Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Trove

I dream that time travel or some type of supernatural powers or pure magic allow my grandmothers and I to be present together when we are all in our forties.  We wallow and weep, commiserate and celebrate. Imagining the conversations the three of us could have Im certain the collective experience, spirituality, wit, grit and wisdom would surely light a world on fire.
 
These ladies both possessed the power to brighten up a whole room with their fiery personalities, although they expressed them quite differently.  My maternal grandmother was fierce, some might say a little brash; hardened from a life lived raising her young daughter on her own while residing with her mother on Fletcher Street in Chicago during the late forties and fifties.  She worked in a mans world when women didnt, in the melting pot of the city, taking public transportation to the loop every day; an experience Id bet fed her old world prejudices, as well as fueled her vim and vigor. She retained an inviting, easy sense of humor bred in mischief, making me believe she was that girlfriend daring you to step out of your comfort zone into wild, reckless, iniquitous fun.

Im quite sure my paternal grandmother had no idea what to do with her.  Equally fervent, ardent and grounded in her views, she brought irrevocable, unequivocal faith to the equation.  She possessed a kind, earnest authenticity and rawness, almost more than my teenaged self could bear. She had a way of clasping your hand, looking deeply into your eyes when she spoke to you, as if penetrating straight to your soul.  I think it scared me; I didnt know who was inside me at the time. How could she be so confident I was all goodness, blindly believing in the tangled mess that was me? 

Maybe she just knew beyond a shadow of a doubt whats inside all of us. Those amazing gifts were born with, stored in the exquisite vessel that is our bodies and minds, waiting for us to unearth them when we finally catch that scintilla of light to be broken open into our full sparkle.

I decide to live the life I imagine.  This doesnt mean a list of prescriptive goals with boxes to check in the New Year, it means a way of being, taking infinite forms.  I want to place myself into the hands of another, in all the diverse, unexpected and beautiful ways this can be:   With people Ill never know, holding my art in their hands as they turn the pages of my sketchbook, or savor my words in published hardcover.  In relationships with the people I encounter every day, from those waiting to be known in the elevator to that one individual I choose to know deeply, intimately, exclusively.
 
Ive spent the past year windward to fear, my face in the storm for causes Im not necessarily passionate about, for someone elses dreams.  I want to channel all Ive learned about facing fear into chasing my own dreams and desires.

Life is a cache of glittering, delightful connections to be made in the present moment, wherever you are, with the power to take you exactly where you want to go. I want to be brave enough to make them.  I want to open my treasure chest and brighten up a whole room. Are you in it with me?


This is my 200th blog post.  In 2014 I plan to catalogue them, to begin organizing them for print. Which are your favorites and how have they inspired you?

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Panacea

When she says shes working on compassion in 2014, but freely admits she doesnt do empathy, she sparks a debate.  Do you need to be empathetic in order to be compassionate?  Most of us in the conversation agree that yes, empathy is a prerequisite for compassion.  Im not ready to commit; however, Im intrigued by this question and want to dig a little deeper.  From a purely academic perspective, vocabulary.com defines the two words like this:

empathy (noun)   understanding and entering into anothers feelings
compassion (noun) - the humane quality of understanding the suffering of others and wanting to do something about it

I can see why it is tempting, especially for those with a bias for action, to want to skip empathy and go right to compassion.  Empathy is feeling; compassion is feeling plus doing.  Lots of us want to be problem solvers, heading straight to the fix.  The trouble is we often gloss over the feeling part, in favor of getting right to action that will make things better.  We want to get out of the uncomfortableness of feeling which can seem of little value.  When were doing its easy to see tangible evidence of the support were providing.  We busy ourselves with action to avoid the helplessness of living in the emotion.

Empathy gets lost because feelings are impalpable.  We think were being compassionate, but as we focus on the action, weve inadvertently eliminated the emotion.  To be truly compassionate individuals, we need to do the hard work of feeling; this is ultimately what compels us to act so powerfully humane.

When I look up compassion in the Urban Dictionary, which I love for its Wikipedia-style real-world (and sometimes shocking) interpretations, I see this: It takes guts to care.  Not what Id describe as particularly eloquent, but to the point.  Its hard to get into other peoples feelings, especially when they are hurting.  It makes us uncomfortable.  We just want to make the pain go away, especially when were the person inflicting the hurt. Heres my case in point:

I ask him if he has New Years Eve plans, if hell go on a date with me.  He tells me he needs to think about it.  It takes only one heartbeat for the pride and excitement swelling in my chest to deflate; its a foregone conclusion that with the need for deliberation, even if he comes back with an affirmative response, the evening is destined to be an awkward disaster.  So Im more than relieved when his verdict denies me.  Hes cajoling me, though, attempting to make me feel better as I recoil disappointed, discomfited and dismayed.  I put a halt to the text messages when it becomes apparent that he is uncomfortable in my pain and wants me to do his emotional labor by telling him Im fine.  I know Im not fine, and I need to give myself the chance to feel the gamut of emotions that exhibiting vulnerability with this invitation fires at me.

This is how we find the guts to care for others, by having the guts to care for ourselves first, doing the hard work of acknowledging, accepting and expressing our own uncomfortable feelings.  We cant truly understand what another is feeling unless weve been there ourselves.  When we sweep our own feelings under the rug we dont experience what its like to live through them and to come out on the other side okay, or maybe even better than we were before we started. 

So heres what I decide:  I get to feel everything I need to in this situation, and I dont need to come back to him until Im done.  For me this means reassuring myself I didnt misread his oeillade. Attractions are extremely visceral.  We cant do anything about them, and they are impossible to hide, especially to a keen observer. But we do deny them, all the time.  I wasnt wrong in my assessment; he just chooses to deny it.  I get to feel proud of myself for my boldness, dismayed by his choice to turn me down, embarrassed for disclosing a feeling he doesnt share and disappointed that we wont be going out. And I get to own these feelings outright.

When we do our own emotional labor, practice living in the uncomfortableness pain and suffering bring us, we equip ourselves for empathy. The feeling component of compassion matters just as much, if not more, than the doing. So many times in life there isnt an action any one person on the planet can take that will right the wrong thats been done to us.  But knowing that someone understands, cares and is brave enough to sit in the tide of emotion darkness inflicts on us is the most powerful antidote ever made.

Yes, empathy is required for compassion.  If you dont know where to begin, begin with you.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Oneiric

You cant see the end from the beginning when you play where no one else is playing.  --  Whitney Johnson

I read these words and its instantly apparent why everything Im after in life these days feels so darn hard to attain.  That project at work that will transform how our business operates, my teenager following the road less traveled to adulthood, my personal quest for epic love.  Im not on a chartered course anymore, anywhere.

In life we get extremely comfortable walking a highly-socialized, everyones doing it, prescribed path.  Assignments at work follow a rote pattern of deliverables, a cadence of operating we know like the back of our hands.  Of course our children go to college after high school and become white collar workers.  We have the means, so naturally this is what theyll do.  Marriage follows its patterns as well, one of them being this:  Buy a house in the suburbs with all of the requisite stuff, birth and raise children, retire and live on a golf course.  There are manuals, directions, models to follow for all of this.  We know how to get these things done and feel successful. Theres nothing wrong with this approach, as long as we are happy and fulfilled with it.

But were all born with dreams, those desires that excite and terrify us at the same time.  We barely dare to articulate them because they are so far left of center. If we let them bubble up and spill over, were going to disrupt the status quo, change the world maybe.  So we keep them contained in the glass, sipping slowly on whats safe.
 
Sometimes we go after our dreams outright. Sometimes life pushes us off the path, presenting an opportunity to work on groundbreaking innovation at work, giving us a high school graduate who cant see himself in school for another minute, or causing us to make choices that net a chance to enter into a relationship on new terms.  And suddenly everything is hard, not only because we have never been here before, because no one involved has been here before either.

We can get paralyzed.  We dont know what to do. Without any guidance were so afraid of failing, we do nothing at all. We can get frustrated, distressed over the need to write the manual or chart a new course.  What if, instead of being upset, we look at the situation as an opportunity to create something uniquely ours thats never been done before?  Isnt this place where there is no documented right or wrong the perfect place for all of us imperfect souls to play? 

In Johnsons post, titled "Where There's a Why, There's a Way" , she submits that when we are clear on why it is were doing what were doing, well figure out how.  This is what I tell young people I coach on long term career goals; dont worry about how you might achieve your goal, get used to saying it out loud. If you truly want it and believe it, youll find a way to make it happen.

And so this is how it is:  Believing so completely that the product were creating will transform our industry keeps me coming back to the drawing board restructuring our approach.  Believing wholeheartedly that my son is capable of reaching his potential on his own terms keeps me constantly looking for new ways to equip him and support him on his journey.  Believing emphatically that the best relationships are not stepped into under perfect circumstances, but are living, breathing, ever-evolving creations of the two unique souls comprising them keeps me pursuing the one in front of me. These are my passionate whys bringing the strength, tenacity and determination to keep me forever modifying the how.
   
The reality is, I dont want to play in the space everyone else is playing in. And maybe thats because I believe I am built to play where no one else plays.  When I ask a colleague for feedback, she deconstructs my leadership in these words: 

You are very thoughtful about how you consider everything and you decide on your tactics based on what's going to yield the most value long term. Then you cautiously and correctly go after it meticulously and you alter your pace and focus based on reactions of everyone:  Eye on the prize and a very intellectual approach to getting there.

What a priceless gift her assessment of my skills is.  Ive never been more challenged in my life than I am right now, but with those words never more confident that Im in the place I need to be, that place where no one else is playing.

I recently invited someone whos never been here before either to come and play with me.  I wonder if hell accept.  

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Voluminous

Christmas is a love story.  I read this on my electronic newspaper in the early hours of the 25th, before even getting out of bed. I dry my eyes and shoot the link to two girlfriends.  I open it up several times over the course of the day to read again.

Im weary, theres no denying it, and the spirit evades me.  Christmas is meant to be the prize, the big, joyful culmination of weeks of preparation, but every year, for me, it lands with a hollow thud despite my best efforts to make it different. Im certain Im not alone in this, and this writer speaks to me; clearly she sees this too.
 
The story goes that love was about to be born, but no one had room to welcome it.  Everywhere was full, booked, closed, busy. But love found room, as it always does, in the most humble, surprising places.

I feel full, booked, closed and busy.  Not just with the squeeze of holiday preparations, but in ordinary time with work, raising teenagers, and the last seven years spent raising myself.  It seems like there is no room to welcome love. All Ive been able to see are the burdens another would need to be willing to take on if love were to come in.

Whether your heart feels festive, lit and tinseled, or barren, drafty, dirt-floored, and covered in straw, love will come wherever there is room.

Hope bursts out of this message. Love can live anywhere. It doesnt need festive and tinseled to feel welcome. Even in my barren draftiness love can exist.

Love is coming either way. Welcome or not. Ready or not. 

Maybe its time to stop preparing and just make some room.    


Read Kristin Armstrongs full post "Making Room".

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Gleam

These early mornings during the holiday season, at the crack of dawn as my mother used to say, I find myself on the living room sofa with my gingerbread latte in front of the Christmas tree ablaze in white lights.  Strung with globes, flames, icicles, and twinkling minis, this tree still somehow positively glows in spite of the fact that an alarming number of bulbs are burned out. Next year well be overdue for new lights and Im hopeful energy-wasting incandescent white is still out there somewhere (did I really just say that?); the blue cast of LED lacks all warmth.  Im spending my quotidian five minutes of me time here, soaking in a little energy before yet another crazy day begins.
 
When this practice starts, its time used to "armor up" as Brene Brown puts it, to decide how I will steel myself against everything each new day brings for me to fear:  That big (or little) presentation where I socialize a new idea, challenge the status quo, or compel someone to add yet another task to their already full plate, that conversation I need to have with a wayward teenager about consequences for veering off the path to adulthood, anything that takes me out of my comfort zone.

It can feel like we live in our suits of armor; were never quite comfortable enough to leave them in the closet.  They become heavy, laden with the smell of fear, if thats possible.  Public speaking, pitching new ideas, defending our opinions, crucial conversations and reasons to uphold unpopular decisions are ubiquitous.  These are not just periodic events with plenty of prep time, which also bring the requisite time to get properly worked up; they are roiling fast and furious like the life-giving pains of labor speed up as the moment of birth draws near.  We need to learn how to roll with them because there is literally no breathing space in between.

When we armor up to protect ourselves from failure and hurt, we live a life that becomes all about just getting past the next scary thing.  We want it over with quickly so we painstakingly script an approved message to be presented stiff and frozen, praying there are no questions to ad lib. Or we avoid conversations completely, choosing to stay on the surface, never clearly resolving issues or requesting exactly what we want. We give only part of ourselves to those we engage with because bringing everything weve got means being vulnerable.  We think if we can squeeze ours eyes tightly shut, clench the bar pinning us inside the seat of this rollercoaster, we can take the next stomach-turning plunge and cross ourselves when we make it out alive.  Life is a tumultuous ride, for sure, but we miss it when we live with our eyes, our lips and our hearts closed.

Maybe what were really afraid of is when we embrace who we are we unleash a blinding light so powerful we truly can change the world? 
  
Instead of suiting up during my morning five, Im challenging myself to look differently at what I fear. How can I approach situations from another place, bringing the best of me to the table, so that Im not living to get beyond the moment, but living through the moment?  I want to commit to the belief that everything Ill ever need to live my best life exists inside of me.

When we think were too flawed to put ourselves out there, the unique gifts we possess to light up the world remain buried beneath our protective armor.  But I need only to look at my Christmas tree to see that despite broken filaments extinguishing countless bulbs its still possible for an incredible, fiery glow.

Perfection is not required to change the world (or your life for that matter), nor is it a prerequisite to worthiness.  Go ahead, open the gift inside you; light the world on fire. 

gleam.
  

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Exegesis

My first experience with global work is conducted via conference calls. I am routinely in a panic. Everyone around me appears to understand everything being said.  I am lost.  Were all rumored to be speaking English, but laced with the heavy accents of Mexico, Argentina, China and India Im straining to find my native tongue within these strange dialects.  Im much more comfortable today, but Ill admit to sometimes even having a hard time when my British colleagues get on a roll.  They, of course, are quick to tell me we Americas are the ones who do not know how to speak English.
 
Once I begin to understand whats coming out of their mouths, I realize the words dont mean the same things. Culturally the same process is done very differently.  A commitment to deliver the materials on Tuesday carries no weight in Chile; in the Banana Republic, I learn, it gets there when it gets there. But Ive built my schedule around the US expectations, and Im also counting on the fact that proven methods of escalation work south of the equator.  Well, they just dont.

Next comes the technical speak.  When youre tasked with leading a project comprised of multiple specialties, you need to come up to speed quickly, going way deeper into, lets say, how a data center works than youd ever care to go.  But this matters because you cant sequence the project or bring the right people to the table at the right time if you dont understand some of the details. 
   
And then we get to the layer so deeply buried and complex it can seem like it takes a psychologist to understand.  Human feelings, our experiences, our baggage; these cause us all to view situations differently, respond differently.  This could very well be the most crucial level of understanding, but its also the most difficult to break through.
 
When you get down to it, an unbelievable amount of information is lost in translation.  We fail every day because of a lack of understanding. Deliverables at work get missed, schedules are blown.  We even fail to understand the source of our managers anger.  Is it about the mistake weve made or the impact to anothers reputation if the project fails?  Head-butting between parents and their teenagers is germane to this.  Our kids deliberately keep us in the dark as they wrestle with the unbelievably difficult task of showing us who they are.  They barely understand themselves, how can they explain anything to us?  Relationships with our spouses and significant others, those meant to be the most intimate of all, fail on a regular basis because were unable to open up to the loved one who matters most to us.
 
When I contemplate it, it seems miraculous that anything ever gets done right at all.  How much of our accomplishments and successes are achieved at the surface level because navigating to a basic level of understanding is relatively safe?  What truly breakthrough work could we deliver or mind-blowing relationships could we revel in if we all seek to really understand each other?

At Trader Joes Im asked by the very friendly cashier what I do for a living.  It takes only a second to do the math in my head and decide explaining my job as a senior leader at my company will take some time to explain, so I blurt out that Im a project manager.  The minute I say it I feel like Ralphie in A Christmas Story, desperately clawing his way back up the Santa slide after he realizes hes made a huge mistake requesting a football instead of the coveted Red Ryder BB Gun coloring his every thought round the clock. I walk out of the store angry at myself for diminishing the title Ive worked hard to earn because it will take a few extra words to get to understanding.
 
To be understood and to understand is humbling.  It requires wholehearted, vulnerable living. It means admitting you just dont get it. This can feel like exposing a weakness.  Arent we supposed to know everything about the job were tasked to do, the child we gave birth to, the spouse weve laid beside for the last 20+ years?  The further removed our beliefs about how much the other may expect us to know are from what we actually do know, the easier it is to admit the disconnect.  No one expects a real estate agent to know how to split an atom, so its hardly risky to ask that question.  But if youre working on a project in the realm of your expertise, or spend every weekend with your boyfriend, it becomes harder to raise your hand.

Understanding requires trusting that the person on the other side of the conversation has the patience and desire to explain the situation or himself to help you understand. And that he will be there for you, without judgment, for as long as it takes for you to get it. Ultimately, if you cant move to the same place, then it means trusting youll be able to coexist, respectfully and happily, on two different sides of the same issue.
 
Getting to understanding is hard work you need to be willing to do. If you wont spend time learning about the equivalent of quadratic equations or nuclear physics when all you really care about is getting to the launch plan for the product that incorporates this subject matter, you risk the success of the project because you can't effectively lead the team doing the work.

Nothing about this is easy because we need to show our weaknesses, so we leave the tough questions unasked, we avoid the work required to get us to understanding.  Its easier to ask to be removed from the project, or to respectfully exit the relationship and move back into our safe place, that place where were not challenged. But if we dont identify the brokenness and fix it, we leave wild success and wild love on the table.   As one of my favorite people at the office told me this week, Development hurts."

Lost in yet another translation, Im accused of not taking my own advice.  Ouch!  It hurts, but in this case its spot on.  I know what needs to be done, but Im just as fallible as the person next to me.  Its not about eating my words; its about teaching myself how to feast on them.  

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Manipulation

Im compelled to look this word up, much hangs on its connotation and its important for my heart that I get this right.  When vocabulary.com reveals two definitions, its not that I dont know they exist, but they coexist so surreptitiously in what I consider to be a sacred space.  That one can be extraordinarily skilled in this dichotomy ambushes me; that Im able to recuse myself from intoxicating, inimitable splendor in order to shield myself from an inevitable, insalubrious erosion of my soul makes walking away a testament to the power of sheer will.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Anthropomorphism

Its a cold Sunday afternoon and Im glued to the television watching March of the Penguins; a documentary film recounting a year in the life of the Emperor species, endemic to Antarctica.  To me the fascinating part of this story is the degree to which the male penguin participates in caring for the chick, acting as an incubator and present when it hatches, as the emaciated female must embark on a slow journey in search of food not long after she lays the egg. Before taking off she transfers this precious cargo to the feet of the male, a process so delicate they must practice many times before actually doing it; if not done properly, the embryo dies.
 
This is probably 8 years in the past, but I remember it as if it were yesterday.  As Im watching, all I can think is that if my mate and I are Emperor Penguins, our chick will surely perish; we are incapable of the level of cooperation required to keep the embryo alive. And even more sadly, when the female returns home devastated to discover the baby she has never met has died, I know in my heart we are incapable of forgiveness, too; I would be no less fierce with my admonishment of the male.

What is it that allows some couples to work so well together and others not so much? 

Fast forward to today, and maybe Ive discovered the answer in a heated debate I find myself in at dinner.  I call myself a feminist, to which he retorts we dont need them anymore.  Weve made tons of progress since the days of Mad Men, he says this is enough.  Lifes pretty much unfair all the way around, even to the white male; this he believes strongly; pounding his hand on the table as punctuation, launching into a diatribe on affirmative action.

Im stunned by the fire in his belly fueling a diametric response so intense I cant believe Id missed his position on this before.  I want desperately for my point of view to be heard, and my attempt to express it calmly causes his head to turn the other way. Frustrated and a little disillusioned, Im on the brink of tears and walk out of the restaurant.  Not my proudest moment.

Were all entitled to our opinions; this I believe.  So when I think about what really bothers me in this situation, its not that we disagree (although this is a hard one for me to swallow). While his position is unfathomable to me, and I can hardly see how we should stop talking about equality for women now that weve tackled the low hanging fruit of feminism and are no longer groped in the office, I do know this:  He believes in his viewpoint as strongly as I believe in mine.

What bothers me is that in this moment he refuses to let me be heard.
 
No two people ever agree on absolutely everything.  Solid, fulfilling, unbreakable relationships are built on collaboration and compromise. But to get to those, you need to listen.   Listening is a form of respect.  We listen to learn.  Its not about shifting someone to your opinion; its about understanding why they believe in their own.  When you take the time to understand where the beliefs of another are rooted, you can get to common ground, that space where we all live, that space where collaboration and compromise can move in and make themselves at home. Equanimity in this world comes only from a relentless desire to understand.
  
The documentary still fresh in my mind, I find a set of four vintage penguin ornaments, in beautiful red and mercury colored glass. I hang them on the tree.  And when its time to put the decorations in storage, one penguin lands on my mantle, instead;  a symbol of hope for better days ahead. The truth is, that chick that belonged to my Emperor Penguin mate and I did perish in our inanition.   He was too busy pushing his own agenda to hear me, and I got tired of fighting to be heard.
   

Although its been many years and Ive healed and moved on, I think its time to put the penguin back on the mantle after the holidays, this time to remind myself not only that I deserve to be heard, but theres always room to be a better listener, too.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Umbra

Their kisses suck out your very soul. The room goes cold when they are near. They steal your positive energy, your happy memories. You cant see them, but feel them acutely.  They are the Dementors, phantoms of doom and gloom from Harry Potter fiction, but weve all run across them in real life.
 
Their power is in the disguise they wear, for these individuals appear happy and confident on the outside, like they have it all together.  Yet when were around them, we feel inexplicably uneasy, in a constant state of inanition.  We quail, questioning our capabilities, querying our confidence, quavering over our conclusions, as if we are somehow less than qualified.  Surely, it must be us, something were doing.
 
It can take some time to realize that theyre casting onto us the shadow of doubt and deficiency they wear upon themselves. The give-away is that in no other arena do we feel this inadequate, sapped of all of our strength. The moment were away from them were resuscitated.

Dementors have ways of tricking us into being untrue to ourselves.  They fill us with the insatiable need to visibly prove ourselves; announce were making progress, take all the credit for getting the work done.  They can cause us to raise our voices to make a point, reduce us to tears as we attempt to claim our worth. They can drain us of all passion we possess to do the work we absolutely love.

Luckily, you dont need to know the Patronus Charm in order to break the spell of the Dementor.  He maintains his hold over you only until the moment you recognize him for who he is. He never really disappears, but you win back the power to quell your own feelings and return to your authentic self.

The irony is the Dementors in our lives can bring out unexpected brilliance within us.  As we fight to retain our sanity and our souls, we develop a sophisticated, almost stealth-like approach, allowing the Dementor the dignity he so desperately needs to maintain with his disguise, bringing a new level of humility to our leadership. 

That's the kiss I'd like to receive.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Kindle

Leadership is not a hierarchy.  From the vantage point of the ranks; however, it looks like one. Logic says survival of the fittest, the most talented ascend to the top, but this isnt always the case.  The most senior leaders in any organization are not necessarily the smartest people in the room. The truly brilliant know they are surrounded by others who are, in fact, smarter, and relish the opportunity to rub shoulders and learn.

The irony in my leadership journey is that I thought Id get to a place where I knew the answer to every question, could solve any problem, and at that point Id be on top.  Now I know that the journey never ends, and no one ever has every answer.  It doesnt mean I cant be a great leader. It just means I will always be discovering.

What we learn in any given day crosses the spectrum from the mundane to the momentous, as evidenced by this sampling of insight coming my way in the last 24 hours:

My super cute, waterproof fashion boots really serve no functional purpose in snow.  As I push my cart to the car, it's apparent I would have been better off in the ski boots I warily eyed a woman in the grocery store sporting.

It is possible to listen to my iPod in my rental car.  All thats needed is the right cable, available courtesy of Nates room, which is a warehouse of auxiliary cords for any electronic product you could ever dream of juicing. Who knew?

Despite the precision required for baking, it doesnt have to be curtains for the batch of cookies when you accidentally add one more tablespoon of cocoa powder than stated in the recipe. In fact, these types of missteps make the delicacy uniquely yours. This, I believe, is how that nebulous ingredient called extra love came into being.

Nelson Mandela knew that if he was ever going to do the work of freeing an entire people, he needed to first free himself.  As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn't leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I'd still be in prison.  Makes me wonder where in life Im holding myself back.

When a teenaged boy wants to walk to a friends house in the snow, it doesnt necessarily mean hes up to no good.  It could be he needs a little time with himself to re-chart his course. Sometimes it is good to let him be; hes going to need to get to know who he is on his journey to becoming a great leader.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Respire

The last line of her message reads Wine soon?”  Im up to my eyeballs in holiday preparations; its like shes thrown a life preserver to a drowning woman.  I ask if she can meet tonight.

Yes, its true; I havent yet cracked a single egg for cookie dough. My tree is a nightmare of cords fueling white light bulbs of all shapes and sizes, with an alarming number dead or dimming as they await last rites. The ornaments are in a box, save for the handful of ill-placed giant, personalized, shiny globes hanging at the precise height of the narcissistic teenaged boys rifling through for anything eponymous.  So much for elegance and balance.  Of course I need a drink.

A few years ago at my church, the pastor was so taken with a homily presented by one of our priests that he requested a repeat on a subsequent Sunday.  Its one that resonates the very first time he speaks it.  The highlight is this:  If youve got time to pray, pray for 15 minutes.  If you dont have time to pray, pray for an hour.  Its such an awesome reminder that we all just need to slow down, to focus on what truly matters. And so I tell my beloved friend that the last thing I have time for is a night out, which is exactly why Im pushing all my work aside to go out.

Dinner (and wine) with my friend is cathartic. She is exactly what I need as I take a well-deserved time out from the rush of the season.   The sparkle and splash of my holiday cards and cookies is a labor of love, but a labor nonetheless. And the demands of ordinary time often cant be held at bay while we get our jingle on, which means were squeezing more into already packed lives.

The few remaining days between us and the holidays are guaranteed to race by faster than those coursers pulling the sleigh. To have any hope of actually enjoying them, we need to take some time for ourselves.  So I delegate all tree decorating to the teenagers.  Im not sure Ill be able to resist the urge to relocate a few (well, many) ornaments, but the heavy lift is done.  And while the mercury glass-colored glitter glue is drying on my stacks of handmade greeting cards, Im taking a moment to sit by the fire and pen this post.  No, I dont have time for it.  Thats why Im doing it.