Monday, March 31, 2014

Substratum

She tells me shes putting her house on the market, describing all of the depersonalization her real estate agent prescribes to speed up the sale.  Im a staunch opponent of this approach believing no one should dictate the number of objects living on my kitchen counters. Its ridiculous, I say, to invest my money in cosmetic changes to a property Im exiting; worse yet guessing what might appeal to a prospective buyer who will likely make changes before the paint even dries.  My house is who I am, to alter it to be what others think it should be goes against, well, pretty much everything I believe.

I dont consider how much my home has to say about me until he shows up to start fixing it.  The need to replace roof vents leads to patching ceilings, which stretches into drywall repairs of all kinds, and well, if were going to paint, after twelve years Id like some new colors please.  The more good work he does the more I find for him to do.  And as he gets intimate with my home uncovering nail pops and drywall seams behind brightly colored walls, he gets intimate with me.

He asks questions about what he sees, and as hes mudding my kitchen ceiling we talk about art museums, Les Mis, Frank Lloyd Wright and the Chihuly exhibit in Phoenix.  He sees not just the home in my life, but my life in this home.  He says he likes the dynamic he witnesses between me and my boys; he says he can tell Im someone whos been through a very challenging time coming out the other side with grace.

Validation comes in unexpected places sometimes. That what Ive been working on for so long, so pointedly, so determinedly is manifesting itself in ways others can see, appreciate and even admire leaves me vindicated.

Its never easy to go it alone, to parent from the gut when your gut goes against the grain, to lead from the heart when others lead from the wallet, to paint the shutters purple when the neighborhood is clearly grey. But now that Im actually doing it, I cant imagine it any other way.  

It makes me wonder this:  Are those who need to see a vanilla house in order to imagine it as their own maybe living a life thats a little too vanilla? 

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Lodestone

My heart skips a beat when she asks the colleague next to me at the table what it is that makes me a good leader.  Its that moment we attempt the impossible, to prepare ourselves for vulnerability. Were not sure what exactly will be said, but we know the words are fraught with the potential to evoke a visceral reaction we pray we can field with passable grace.

Every day some publication somewhere is posting research, opinions, guidelines, maybe even folklore, around the seven, ten or thirty-three qualities a great leader possesses. As we digest these concepts, we cant help but assess ourselves in search of reassurance weve got what it takes to come out on top. But my co-workers response to this question is anything but a checklist; its all about the singular combination of traits and values making me exclusively me.

Harvard Business Review, in "Which Women Are Rising to the Top?cites data gathered from elite female leaders across the globe surveyed about how they rose to the top in their fields. The findings highlighted in this particular post are brilliant in their simplicity:  Exceptional women leaders look at success holistically; its not just about work, but about life. They are honest and open about the choices and sacrifices they make to balance, and they go about finding a workplace culture where they are set up to win on all fronts. 

What I love most is these women know this to be true: They arent one of the guys and they dont try to be.

As this information sinks in, it starts to feel groundbreaking, and for me personally, vindicating. My colleagues words are powerful because they tell me Im succeeding on my own terms.  My determination to lead with authenticity, to resist the urge to be anyone other than me is paying off.  And its
reverberating.  I am smiling when it hits me every initiative I own at the office this year pairs me with an outstanding woman leader.  I find it ironic that I dont set out to do this, it just happens.

We are natural magnets for what we most want out of life, for the connections we want to make, for the relationships we want to be in.  Is what youre putting out there what you want to attract? 

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Tachometer

When Larry shows up oozing respect, takes a careful look around, asks the right questions, gets to the root of the problem at hand, and explains in laymans terms absent of condescendence I decide he is someone who has earned the right to do more for me.  In this single interaction I have no doubt he will fix whats broken and have my back.  My sons free-wheeling approach to procuring contractors for work in our home finally pays off. Im blanketed in stuckness again; a strangers appearance a gift I spot as a relief valve when this, the smallest of clogs, starts to open with the promise of dislodging the dam of my life into a cathartic watershed.
 
My foot is pushing the accelerator to the floor, yet Im not moving. Im a dune buggy spinning sand thinking speed will bring traction.  Its even invading my sleep. This weeks recurring dream is most telling:  Ive remarried my ex-husband, more miserable than ever, but its clear Ive somehow allowed myself to be coerced into this place again even though I know I dont want it.  It seems obvious its me I have the problem with.  Where has all my confidence gone?

As Seth Godin puts it, its easy to be confident when youre having success:  When youre bringing in gobs of revenue at work, guiding motivated teenaged over-achievers, basking in the glow of an attentive partner showering you with admiration.  Who wouldnt be bleeding confidence?  What happens when instead the results of your work are less visible or take years to come to fruition, your child stands on the threshold of his future yet doesnt know what he wants to be when he grows up, or your partner barely seems to notice youre around?

Im fascinated by how easily, how abashedly I allow others to rob me of my confidence, stalling myself in feelings of unworthiness, recusing myself of this inalienable right.  Its not easy to be your fabulous self as my friend Tracy puts it, when the highly engaged audience at the conference loses all energy the minute I start presenting my topic, or when the decision to press for early graduation for my high school senior results in a state of limbo without a job or a plan, or when the former boyfriend Im embarrassed to admit I still harbor feelings for shows up at a party with someone else fabulous and proceeds to get my name wrong when he makes the awkward introduction.
 
We start to think maybe were not so great after all.
 
We all seem to depend on some degree of outward affirmation of our fabulousness to coax our inner confidence out of hiding, but life is not always there to profess this faith.  We need to manufacture confidence and continue to produce it no matter what the environment. So how do we each own our confidence and stand tall when circumstances can cause us to feel like the world is out to get us?
 
I dont have any magic formula, but what Ive learned is this:

Youre not always going to be able to exude confidence.  Its more about striving.  Even when you know youre walking into a potentially volatile situation, its impossible to be completely steeled and prepared for whatever awaits. The only unequivocal certainty is that whatever situation you play out in your head will not happen. Accepting that you may not be able to course correct in the moment as adeptly as youd like is a kindness you need to grant yourself.
    
One failure doesnt define you. Standing in front of twenty-five people and putting them instantly to sleep with a boring monologue doesnt mean every presentation is awful. Were made up of a multitude of data points and experiences factoring into who we are.  The same is true when we think of the circumstances composing one failure.  You are only one factor in a complex equation, and there is usually a next time to get closer to right.

Youre allowed to feel down when things bomb. When successful advocacy for early graduation for my struggling child creates new challenges I dont anticipate, I can choose to wallow in this outcome and second-guess myself. Or I can acknowledge the frustrations as I remind myself of the many reasons this choice was the best one to make at the time. No one skates through life getting everything right.  No one should be expected to pretend it feels great when it doesnt.

Dont leave love on the table. Even in your darkest moments, those times when youre embroiled in what feels like a colossal failure, there is likely at least one advocate or champion in the room, someone who knows what it feels like in your shoes, who can see your breath as its literally sucked out of you and finds a way to rescue you with a protracted and protective hug.  Take it.  Dont suffer in silence because youre embarrassed or ashamed.  Its amazing how many people want nothing more than to comfort a wounded soul.

When one thing goes wrong it can seem like everything is wrong, leaving us in this place of stuckness as we helplessly watch our confidence ebb. Conversely, when one thing goes right, everything begins to look better and confidence returns. So Im pausing to change gears, looking for places where I can gain traction, even if its only the lowest common denominator inching forward.
 
This is why hope springs eternal for me when Larry does such an impressive job with the entire experience of diagnosing the problem with my oven. When we find someone who brings good into our lives, we latch on hungry for more. I havent soaked in my bathtub in several years.  I can hardly contain myself when I realize Larry can make this possible again. Ive been stuck here for a long time, unable to ask for help where its demanded.  But now this feels solvable. I eagerly question what needs to happen with my hot water heater so my bath isnt stone cold before it ever fills to the brim.  He even has a friend who can trace the source of the water spot on the ceiling below my tub so I dont end up bathing in steamy water on the kitchen floor. Ralph will be here tomorrow.

As I write the first two sentences of this post I think what if I use the Larry rule to decide who earns the right to the leadership I bring to my work and the love I have to offer in relationships?  I may never feel stuck again. 

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Hieroglyphics

When he settles in the passenger seat firing up his playlist, its pretty likely whats coming out of the speakers is nothing Im interested in hearing.  But this time I like the melody and so I listen intently to the lyrics. Absorbing what this artist is saying leaves me thinking in a different way about expression, judgment, the root of defiance and everything my teenager fights for so passionately. It goes like this:

Graffiti the land with skyscrapers
Graffiti the sky with airplanes and satellites
Graffiti the minds of children with your man-made laws
Graffiti the world, I saw the writing on the wall

Its amazing, really, that mindful attention to one rapper could be so powerful, but all of a sudden I understand why my boy is so upset. 

We have covered a once pristine land with buildings of all shapes and sizes.  Sure, we require architects to go to school in order to design structures that are safe and sound, but who gets to decide whether they are truly beautiful enough to pepper our landscape?  And then we take it to the next level, branding these buildings.  Corporations and retailers imprint their logos in all shapes, sizes and colors, complete with lights and neon; homeowners choose paint colors for doors and shutters, accent with trees, flowers and seasonal decorations ranging from twinkling lights to statues to plastic figurines.  Who gets to say whether this is aesthetically pleasing?  We complain tactlessly about the choices of others, yet were all outraged with homeowners associations trying to infringe on what we believe is our right to ornament our piece of property however we see fit.

Our world is full of virtual graffiti, too. What about social media as a form of self-expression?  Our Facebook pages and Twitter feeds are flooded with graphics tagging the internet with our photos and thoughts in hopes of being liked, friended, somehow called-out, noticed for our unique brands.  Life is a rolling advertisement for millions of individual messages.

I get how we can confuse, deflate and disappoint our kids when our actions dont seem to match our words, and how a feisty teenager could be driven to taunt a hypocritical world with his own small mark on an already littered universe.  Isnt he just expressing himself like everyone else is?

Im striving for understanding.  While I may not like most of my sons musical choices, I often find I can connect with him when I take the time to wade through the booming bass, foul language and screaming to get to the message in the song.  Like all of us, hes just trying to figure out how he can make his mark on this world.  I see his writing on the wall.


You can find Graffiti the World by Rehab here

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Impenitent

Theres this bird who sings a song that speaks to me so completely I would swear he sings for no other.

He circles above me through countless seasons, taking me in with a surreptitious blatancy, cawing, even dive-bombing, until I give his song a listen.

He longs for a nest I wonder if hell ever be brave enough to build. While hes never far from me, he rarely gets close.  Yet in unexpected, evanescent moments I find him perched on my shoulder singing so sweetly, so intentionally, so honestly, so unapologetically, solely for me.

And as quickly as he lands, he flies away again, leaving me to stand fallow in his wake, wanting more.

Im seeking the grace to revel in every note this beautiful bird is capable of trilling for me however fleeting, the willpower to leave this birdfeeder bare, and the patience to listen for the one who knows the nest builds itself when you find the courage to sustain an endless serenade.



I discovered prayer flags in Cloth, Paper, Scissors magazine two years ago.  Dating back thousands of years to India, an artist creates a flag, hanging it outdoors for a period of time.  As the flag weathers, unravels and fades, its sentiment is spread to all touched by the wind.  The symbolism moves me, and so I create my own in hopes a zephyr will bring back to me all that I am seeking.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Debouch

Until its pointed out to me, I dont see any significance in today, March 4th; just another day on the calendar at the tail end of winter, right?  When a new friend of mine shares the symbolism another imprinted on him I know immediately Im going to write about it.  As I recall his story in my head, it goes something like this:  A friend of his, who embraces implicitly the evanescence of one humans life, when diagnosed with a terminal illness implores everyone he touches to march forth; life will, and should, go on without him.  Its nothing short of eerie then when this day ultimately marks his passing.

This has me thinking March 4th should be a power day, the reminder we need to pause for a moment, consider how were moving forward with our lives, refuel and recalibrate if needed, and bask in our progress.  Maybe youve disappointed yourself, abandoning your New Years resolutions sooner than expected?  Maybe this relentless winter has left you listless, stripped of your inner drive? Maybe youre feeling like a spectator on the sidelines while everyone else around you appears to be putting one foot in front of the other?

I inventory my advancement since opening 2014 with the decision to find ways to put myself in the hands of another:  I mail my sketchbook to the Brooklyn Art Library in January; my art will be in the hands of many (I hope) as the cross-country tour kicks off in New York in ten short days (tour dates and locations here). I start a hot yoga practice, putting myself in the hands of the instructor, tuning out all distraction as I execute her commands, healing both my body and mind in ways I didnt think possible.  

I hadnt considered myself an option for this exercise, and so the real surprise comes when I notice Im confidently putting myself in my own hands.
 
Sure, Ive been running my life quite successfully for quite some time now.  Ive made career choices, parenting choices, relationship choices.  But I cant say Ive believed up until recently that I own all of these choices outright, that I can make them independent of the opinions or feelings of others, that I will not sabotage myself choosing what I think another wants me to do over what I know in my heart is best for me, and most importantly, that I will not abdicate my power with the mistaken belief my fate must hinge on the choice of another.

This becomes crystal clear for me in matters of the heart.  The radio talk show host asks women to dial in with their stories of forcing a mans hand in marriage.  Caller after caller tells her tale of frustration and misery over her boyfriends hesitation to commit until finally both the host and I blurt out in unison, Didnt any of you ever think you could make the choice to walk away?

But we dont.  We wait and we wish things were different.  We worry weve invested too much to abandon this.  We worry were not getting any younger.  And what will our parents think?  What will our friends think?  We dont ever for one minute trust that there will be a right time and a right place when the right person stands in front of us ready to march forth.
 
We always have choices.  Sometimes we make ourselves blind to them because were afraid of the uncertainty they bring.  And so its easier to stay put, convincing ourselves we are powerless, turning over the choice to someone else, readying ourselves to react to whatever gets decided.

Im not saying its easy. What Im saying is that instead of taking ourselves out of the equation, the powerful move is to assess the situation, recognize the choices that belong to us, weigh the opportunities and risks, and be deliberate and decisive about what we do next.

Our children only run our lives if we let them.  Our bosses only dictate our next assignment if we dont ask for the one we want.  That guy who cant answer your question about whether he wants to marry you only holds you hostage if you choose to wait on him.

What are you doing to march forth?

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Suss

As a girl, my most vivid memory of clothes shopping with my mother is of her holding up something beautiful draped over a hanger only to place it right back on the rack.  This was pretty standard behavior for her, and when I asked why she put it down, her answer was always the same. Not today, Ill come back another time.

Am I a slave to fashion?  No.  But I carefully curate my wardrobe, rarely exhibiting the same control my mother did, hardly hesitating when I see something I like.  And Im drawn to the beautiful sketches fashion designers create to illustrate their ideas as they bring them to life. So when this infographic depicting dresses worn by every best actress winner in attendance at the Academy Awards the evening she receives her statue makes an appearance in my Twitter feed, I study intently.

Although not an Oscar contender for this particular part, Kate Winslets character in The Holiday is emboldened by the discovery her perpetual unhappiness stems from the fact shes never had more than a supporting role in the story of her own life.  Shes put the wants and needs of others first, her own desires on the backburner.  Now its time to step up and be the leading lady.

And so I ask the question, are you the leading lady in your life?

Its easy to cast yourself in a supporting role.  Subordinate has been the default position for women since the beginning of time. While the world is far more accepting today than ever, many of us still hold ourselves back, finding it difficult to break our own glass ceilings; to silence those voices inside our heads saying were not giving unless were denying ourselves, the voices saying we should place our desires on hold while we support others in pursuit of their own.
 
A writer for Psychology Today says it best here. When we dont take charge of our own happiness, we inevitably look to others in our lives to make us happy.  We put an unbelievably huge burden on those who love us.  Its a task they cant possibly complete to our satisfaction.  We may think were doing everyone around us a favor by sacrificing ourselves, but if were unhappy and unfulfilled in doing so, everyone else is unhappy, too.

If youve been doing for others for what seems like forever, you may not even allow yourself to give this much thought, but its never too late to start.  Theres no time like the present to figure out what direction youd like to take the pursuit of your happiness.

Its actually a gift to others to own this part of ourselves; to create space to follow our dreams; to occasionally take a dress off the rack and bring it home. The best conversations, whether were recounting our own stories or listening to anothers, are those we share with a loved one positively gleaming in pride, awe and satisfaction as we witness the power we possess to make our own happiness.