Exhaustion

To say that adulting is exhausting right now, would be the understatement of the century. Even being a kid is an endless string of activities, events, play dates, tests, and whatever. Many of us are chronically sleep deprived to start with, but what about the emotional and spiritual toll this modern world lays on us? How does chronic sleep deprivation factor into these elements, and how do we get out of the ruts in which we find ourselves? I can assure you, we are not going to “self care” our way through the feelings of dread, dissatisfaction, loneliness, anger, loss, shame, frustration… or much else. The whole idea that we can find salvation in a product, concept, or idea, has been the biggest of the big lies of human history. But really though, how do we find it? Asking for a friend.

There has to be a balance struck again, if ever there was one, in our daily lives. For instance, I get up VERY early every morning, so that I have time to collect my thoughts before the action of the day, especially weekdays. I have about 1-2 hours before the house starts to wake up. I’m able to read the news, make coffee, do some yoga or meditate, catch up on social media, and maybe even get some breakfast. I wake the kiddo up for school, and we are off to the races from there, until bedtime for us both. By 8:30pm, I’m soooo ready for bed. That’s just the regular schedule we have. It’s summer break now, so things are a little different. I still get up with the sun, and want to crawl into bed at the same time as always. I definitely like a routine. However, the last several days have been different. Perhaps it’s the humidity where we live, or that our school-year routine has been disrupted, but I can say I’ve been walking around like a zombie. I’ve been doing some learning courses in the early mornings, and the kiddo has been in summer mode, sleeping in typically. I’m way too high strung to sleep in or take naps. I’ve been an insomniac as long as I can remember. The balance to the crazy days are those moments of quiet in the morning; rarely is anyone up with me, save for the dog. I can attest that this week has been a challenge to find that balance, since the kiddo has also been fighting a summer cold, waking up early in the mornings, and struggling to get to sleep at night for the same reason. I’m grateful that I’ve been available to attend to the illness and a kiddo who needs me, but losing the balance time has been noticeable.

In contrast, it has taken me decades to get to this place of understanding rhythms. I’m a routine-oriented, Type-A, highly anxious human being, so “relaxing” isn’t something that comes naturally to me. My version of it is cleaning the kitchen or sitting here at my desk writing. I spend about an hour or so on the couch in the evenings with my family, generally unwinding from the day, but even then, I’m typically multitasking on my phone. It’s the main time that I get to see my husband, as he often works longs days away from home, while I work at home and chauffeur a small human to and from school.

But why? Why is it so hard for me to wind down? Probably the same reasons that you and many other people do. We are overstimulated, overworked, overtired, while simultaneously undervalued, and under-connected with. It’s a wild dichotomy and how we found ourselves here is a modern human invention. It didn’t have to be this way. I’m not someone who has nostalgia for the hunter-gatherer days, by any stretch. I enjoy not being a nomad (in some ways), having a permanent home, and being able to have that routine I speak so highly of. I like modern conveniences for stuff, too. However, at the same time, I loathe the idea of credit scores and preventable wars, billionaires and their race to the stars. I’m pretty much over most of it.

This leads me back to balance and exhaustion. It’s fucking exhausting living in the modern age. We are distracted, disconnected from everything that matters, and more diseased than ever. There has to be some sort of balance. We have to find the simplicity and joy of connection, focus, and love. If we come from a place of love and connection, all things are possible, in my opinion. Obviously, peace and love aren’t going to get the richest among us to pay more in taxes or end world hunger anytime soon. I’m not delusional. However, it’ll make our time on this rock suck marginally less, and give us the community of friends, family, and neighbors that we so desperately need. We will make connections with those around us, help us find support during the hard times, and have folks to celebrate with us during the times we need to throw a parade for our successes. It makes every single thing suck less, to not be an island. It’s the love and connections that will get us through.

One of my besties literally just called me, while she is on a weekend trip with longtime friends and family, to tell me about a win she just received. A 30 second phone call to say “Hey I got the great news in an email just now, and I had to share it with you”. I told her how amazing I thought it was, and told her congratulations. That was it. Love you, bye. End of call. This is the shit we need. People in our corner to fight and celebrate with us, so we can help each other carry the weight of the crazy world. This is how we strike the balance between overwhelming existential dread and a throwing fucking party. Also, as a brief aside, surround yourself with people who fill your cup up, recharge your batteries, and give a crap about you, as often as humanly possible. The alternative is miserable- 0/10- Do Not Recommend. Not only will we find better balances in our lives, but we will find the drain far less exhausting to endure. Life is short, fill as many moments as possible with love and compassion.

Thank you for reading

Rainy Day Musings

The last several days have been really bipolar in my personal life. Both extremes, swinging wildly to be noticed, as I’ve been wrapping up a couple courses that I’ve been working on in my time off. I’ve been meditating more and noticing there have been some really interesting synchronicities swirling about. I’m moving through some changes and experiencing personal growth, but I look around and see things that may be reminders of something or little signs that I pick up on in the world. Some give me a feeling of reaffirming, like seeing birds in the bird feeder reaffirms that animals are often so much wiser than we are. Oh, and to remember to refill it, as we now have a hungry horde of diverse bird species that come to our birdie buffet. Or seeing 12:34 on the clock everyday, which makes me think I’m on the right path for something. I couldn’t tell you what, since I feel like I’m floating in space most of the time. I also feel like so many of us are “looking for a sign”, that sometimes we just make them up, so we can feel supported or as there is a divine presence of sorts. It makes us feel less alone, I imagine. I’m sure I’m making some of these signs up. That’s my cynical nature shining through. My cautiously optimistic side wants to believe there is something to synchronicities and signs. Maybe I’m just trying to drag myself out of existential dread or perpetual boredom. Who knows?

I’ve been reading a book called Find Your F*ckyeah, by Alexis Rockley (the audio version of course, because I can only read in short bursts these days, due to many interruptions). She describes your F*ckyeah as your “art” or “passion”, not necessarily something you get paid for, but things you’d do without getting paid, or things that you can find your flow in. I love her approach to this book, not claiming to have all the answers, and just being real. I appreciate the honesty. But more than that, I appreciate her saying, sure, I don’t have the answers for you, but I have the way that you can find them yourselves. I don’t want anyone to do anything FOR me, or giving me some “quick fix” solution. I want to have the skills and knowledge to DO IT MYSELF. And maybe that hyper-self reliance is my trauma response to being perpetually disappointed. I’m self aware enough to recognize that I’ve been let down, A LOT. By myself and everyone else. I’d rather be to blame on my own, and figure it out without relying on others, who will then also let me down. Being let down by myself for not meeting an expectation is part of the human experience. Being let down by others can be triggering and cause us to lose faith in humanity or our support systems. It’s all a bad time.

But the question for me is how to find FLOW. Do I do the stuff I’m good at? There’s a handful of things I’m alright at, but most of them are soul numbing and boring as hell. Do I do the things I’m bad at? That sounds like an effort in frustration, since I don’t want to keep doing something I’m bad at to hopefully find joy and flow in it at some later time. Does that make me impatient? Yeah, probably. My brand of neurospicy can only handle so much failure in a day, and doing something I’m not good at in hopes to become better at it, sounds exhausting these days. Unless of course, it’s something I find some sort of joy in, but those things seem to be fewer and fewer. Being an adult is crap. Just continuing to do things that suck, day in and day out, until we come to the end? Why have we done this to ourselves? Alexis suggests making the mundane into a game, to make it less garbage and soul killing.

A couple of things I am pretty good at, that are not completely mind numbing, are writing (which I’m doing right now) and roller skating. There are only a couple roller rinks remaining here, and of course the weather isn’t cooperating for outdoor skating. My hope is to take the kiddo out next week, when the rain is slated to pause, so we can hit the skate park. She can ride her bike or scooter, and I can get in some skate time myself. That’s been the light guiding me out of this weather-induced funk. We’ve had only a few sunny days, and the rest have been torrential rain. Gotta love the Midwest. My goal is to improve my jam (otherwise known as rhythm) skating, since I spent a decade of my life playing roller derby. The jam aspect sort of got lost. I took a couple roller derby practice sessions last year and the game has changed so much, as has the style of play. I retired 10 years ago, so it doesn’t hold the same spark for me. It’s a game and style I don’t particularly recognize, slower paced. It’s a lot less fun to play, and I’m sure it’s not nearly as exciting to watch for spectators. There aren’t the big sweeping hits that send skaters flying into the seats. There aren’t the massive breakaways from the pack, or the harrowing disappointments when someone is sent to the penalty box. The rules themselves have even changed drastically,because this sport is always evolving, as it should. A decade ago, I was pretty good at it. It’s kind of lost the luster now. I love being on skates though, so the skate park will be exciting.

http://egyptsaidso.com/weekly-motivation/if-destiny-is-by-choice-not-chance-then-what-are-you-choosing/

Finding a new hobby seems like the only way to find more flow in life, but what, and how? Alexis talks about how hard it is to find things that we enjoy, that are marginally difficult enough to keep our full attention long enough to find flow, primarily because we are too tired, anxious, or distracted for the trial and error of discovering it. Often we are afraid of failure to the point of “trying new things” paralysis. This keeps many of us from finding our flow, our art, our passions in life. This keeps us on the hamster wheel of productive for productivity sake, and completely out of finding our F*ckyeah. It makes us relatively good employees, and otherwise numb to the injustices in the world. We are passive and tired as hell. I blame many of the issues we are experiencing in our current world (politics, war, famines), on exactly this. How things might be different if we were all finding our flow, and excelling at things we enjoy? It’s a wild thought to entertain, for sure.

My hope for us all is that we find what lights us up, where we can find joy and flow, bringing our whole selves into the light, even if it’s only occasionally. Best wishes in discovering what that is for yourself, finding the time and resources to explore and try and fail in all the things you’ve been afraid to.

Mind Fullness

When I was 19 years old, I had my first real, life-pausing panic attack. I was living in my first apartment with my best friend from high school. I worked two jobs, as I have for much of my life, to make ends meet in that awful little cave. The cave was on the second floor, right above the apartment managers. They didn’t trust a pair of teenagers on their own for the first time. How could they, we were teenagers on our own for the first time. I was beyond broke, even with two jobs, so I did not have a car. I walked and relied on the bus for most transit. My night job required me to bum a ride from a coworker, my roommate, or friends that could be in the area, as the bus that went to my house didn’t go that far, that late. The “reason” for this panic attack was that I had missed the bus after my morning job, by only moments, to get to my night job. Because of the day of the week, there wouldn’t be another bus going all the way to my night job for over an hour. I went back into my day job and used the phone (this was before cell phones were really a thing) and called out due to transportation issues. The manager there already didn’t much like me, so I was hanging by a thread. I caught the next bus home, and as I was walking from the bus stop the half mile to my apartment, my mind could not stop racing. The blender, as I call it, was on overdrive- catastrophic thoughts spinning around, until finally about a block from home, I broke. I was crying hysterically, couldn’t breathe, could barely keep walking in the state I was in. My chest hurt. I called my mom as soon as I got in, since she’s in the medical field. I was positive that I was having the heart attack I’d joked about for years. The joke was that I wouldn’t make it out of my teens, that I’d give myself a heart attack before then. I had dreams of not making it to 20 years old. I was on borrowed time anyway, right? Fuck it. Rock it ‘til the wheels fall off! And here they were, falling off, and I’m sobbing to my mom that I think I’m dying. She talked me down, and told me she would talk to me later that evening. I felt like death. I was having muscle spasms and was still laboring to breathe naturally. I wasn’t convinced that I wasn’t dying, but I did my best to calm down and think about what I was going to do. I never was able to stop the panic attacks completely from happening. But I have a much better handle on them now that I’m in my 40s. 

A long time ago, I read somewhere that anxiety is living in the future, depression is living in the past. I’m not talking diagnoses here, but the feelings of anxiety and depression. Side note: If you think you have disorders regarding either of those conditions, I urge you to seek medical advice as soon as possible. Medical providers have made my struggles with both anxiety and depression more manageable. 

Anxiety or worry are often created by focusing on what is going to happen, what hasn’t happened yet, catastrophic feelings of worst-case scenarios swirling around the old brain bucket. Sadness often arises from feelings of what could have been, should have been, loss, lack, and even sometimes jealousy of how things transpired for someone else or how you were wronged in some way. Neither of these states are living in the NOW. The right here and right now. Mindfulness is one way to combat the feelings of “not yet”, or “passed me by”. 

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I started my mindfulness and spirituality journey when I was 13 or 14 years old. I started reading books on earth religious traditions like the Celts, Druids, and Pagans of Europe. I studied these traditions for several years, until I got busy and had to focus on daily life for a while. This “break” is where the panic attacks started. In my early 20’s I found books and teachers of Eastern philosophies like, Tao, Tibetan Buddhism, and Japanese Buddhism. Here, I found my way to Jodo Shinshu Buddhism of Japan. Throughout all of these traditions, awareness, mindfulness, clarity, some form of meditation or chanting are commonplace. I believe that many of these words we use to describe the spiritual practices, are effectively a different method of the same ideas. Zen schools meditate- sometimes chanting, sometimes silent. There are Zen lineages that practice walking meditation as well. Jodo Shinshu Buddhists don’t focus on meditation so much as group chanting. Pagans from many cultures chant, dance, pray, and focus their minds on certain tasks or thoughts. There are thousands of years of history in humanity where some form of mindfulness, chanting, meditation, or prayer are part of spirituality or devotion. Even in the Abrahamic faith traditions there is chanting, singing, or group prayer of some kind. I genuinely believe that our modern world has stripped much of this spiritual connection from us as a collective. 

I was listening to an audiobook recently about Transcendental Meditation. They conducted an experiment years ago to see if collective meditation had an effect on the world around us. The idea was that everyone in the experiment meditate at home or work/school, at an appointed time to see what happened. They did this every day for a period of time. What the studies showed is that even for several days after the meditations, there was a reduction of violence and crime in the areas surrounding the meditators. That’s a pretty powerful finding, where a collective resonance on peace could amplify to others who were not even remotely involved with the exercise. We have within us, the power to change the world, we just don’t realize it. Focusing on the here and now, feels really short sighted for someone like me. I’m naturally skeptical and data driven in almost all things. But focusing on now doesn’t mean forget to plan for later. It simply means to not get bogged down in later, or before, and forget that life is Happening Now. It isn’t happening 5 minutes ago. That’s in the past. It’s not happening in 5 minutes. That hasn’t gotten here yet. Your life, my life, our lives are happening RIGHT NOW. RIGHT NOW

Right now, I am writing this blog post. It is later than I had anticipated and had planned for. But earlier this week, happening now happened. In a previous life, I’d have been really hard on myself for “slacking” on my responsibility, had I found myself in the place I am now with this writing. I’d have taken time away from my family or the class I’ve been taking, to crank this out days ago, had I focused on a strict deadline for myself. I believe that both of these scenarios would have been a detriment to the content of this post, truthfully. Had I not completed my class, I may have had a different perspective on this post, or had written something else entirely. I found meaning and joy in that course, as well as the exercises it contained. I have a clarity in perspective that I didn’t have a couple days ago. I had a mediation on Thursday that really opened my heart and mind in ways I find difficult to explain. And because I focused a lot of energy into that course, even though I’ve been meditating for more than two decades in some form or fashion, I am now a certified meditation teacher. It feels good to have completed the course and had the experience. But something had to shift for my focus to be on that. Writing this blog was part of that trade-off. I have one more certification that I am currently working on, but that will take a bit more time to wrap up. In the fall, I plan to take another meditation course, certifying myself in some other techniques that I hope to master. All of this to say that 1) I have allowed myself the grace and space to recognize that in the now I am writing, which I love more than many things, as well as understanding sometimes I cannot have the diligence I would like, and that’s ok, and 2) personal growth is not a linear process, and I have found much of my own growth through mindfulness, spirituality, and shitloads of trial and error. Finally, 3) you, my readers, are not going to care if my blog post is an hour later to be delivered, than it was last week. Right? Right. Nobody is going to hate me for that.

For those keeping track, I made it past 19 years old. None of my panic attacks killed me, though I felt like they might, and there have been many (many, many) over the last few decades. I can attribute that to a myriad of things, people, circumstances, and just plain luck. I’m grateful for that. To have fizzled out at such a young age, I’d have missed some of the best and absolute worst days of my life. I am looking forward to more of both, while I’m experiencing the right now, right here. 

Thanks for reading, and I hope that you find value in me sharing my experiences.

The Quest for Improvement

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