Groundless

We’re getting tossed about. All is shifting.

Our house is surrounded in scaffolding, as rotted fascia is replaced with new walls.

Jeb turns 11 on Friday. Hormones pulse beneath the flesh of his broadening shoulders. We look at each other, nearly, eye-to-eye.

The car got a new radiator (that leak was not just in my head – see post details here). And we discovered the rear shocks were shot, as well.

“What happens if you don’t replace the rear shocks?” I ask the mechanic, as I tally up the estimate he’s quoting me.

“Well, then you’ll have a pretty bumpy ride.”

I’m all for smooth sailing these days, but lately, circumstance seems to be continually swirling our family in the flurry of a snow globe. It’s unsettling. Discomforting.

Yet, I can’t help but think if I just changed my mind about it all, I may find some beauty in the blizzard.

2014-12-2_Jeb_wave foot

Sometimes in the midst of the chaos, I reach for the wisdom of a master. One who has dedicated her life to staying with all places uneasy. Pema Chodron dives right in. Suggests that the greatest gifts can be found when everything gets tight and goes topsy-turvy.

“…We continually find ourselves in that squeeze. It’s a place where we look for alternatives to just being there. It’s an uncomfortable, embarrassing place, and it’s often the place where people like ourselves give up…

This place of the squeeze is the very point in our meditation and in our lives where we can really learn something. The point where we are not able to take it or leave it, where we are caught between a rock and a hard place, caught with both the upliftedness of our ideas and the rawness of what’s happening in front of our eyes—that is indeed a very fruitful place.

When we feel squeezed, there’s a tendency for mind to become small. We feel miserable, like a victim, like a pathetic, hopeless case. Yet believe it or not, at that moment of hassle or bewilderment or embarrassment, our minds could become bigger. Instead of taking what’s occurred as a statement of personal weakness or someone else’s power, instead of feeling we are stupid or someone else is unkind, we could drop all the complaints about ourselves and others. We could be there, feeling off guard, not knowing what to do, just hanging out there with the raw and tender energy of the moment. This is the place where we begin to learn the meaning behind the concepts and the words.

We’re so used to running from discomfort, and we’re so predictable. If we don’t like it, we strike out at someone or beat up on ourselves. We want to have security and certainty of some kind when actually we have no ground to stand on at all.

The next time there’s no ground to stand on, don’t consider it an obstacle. Consider it a remarkable stroke of luck. We have no ground to stand on, and at the same time it could soften us and inspire us. Finally, after all these years, we could truly grow up…

We are given changes all the time. We can either cling to security, or we can let ourselves feel exposed, as if we had just been born, as if we had just popped out into the brightness of life and were completely naked.

Maybe that sounds too uncomfortable or frightening, but on the other hand, it’s our chance to realize that this mundane world is all there is, and we could see it with new eyes and at long last wake up from our ancient sleep of preconceptions…

We need encouragement to experiment and try this kind of thing. It’s quite daring, and maybe we feel we aren’t up to it. But that’s the point. Right there in that inadequate, restless feeling is our wisdom mind. We can simply experiment. There’s absolutely nothing to lose. We could experiment with not getting tossed around by right and wrong and with learning to relax with groundlessness…”

~Pema Chodron from “Three Methods for Working with Chaos” courtesy of Lion’s Roar

Mahalo Ke Akua

Two years ago we marked a passage. Gathered with the ones closest to us, and celebrated Love.

I rarely share photos of myself or my family on the Archives. But today, I want to express my gratitude with the world.

I am so thankful for the Bohemian. A rare, gem-of-a-man. A true treasure. Such a gift to Jeb and I…

photo courtesy of Amy Vanderhoop
photo courtesy of Amy Vanderhoop

 

 

photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Amy Vanderhoop
photo courtesy of Amy Vanderhoop
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Amy Vanderhoop
photo courtesy of Amy Vanderhoop
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography
photo courtesy of Sara Wall Photography

Seeing Red

“It’s all in your head, Jess.”

The Bohemian is smirking at me from underneath the car. He’s on his back, flashlight in hand, neck arched. His face peers closely at all those critical parts, so rarely viewed. He’s in the underbelly of our Toyota.

This isn’t the first time he’s teased me with this. It’s a remark I can’t stand to hear, though the way the Bohemian delivers it, carries just enough love to make me interested in why I dislike it so. A week ago, he was echoing this sentiment as I groaned through sleepless nights, dealing with a pinched nerve in my lower back. Right now, it’s car trouble.

Today, the car’s temperature gauge is in the red, there is evidence of a leak, and I’m wondering how our one-car family will get through five days of no transportation. Every mechanic we know is booked until next week.

Thirty minutes ago, I didn’t even get as far as a mile down the road before the temperature was reading maximum. After cooling it down and topping off the coolant, the Bohemian has been doing test drives, trying to mimic my over-heating scenario.

“I put the air-conditioning on max, ran the defrost, drove it around…the temperature looks normal, Jess. And I don’t see anything leaking under here, either.”

I can still see the faint wet spot on the floor of our garage, left over from the morning, when I first noticed a decent-sized leak coming from under the radiator zone.

“But you saw that leak this morning, right? That wasn’t my imagination.”

“Yeah, I saw it, but it’s not doing it now. Nothing looks wet. I don’t see anything wrong.” He scooches out along his back and swings his body up to sitting, smiling.. “There is no problem.”

Believe me, I don’t want a mechanical problem. No more than I want a pinched nerve in my back keeping me from morning walks and a full-night’s sleep. But I can’t deny the tingling that runs down my leg, and I’m not sure I can trust that a simple trip into town may find me, hood up, alongside the highway again.

“Will you come with me to the post office and we can see what it does?”

“Sure.”

We drive fifteen miles or so. Run the air conditioning, drive up and down steep hills. We stop, check the pavement beneath the car. The temperature runs normal. There is not a drop to be seen.

All in my head…hmm.

I like to think that this mysterious life can be some sort of out-picturing of our interior world. That we are the writer, director, producer, and star of our own movie-in-the-making. Each scene is custom-made for us, for our experience and growth. And though we all live here together, and our plot-lines may intersect, no two movies are the same.

I’ve heard it said that five people can experience a situation together, but ask each one of them, individually, what happened, and you’ll get five very different stories. Each one of us sees the world through our own unique filter, shaping our life stories just the way we need.

The ever-steady Bohemian doesn’t need reminders about over-heating. I’m the one that seems too quick to lose my cool. He’s the one with oodles of patience, when I let the small things fray at my nerves.

So did I just manifest some little overheating drama on my way to the acupuncture appointment that was supposed to calm my nerves? Maybe I’m stretching a little further out on the woo-woo limb than necessary. But as the Toyota seems to be in working order as soon as the Bohemian enters stage left, I’m pondering the power of my script.

And the Bohemian has his own movie, too. One could suggest he just needed an excuse to leave work early, put on his hero cape, and come to his wife’s rescue. That he needed to remind us both, there is no problem.

We could catalog this incident in the metaphysical files under “?”. Move on to our old routine and just forget about it. But I’m too practical for that. I’ve secured a diagnostic with the mechanic next week.

From now until then, I’ll play with the metaphors of running hot and being nervous. Though, guaranteed,  I’ll be traveling with a gallon of water, some rags, and chronically checking under the hood.

I may be making this movie, but I’m still getting to know the Muse. Not quite sure where this little sub-plot is taking me.

courtesy of Oceanworks Car Blog
courtesy of Oceanworks Car Blog