7th graders have a court case to crack. But the catch was that only four of the six students vying for the prosecution would be selected for the team. She had to audition for the team on a zoom call that day. She had just had surgery the day before: the six titanium screws had come out of her knee. While this is a huge (literal) step forward in the long term, in the short term, she was back on crutches, pain meds, and restricted movement. She therefore was feeling constricted and inadequate, like she could never be chosen on a prosecution team. After moaning and procrastinating, she came to me for help. She understands that we need to find pillars of expansion when we can’t support ourselves. Life is crushing, and sometimes we need someone else to hold our hand and guide us. I first reminded Lil the odds were over 50% that she would get a spot on the team, so she had a realistic chance. We sat together and she read me the case line by line. She honed her questions as we discussed the case. She would have to think of the follow ups on the spot. So, we agreed that if she didn’t make the team, we’d find another opportunity for her. She came back after the hour-zoom call elated. She had just been appointed Lead Prosecutor, and will be going down to Las Cruces for an overnight in early November. With this expansion, the discouragement and pain of her knee seemed to lesson. Not that it always works like this. Lexi joined her volleyball team, practiced daily on and off the court, with a coach, with her parents, with her friends, and still never made a serve over the net. Yet with the end of volleyball season, rather than join her basketball team, she is going to join a club volleyball team to get extra support. Next year, when her serve sizzles, it will mean all the more to her. The question I ask myself every morning now is: how can I cultivate a mindset of expansion today? And if I’m stuck, whom can I call? According to Chopra, choosing expansion paradoxically means less focus on material things, more focus on experiences (physically bigger does not mean emotionally healthier)!! Choosing expanion means choosing less conformity, more individualism. Expansion is less ego-driven, more altruistic. It means less denial, more self-knowledge. Despite all the losses we encounter, we are meant to keep expanding. All of us. None of us learned to ride a bike alone. So when did we stop asking for help? The way is not always easy. The how is seldom obvious. But the alternative is simply contracting. Last month, tragically, an Amherst classmate of mine lost his 15 year-old son. It has haunted me, especially with a 13-year old under my roof. I can’t imagine anything more painful than burying a child. As a writer, I imagine a lot – and nothing trumps this. On his facebook page, this friend wrote, “I’m a dad. That’s all I ever wanted to be. The rest is just gravy.” Of course, when we were in college, I never guessed all he ever wanted to be was a dad, and he probably didn’t either. He was incredibly goofy (he still is), but I get it. When you grasp who your child is for the first time, you experience a paradigm shift. You realize that “parent” is the most fulfilling identity you’ll have, second only to “self”. His comment has stayed with me: “The rest is just gravy.” Do we spend too much time focusing on the gravy, at the expense of what’s really important? This drove me down a rabbit hole to write down what is really important. 1) Health (physical, mental, spiritual, because without it….) 2) Close knit loving Family and Friends, a circle that expands over time 3) Money (because, as I’m still discovering, without it…the stress, the stress!!). 4) Meaningful Pursuit – one that uses your talent, that makes a difference, that adds to others’ lives All the rest – while some of it is very important – I think could really just be gravy. Did I miss anything? And I hear you, gravy is important – who wants a life of plain vanilla ice cream with no sauce? It just seems that in this age of social media with the excessive need to post everything you do online, the gravy can drown out the fundamentals. With a teen and tween under my roof, I am aware of how heavy the Kurse of the Kardashians lies on this generation. The urge to be famous and therefore validated, to be (literally) “liked” is a tsunami of gravy that drowns out real connection and vulnerability. We are told we don’t matter unless we’re “somebody”. We have “failed” unless we “make it”. It's hard to cultivate self-love in an over-processed culture. We bury our very selves in the pursuit of gravy. In researching my friend Janine’s family history for her book, one of her cousins nailed the essentials, and early in his life. For starters, Janine’s mother is actually first cousins with these three brothers. Yet this is the kind of family whereby Janine herself became like a first-cousin to them, and their families have stayed close, for generations! Jean Claude created a publishing company, on which he made a tremendous profit, when he sold it at the age of 40. With some of that money, he bought a vineyard in Provence (right?!?!). Because family meant everything to him, Jean Claude began an annual tradition wherein his brothers and their families, and “cousine” Janine and her family would make an annual pilgrimage to the vineyard for Bastille Day, celebrating the week together. Every year they would roast a lamb on their last day together, bask in the Provencal sun, and of course, drink Jean Claude’s wine. They would laugh, and celebrate whatever kind of year they had lived, and toast to family in the warmth of the beautiful French countryside. After selling his publishing company, Jean Claude also became a writer himself, upon discovering his Jewish ancestors were the money stewards for the popes in Avignon. When he passed, the family was devastated. A pretty solid life. Another solid life is that of my favorite English teacher, whom I was lucky to have for three years. Yesterday I learned he died on my daughter’s 13th birthday. Thanks to Dr. Jon Kite, I am a writer. (Though he was too humble to go by “Dr”, despite the fact that his Ph.D. was from Stanford). Mr. Kite’s passing has deeply affected me, as I realize that the grownups who knew me when I was a kid are vanishing. Sans Kite, Paris is forever emptier. The last time I saw him was the last time I was in Paris. I took a bunch of high school kids to France in 2006, and Kite joined me in a Brasserie. We reminisced late into the night. Mr. Kite’s love of humor and literature and teaching and drinking and smoking made him a joyful curmudgeon, a paradox he fully embraced. The myriad of tributes that are pouring out on our high school FB page show what a legend he was, how many lives he affected by showing up and sharing his passion, in his case, for great writing. The rest I do believe is all Gravy |
AuthorSteph: friend, writer, wife, mother, sister, daughter, lover of life, and of chocolate. Archives
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