Vulnerability and Courage

“I believe that you have to walk through vulnerability to get to courage.” – Brene Brown

My friend sent me an email the other day that made me feel like the wind was knocked out of me. It said in essence that she was hosting Thanksgiving at her house but we weren’t invited. There are so many ways to explain this away – she didn’t mean it to be hurtful, the pandemic has made gatherings risky so to protect our older generation this is wise and so on. But the fact of middle age is that we very rarely wound each other. Our lives and patterns of communication have solidified so that no one needs to either extend themselves very far nor risk being hurt. It was such a surprise for me to feel so pierced that it threw me and my productivity off kilter for the rest of the afternoon.

I’ve been listening to a lot of podcasts about vulnerability. it started with University of Houston research professor Brene Brown but now I’m finding that thread in so much of what I’m reading and listening to. That vulnerability means that we are daring to live out in the open, to try things and to fail, that if marks whether we are doing something meaningful. And by meaningful, I mean meaningful as in measured by personal growth.

So I’ve been consuming all this content about vulnerability, I know it’s one of my weaknesses and then my friend sends that email that hurts me. My first reaction was to hide, to pull back into my shell and just nurse the wound. I’m a pretty affable person and I can shake things off as unintended. But one of the reasons the email wounded me is that it feels like my friend often makes unilateral decisions without consulting me. And the second reason is because I secretly fear that I value her friendship more than she values mine. And the third is because I’ve never told her the previous two reasons.

Instead of hiding, I waited a few hours and sent an email back saying that I was wounded. I’ll be honest here – it felt yucky. Her response was lovely and though we probably won’t still get our families together for Thanksgiving as we have for every year for the past ten, it won’t stick like a turkey bone caught in my throat blocking my ability to breathe or be grateful. I continue to feel a little tender but within that tenderness is a kernel of additional belonging that I didn’t have before. I can speak my truth and still be accepted. My right to be here isn’t conditional on me behaving affably. I feel a little more wise about how to coach my kids about friendship. I crossed that chasm between learning about something and doing something and it makes me feel brave!

Glimpses of Sunshine

The other day at my 5-year-old daughter’s check-up, the doctor asked her how online school was going and she answered, “It’s stressful.” And it is stressful – for her teacher who can’t see the kids when she is sharing her screen, for my daughter who often doesn’t feel seen, for her younger brother who wants to do what his sister is doing and for me adding the jobs of teaching assistant and janitor to parent and breadwinner. On one level we are fine and on another level, we are deeply tired as most everyone is during this pandemic.

But every once in a while, something breaks through my grief of how things ought to be to show me the beauty of how things are like the sunshine in this picture. I know that I will be grateful for this extra time with my kindergartener and the extra glimpse I’m getting into how she learns. I also know that generally speaking, I’m a Pollyana but I greatly need these miraculous glimpses to fuel my sunshine!

There are moments when I’m buried too deep in my to-do list to let the light in. Finding time to clean my windows when I don’t have two spare moments to rub together is not easy. But when I take fifteen minutes before the kids wake up in the morning to meditate, do yoga, read something inspirational or write anything that is authentic, it changes my day. The step back from my to-do list restores my heart space that holds the why I am running around doing all these jobs. It widens my aperture to include the big picture so I am more open to see the sunshine streaming in. And when I’m operating from my calm, all my tasks, whether they be work, kids or home go a little better. This Zen saying makes me laugh but probably even more so because there is truth to it, “You should sit in meditation 20 minutes a day. Unless you’re too busy, then you should sit for an hour.”

Yes, this time of remote learning and social distancing is stressful. It puts a spotlight on our human struggle to see and be seen. All of which goes better when we whatever we need to do to clean our windows and let the sunshine in.

Weaving our Gratitude

I love Thanksgiving!! The “aaahhhh” of Thanksgiving nestled between the “eeekk” of Halloween and the “wowww” of Christmas! Gratitude is such a soft emotion, a being instead of a doing. The more I focus on being thankful, the more all that I think I need to do, pursue, achieve and buy falls away. But it’s so soft that sometimes I find it easier to move back to the drumbeat of doing!

Last night Miss O chose a bath bomb for her bath, a small blue one that melts away to reveal a small sponge animal in the middle. There is a lot of delight in seeing what’s inside but when the creature was a swan that she already has, I thought we were headed for disappointment instead of surprise. But she said, “Oh, a baby swan to go with the mommy swan” and I was blown away by the demonstration of how the narrative matters.
So I connect with hemming our blessings with thankfulness – an act of staying with the gratitude so that we weave our narrative based on our blessings, not our disappointments. Happy Thanksgiving!

High Off the Ground

Who doesn’t love Mark Twain quotes? Somehow he manages to be both flippant and deep at the same time.

Yesterday as Miss O was climbing trees, I noticed that it was a lot harder to watch others go out on a limb than to do so myself. Shoot – that shift in perspective is always so humbling. 😀 So I’m sending my thanks to all my friends and family that have supported me out on my limbs and shared the fruit (and bruises) with me!!

Breathe. Just Breathe.

As I was heading out the door with Miss O the other day, I was holding the doll she wanted to bring, the doll’s bottle, a plate of cookies, some snacks and a cup of lukewarm tea. Then she wanted me to carry her so I bent down to pick her up and it seemed like she’d gained a couple of pounds overnight. Suddenly I was off balance and because dropping her was out of the question, I instead spilled the tea all over the floor, my sleeve, the hood of the shirt Miss O was wearing, my shoes and her shoes. It was all over…

 One of the parts about parenting that I find most challenging is that I don’t feel free to express myself fully at times. When I’m frustrated, angry, sad, scared, I don’t just let loose but instead try to find the mature and exemplary way through the situation until I can scream, cry or swear in an appropriate moment which is usually long after the feeling has passed.

 As I got my bearings after spilling the tea all over, I set Miss O on the counter and she said, “Take a deep breath, Mama.” Sometimes that is all that there is left to do and she was right, it helped.

Belief in Action

I’ve been so inspired by recent news stories about people whose Iives are beliefs in action – like John McCain and Colin Kaepernick. For me it resonates with what my dad said again and again — we must believe in something bigger than ourselves. And when we do, it has the power to change lives.