Thursday, August 30, 2012

Discern

I watched this video a few days ago and could not stop laughing.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZSIYQeF7FE&feature=player_embedded.  Being the mother of teenagers, I found an instant affinity to the writers sardonic acceptance of his adolescents lack of ambition.  But the underlying theme, and I think what makes this subject so real to so many, is our chronic habit of comparing ourselves to others.
It feels like every walk of life is laden with overachievers. Isnt that all we ever hear about?  As parents, we compare our children to each other by the number of Advanced Placement classes they are enrolled in, the tier of the sporting team they play on, the number of extra-curricular activities theyre involved in.  The college graduate who gets the job at the office has an advanced degree from the most prestigious university, an exhaustive resume of internships, volunteer work with a myriad of worthy charitable organizations. To even participate in epic sporting events like the Olympics you need to be extraordinary, but that doesnt even seem to be enough in this venue; the press flocks only to the superhuman, bejeweled with multiple medals.   
Even the most confident person has to look at herself sometimes and wonder how she can possibly measure up.  This mindset can be even more devastating when you feel like you are working really hard to be the best, yet it looks like someone less qualified is winning.
Ive spent a lot of time gauging whether my climb up the corporate ladder is expeditious enough by comparing myself to my peers.  The absolute worst came out in me many years ago when I worked for a manager who I did not view as talented enough to be in a role that was senior to me.  I am forever indebted to a close colleague and dear friend who patiently listened to me for months as I doubted my own talent. Every evening, it seemed, I spewed another story laced with bitterness about Charming, our code name for my self-proclaimed nemesis. My logic, at the time, told me I must be marginally competent at best if the powers-that-be in my organization deemed this guy skilled enough to be my boss.
Of course I was all wrong.  Ive since learned comparison is the thief of joy.  (I think Ive quoted Theodore Roosevelt in a previous blog).  Safely removed from the situation, I can see now it was nearly impossible for me to be happy with what I had accomplished when I was constantly comparing myself to Charming.  It was so bad; in fact, I was demotivated; wondering why I needed to work so hard if other people around me appeared to be getting ahead when it seemed they hardly did any work at all.
Over the years Ive become much more comfortable in my skin and confident in my abilities.  Sure, I occasionally, well maybe a little more than occasionally, compare myself to others.  But Im quick to remind myself that I possess a unique combination of skills that distinguish me from everyone else. 
We all possess our own secret sauce or magic potion no one else can touch.  The challenge is in figuring out what it is and capitalizing on every opportunity to exploit it. Thats what Joan of Arc and Annie Oakley did.  Who cares if they were only teenagers at the time?
Its been quite some time since Ive spent any time thinking about Charming. Maybe a year ago I found a sealed envelope labeled in my handwriting:  To be opened in 2014.  I smiled as the memory of what was inside came back to me. My friend who consoled me through my months with the sub-par manager wanted to make a point to me that none of this would really matter in the grand scheme of things.  Inside the envelope was the question she suggested I pose to be answered far in the future: Where is Charming now?

Monday, August 27, 2012

Sangfroid

It didnt take long, less than two weeks, actually.  My new assignment has me so consumed with commuting extra miles, attending non-stop meetings and acclimating myself to processes and people, it seems like there is hardly time to catch my breath.  Im back on that treadmill where I can barely stay on top of the avalanche of e-mail, doing the heads-down work at home in the evenings because there doesnt seem to be enough hours in the day.
At three oclock in the morning I found myself wrested out of slumber attempting to solve some vague, but confounding puzzle in my mind.  I cant say what it was exactly, just that it was disturbing and had me working really hard.  My demons were now wide awake attempting to fill me with angst and self-doubt, the new tasks in front of me growing as disproportionate and overbearing as long shadows looming on the wall.
Eventually I drifted back off to sleep, and upon awakening to my alarm just a few short hours later, a quick scan of my in-boxes revealed a new post on one of my favorite blog sites, the one that reminds me how to find grace and peace in our fast-paced, 21st century world.  Although Im not proud that my morning routine involves checking e-mail while still reclining, I always read these particular posts in bed.  They speak of what truly matters in life and often cause me to rethink the approach to my day.
This morning was no different.  At Home with Our Faith is running a two-part interview called Help Yourself.  Read the post here:  http://homefaith.wordpress.com/2012/08/27/help-yourself-part-two/. The topic is how to find more harmony and enjoyment during the course of a day in spite of the constant demands placed on us. Who couldnt use this advice, right?  It is especially valuable to me as I parachute back into another tour of duty at the office.
The post challenges the reader to ask herself How do people feel when theyre with you? Does your presence create a feeling of calm, safety and security where others would unburden themselves?  Or do people feel your need to be heeded, placated, respected or loved?  The idea is that were happy, and more importantly, those around us are happy when we project an inviting tranquility. 
As I processed this concept in my mind I thought about which one of my needs would likely bring the greatest amount of calm to my day if I eliminated it.  I settled on my desire to impress.  I am especially absorbed with this when working in a new setting where I believe, possibly erroneously, that others expect me to take swift action.  I ticked off the activities I have in front of me, visualizing how things might play out if I stopped trying to impress people.  How would decisions I need to make be impacted?  How would the course of conversations change or my direction be altered? 
The effects of this exercise were pacific.  All of the stress associated with urgency fell away.  I actually felt lighter and happier about starting my day.
What I also discovered is that the second point in the blog is important to how successful any of us can be at sustaining this behavior.  We need to find peace and happiness within ourselves in order to share it with others:  Whether it is noticing and capitalizing on those moments in life when were handed the opportunity to take a break, or allowing ourselves a few minutes each day to feel grateful.
As the day wore on and I got caught up in the urgent requests and issues that couldnt wait, I was swept right back into the stress which Im sure others could read all over my face. I can tell this is going to take some time to master.  But Im encouraged by the success Ive seen at home.  The relationships Ive cultivated with my boys over the past five years radiate this philosophy.  More and more I notice our remarkable ability to remain calm and respectful with each other in spite of some extremely challenging situations.  Its not all sunshine and roses in my home, but we find our way back to peace with an arresting immediacy. Ive literally seen my boys calm down in my presence alone. Im hopeful I can move this practice into the workplace. 
Its past my bedtime, but I just had to take some time to write.  While it might seem like this is a lot of work, imprinting some words on my virtual paper never ceases to bring me a little peace.  Im grateful for this gift.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Sate

The single thing which makes any man happiest is the realization that he has worked up to the limits of his ability, his capacity.  Its all the better, of course, if this work has made a contribution to knowledge, or moving the human race a little farther forward.  These are Neil Armstrongs words, as quoted in Life magazine weeks prior to the Apollo 11 mission in July of 1969, upon being asked to describe what this unprecedented flight meant to him. He was 39 years old.
Perhaps Armstrongs assessment of the monumental feat he was about to embark on explains what drives so many of us to reach for and achieve our dreams.  This is clearly a man who leveraged his strengths early, getting his pilots license before he could even drive a car, sandwiching a career as an exceptionally skilled and decorated aviator in the Korean War between his studies in aeronautical engineering.  Its no wonder he was recognized as one of the few having The Right Stuff and recruited to be a part of NASA in its nascence. The rest, of course, is history.
But were not all phenoms like Neil Armstrong.  Many of us spend a significant amount of time finding ourselves.  Once we realize the direction we want to head in it can feel like we are woefully behind.  For me the need to catch up is sometimes as powerful and undeniable as the deafening ticking of a womans biological clock. 
Years ago when I was particularly frustrated in my job, feeling like I was blocked by a manager who not only held the job I coveted, but lacked the skills or leadership ability I believed I already possessed for the role, I went to a mentor to ask why I should stay at my company when this obviously incompetent person was clearly in my way.  At the time, I wasnt seeing very far in front of me, blinders forcing my attention on a seemingly insurmountable wedge between me and the career growth I was desperately seeking. 
Through the course of this counseling session, I ended up answering my own question.  The reason I needed to stay was because I knew deep down that I wasnt done yet.  I had so much more I wanted to achieve at this company, so much more to give. I hadnt trusted that my abilities were visible to others and lacked the patience to let the situation play itself out.
Once my mentor heard me encapsulate my issue so succinctly, he challenged me to overtake my so-called foe. This was a foreign idea to me, as I never considered myself someone who could openly compete so aggressively for a role in the workplace. While it all sounded a little conniving, there never was any diabolical plot.  But I liked that this mentor was teeming with confidence in me and my power to unseat a weaker opponent. His faith in me kept me in the game.  I continued to work hard, letting my strengths shine through, and supported my manager as best I could.  In the end, poor results and an unhappy customer spoke volumes:  The job eventually became mine. 
That period of time was one of the most difficult in my career. The situation got worse before it got better; culminating in the worst performance review Id even endured.  Had I not believed in my heart that I had more to achieve in that organization, Im certain I would have given up.  My perseverance came from inside, my belief that I belonged in a seat at the leadership table, that I have what constitutes The Right Stuff to walk on my own personal moon.
I think we are all in charge of setting our limits and defining when weve reached full capacity.  Happiness comes in when we are satisfied that our achievements align with our abilities.
When I read Neil Armstrongs obituary in the Sunday paper, I wondered if he died fulfilled, content that he was in fact done. How could he not feel like his contributions helped move the human race forward?  But what if we believe our possibilities are limitless?  Does that mean that were never done?  I hope so.  Because being done might feel a little bit like waiting to die.
For me, my drive to ascend as far as my talents will take me centers on my desire to contribute in some way to inclusiveness for women in a male-dominated workplace.  If my gifts can take me to a place where my voice can be heard, Ill consider it my one small step for woman, one giant leap for womankind.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Gird

My teenagers find themselves in trouble occasionally.  I know its probably hard to believe, it certainly was for me when it first started happening.  Kids dont get slapped on the wrist anymore, sent home to their parents to deal with their poor choices.  Opportunities to look the other way have diminished and consequences are much more serious than they were a generation ago.  But Im finding in our increasingly toxic world, there is thankfully no shortage of people who want to help. 
The customary prescription for a juvenile brush with the law these days is some sort of educational program coupled with community service work.  Instructors with varying degrees of expertise, enthusiasm and experience offer presentations on the standard adolescent fare:  Drug use, drinking, anger management, respect, bullying, and peer pressure. While Ive encountered many parents who grumble about the effort they themselves are forced to exert for these interventions, Im finding a wealth of knowledge and ammunition to use in the battle Im forging to preserve my boys futures.
Im not particularly proud to admit it, but Ive become somewhat of a connoisseur of these courses.  Teenage boys are a tough crowd to engage.  Ive watched many kids fiddle with their smart phones and doodle on the hand-outs, ambivalent to a droning monotone recitation and weak attempts to extract thoughtful responses to obvious questions.
Tonights curriculum was different, though.  Heres what made it so:  The instructor, an older gentleman who evoked the image of a loving grandfather, started his presentation with a photo of his own grandchildren and told these kids he does this for them, for their futures.  We watched a video, clearly targeted to parents, but he paused the tape very early on to tell the teenagers that while this is material for the adults, he believes theyre old enough to hear the truth:  A very pointed move to engage, which worked, at least for my kids.
It was the first time that I, even as an adult, heard the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse clearly stated in terms of a cycle of addiction, a black hole of slow decent.  The message was so perfectly crafted; seducing the adolescent audience into attention by acknowledging that drug use starts as a reasonable effort to feel good, but then derails into a dependency just to feel normal. An observation that this is truly a medical problem and not the moral one we parents try to make it, the recognition that our brains are the last organ in the body to mature, at 21 years as the minimum.  
What broke my heart, though, was the statement that drugs alter every element of a developing brain.  Not just that piece that makes our babies feel good, but also the parts that make them think, decide and dream.  Yes, dream. 
Tears sprang up in my eyes at the mention that drugs could steal my boys dreams. Our dreams are stowed safely away inside of us, waiting patiently for us to grow into them. The thought that a predator lurks with the power to take that away from them is unfathomable to me.
There was a lot of discussion in the video about why we should fight for our kids in this arena.  Isnt it just easier to place our heads in the sand, to look the other way, to say theyll get through it because we did at their age?  Maybe so.  And believe me, every time I think its too hard, these thoughts cross my mind. But I walked away tonight so thankful that someone out there is willing to talk to kids (and parents) straight.  Even my oldest, who is staunch in his views, admitted it was the most fact-based presentation hes seen to date.
As we drove home, I didnt ask whether my boys believed everything they heard.  Instead I reminded them once again, that if they choose that path of destruction they will be waging a war with me that they cant win, because I love them too much.  Theyve watched me discover and go after my own dreams. They are no foe for me when it comes to preserving whatever it is they have yet to dream.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Delectation

Art supply stores are to me what candy stores are to a kid with a sweet tooth.  A good one is like an endless market of appetizing treats, each more irresistible than the previous.  How can you possibly be expected to choose just one? Its been this way for me since college and my first exposure to Design art markers, their fat, felt tips saturated with intense, indelible hues, infused with an intoxicating chemical scent and a distinctive squeak that accompanies the application of color across paper.  While I wished for the extravagance of owning one in every shade, my students budget forced the limiting selectiveness of a practical, neutral palette. 
When I decided to investigate a local artists haven a few weeks ago, it felt like déjà vu. In search of affordable canvas for some work the kids are immersed in, I found myself lured into combing the aisles, taking in everything there was to offer.  Rainbows of paints, markers, pencils, chalk and oil pastels in every conceivable shape and size.  The packaging was as captivating as the medium itself.  While I browsed for at least an hour, I left the store with nothing more than what I came in for, finding it better to abstain than attempt to limit myself to just one of any of the colorful temptations in the store.
Nates eyes were as wide as saucers when he saw my bag emblazoned with the art store logo.  Seems he had been researching paint on-line the previous evening, discovering the mother of all products.  He explained to me that he needed Montana Gold, renowned for the control it affords the user, that the number and size of ball bearings inside each can provides a consistency of color upon every application that is unmatched by the competition. When he asked if we could go back to the store the next day, how could I say no?  He and I fed off each other as I described the infinite selection of indulgences in the store. It was like finding my soul mate.
There is nothing better than a conversation about your passion with someone who loves the exact same thing.  It is an instant leap to intimacy; the mutuality creating an immediate bond. A close second is hitting upon anothers equal, but different passion.  The emotions are the same, the affinity as satisfying.
I spent the weekend in Eagle River, Wisconsin with some friends.  Its a sleepy little community on a chain of lakes with an indisputable north woods feel.  Stands of tall, narrow pine trees pepper the shoreline, serving as a curtain for the water, which is the star of the show. Seasonal activities pivot around the lake.  Fishing, of course, is an obvious pastime, which I am no stranger to.  As a kid, I spent time at Lake Delavan, at a little cottage with a small pier.  It was here that my dad taught me how to pick up a worm from the container of bait, pinch off a small piece using my fingernail, and snake it on the hook at the end of my bamboo pole.
In the eyes of a true fisherman, though, this hobby takes on all of those qualities that art does for an artist.  Listening to my friend recount his trip to the bait shop with its endless options of fishing lures in varying size, shape, color and sparkle, my mind went back to the art supply store.  His eyes danced as he talked with his wife about the control it took to limit himself; the splurge he made on one special lure he couldnt live without.  While Ive never viewed fishing as an art form, hearing him describe the one that got away in terms of the uniqueness in striping and color that truly made the elusiveness of catching this particular fish disappointing, I found a new respect for this sport, and a kinship to his passion.   
Youve hit pay dirt in my mind when you find yourself with someone so willing to share a passion.  This is where we see the raw; the intangibles that make a person tick. Anything that we speak about in these terms is something to pay attention to, and incorporate into life. Maybe theres not any money in it.  Maybe its not a career.  Certainly its a gift to be embraced and indulged.
This is the sweet spot; its where we shine.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Sanskrit

I cant do one more thing for someone else today, was what I said to myself when my son asked this evening if Id make him two pieces of toast. It felt selfish, the second the thought crossed my mind.  I hadnt seen Nick all day; he hadnt been the one making demands on me. Was it really so difficult or such an inconvenience to appease him?
This is my first week at my new client assignment.  Yes, Ive finally made it out of the awkward, landing a leadership position, and have decided I am sorely out of shape for the real world.  The commute is long, there are introductions to be made, a slew of meetings to attend,  personalities to learn, new expectations to be met, and a computer that I somehow managed to lock myself out of on Day 2. I feel like the treadmill I was leisurely walking on has been accelerated to the highest speed.  Im furiously running, trying to be everywhere at once, and in serious danger of being launched off the back the second I slow down.
Dont get me wrong, Im very excited about this position and so happy to be back working with a team again. I just want to be great instantly, but getting acclimated to a new place always takes time.
I did what any sensible girl would do in this high stress situation; I went for a run.  After rain all day, the sun had finally shown its face right before sunset, and I decided if I moved quickly, I could get some miles in before dark.  I braved a loop I hadnt traversed since the winter. Without my usual running companions who assume all navigational duties, I wasnt quite sure if I would remember the route, but it didnt matter.  All I knew was that I needed out.
Not surprisingly, I had no trouble deciding where to turn as I weaved my way through the grounds of the abbey and adjacent subdivisions. But if I had been asked to give directions, I wouldnt have a clue. 
Earlier in the day, my boss discovered that he and a client, as kids, had family in the same town.  As my boss described the location of his grandparents home, not in street names, but in landmarks, I smiled, wondering how many trips hed taken in the backseat of his parents car. A path etched indelibly in his mind, a map written in the language of love.
Its funny that we find our way through life so often without being able to tell anyone how were getting there.
In sorting out the puzzle of my week, it became evident I am the one placing all the demands on myself.  My own worst enemy as usual, Ive sped up the treadmill while everyone around me seems completely willing to grant me the grace thats required to settle in and learn the lay of the land.  Im the one who wants to be instantly infused with the roadmap of understanding that only comes with time.
After logging 4 miles, I turned back into my neighborhood, noticing I had been gaining speed.  I felt like I could run another four.  I stopped in my garage for water and walked a few more minutes in the dusk. I was breathing easier, and feeling better about my situation.  Its temporary. 
Soon Ill be immersed in the culture and the nuances of my new environment. Ill know where Im going by instinct, able to explain my way in that mystical dialect known only to those whove walked this path many times over.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Arcanum

Even though the alarm was set slightly later than usual in an attempt to promote sleeping in, I found myself wide awake well before I was to meet a friend for our Sunday morning run.  Rising sooner than planned can feel like a gift sometimes, stealing a few extra minutes at the dawn of the day while everyone else in my world is still dreaming, or maybe lazily rubbing the sleep out of their eyes in a groggy haze. 
The windows are wide open in celebration of the respite weve been enjoying recently from this summers grueling heat. The sound of ringing church bells floats inside on the coat tails of the breeze, signaling the imminent commencement of the next mass.  
The bells are a happy reminder that some constants in life endure, just a few short notes to ground us in time and place. The clock in my grandparents home chimed every fifteen minutes with a timbre evocative of the traditional Catholic mass.  Moving into our home ten years ago, the discovery that our new neighborhood nestled within earshot of the bells of a small abbey was a boon.  I became immediately accustomed to the cadence, able to mark time without the need for a clock.  I found myself tracking stretches tending to my garden and the pace of my running to their reliable ring.
Deciding to spend my extended Sunday morning on the blog, the church bells reminded me that someone recently asked me to write about happiness.  Its a topic Ive wanted to tackle, albeit a cryptic one in that it seems elusive to so many and has the same meaning to so few. 
I think happiness is misconstrued. We talk about finding a husband to make us happy or complete us.  We defer, saying that well be happy when a fixed set of expectations are met or specific events occur. We define happiness by the approval of others and validation that our choices are accepted by the masses. In fact, we need this substantiation so badly, well push our true passions to the side in favor of the course of action we deem safe and accepted in the eyes of others.
My behavior as a college student on the dating scene is unfortunately and embarrassingly illustrative of everything not to do when it comes to happiness.  I thought the only way the road to happiness could be paved was with a man at my side.  My usual approach to dating was to let the guy run the show.  I deferred most, if not all, decisions about what we did and where we went to him so as to give him no reason not to like me, and even when I realized maybe he wasnt so great, Id stay until he eventually broke up with me.  Nowhere in this equation did I ever really consider what I wanted.  Is anyone surprised I was miserable?
We spend a lot of time giving over control of our happiness to others in hopes that pleasing them is the way to be happy with ourselves.
Happiness, to me, works like a fulcrum.  Its about having a really steady base so that youre free to move about in any direction the world takes you and confident to take yourself any place you want to go. Its different for everyone because we all require and expect different levels of support to feel comfortable in our decisions, our worth, and ultimately in our skin itself.  Striking the right balance is how we make ourselves happy, and no one else can do it for us.
I consider myself to be happy in my career because I have what feels like the right amount of support and backing from my company along with the perfect level of freedom and empowerment in my work and development.  I am tentative at times with parenting because the scaffolding Im on top of doesnt seem strong enough.  Im reluctant to wade into the dating pool because my past experience in relationships tells me I can expect little to no support and suffocating restriction when it comes to following my dreams.
So, you might look at that assessment of the three major buckets of my life and say Im marginally happy at best.  But youd be wrong.  Im really happy. And heres why:  I believe I am responsible for and capable of creating my own happiness.  I view happiness not as a destination, but as a constant companion on the journey. I define my happiness in my own terms. I respect the sheer impossibility of the notion that every aspect of my life can be great all the time. 
Its okay to be happy with yourself if youre still single at 35, if you think you might not be in the right job, if your mom wants to be a grandmother but you dont want a baby until your career is more established, if youve ever found yourself at the police station picking up your errant teenagers. . .   The list goes on.
To get to this place requires a willingness to really pay attention to whats good.  We always seem to focus on whats not going right. A few years ago when I was on my self-help book kick, I read a resounding analogy about how getting every facet of your life to go right at the same time was like trying to stuff an octopus completely under your bed.  At least one arm is always flopping out. When you accept that reality, it takes a lot of the pressure off.
A top priority every day of my life is to do or notice at least one thing that makes me happy or plant a seed of happiness for the future. It might be my morning run, a warm cup of ridiculously overpriced boutique coffee, gushing ebulliently with my son over our shared obsession with art supply stores, the pacific and nostalgic toll of church bells, or a few minutes to write a really juicy blog post that I just know will make someone in cyberspace laugh or cry or do a little of both. 
One of my most cherished cards of the past holiday season bore this message:   Now and then it's good to pause in our pursuit of happiness and just be happy. Guillaume Apollinaire
Now thats someone whos on the road to solving the mystery of happiness.


Bloggers note:  If youve tried unsuccessfully in the past to post a comment, you might want to try again.  The problem appears to be fixed.  Thanks Aimee  ;-)

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Emprise

Life can seem to be all about following the rules.  There is an almost dreamy decadence that comes on those rare occasions when we disregard convention and take a risk.  Its like skinny dipping at midnight under a blanket of stars on a warm summer night.  Theres an immediate surge of adrenaline as the water somehow takes on a sublime, velvety feel, impossible to discern in swimwear in the light of day.
When a colleague leaned over our table of drinks the other evening and quoted Steve Jobs to me, saying:  Its more fun to be a pirate than to join the navy, I smiled deliciously at the thought. Ever since, though, Ive been thinking about his subsequent sobering acknowledgment that there are so few opportunities in our daily lives to be the pirate. 
What Jobs statement refers to is the hiring philosophy for his creative company:   Those who work best in structure, hierarchy and protocol are better suited in conventional organizations. The people who thrive in the ambiguity of unorthodox arenas and burst with passion for what they do were the ones he wanted for his business, not just for the decidedly creative roles, but for all roles.
Clearly, at Apple, Jobs was looking for people who are swashbucklers all the time, but he also created a unique utopia where this is embraced and expected 24/7. What about the rest of us who live and work in the real world?  My immediate response to my friend was that we need to be on the look-out for those places and times in our lives when we can safely let our hair down, and that the search itself is part of what makes being the pirate so fun. 
We all have an inner pirate.  The question for me is when and to what extent to do we let her out?  Im sure it wont surprise you, but, to me, this is all connected to the confidence and courage unleashed by following our dreams. I was telling some new acquaintances recently that as I nudge my writing beyond the cloisters of my inner circle and receive positive feedback about its quality and resonance, I am becoming more confident in my abilities, fueled to push it out further. There is no prescribed path for how I launch it into the world, no rules about what I write or how I write, and Im filled with a desire to come back to it again and again.  It can sometimes make my day job pale in comparison.
Following our own path is where the pirate makes her appearance.  The more time we devote to the things we love, the more confident we are in letting our true selves bleed into other aspects of our lives.  Over the last few months, Ive felt compelled to look for avenues to introduce my writing into my job, submitting some pieces to leaders at work. I have visions of Ralphie in A Christmas Story, imagining the fanfare that would surround him when his teacher awards him an A + + + for his riveting theme about his Red Ryder BB gun.  But Im also prepared to be jolted into the reality of a C grade and the comment Youll shoot your eye out.  Whether there is a place for my writing at the office is yet to be seen, but hitting the send button felt that electric kind of good that bounding into the water in the buff at the bewitching hour evokes. 
Somehow that same conversation the other evening turned morose, as stories were shared about the life-changing realities of incapacitating accidents and illnesses that unsuspectingly rob people in their prime. Being middle-aged, everyone at the table could relate.  Were at the intersection of wisdom and vitality. The time to strike is now.  I looked at my friend and said Be the pirate.
Maybe Im being a little overly dramatic, but life is short.  Too short to leave your dreams stashed in a corner somewhere to be looked at later when you have more time. We need to keep our eyes open, looking harder for the places to bring out the pirate.  You only need to go skinny dipping once to be forever enamored, restless, and keenly attuned to the next opening to repeat the rush.   

Bloggers Note:  As I was putting the finishing touches on this post, an e-mail came through from the office.  My most recent writing submission has been approved for our newsletter. They like the tone, but want me to dial it back a bit.  I guess that means I should confine skinny dipping metaphors to the blog . . .

Monday, August 6, 2012

Aberrant

As the garage door creeps up its track like an aging rollercoaster, acrid paint fumes waft under my nose.  Im parking the car left of center now, as Im sharing space with my teenagers who have outfitted a man cave designed for their latest foray into the arts.  Furnished with lawn chairs, a wooden workbench, repurposed skateboards and remnants of a big-screen TV, they work under shop lighting rescued from the basement, their monster music blaring as they cut stencils to contain the spray paint that imparts their designs on any surface imaginable.
Art is in their blood, the same way it is in mine. Ive seen it manifest itself over and over again in drawings on bedroom walls, plastic drinking bottle sculptures, duct tape clothing, embroidery floss bracelets and various found-art media:  chalk on sidewalks, sand on beaches, snow on a frozen pond. They can try to deny it or cast it aside, but they are infused with a creativity that colors every speck of their worlds.
And this is how it is with our passions, those talents we are truly meant to explore, exploit and export.  Our gifts are deliberately designed to be irresistible and irrefutable to us. What a clever way to ensure that we are inevitably led to happiness. 
So if were programmed to gravitate toward our strengths why do so many of us suffer in jobs we dont care for, leaving our dreams unfulfilled?
Sometimes our passions are off the beaten path.  When we were younger, we acquiesced to the wishes of our parents.  I know plenty of adults who became the professional mom or dad wanted them to be as a requisite for a funded education, only to change careers later in life.  In my generation, you may have received half-hearted encouragement to go for what you really wanted with the caveat you get a teaching degree to fall back on.
Todays world is different.  The most ambitious entrepreneurs are starting businesses in college dorm rooms.  A tiny handful of true risk takers abandon their educations in favor of following creative dreams.  But most of us still guide our children to take the safe route.  They should pursue degrees in higher education because it seems more probable that theyll find success and monetary rewards in these familiar and accepted surroundings. The white collar world is the coveted place to be, and anymore, no one will look at you without a college degree.
I remember my own decision to pursue interior design.  Seeking independence and emancipation from the responsibilities and constraints of the oldest child in a 7-person family, I knew I wanted to go to college.  I had the grades, and parameters were set.  It would be a state school, and I wanted the biggest.  Having finished an interior design course in public high school, I decided this was a form of art I could pursue that would satisfy the requirement that I end up with a steady job upon receipt of a degree.
Ironically, I spent twelve years in a career I wasnt particularly good at.  Working my way up from technical drawing positions to true design, I discovered I was surrounded by colleagues who were far more talented and most importantly, confident and courageous in their work.  It wasnt until I found myself on the business side of things that I found my true calling.  I went from counting the minutes until I could pick up and leave for the day to wondering where the hours in the day went. 
I followed the popular, prescribed path for my generation. An undergraduate degree at a Big Ten university was more than respectable at the time.  But I didnt end up any more satisfied with my original career choice because of it.
And Im not alone.  I used to love those interviews with successful businesspeople that the Chicago Tribune published years ago in the business section of the Sunday paper.  There was a chronological history of the path each individual took to get from the first job as a high school babysitter to the present.  I was always fascinated and inspired by the people who took the circuitous paths.
Ten may be the new fifteen in todays world, but I dont believe most kids have any better idea of what they want to do with the rest of their lives than we did a generation ago. What they decide to do today may not be what they are doing twenty years from now. It all comes together when you love what you are doing so much that you find the courage to immerse yourself completely. But no one can predict when exactly that will be.
And maybe thats why I allow my boys to use our home as a canvas for just about any project they can think of:  I want them to get comfortable trying new things, so its not so scary to look for what they love and go after it. I want them to find the courage within themselves much earlier in life than I did.
A friend reminded me recently that my boys are not following the ubiquitous path of the average honor student athlete because I allow it to be different.  Shes right.  I am wide open to the path less traveled because thats where we all find ourselves.
Two roads diverged in a wood and I - I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.  --  Robert Frost