I've been thinking about my childhood lately. Things like the storefront one of our neighbors had connected to his house. Freddie's is where my family went to get Town Talk bread, milk, Dolly Madison treats, penny gum and on special occasions chocolate ice cubes for a nickel. I was partial to the candy necklaces I could fashionably wear and lick at the same time. Freddie's had an awesome comic book rack and the cigarettes were kept behind the counter along with aspirin and other things only adults could buy like x-rated mags. Freddie hung a sheet between the store part of the house and his actual living room from which emanated the incredible smells of homemade sauce and the sounds of Bonanza. Sometimes if the curtain blew open just right I could see Mrs. Freddie with a table tray in front of the TV eating her spaghetti. This mixing of worlds fascinated me.
A ways away was the neighborhood fire station which had a big red metal Coke machine. I loooooved that Coke machine. The firehouse doors were usually open and kids could take the change they'd collected delivering papers or scavenged from Dad's couch cushions to get an icy cold Coca-Cola sweat dripping down the green sides of the glass, bottle refundable for a nickel,. Sometimes the firemen who sat smoking on the metal park bench in front would let us climb up onto the truck, hang from the back, put on their helmets, try on their boots and if we were lucky sit in the cab and honk the horn.
We attended the local Catholic School walking with our book bags which were not knapsacks but actual suitcase looking things and metal lunchboxes that scratched our legs as we walked. My family attended mass on Sunday and my classmates and I went to morning mass on First Fridays and regularly scheduled weekdays. In my homeroom everyone knew everyone else. We were a group, a collective, special. It was the same students first grade through eighth. We knew who would be in the turtle row, the rabbit row, who would get boxed around the ears by the nuns, who would volunteer for extra work. We felt sorry for the public school students who didn't have the one true faith and collected pennies for the pagan babies in our pint sized milk cartons. It was familiar and safe.
During the summer we spent our time at the local pool playing with the teenage boys who would pick us up and throw us like sacks of potatoes to splash into the deeper water. Or they'd pass us around like dolls from one to one another putting us on their shoulders, jousting with each other to see which of us would fall first from our perch.. My favorite game was jumping as hard as we could on the diving board for height, distance, momentum and doing cannonballs trying to hit the lifeguard on duty with the splash. I grew up with a pair of enormous identical twins, older and desired by the girls who tried to bounce the bolts from the board's sockets and who always inevitably won.
At home we watched Leave it to Beaver, the Little Rascals, Mayberry RFD and Matchgame 76. We ate dinner as a family, did our homework and were in bed by 9. Life was simple, I was innocent.
All of the above is true. And not.
My childhood has a dark and twisty side, a shadow if you will. There is an underbelly of shit that got stuffed up in the attic, down in the basement, anywhere it could be shoved while my family struggled mightily to maintain an illusion of all is well rather than face reality which scared all of us. The reality of my childhood is one of love, presence, God and community. It is also one of abuse, alcoholism, mental illness and cruelty.
I have spent the better part of my adult life struggling to heal from the things stuffed up in the attic and basement. On bad days I'm not sure I'll ever be whole. On good ones I feel joy and gratitude. I continue to make progress and one bit of wisdom I've gleaned is my nostalgic recall of the innocence and simplicity of my childhood is fantasy. Life's complicated. Good and evil exist side by side. When I was a kid though the evil was never acknowledged, the elephant in the room. And because it was not acknowledged or called out of hiding it perpetrated itself. with impunity. As Edmund Burke once said "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
Which brings me to Penn State. Joe Paterno, Graham Spanier, Tim Curley et al. stood by passing the buck from one to another while Jerry Sandusky continued to steal from boys who trusted him as a father figure any hope of a physically, emotionally and spiritually whole and healthy adulthood. It is also true Penn State espouses academic excellence, personal/social responsibility and the dignity of others as ideals to be upheld and has produced thousands of graduates, including former football players who have gone on to become solid citizens and to lead moral, upstanding and successful lives. These things coexist. Good and evil. Light and shadow.
Along with thinking about my childhood I've also been wondering if I were the janitor who witnessed Sandusky performing oral sex on a child in the locker room would I have blown the whistle? What if I knew it meant the loss of my job? What if I thought no one would believe me, a janitor at the bottom of the institutional food chain, my word against that of a revered coach? What if I told myself, surely someone else knew about this and would do something? What if I feared Sandusky would sue me for libeling him after no one believed me? Would I have called police? Would I have intervened? Would I have had the courage to act?
No one likes looking at evil. By it's nature it makes good folks want to turn away, run, hide, do nothing and hope someone else will step up to the plate.
I'm afraid that if I were the janitor I would have just kept on walking. We all have good in us. We all have a shadow. I need to look in the mirror and see what is there, unflinching not turning away and accepting what I see. I need to acknowledge the shadow in me and then pray that by the grace of God I will do the next right thing. Because what the mirror shows me when I dare to look is.....
We are Penn State.
Showing posts with label recovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recovery. Show all posts
Friday, July 13, 2012
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
The Squirrel Cage
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Fat Hamster |
Seriously though. There has got to be a better way. (Ice cream maybe?)
I'm thinking about the hamster wheel because right now my head is in an existential, dark and twisty place (which is why I'm writing this post.) Well, you say, that's not moving the body. Hey look Mrs. Smarty Pants, my fingers are tip, tippity-tap, typing away, so HAH! Movement. TAKE THAT! (And at least it's not ice cream)
Anyway here's the thing. There's a person (herein to be known as X) in my life who looks and acts pretty normal, appears to be a competent person and has done nothing to me but in spite of that I feel like there's something not quite right, something amiss. I feel malice, ill will and contempt emanating from X in waves when I'm around but no one else seems to notice it. Everyone acts as though they genuinely like X. And this makes me feel crazy because I'm afraid X has everyone buffaloed and is going to hurt someone I care about....at some point.....in the future. Ahem.
Now I'm a highly sensitive person and just a teeny tiny bit tightly wound. You're shocked I know. I know. Fact is though, as hard as it is to believe, I am extremely sensitive - to light, to sound, to smell, to vibrations, to shellfish. You name it. And I'm hypervigilant. I react internally to the moods, feelings and energy of others. So presently I'm reacting all over the fucking place. Literally the hair on my arms is standing on end and I have the heebie jeebies just thinking about X. It's almost like I expect the human skin on X's head to flap back revealing a reptilian one that's licking it's nonlips and going "yum, yum."
Consequently, there's not much contact between X and me to be sure. But sometimes we do end up in the same room and inevitably on these occasions as I'm sitting, listening to a speaker and not paying much mind to anything except what's being said I'll look up and BOOM there's X leaning forward, arms crossed defensively, staring straight at me with a hostile/contemptuous expression that seems vaguely ominous. It makes me uncomfortable because it feels like a challenge or maybe even a threat. Being the submissive that I am though, instead of confronting this, I immediately look away. Most of the time if I dare look back X eyes are still drilling holes in my head.
Consequently, there's not much contact between X and me to be sure. But sometimes we do end up in the same room and inevitably on these occasions as I'm sitting, listening to a speaker and not paying much mind to anything except what's being said I'll look up and BOOM there's X leaning forward, arms crossed defensively, staring straight at me with a hostile/contemptuous expression that seems vaguely ominous. It makes me uncomfortable because it feels like a challenge or maybe even a threat. Being the submissive that I am though, instead of confronting this, I immediately look away. Most of the time if I dare look back X eyes are still drilling holes in my head.
What sucks though is that as much as I want to spin in one place in my little hampster wheel for forever, as I go over and over the things I think are wrong with X , I am sober enough to know that, wait for it, wait for it....
It's not about X.
"It is a spiritual axiom that every time we are disturbed,
no matter what the cause, there is something wrong with
us."
no matter what the cause, there is something wrong with
us."
X is just a mirror. As Pogo once said, "I have seen the enemy and he is us." So it's me who needs to change not X. Time to stop blaming the mirror. Time to move a muscle - change a thought.
See how that came around? Well I'll be damned. It works. It really does.
See how that came around? Well I'll be damned. It works. It really does.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Acceptance
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Ummm, 17 actually. |
OK, I made it to my first water aerobics class, participated, got my heart rate up and didn't die, though I wanted to. When you hide from your body for as long as I have and pretend that you don't have one, it's kind of a shock to realize that yes in fact you do have a physical self and yes you have somehow become middle aged and yes you are going to be REALLY sorry if you don't wake up and start moving ASAP.
My body is a TRAIN WRECK.
But pain is a great motivator and I'm moving again for the first time in, oh, a decade and a half, I kid you not. I swear I looked in the mirror the other day and thought to myself, holy crap, I'm not just a floating head. Where did all of THIS come from? I have enough ass, belly and boobs to create a lifetime supply of soap.* (Barb - that's a Fight Club reference. See still Dark and Twisty!)
No one clued me in though that I was going to have all sorts of unpleasant reactions once I began to move again. (I can't even call it working out because I can barely keep up with the 80 year olds) But I am almost 20 years on the wagon and I kind of remember sobriety didn't feel so good at first either. The key I think is to accept where I'm at and not judge or beat holy hell out of myself, which in the end will not be effective and will only keep me from doing what I need to do. This is how far down the scale (or up as it were) I've gone and I just need to accept it.
By the by, the last time I went with S&H to the gym, in addition to the water aerobics, I attempted to ride a stationary bike. This particular bike had a computer screen upon which one could see a virtual track and a pacer bike with the idea being to pedal and steer and STAY ON THE TRACK. First Sunshine and Happiness had to help boost me onto the seat and then I couldn't keep my feet in the little footie thingies (which reminds me of the last time I had my gyne exam and I almost got my foot caught inside the stirrup because instead of placing my heal on it like you're supposed to, I tried to shove my foot through it. My doctor almost pissed herself. She was like, "it's not a damn bicycle.") Anyway I digress.
Turns out I wasn't able to pedal and keep myself on the track while watching my heart rate and rpms and I had to keep stopping to pull my shorts out my ass due to the friggin seat being up my anus. Soooooo, I don't expect I'll be riding a real bike anytime soon.
Turns out I wasn't able to pedal and keep myself on the track while watching my heart rate and rpms and I had to keep stopping to pull my shorts out my ass due to the friggin seat being up my anus. Soooooo, I don't expect I'll be riding a real bike anytime soon.
Monday, January 9, 2012
Adventures with D&T
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Mr. Magoo |
As a result I never learned "car things" like that there's a defrost button or a release on the shift lever, or a NEUTRAL. Who knew it wasn't necessary to keep a rag under the seat to wipe the steam off the windshield? Or that you have to push the release button in when shifting from park to drive so as not to strip the transmission? And WTF is neutral even for anyway?
Once upon a time, my driving teacher instructed me to get into the left hand lane in order to make a left turn. I promptly complied crossing the yellow line and moving into the lane of oncoming traffic because... you guessed it.... IT WAS ON THE LEFT HAND SIDE.
Yeah. I'm THAT person.
Anyway, recently I started making deposits (for S&H) at our local bank. Each time I'd drive there, park, go inside, visit the teller, chat, make the deposit, say "have a nice day" and leave. The parking situation is really tight though and some days I'd drive around and around before a spot opened up. Other days I'd park blocks away and walk or sometimes just leave and come back later. So...did I mention that the bank has a drive through window?
One day, not much different than other days, I thought, I suppose I could use the drive through." Brilliant, that.
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Convenient Drive Through Window that I Never Thought to Use |
Later after several successes it was evident that now I'm cooking with gas and it's time to try transacting at a DIFFERENT bank. Confidently I rolled up ready for business and the first thing I see is this:
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Intergalactic Tube Thingy |
Teller: Hi may I help you?
Me: (hitting the red CALL button) I need to make a deposit.
Teller: O.K. go ahead.
So I put the deposit in the tube and wait. And wait. And wait. A full 15 minutes. In that time I managed to text some friends, play with the heat, listen to the radio and watch 3 other cars pull in, make transactions and leave. Initially I assumed the teller was helping them and would get back to me but as this didn't happen I began to get irritated. I'd been there WAY before those other cars and she hadn't even sucked my deposit up the damn tube yet. Boy was I HOT. I decided to give her a piece of my mind and glaringly looked over at her, when I, for the first time, noticed a green SEND button. Right next to the red CALL button. Right on the bottom of the intergalactic tube thingy. Which I'd never pressed. Hell, I didn't even know there was a SEND button.
Me: (sheepishly pressing the red CALL button) Ah, should I send up my deposit?
Teller: (in exasperation) Well YEAH.
Yikes. So I pushed the SEND button, whoosh up went my deposit and the rest went swimmingly.
You'd of thunk at this point I knew everything there was to know about how to do drive through banking but you'd of thunk wrong because the NEXT time I used a multi-service drive through I again waited for 15 minutes because the teller never said "Hi may I help you," (like they always do INSIDE the bank) and I thought it'd be rude to push the green SEND button to give her my deposit before she was ready. Eventually I realized no such indication would be forthcoming (I'm quick like that) so I pushed the red CALL button and asked her if I should send up my deposit. And once more, a completely flummoxed teller said with much annoyance, "Well YEAH."
Additionally I thought that the communication between me and the teller was like a walkie talkie so I pressed the red CALL button and held it every time I replied. Who knew that once the teller turned the MICROPHONE on she could hear me regardless?
Me: (pushing red CALL button upon which a buzzer sounds inside the bank) Are you ready for my deposit?
Teller: Well YEAH.
Me: (pushing red CALL button thereby causing buzzer to buzz AGAIN) O.K.
Teller: Here you go. Have a nice day. (thinking to herself - now get the hell out of here)
Me: (pushing red CALL button, making buzzer sound one last time) You too.
Teller: (in her head) Oh dear Lord, thank God she's gone.
Yeah. I'm THAT person.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Lessons from 2011
Disclaimer: This post contains adult language, sexual content and in general dark and twisty stuff. I am not kidding. Proceed with caution.
At first as I looked back on 2011 I thought to myself, "hmmm I've not really learned much of ANYTHING this past year." No big life lessons. No great awakenings. Nothing revelatory. There just really didn't seem to be much of anything at all.
This made me grumpy. Well grumpier than I usually am.
I mean in my book, shouldn't I at least be able to think of one thing I'd learned, even if it was small? And so because I couldn't and because it made me grumpy, I continued to wrack my brain. Wrack. Wrack. Wrack. And......... Nothing.
I decided to try again a bit later.... Wrack. Wrack. Wrack. And...... More nothing. Then just as I was about to give up resigning myself to eternal grumpdom, I came upon a Dear Sugar column in The Rumpus. And it was here that I found it. Something revelatory, something miraculous, something big.
Below in its entirety is Sugar's column Baby Bird.
Dear Sugar,
WTF, WTF, WTF? I’m asking myself this question as it applies to everything
every day.
Yours,
WTF
Dear WTF,
My father’s father made me jack him off when I was three and four and five. I wasn’t any good at it. My hands were too small and I couldn’t get the rhythm right and I didn’t understand what I was doing. I only knew I didn’t want to do it. Knew that it made me feel miserable and anxious in a way so sickeningly particular that I can feel that same particular sickness rising this very minute in my throat. I hated having to rub my grandfather’s cock, but there was nothing I could do. I had to do it. My grandfather babysat my older sister and me a couple times a week in that era of my life and most of the days that I was trapped in his house with him he would pull his already-getting-hard penis out of his pants and say come here and that was that.
But I could never shake it. That particular fuck would not be shook. Asking what the fuck only brought it around. Around and around it went, my grandfather’s cock in my hands, the memory if it so vivid, so palpable, so very much a part of me. It came to me during sex and not during sex. It came to me in flashes and it came to me in dreams. It came to me one day when I found a baby bird, fallen from a tree.
So that's it. Thanks to those who have loved and supported me through all of my WTF moments. Happy New Year Sweet Peas.
At first as I looked back on 2011 I thought to myself, "hmmm I've not really learned much of ANYTHING this past year." No big life lessons. No great awakenings. Nothing revelatory. There just really didn't seem to be much of anything at all.
This made me grumpy. Well grumpier than I usually am.
I mean in my book, shouldn't I at least be able to think of one thing I'd learned, even if it was small? And so because I couldn't and because it made me grumpy, I continued to wrack my brain. Wrack. Wrack. Wrack. And......... Nothing.
I decided to try again a bit later.... Wrack. Wrack. Wrack. And...... More nothing. Then just as I was about to give up resigning myself to eternal grumpdom, I came upon a Dear Sugar column in The Rumpus. And it was here that I found it. Something revelatory, something miraculous, something big.
Below in its entirety is Sugar's column Baby Bird.
Dear Sugar,
WTF, WTF, WTF? I’m asking myself this question as it applies to everything
every day.
Yours,
WTF
Dear WTF,
My father’s father made me jack him off when I was three and four and five. I wasn’t any good at it. My hands were too small and I couldn’t get the rhythm right and I didn’t understand what I was doing. I only knew I didn’t want to do it. Knew that it made me feel miserable and anxious in a way so sickeningly particular that I can feel that same particular sickness rising this very minute in my throat. I hated having to rub my grandfather’s cock, but there was nothing I could do. I had to do it. My grandfather babysat my older sister and me a couple times a week in that era of my life and most of the days that I was trapped in his house with him he would pull his already-getting-hard penis out of his pants and say come here and that was that.
I moved far away from him when I was nearly six and soon after that my parents split up and my father left my life and I never saw my grandfather again. He died of black lung disease when he was 66 and I was 15, the same as his father had, both of them coal miners.
“Do you remember how we used to have to jack him off?” I asked my sister one day shortly after he died. We’d never spoken of it. I’d never said a word about it to anyone. I was ready for my sister to say no, for everything I remembered about my grandfather and his cock to be an ugly invention of my nasty little mind.
But she said, “Yeah.” She said, “Wow.” She said, “What the fuck was up with that?”
There was nothing the fuck up with that and there never will be. I will die with there never being anything the fuck up with my grandfather making my hands do the things he made my hands do with his cock. But it took me years to figure that out. To hold the truth within me that some things are so sad and wrong and unanswerable that the question must simply stand alone like a spear in the mud.
So I railed against it, in search of the answer to what the fuck was up with my grandfather doing that to my sister and me. What the fuck? What the fuck? What the fuck?
But I could never shake it. That particular fuck would not be shook. Asking what the fuck only brought it around. Around and around it went, my grandfather’s cock in my hands, the memory if it so vivid, so palpable, so very much a part of me. It came to me during sex and not during sex. It came to me in flashes and it came to me in dreams. It came to me one day when I found a baby bird, fallen from a tree.
I know you aren’t supposed to pick up baby birds. I know once you touch them their mama won’t come back and get them, but this bird was a goner anyway. Its neck was broken, its head lolling treacherously to the side. I picked it up and cradled it as delicately as I could in my palms. I cooed to soothe it, but each time I cooed, it only struggled piteously to get away, terrified by my voice.
The bird’s suffering would’ve been unbearable at any time, but it was particularly unbearable at that moment in my life because my mother had just died. Her death was ugly. She was only forty-five. And because she was dead I was pretty much dead too. I was dead but alive. And I had a baby bird in my palms that was dead but alive as well.
I knew there was only one humane thing to do, though it took me the better part of an hour to work up the courage to do it: I put the baby bird in a paper bag and smothered it with my hands.
Nothing that has died in my life has ever died easily and this bird was no exception. This bird did not go down without a fight. I could feel it through the paper bag, pulsing against my hand and rearing up, simultaneously flaccid and ferocious beneath its translucent sheen of skin, precisely as my grandfather’s cock had been.
There it was! There it was again. Right there in the paper bag. The ghost of that old man’s cock would always be in my hands. But I understood what I was doing this time. I understood that I had to press against it harder than I could bear. It had to die. Pressing harder was murder. It was mercy.
That’s what the fuck it was. The fuck was mine.
And the fuck is yours too, WTF. That question does not apply “to everything every day.” If it does, you’re wasting your life. If it does, you’re a lazy coward and you are not a lazy coward.
Ask better questions, sweet pea. The fuck is your life. Answer it.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Loneliness
There's walls made of steel
There's walls made of stone
But none are so strong
As the walls made of fear alone
There's walls made of stone
But none are so strong
As the walls made of fear alone
Maura O'Connell
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But I'm chipping away at it...... |
In 2005, Frank Warren created Post Secret, an art project in which people are invited to anonymously mail in their secrets on a homemade postcard. Select secrets appear every Sunday on the PostSecret blog. I read this blog every week and both of these postcards are from the site.
And I have the sense, though I can't quite put my finger on why, that somehow my loneliness is related.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Dear Sugar
In my last post I was wrestling with what I believe. I'm a "Why?" kind of person so when awful things happen, my pattern is to try and figure them out as if there's some "right" answer that could possibly explain tragic circumstances. I know it's just that I'm afraid and trying to feel some small bit of control over situations in which I'm powerless. I know I'm just trying to avoid the reality that sometimes life sucks.
A friend recently experienced an unimaginable loss. She's handling it with grace. Me, not so much. I'm angry and when I'm angry I push away. Hard. (my apologies to Sunshine and Happiness.) When painful things happen I intellectualize to not have to feel. I retreat into my head and I start thinking. As always, this is a bad, BAD, very bad thing.
Here's what Sunshine and Happiness says when bad things happen and I get angry and all up in my head, " Hello, honey? It's not about you."
Despite S&H's wisdom, for the past few days I've not only been up in my head but also all over Google and Facebook. That's because I find that playing on the Internet is a nifty way to not have to feel stuff. While avoiding my feelings I found a link to a FB page called Grief Beyond Belief, a brand new site that provides faith-free support for non-religious people grieving the death of a loved one. It was there that I found a link to the following advice column:
Here's what Sunshine and Happiness says when bad things happen and I get angry and all up in my head, " Hello, honey? It's not about you."
Despite S&H's wisdom, for the past few days I've not only been up in my head but also all over Google and Facebook. That's because I find that playing on the Internet is a nifty way to not have to feel stuff. While avoiding my feelings I found a link to a FB page called Grief Beyond Belief, a brand new site that provides faith-free support for non-religious people grieving the death of a loved one. It was there that I found a link to the following advice column:
Dear Sugar
I’m writing this from my little couch/bed in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Egelston Children’s Hospital in Atlanta. My husband and I just found out that our 6-month old daughter, Emma, has a tumor and she is having brain surgery tomorrow. I am scared that I will lose her. I’m scared she could be paralyzed or her development will be messed up and she will have a hard life. I’m scared they will find out the tumor is cancerous and she will need chemo. She’s only a little baby.People have poured all their thoughts and prayers into us right now but to be honest, God is farthest from my mind. I’ve never been super religious but now I find myself doubting His existence more than ever. If there were a God why would he let my little girl have to have possibly life threatening surgery, Sugar? I never in a million years thought that my husband and I would be in this situation.
I want to ask you to pray and all your reader’s to pray, to a God maybe I’m not sure I even believe in anymore. Pray that my baby will be okay. And that we can walk away from this and forget it even happened. I have written you before about different things, which now seem so stupid and silly. I just want to get through this with my husband and daughter and look back and thank God that everything is okay. I want to believe in Him and I want to believe all the prayers being said for us are working.
Abbie
Dear Abbie,
I know everyone reading these words shares my relief that Emma came through her surgery so well. I’m sorry you’ve had to endure such a frightful experience. I hope that the worst of it is over and that you will be able to “walk away from this,” as you put it, and to keep walking—far and fast—into a future that does not contain the words tumorand surgery and cancer. I agonized about whether to publish your letter. Not because it isn’t worthy of a reply—your situation is as serious as it gets and your doubts about your faith in God are profound and shared by many. But I couldn’t help but wonder who the hell I thought I was in daring to address your question. I wonder that often while writing this column, but I wondered it harder when it came to your letter. I’m not a chaplain. I don’t know squat about God. I don’t even believe in God. And I believe less in speaking of God in a public forum where I’m very likely to be hammered for my beliefs. Yet here I am because there I was, finding it impossible to get your letter out of my head.
Nearly two years ago I took my children to the Christmas pageant at the big Unitarian Church in our city. The pageant was to be a reenactment of the birth of Jesus. I took my kids as a way to begin to educate them about the non-Santa history of the holiday. Not as religious indoctrination, but as a history lesson.
Who is Jesus? they asked from the back seat of the car as we drove to the show, after I’d explained to them what we were about to see. They were four and nearly six at the time. They’d heard about Jesus in glimmers before, but now they wanted to know everything. I wasn’t terribly literate in Jesus—my mother was an ex-Catholic who spurned organized religion in her adult life, so I had no religious schooling as a child—but I knew enough that I was able to cover the basics, from his birth in a manger, to his young adulthood as a proselytizer for compassion, forgiveness, and love, to his crucifixion and beyond, to the religion that was founded on the belief that Jesus, after suffering for our sins, rose from the dead and ascended to heaven.
After I finished with my narration, it was like someone had served my kids two triple shot Americanos. Tell me about Jesus! became a ten-times-a-day demand. They weren’t interested in his birth in the barn or his philosophies about how to live or even what he might be up to in heaven. They wanted only to know about his death. In excruciating detail. Over and over again. Until every ugly fact sank into their precious bones. For months I was compelled to repeatedly describe precisely how Jesus was flagellated, humiliated, crowned with thorns, and nailed at the hands and feet to a wooden cross to die an agonizing death. Sometimes I would do this while making my way in a harried fashion up and down the aisles of the hoity-toity organic grocery store where we shop and people would turn and stare at me.
My children were both horrified and enthralled by Jesus’ crucifixion. It was the most appalling thing they’d ever heard. They didn’t understand the story within its religious context. They perceived only its brutal truth. They did not contemplate Jesus’ divinity, but rather his humanity. They had little interest in this business about him rising from the dead. He was not to them a Messiah. He was only a man. One who’d been nailed to a cross alive and endured it a good while.
Did it hurt his feelings when they were so mean to him? my son repeatedly asked. Where was his mommy? my daughter wanted to know.
After I told them about Jesus’ death, I wondered whether I should have. Mr. Sugar and I had managed to shield them from almost all of the world’s cruelty by then, so why, for the love of God (ahem), was I exposing them to this? Yet I also realized they had to know—their fascination with Jesus’ agony was proof of that. I’d hit a nerve. I’d revealed a truth they were ready to know. Not about Christianity, but about the human condition: that suffering is part of life.
I know that. You know that. I don’t know why we forget it when something truly awful happens to us, but we do. We wonder why me? and how can this be? and what terrible God would do this? and the very fact that this has been done to me is proof that there is no God! We act as if we don’t know that awful things happen to all sorts of people every second of every day and the only thing that’s changed about the world or the existence or nonexistence of God or the color of the sky is that the awful thing is happening to us.
It’s no surprise you have such doubt in this moment of crisis, sweet pea. It’s perfectly natural that you feel angry and scared and betrayed by a God you want to believe will take mercy on you by protecting those dearest to you. When I learned my mom was going to die of cancer at the age of 45, I felt the same way. I didn’t even believe in God, but I still felt that he owed me something. I had the gall to think how dare he? I couldn’t help myself. I’m a selfish brute. I wanted what I wanted and I expected it to be given to me by a God in whom I had no faith. Because mercy had always more or less been granted me, I assumed it always would be.
But it wasn’t.
It wasn’t granted to my friend whose 18-year old daughter was killed by a drunk driver either. Nor was it granted to my other friend who learned her baby is going to die of a genetic disorder in the not-distant future. Nor was it granted to my former student whose mother was murdered by her father before he killed himself. It was not granted to all those people who were in the wrong place at the wrong time when they came up against the wrong virus or military operation or famine or carcinogenic or genetic mutation or natural disaster or maniac.
Countless people have been devastated for reasons that cannot be explained or justified in spiritual terms. To do as you are doing in asking if there were a God why would he let my little girl have to have possibly life threatening surgery?—understandable as that question is—creates a false hierarchy of the blessed and the damned. To use our individual good or bad luck as a litmus test to determine whether or not God exists constructs an illogical dichotomy that reduces our capacity for true compassion. It implies a pious quid pro quo that defies history, reality, ethics, and reason. It fails to acknowledge that the other half of rising—the very half that makes rising necessary—is having first been nailed to the cross.
That’s where you were the other night when you wrote to me, dear woman. Pinned in place by your suffering. I woke up at 3am because I could feel you pinned there so acutely that I—a stranger—felt pinned too. So I got up and wrote to you. My email was a paltry little email probably not too different from the zillions of other paltry little emails you received from others, but I know without knowing you that those emails from people who had nothing to give you but their kind words, along with all the prayers people were praying for you, together formed a tiny raft that could just barely hold your weight as you floated through those terrible hours while you awaited your daughter’s fate.
If I believed in God, I’d see evidence of his existence in that. In your darkest hour you were held afloat by the human love that was given to you when you most needed it. That would have been true regardless of the outcome of Emma’s surgery. It would have been the grace that carried you through even if things had not gone as well as they did, much as we hate to ponder that.
Your question to me is about God, but boiled down to its essentials, it’s not so different than most of the questions people ask me to answer. It says: this failed me and I want to do better next time. My answer will not be so different either: to do better you’re going to have to reach. Perhaps the good that can come from this terrifying experience is a more complex understanding of what God means to you so the next time you need spiritual solace you’ll have something sturdier to lean on than the rickety I’ll-believe-he-exists-only-if-he-gives-me-what-I-want fence. What you learned as you sat bedside with Emma in the intensive care unit is that your idea of God as a possibly non-existent spirit man who may or may not hear your prayers and may or may not swoop in to save your ass when the going gets rough is a losing prospect.
So it’s up to you to create a better one. A bigger one. Which is really, almost always, something smaller.
What if you allowed your God to exist in the simple words of compassion others offer to you? What if faith is the way it feels to lay your hand on your daughter’s sacred body? What if the greatest beauty of the day is the shaft of sunlight through your window? What if the worst thing happened and you rose anyway? What if you trusted in the human scale? What if you listened harder to the story of the man on the cross who found a way to endure his suffering than to the one about the impossible magic of the Messiah? Would you see the miracle in that?
Yours,
Sugar
And by the grace of Sugar, I found the answer I was looking for.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
A Dark and Twisty Fool
Any time I use my intellect to pursue God I start down a bad, BAD, very bad path. When I try to figure God out I end up confused, sad, angry and sick. You know why? I am not equipped to figure God out. Who knew?
As a child I was raised Catholic. At home, at school, in church, I accepted everything I was taught. One of those things was not to question because all is mystery. As a child I was exceptionally good at this. I did my best to be obedient, I trusted and I believed in all that is good and right in this world. I kept it simple. And I was happy. But somewhere in there I grew up. And I started to think too much.
Now I believe that I have a good heart. And I know the difference between right and wrong when it comes to my own actions. I may not be able to judge your heart or your actions but my insides always tell me what the right action is for me. I trust that. Unfortunately I have lots of practice ignoring my insides.
My head though is a different story altogether. My head is wired for dark and twisty, complicated, catastrophic, negative, destructive thinking. My thoughts often don't start out on the dark side but this is what happens. I start trying to figure things out in my head. Right there a red flag should go up because without fail I am about to snowball down the aforementioned bad, BAD, very bad path. Self knowledge leads me nowhere. And it's worse when I think I have knowledge about you and that I have you figured out. When I am absolutely sure I'm right it is a given that I am wrong. This is why I have good people around me. To set me on the straight and narrow.
And this is what happens every time I try to figure out God. Seems my God chooses to remain a mystery and no matter how hard I spin my wheels all that happens is that I tire myself out and make myself unhappy. I judge myself because I don't understand God. Because how am I supposed to believe in Something I don't understand? All of this is to say that faith and belief are extremely personal and not something that can be proven. (or figured out) One thing I know though is that I can't ever trust my screwed up mind. I have to go with my insides.
And here are the things my insides tell me.
God's Own Fool
Seems I've imagined Him all of my life
As the wisest of all of mankind
But if God's Holy wisdom is foolish to man
He must have seemed out of His mind
For even His family said He was mad
And the priests said a demon's to blame
But God in the form of this angry young man
Could not have seemed perfectly sane
And we in our foolishness thought we were wise
He played the fool and He opened our eyes
We in our weakness believed we were strong
He became helpless to show we were wrong
And so we follow God's own fool
For only the foolish can tell
Believe the unbelievable
And come be a fool as well
So come lose your life for a carpenter's son
For a madman who died for a dream
And you'll have the faith His first followers had
And you'll feel the weight of the beam
So surrender the hunger to say you must know
and the courage to say I believe
Let the power of paradox open your eyes
And blind those who say they can see
And we in our foolishness thought we were wise
He played the fool and He opened our eyes
We in our weakness believed we were strong
He became helpless to show we were wrong
And so we follow God's own Fool
For only the foolish can tell
Believe the unbelievable,
And come be a fool as well
As a child I was raised Catholic. At home, at school, in church, I accepted everything I was taught. One of those things was not to question because all is mystery. As a child I was exceptionally good at this. I did my best to be obedient, I trusted and I believed in all that is good and right in this world. I kept it simple. And I was happy. But somewhere in there I grew up. And I started to think too much.
Now I believe that I have a good heart. And I know the difference between right and wrong when it comes to my own actions. I may not be able to judge your heart or your actions but my insides always tell me what the right action is for me. I trust that. Unfortunately I have lots of practice ignoring my insides.
My head though is a different story altogether. My head is wired for dark and twisty, complicated, catastrophic, negative, destructive thinking. My thoughts often don't start out on the dark side but this is what happens. I start trying to figure things out in my head. Right there a red flag should go up because without fail I am about to snowball down the aforementioned bad, BAD, very bad path. Self knowledge leads me nowhere. And it's worse when I think I have knowledge about you and that I have you figured out. When I am absolutely sure I'm right it is a given that I am wrong. This is why I have good people around me. To set me on the straight and narrow.
And this is what happens every time I try to figure out God. Seems my God chooses to remain a mystery and no matter how hard I spin my wheels all that happens is that I tire myself out and make myself unhappy. I judge myself because I don't understand God. Because how am I supposed to believe in Something I don't understand? All of this is to say that faith and belief are extremely personal and not something that can be proven. (or figured out) One thing I know though is that I can't ever trust my screwed up mind. I have to go with my insides.
And here are the things my insides tell me.
- God exists
- Evil exists
- I don't understand why evil exists and I've not been able to find an acceptable answer or one that can comfort me. However, I believe that God cries with me when I am in pain.
- I believe I receive guidance when I allow myself to be open to it.
- I believe that though I need God's strength to accomplish anything, He won't do for me what I am capable of doing for myself. Case in point, I asked God for years to help me trust Him. And then I went about my business and when something challenging happened I became frightened and refused to trust. Finally, one day, after I'd cried to her yet again about this, Sunshine and Happiness said to me, "Look you just have to say, God, I trust you and then act as if you do. That's the only way to learn trust. God can't do it for you." Damned if she wasn't right.
- I believe I have a choice every time I am faced with a situation about whether I am going to turn toward the light or go the dark and twisty route.
- Going the dark and twisty route never leads me to my Higher Power. It never brings me serenity.
- I am of 2 natures, both saint and sinner, capable of both good and evil.
- My God wants me to choose to go toward the light. It's just that sometimes I don't want to.
- I have a purpose in this world.
- Altering my mind with alcohol, drugs, food, co-dependency, etc. moves me away from God and my purpose in this world.
- Gratitude, doing the next right thing, engaging in relationship, prayer, meditation and being of service to others bring me closer to my Higher Power and peace.
I started thinking about all of this because I haven't played guitar in years but for some reason today I dug it out. I plucked and plunked along but the only song I could remember was God's Own Fool by Michael Card. Now I've known this song since my college days and since college have had a mixed reaction to it When I read the lyrics I'm put off because I don't like proselytizing. I don't believe that there's only one way, one path to God and I cringe at those who push this idea onto others. Christianity as an organized religion at best leaves me cold and mostly just makes me angry. Intellectually this song embarrasses me. And yet ....
My heart says otherwise.God's Own Fool
Seems I've imagined Him all of my life
As the wisest of all of mankind
But if God's Holy wisdom is foolish to man
He must have seemed out of His mind
For even His family said He was mad
And the priests said a demon's to blame
But God in the form of this angry young man
Could not have seemed perfectly sane
And we in our foolishness thought we were wise
He played the fool and He opened our eyes
We in our weakness believed we were strong
He became helpless to show we were wrong
And so we follow God's own fool
For only the foolish can tell
Believe the unbelievable
And come be a fool as well
So come lose your life for a carpenter's son
For a madman who died for a dream
And you'll have the faith His first followers had
And you'll feel the weight of the beam
So surrender the hunger to say you must know
and the courage to say I believe
Let the power of paradox open your eyes
And blind those who say they can see
And we in our foolishness thought we were wise
He played the fool and He opened our eyes
We in our weakness believed we were strong
He became helpless to show we were wrong
And so we follow God's own Fool
For only the foolish can tell
Believe the unbelievable,
And come be a fool as well
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Life After
For Donna.....
Down below the surface of a quiet pond lived a little colony of water bugs. They were a happy colony, living far away from the sun. For many months they were very busy, scurrying over the soft mud on the bottom of the pond. They did notice that every once in awhile one of their colony seemed to lose interest in going about. Clinging to the stem of a pond lily it gradually moved out of sight and was seen no more.
"Look!" said one of the water bugs to another. "One of our colony is climbing up the lily stalk. Where do you think she is going?" Up, up, up it slowly went....Even as they watched, the water bug disappeared from sight. Its friends waited and waited but it didn't return...
"That's funny!" said one water bug to another. "Wasn't she happy here?" asked a second... "Where do you suppose she went?" wondered a third. No one had an answer.
They were greatly puzzled. Finally one of the water bugs, a leader in the colony, gathered its friends together. "I have an idea". The next one of us who climbs up the lily stalk must promise to come back and tell us where he or she went and why."
"We promise", they said solemnly.
One spring day, not long after, the very water bug who had suggested the plan found herself climbing up the lily stalk. Up, up, up, she went. Before she knew what was happening, she had broke through the surface of the water and fallen onto the broad, green lily pad above.
When she awoke, she looked about with surprise. She couldn't believe what she saw. A startling change had come to her old body. Her movement revealed four silver wings and a long tail. Even as she struggled, she felt an impulse to move her wings...The warmth of the sun soon dried the moisture from the new body. She moved her wings again and suddenly found herself up above the water. She had become a dragonfly!!
Swooping and dipping in great curves, she flew through the air. She felt exhilarated in the new atmosphere. By and by the new dragonfly lighted happily on a lily pad to rest. Then it was that she chanced to look below to the bottom of the pond. Why, she was right above her old friends, the water bugs! There they were scurrying around, just as she had been doing some time before.
The dragonfly remembered the promise: "The next one of us who climbs up the lily stalk will come back and tell where he or she went and why." Without thinking, the dragonfly darted down. Suddenly she hit the surface of the water and bounced away. Now that she was a dragonfly, she could no longer go into the water...
"I can't return!" she said in dismay. "At least, I tried. But I can't keep my promise. Even if I could go back, not one of the water bugs would know me in my new body. I guess I'll just have to wait until they become dragonflies too. Then they'll understand what has happened to me, and where I went."
And the dragonfly winged off happily into its wonderful new world of sun and air.......
From: "Waterbugs and Dragonflies" by Doris Stickney
Down below the surface of a quiet pond lived a little colony of water bugs. They were a happy colony, living far away from the sun. For many months they were very busy, scurrying over the soft mud on the bottom of the pond. They did notice that every once in awhile one of their colony seemed to lose interest in going about. Clinging to the stem of a pond lily it gradually moved out of sight and was seen no more.
"Look!" said one of the water bugs to another. "One of our colony is climbing up the lily stalk. Where do you think she is going?" Up, up, up it slowly went....Even as they watched, the water bug disappeared from sight. Its friends waited and waited but it didn't return...
"That's funny!" said one water bug to another. "Wasn't she happy here?" asked a second... "Where do you suppose she went?" wondered a third. No one had an answer.
They were greatly puzzled. Finally one of the water bugs, a leader in the colony, gathered its friends together. "I have an idea". The next one of us who climbs up the lily stalk must promise to come back and tell us where he or she went and why."
"We promise", they said solemnly.
One spring day, not long after, the very water bug who had suggested the plan found herself climbing up the lily stalk. Up, up, up, she went. Before she knew what was happening, she had broke through the surface of the water and fallen onto the broad, green lily pad above.
When she awoke, she looked about with surprise. She couldn't believe what she saw. A startling change had come to her old body. Her movement revealed four silver wings and a long tail. Even as she struggled, she felt an impulse to move her wings...The warmth of the sun soon dried the moisture from the new body. She moved her wings again and suddenly found herself up above the water. She had become a dragonfly!!
Swooping and dipping in great curves, she flew through the air. She felt exhilarated in the new atmosphere. By and by the new dragonfly lighted happily on a lily pad to rest. Then it was that she chanced to look below to the bottom of the pond. Why, she was right above her old friends, the water bugs! There they were scurrying around, just as she had been doing some time before.
The dragonfly remembered the promise: "The next one of us who climbs up the lily stalk will come back and tell where he or she went and why." Without thinking, the dragonfly darted down. Suddenly she hit the surface of the water and bounced away. Now that she was a dragonfly, she could no longer go into the water...
"I can't return!" she said in dismay. "At least, I tried. But I can't keep my promise. Even if I could go back, not one of the water bugs would know me in my new body. I guess I'll just have to wait until they become dragonflies too. Then they'll understand what has happened to me, and where I went."
And the dragonfly winged off happily into its wonderful new world of sun and air.......
From: "Waterbugs and Dragonflies" by Doris Stickney
Friday, September 2, 2011
Endings
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Mrs. K. |
Usually when I attend a funeral mass I forgo communion. Today for some reason I decided I wanted to participate. I usually don't because non celibate gay folks are not supposed to receive. Participating in the sacrament is tantamount to declaring that the receiver is in full communion with the universal Church and faithful to Catholic doctrine. Which of course I am not. But damn it, the idea of "joining with" Mrs. K.'s family and friends in a communal albeit symbolic meal made me smile. And I do happen to believe that where 2 or 3 are gathered God is present. I didn't want to feel separate from those who were grieving. I wanted to be a part of it, so no disrespect intended, I went.
I was really nervous though. Rebel I am not. Sunshine and Happiness and I were discreet at the service but didn't shy away from holding hands or from comforting one another. That's kind of a moot point anyway because S&H had come out to the entire funeral home the night before. Catholics however are not the most touchy-feely, free with their emotions, accepting kind of people and S&H is HUGE on emotions and hugging. Anyone and everyone. Anywhere. So much so that sometimes I wince as she approaches an unsuspecting hug-ee. It makes me jumpy. Also I'm just a teensy bit paranoid about being in a church that at one time would have stoned me.
So S&H asks me at the beginning of the service if I am going to go to communion and informs me decisively that she is not. I'm unsure. When that part of the mass rolls around I decide that I would like to participate. I am however extremely self-conscious because to those Catholics who know S&H and I are gay (which is everyone who was at the funeral home the night before) it is a given that I should not go up and receive. Thems the rules baby! At this point I took a deep breath and stepped out of the pew and started up the aisle. As I inched forward I kept looking for the guardian of the rules to jump out of a pew, tackle me and yell "Nooooooo!" Needless to say, I was a bit distracted when it came my turn in front of the priest. Here's how it went down:
Priest: "The body of Christ"
My turn. Total silence. I am frozen in place, my mind gone blank, blankity, blank, blank as to what I'm supposed to say. (Amen by the way is the correct response.)
Long pause. Oh wait something's coming to me.
Me: In full Pentecostal mode, "THANKS BE TO GOD!"
Not only is this NOT the correct response but by the look on his face this priest probably wouldn't have been surprised if Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston had popped out of the sacristy and started singing Oh Happy Day, so emphatic was I. To his credit he still gave me the bread, although he did hesitate.
Anyway, we got through the funeral and afterwards S&H hugged Mrs K.'s family, the priest, the pallbearers, the driver of the hearse, the chapel attendant and the groundskeeper before we headed home. S&H went off to work and I am here by myself thinking about the empty house next door. The older I get the more true the expression, here one minute, gone the next becomes. I'm sad and grateful both, glad to be here but aware I won't always be.
So here's to you Mrs. K. I promise I will miss you.
This leaf from that legacy maple is the color
of the fine expensive wine
nine years ago
I gave up drinking
and hanging from the limbs of another tree
are the amber hues of so many
many drafts and gills
so many nights ago
I said goodbye to.
Water over ice in a delicate glass
I rescued from my dead mother's kitchen.
Take it, she would have said, and
put it to good use.
I did. I lift it now to know its clarity
Nine years or ninety-one:
At the end of any stretch there
lies another. Here's to the stretch. Here's
to the end. Here's to whatever time
it takes to have the heart it takes
once more to get there.
- William Kloefkorn
Friday, August 19, 2011
Down the Rabbit Hole
The world is upside down.
Have I ever talked about how I stayed away from my family for over a year and a half because I have a PTSD response to them? The expression "you make me sick" must at one time have been literal.
This is because my family is nuts.
Really, there is some weird kind of mental illness, undiagnosed, that runs straight through my genes.
Some symptoms:
1) Constant inane conversation in which insignificant details are repeated over and over and over:
My mom: "Blah, blah, blabbity, blah, blah."
Me: "Mum, you told me that already."
My mom: "No I didn't."
Me: "Yeah, you did
My mom: "Blah, blah, blabbity blah blah......" (completely ignoring me)
Me: (Form pretend gun, place to head, pull trigger)
Listening to my mom's stories is soul death.
2) A complete lack of awareness of others' personal space or boundaries.
Me: "Mom, quit grabbing my ass and kissing me smack on the lips."
My mom: "You know you like it."
3) Pathological contempt and judgment of others
My mom: "That doctor doesn't know what he's talking about. Why just the other day I heard Sharon Osborne on The Talk say blahbity, blah, blah...."
4) Debilitating self centeredness
My mom: Blabbity, me, blah, blah I, blabbity, blabbity, me, me, me. Also refer to #1
My mom broke her leg, dad had hip surgery and now my grandmother is in the hospital with a compression fracture. Did I mention no one in the family drives? Oh, wait a minute. I drive. Mmm, hmm.
Being around my family is akin to being invited to jump right in and join the crazy. Boundaries people. You can have your crazy, just don't go crossing over into mine.
Friday, August 5, 2011
Hide and Seek
SYTYCD Season 2 - Hide and Seek
In 2009, as I was driving along in my car minding my own business a song came on the radio that brought me up short. The chorus and lyrics were familiar but not the verses and for the life of me I couldn't put my finger on where I'd heard it before. The hook stuck in my head and I found myself singing it over and over and over, all OCD like.
This what I couldn't get out of my head:
"Mmm whatcha say?
Mmm, that you only meant well.
Well of course you did.
Mmm whatcha say?
Mmm, that it's all for the best.
Of course it is.
Mmm whatcha say?
Hmmm, that it's just what we need.
And you decided this?
Mmm whatcha say?
What did she say?"
And then it hit me where I'd heard this before. A few years back Sunshine and Happiness and I were compulsively addicted to So You Think You Can Dance. S&H loves to watch dance competitions and the yumminess that is Cat Deely was enough to convince me. During the finals choreographer Mia Michaels set one of her routines to a mashed up version of Hide and Seek. Oh, Mia, Mia, I miss your pompous ass.
But on to where it is I'm going with this.
When I found the original Hide and Seek on iTunes it got downloaded PRONTO! Then every time I listened to it inevitably I'd start crying at "you won't catch me round here," be snotified by the chorus and at the end dissolve into a heaving, sobbing mess. It felt like being stabbed in the gut. The song brought back every "this is for your own good," "this is just what you need," "this is all for the best," that I'd heard in my lifetime. Right before something awful happened. Over and over and over, all OCD like.
Mommy issues anyone?
After awhile though my blubbering remarkably turned into anger. Horrible, festering anger. Homicidal, destructive, long suppressed um rage actually. Oh my! And so I came to find out, through the suckass feelings evoked by this song, that when I allow myself to feel emotions regardless of how ugly they are and I allow them to come up, despite my natural tendency to stuff them, that I also get to let go of them and make room for the good stuff like happiness, love and joy.
And so as much as I HATE the song Whatcha Say I'm grateful to Jason Derulo. Grateful because his song led me to Hide and Seek. And now I don't have to do either anymore.
Imogen Heap - Hide and Seek
Check out Fightstar's acoustic version on youtube.
Friday, July 29, 2011
Sugar
This is my cat. Her name is not Sugar. |
But that's not what this post is about.
It's about sugar.
Years ago, S&H eliminated all sugar and flour from her diet, started weighing and measuring her food and added karate. She lost a shitload of weight and now looks like Kim "Sugar Free" Couture.
Do you have any idea how many products contain sugar or flour?
Ummmm, all of them.
I freaked out when S&H decided to try this food plan. I mean FREAKED. What did that mean for me? Was I gonna have to eat that way too? I have given up alcohol, drugs, cigarettes and bad relationships but I REALLY like my carbs. In fact I've never met a carb I didn't love. What to do? What to do?
Did I mention I am also a Chub Scout?
So I took the plunge and for the past few years I've managed to not eat any sugar, dextrose, fructose, corn syrup or evaporated cane juice. I also gave up any and all processed flour. This state of affairs suddenly became very tenuous this afternoon.
S&H and I have a unique filing system called "throw everything into a bankers box and leave it there." Because of nerves and fears of an audit, I decided to tweak this system and organized all of our important documents by category, (taxes, credit card bills, receipts, marriage license, etc.) and then put them in a bankers box. Works well, this system.
For convenience sake I keep the bankers box on the floor of our extra bedroom which doubles as the cats' bedroom. Around 3:00 PM I went to get a receipt from said bankers box and found ....my cat had puked all over/in it. By the by, cat puke is extremely acidic, just in case you didn't know. Ate right through the damn manila folders.
What I wouldn't give for a Twinkie.
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