On Change

Have you ever had one of those weeks where it felt like the universe was screaming a message at you? Like EVERYTHING that you were reading, listening to, engaging with kept culminating to the same thing? Ugh. I had that week this week. And it felt like everything was coming down to change.

“All that you touch You Change. All that you Change Changes you. The only lasting truth is Change. God is Change.” – Octavia E. Butler, Parable of the Sower

But as I was considering this, I realized something frustrating. There are people that do not let you change. Or at the least people who view your changing as a direct attack on them. And while they can’t necessarily stop your changing, they often make it so uncomfortable it becomes a struggle to change with any sort of grace or excitement or curiosity at what’s to come.

I guess maybe it’s time to stop talking so abstractly, and get to the point.

I have been playing with change for a few years now. Seeing it as inevitable, allowing it, guiding it when I can. I try to approach this guiding like a good scientist, or a curious explorer: try new things with the option of changing them as needed. Collect data on what does and doesn’t work and proceed accordingly. What I didn’t count on, is how difficult it can be to change things once they don’t seem to be working. Especially when other people are involved.

Last week, after talking to my parents at our once-monthly meeting that we’ve been scheduling for a couple of years now, I got the sense that this wasn’t working any more. Our conversations sometimes flow and sometimes don’t. It all feels very forced. And I realized, oh, maybe it’s time to change the way we’ve been doing things. I don’t really know what to change it to. And since I’ve been the one changing things, it seems like the onus to figure that out falls on me.

I casually brought it up to my brother this weekend. This feeling that the way my parents and I have been doing things for the last couple years isn’t working any more.

“What do you mean? Do you miss them?”

I didn’t think I did and I said so.

He insisted. There were two options for why this wasn’t working. Either it was COVID or that I missed them.

I knew neither was true. And the pressure to have it one or the other left me feeling that this task (that is very much doable I know) is in fact, impossible.

While I know (theoretically) that there are infinite ways in which my parents and I could spend time with each other, the fact that this isn’t working anymore, the fact that it is now failing, brings this dread upon me. Because it feels like if this isn’t working, then I have to go back to how things were before. My experiment failed. I was wrong.

Another option is that how things were didn’t work and how things are now don’t work, and there is a third and fourth and fifth and sixth way of doing things, many of which might not work. Or more likely will work for a few months or years, and then need to be adjusted again in the future.

We have a tendency to think things are final that are not. We think that if someone needs space from another person, it is permanent, unchangeable, and that we will regret it. But that can not be the case, if we let it. We can allow people the space they need and welcome them back when they’re ready, if we are also ready. We can not see people for a few months, not know when we’re gonna see them again, and sit with the discomfort of not knowing, and still allow it to happen.

I think the thing that is not working for me with my parents right now is the planning. When I first took a step away from my parents, they struggled. I probably struggled too. There was no definition. I would see them when I saw them but less often than I had been seeing them when I has been seeing them before. But then they would reach out and we’d talk and they’d say “when are we gonna see you again?” and I’d get annoyed. I knew they were asking out of anxiety. Out of their way of loving, maybe. But mostly out of anxiety. And I figured, a kind way to avoid their anxiety and my annoyance at the question, was to just plan it out. So every month I see them. And at the end of every call we schedule our call for the next month. But I don’t think that’s working any more.

As many of you probably know and experience, there’s not much to report this year. Things are mostly the same one month to the next. We are in a pandemic. In quarantine. Life is limited and it feels that not much is happening. And it makes these conversations feel pointless. On top of this, I have little trust with my parents. Something they are likely amply aware of at this point. I don’t open up to them about much, because they generally aren’t great at responding to the daily hurts and aches and pains. They are quick to try to fix or tell me the things I should have done differently or they ways I have misunderstood.

I know the other thing delaying this change is that change is hard. There is loss and grief and sometimes pain, even if the change is a good one that we chose for ourselves.

Change is hard because it reminds us how little is actually in our control. When we’re walking down our path that’s been planned out to us, we imagine that we know where we’re going, and that we’ll get there so long as we stay on the path. But shit happens. Snow falls and winds blow, the path gets hidden or we get pushed off of it. And sometimes, we see the path for what it is and make the choice to step into the unknown ourselves.

That has been my life for the last five years since I stepped off of one path and onto a patch of grass. I have been exploring this new world trying different directions and off-shoots. Sometimes I stay on a path for a while because it is easier and I can rest just following someone else’s path. There is peace in that. Freedom. Ease. There is time then to explore paths in other realms or other things all together. When we are following a set path we can pay more attention to what is around us, less nervous about where we are going, we spot a cool mushroom under the brush or a cool bird in a tree. Sometimes I stay on a path for a while because it gives me this sense of safety, this idea that I know where I’m going because there’s a path ahead. And then I realize I’m getting somewhere that’s not working. I think, “Oh. This isn’t what I want,” and step off again.

There are people that are happy to weather these changing paths with us. They may not walk with us all the time, but are happy to join us when the going gets tougher to keep us company and help us feel safe. There are people that stay on their own path, or explore on their own, and are excited to see you when your adventures happen to cross. And there are people who stay on that path defined by someone else, scared and screaming at you to come back to it because what if you get lost or hurt or end up somewhere else altogether.

I want to change how I interact with my parents these days. I want to step off this path I created and try new things. But I get worried that instead of coming off the path and exploring with me, my parents will stay stuck and start screaming. Or worse that they’ll say, “See we were right all along. Our path was the right path all along.” And what proof will I have otherwise? Aside from the infinite paths and non-paths around us that they fail to see?

The Rules We Make

This week my therapist casually said, “you really are a rule follower.” I responded, “yeah. I’m pretty boring.” She quickly clarified.

Rules are there to make us feel safe.

Now, she wasn’t talking about all rules, about federal, state, municipal laws. She was talking about the rules we create for ourselves.

Rules like: I can only be angry or judgmental if it helps me clarify my boundaries. Bonus points if I then clearly set those boundaries with whoever crossed them.

(^^this is the rule that led to my therapist saying this in the first place).

Nobody taught me that rule. Nobody ever said that to me. If anything, the rule I was taught: unless a feeling is positive, don’t have it. If you do, you’ll never feel happy again.

Thankfully, I unlearned this second rule. But I can see where the first one is only a baby step from it. A box in which feeling my feelings it ok. And out of which, they must be fixed and stopped.

My therapist then gently reminded me that these rules of mine weren’t actually keeping me safe. Because feelings are not in and of themselves unsafe.

Now, I know they still feel unsafe to me sometimes. And to lots of people. Most of us were not taught how to let our feelings pass through us. Most of us are kinda scared that if we let ourselves feel things (specifically the “negatives” like sadness and anger and hurt) that something bad might happen. Maybe we’ll never stop feeling sad. Maybe in our anger we will hurt someone we love. Maybe if we’re hurt we’ll never be vulnerable, and therefore never feel connected, again.

I have gotten infinitely better at feeling my feelings. I started at a very low skill level on this one haha. But I still have some room to grow. I still have a tendency to only feel my feelings for a little while before my brain says “OK, you feel this, you recognize it, now how do we fix it?”

I am not sure what happens if I unlearn this. My guess is, another baby step, another bigger or differently shaped box.

But I’m curious. What would it be like to truly just let my feelings be. To let them flow in and out as they come and go. To not always have to attribute meaning to them. To learn from them what I can, not out of a need to fix, but out of curiosity about myself and those around me. And not always to learn. To sometimes just be. With them.

On Connection

I have been struggling to feel connected to people recently.

It is a frustrating feeling. To want more than anything to feel connected to my friends, and not knowing what’s stopping me from doing so.

It’s easiest, at first, to blame others. To make a running list of all the things that people are doing wrong, of all the way their actions lead to my growing resentment.

I don’t know why this is so easy for me. I don’t claim that to be the case for everyone. I am guessing that it is a result of things I was shown and taught growing up. Which means I can work to unlearn them.

What I recognized today is my part.

You see, in simple terms at least, connection seems to me about being seen and accepted by others. But as I spent most of the day (so cold, brr) hanging out (safely and at a distance) with some of my closest friends, I realized I was filtering myself more than usual. I felt more nervous about saying the wrong thing, about hurting feelings, about being misunderstood, or worse, hurting people despite my good intentions.

That all translates to this feeling, this realization that I’m not really showing myself. And if I’m not showing myself, people can’t see me, I’m not feeling seen.

It’s an unfortunate patterns, because the less I feel seen the less I want to show of myself regardless of why it started. This is something we spoke about at work once, these behaviors that push people away when what the person is really seeking is connection. I know that I need to put a conscious effort into showing myself. I need to share especially those things that worry me to share. I need to get out of this rut of feeling so disconnected and alone even when I am around people I love and who love me.

I feel sorely not enough this week. I feel too judgmental, too angry, too needy, too resentful. So I guess I also feels like all too much this week. All to say, I don’t feel like the me that I want to be. Perhaps it’s time I accept the me I am now and start showing her around. I have a feeling most of my friends won’t be too bothered by her. By not the best version of me.

And maybe when she, when I show myself and feel seen, I will get a step closer to feeling like a different version of me.

On Adapting and Needs

Humans are super adaptable. This can be seen as a great thing, but I think there are also dangers to this. I wonder if in adapting to a new situation, there is an inevitable forgetting that must happen. A forgetting of how things were.

I’m fresh out of therapy and we ended on a note of recognizing what a year of seriously adjusted socializing could do to us. I’m not going to go into the science of how human beings are social creatures yadda yadda yadda. That’s not my forte. But on a very personal level, I realized this is what this year has meant to me.

I struggle socially. Having social anxiety has never been the phrase that’s hit home for me, though I’m sure to others what I describe sounds like just that. I struggle with imagining that people don’t like me. With believing that there is something so wrong at the core of who I am, that people cannot possibly want to be in relationship of any sort with me.

This is something I was thankfully very aware of by the time that COVID and the social distancing that came with it came to be. My awareness of it allowed me to (mostly) catch myself when my brain was going too deeply into this world of its creation. It allowed me to reach out for support when I needed reminders that this world was one of my brain’s creation. Was not necessarily the reality.

But I fear that there will be longer term implications. I went from socializing with all sorts of people a few times a week, to socializing with a small group of people a few times a month. I went from having ample “data” to fall back on when I needed proof that this one awkward hangout was not proof of my brain’s entrenched thinking. Now, it takes a bit more hard work to “mine the data.” Though there is less of it to mine, that decrease means that every missed connection, every small oversight, feels like it holds more weight. And at a time when we’re all so overwhelmed that it is easier than ever to not be fully present with people when we do hang out. Easier than ever to miss responding to a text.

It is no surprise, then, that I have had bigger and more frequent breakdowns in the last couple of months than I have in a while.

What worries me is how normal this all feels now. And how little we know about when and how it will change. What worries me is all the people who didn’t have a chance to develop this awareness before we went into lockdown. What worries me is our inability as a culture to talk about mental health. I fear that when this is all over (if this will all ever be over), we will all have shared a collective trauma that we have no language to talk about on any large scale.

Sure we are adaptable. We have mostly shifted to doing things a new way. But I worry that we forget what that means. I worry that we forget what we’ve lost. And I worry that we forget to grieve and process that.

Toying with Flexibility

I have often struggled with flexibility. For me that meant that if something didn’t happen the way I wanted it to, the way I imagined it to, then I would…give up and move on. Sometimes I would get angry and resentful. I would feel hurt and unsupported.

I’m trying to work on that. Work with it.

I’m on my second month of 30 days of yoga!!!!! The first month, this flexibility looked like taking days off without giving up on the month. It meant that if a yoga practice felt out of my league or outside my interest, I could skip it, but come back to the challenge the next day.

This month, I’m trying something a little different. About ten days ago, I showed up on the mat to a practice that was very active, when all I wanted to do was move slowly, breathe deeply, and stretch. So I let the practice play to keep track of time, and I moved slowly, breathed deeply, and stretched.

Today, I woke up tired but determined to do my practice before work–I prefer to move my body with any intensity before breakfast, it just feels better. But this morning as I entered my first downward facing dog, I realized that was not what my body needed in that moment. I decided to pause yoga and get my workday going early. I decided to come back to this specific practice later. And if it still didn’t sit right, maybe I’d skip a day or do a more restorative practice again. Whatever felt right.

The point of this isn’t the yoga…it isn’t what I ended up doing after I finished work today. It’s that playing with flexibility has opened new options up for me. It’s helped me challenge my black and white thinking, something I am constantly trying to improve on. It’s helped me manage my perfectionism and move my body with somewhat more consistency. It’s pushed me to listen to myself more often throughout the day. And to try things out without committing to them unnecessarily. It’s helped me hold more grace for my friends and for the people around me.

So yeah…stay flexible people.

P.S. No this whole post was not a pun around flexibility and yoga, I promise!

On Relationships

Today I went on a walk with a friend.

We hadn’t seen in each other in a couple of months cause of holidays and quarantines and moves. We hiked all around Mt. Tabor in East Portland and talked. About work (we’re both starting new jobs) and family and politics (a teensy weensy bit) and how we are struggling with ourselves now. We…I just have so much time to be alone with my thoughts.

And there are a lot of them.

Towards the end, we talked some about relationships, and where we are in our in betweeness of things. It was nice because he described things that I remember going through a year or two ago. And in that way, I felt less alone with that, and hopefully so did he.

There was a point where I was telling him about how I did all this work to separate my self-worth from a romantic relationship and how now I felt stuck in this weird way. Like I don’t know how to be in a romantic relationship if that’s not a part of it.

And I’ve thought about that (duh) over the last few hours and it’s irking me. It feels like I did all this work to learn to love myself, and I do, but now I don’t trust myself to hold onto that in a relationship.

And beyond that…now that I love myself, the thought of having to convince someone to love me just sounds exhausting.

And I know that that’s where the rub is. In the idea of having to convince someone to love me. I know that’s not how it works. Or how it should work, I guess. And that’s where I’m stuck now.

That’s the work now, it seems.

It’s…Complicated

I have, unsurprisingly, been all over the place this week. I wish I could wrap everything nicely for you with a bow. The only consistent thought, coming up again and again, is how I have to get comfortable in the gray zone. A good friend put it differently yesterday. Getting comfortable with complexity.

This first started with what to call Wednesday’s events. I have seen arguments to call it domestic terrorism and arguments against that. I have seen arguments saying that demonstration is not a strong enough word. I have seen arguments that calling it a coup is complicated and dismisses coups that have happened elsewhere. I’m not here to explain all the arguments, but rather to talk about complexity.

People do not agree on what to call Wednesday’s event, but they agree that it’s important to be discussing it in terms of white supremacy. White supremacy is the belief that white people are superior to people of other races and thus should dominate them. Of course, this is further complicated by the fact that white supremacy also constructed races and therefore gets to decide what races are and who belongs to which race.

This is also complicated because versions of white supremacy can be found in many countries and cultures and groups of people that are not white. We see a preference for light skin in many cultures across the world. Think about skin bleaching in southeast Asia. There is racism within Judaism (a people classified as a race by a Nazi German), with Ashkenazi Jews at the top. There is racism within the Latinx community where Indigenous and Afro-Latinx peoples are often underrepresented. It is confusing and complex to see groups of people who would not be considered white by white supremacists, echo these pyramids of power in their culture.

On Thursday, I started seeing a new complication–what about Jewish people. I saw a lot of Jewish people get angry about antisemitism not being explicitly included in discussions about white supremacy. I saw Black and Indigenous folks get angry that Jewish people were centering themselves in conversations. I am Jewish and to be honest, I cringed at a lot of the ways I saw Jewish people engaging. And I had to sit with that. I have seen some heartening responses from both sides acknowledging that antisemitism has often not been an explicit part of the conversation. Acknowledging that there are Jewish people who are deeply racist. Acknowledging that anti-Black and anti-Indigenous racism is still the focus in the United States. Acknowledging the moments of antisemitism by Black leaders. Acknowledging that we all benefit from ant-racism work. This was, is, uncomfortable work. And, as my therapist pointed out, we are unfortunately often in the business of reenacting trauma with each other. Of triggering each other. Of leaving spaces with few people and sides feeling seen and heard.

In therapy, I spoke about my own internal struggle. I am an Ashkenazi Jew. I am white by some standards and not white by others. I have explicitly been told in my life that I am not white. I have also explicitly been told that I am. I felt fear as a Jewish person in the USA on Wednesday as I have following every synagogue shooting that has happened since my family moved to this country. As I did following Charlottesville. I also felt shame and embarrassment that Jewish people were making it about us. These are my feelings and I promise I am working through them, and in the meantime I want to be honest about them. Being Jewish and white in this country is scary for days, maybe weeks at a time. But I move freely. I come with the privilege of class and money and, yes, skin color. I have no accent and most often (and most annoyingly) people that do not know me well, assume I am Christian. It is easy for me to hide, to blend in, as it has been for some Jewish folks for eternity. This is a blessing, yes, and it comes with its own complications.

Being Jewish in this country has been really scary at times, but it has not been the same as being Black or Indigenous in this country. I don’t see my friends and family and community dying of COVID at higher rates because of their Jewishness. I don’t see my friends and family and community dying at the hands of cops in disproportionate numbers because of their Jewishness. I don’t see my friends and family and community being pushed to certain neighborhoods and food deserts because of our Jewishness. I have heard stories of the times that this has happened to us. Of Europe before and during the election and rise to power of the Nazi Party. But it is not happening to us now, not in this way, not in this place, not in this time.

And just like being Jewish in this country does not pose the same threat as being Black or Indigenous. These are all also different from Latinx experiences, from immigrant and migrant experiences, from the experiences of Asian people, from Muslim and Arab experiences, from transgender experiences, from experiences of poverty and houselessness. It is true that none of us experience the same oppression as the other, and yet we all experience oppression. In some form at some time on some level.

The other thing that’s complicated is where do we go from here. How do we move forward as a country knowing what we know of each other now. Knowing that there is a percentage of the population who so desperately believes in white supremacy that they are willing to give up our democracy for it. Knowing that there are people who hate (and fear) Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, Muslim, Jewish, and transgender individuals so much that they are willing to watch this country crumble.

How do we call more people in while ensuring safety for those most marginalized? What do we do to reintegrate people who are wanting to take accountability and are wanting to try to do the work? How do we handle the people who don’t?

I heard the other day, I believe from Sonya Renee Taylor, that it is immensely challenging to imagine a future like this because it’s so hard to imagine something we don’t already know. This is a challenge. This is work that we have actively chosen not to do as a country. And so, a country where we do this work feels scary and new and unimaginable to many. Let’s acknowledge that and try anyway.

I think a lot of us assume that what we have been unable to achieve is impossible. I don’t think that’s true. As a country, we haven’t been trying all that hard if at all. But even if it is impossible, is it not still worth trying?

**Please let me know if any language I have used could be improved upon. I am using what I know to be best practice at this time, and language is complicated and fluid and I’d like to know if anything could be worded better.**

On Israel: Pt 1.

A few years ago, I was meeting some of my then-partner’s friends for the first time when Israel came up…as it does? My partner and I were heading to Astoria the next morning for a weekend away to celebrate his birthday. Astoria led to The Goonies house, which was closed down to tourists and covered by a huge Israeli flag. And then the topic was broached–Israel’s right to exist. I was speaking with two progressive Americans, one Jewish and one not. They didn’t know, in that moment, that I was (am) from Israel. They would find out moments later when my partner shared for me. But it was something that irked me in that moment. How could a bunch of Americans–citizens of a country founded on land stolen from Indigenous peoples–tell me that Israel had no right to exist. It felt…hypocritical and annoying.

To give some context, this was before my own baby-awakening-that’s-still-in-the-works. Only a couple of years after I first questioned (in the tiniest of ways) the story that I had been told of Israel by my Israeli school and Israeli parents. It was before I started seeing the parallels between anti-Black and anti-Indigenous racism in the US and the racism in Israel. It was before I was able to separate the issues of Israel’s existence and the issues of Israel’s human rights violations (is this separable?).

Today, on my daily Instagram download, I happened upon a meme suggesting a solution to the Israel-Palestine Conflict by relocating Israel into the United States.

The earliest sign I could find of this meme on the internet was from 2014. The meme shows Israel in red placed in the middle of a lime green United States of America and lists nine “highlights” that would result from this move.

There were some interesting comments on the post, which was eventually removed, not because of this meme but because of a different one that had nothing to do with Israel.

Here are a few of the highlights that I had some direct issues with:

  • “Americans will welcome Israelis with open arms into their homes.”
    • Will they though? What about the anti-Judaism that is still alive and well here?
    • There is a distinct difference between “supporting” a people from afar and welcoming them into their homes with open arms.
  • “America has plenty of land to accommodate Israel as its 51st state.”
    • If we’re talking about giving land back to Indigenous peoples, is this true?
  • “Middle East will again be peaceful without foreign interference.”
    • Foreign, and specifically western, interference has been present in the Middle East since at least the 1800s–far before the current state of Israel came into existence.
  • “Oil prices will go down, inflation will go down, whole world will be happy.”

I think the last two statements especially, are representative of a line being crossed from where to where, I’m not sure I can explain. To imply that all foreign interference in the Middle East is a result of Israel is absurd. If only because much of the Middle East was carved out between the European Empires until the 1930’s and 40’s. To imply that Israel is the only reason that foreign interests (mainly, but not only, the United States) are fighting wars in the Middle East feels just disconnected from reality. To imply that all it would take for the “whole world” to be happy is to move Israel is also a bit far-reaching.

I thought, on-and-off, that maybe this post was ironic–just because some of the literal meaning seemed so outrageous to me. I don’t know how to confirm or refute this to be honest. But I really don’t think that’s the case.

I thought, as I have several times in the last year, if there really is a way to solve this conflict while still maintaining a Jewish state. It is, honestly, still hard for me to let go of the feeling of internal calm that I get knowing that a Jewish state exists somewhere.

I thought that if the United States has a right to exist on stolen land, after slavery, and over a century of further human rights violations within and outside its own borders, then why should Israel not.

I thought, the existence of the United States should not green light the existence of any other country. We can and should do better as a world.

I thought, not for the first or last time, how sad it is that a nation founded as a result of the Holocaust could be responsible for such atrocious treatments of another people. And then I remembered the abuse cycle and how it is not rare for survivors to become abusers. I mourned some more.

I have no internal solution to this. For me, the reality of Israel’s existence is much more difficult to come to terms with than the reality of the United State’s existence. It hits closer to home for some reason. A few months ago, a friend asked me and another white woman why we thought it was so hard for Americans to accept the reality of racism that’s woven into its roots. My answer reflected my own struggle to accept the reality of Israel–when a story, real as it is, attacks the core identity of the country that you are a part of as it has been taught to you–the propaganda that you have absorbed and believed for as long as you can remember–it takes a lot of work to dismantle. It can be physically painful. It is not going to happen over night. It is going to require some intentional work and some people just won’t want to do it. And that sucks.

Let me know what you think. As anxious as I am to share these thoughts, I aim to be open to feedback and different ideas. Thanks!

Finding Yourself in the Past

I’ve been cleaning this week. Being holed up at home for ten days and unemployed for two months, I’ve really let the clutter build. Today I went through my “office.” A small white desk and nightstand turned shelving. I do this every so often. Cleaning my office mostly involves going through papers deciding what to keep, what to toss, and what needs to go where.

One thing I seem to collect like no other is notebooks. I have small ones for my purse, big ones for my art. They are lined or gridded or blank papered. Two or three of them were supposed to help me create a budget. One is labeled “PERSONAL.”

I use them to write down musings and thoughts. Advice and lessons learned. But they are not organized in any particular way these journals. Except for my bullet journals. Those are mostly pristine.

Today I cleaned my office and found a light brown notebook. It’s is 3.5″ by 5.5″. Lined. Bound with string. It’s untitled. Appears unimportant. But the contents:

02.14.16. made me turkey bolognese for dinner on Valentine’s Day ❤
02.15.16. asked me if I wanted him to sleep over tomorrow and said there was a right answer.
02.14.16. “But I know the hardest and most valuable part has been accomplished because I have you.”
02.16.16. Salsa, ate, sharing, friend, Tin Bucket, love fading. Talking. When will we move in together?
02.17.16. helped me pick out a dress for the wedding
02.18.16. first flight together! Let me sleep on his shoulder
02.19.16. bought a clock together
02.20.16. Salsa dancing to JT @ Jenn + Jame’s wedding in Pitt
02.21.16. bus -> bookstore -> andy warhol -> tough night -> best makeup
02.22.16. stuffing all our carry ons under our chairs/between our feet on the flight from PIT to Houston.
02.23.16. helping me out of my Lardo slump
02.24.16. promising me that if I give Milo up for adoption, when we have a house with a back yard, we’ll adopt another dog.
02.25.16. Thanks for coming to sleep over after I left the bball game early and was moody.
02.26.16. Thanks for finally taking me to Dick’s Kitchen. It was delicious!
02.27.16. Thanks for putting up with my huge overreaction to The Witch.
02.28.16. So happy we finally watched Annie Hall! Thanks for going out to dinner @ Andina w/ my parents. Grabbing a beer at Deschutes before was simply perfect.
02.29.16. Thanks for calling me when you were done @ work. I was a little anxious about how your working would affect our partnership.
03.01.16. Thanks for convincing me to go to salsa AGAIN…it was really uplifiting.
03.02.16. Thanks for calling when you got out of work.
03.03.16. Thanks for putting up with my mood, and for getting me out of it by making me laugh. And for not giving up on us. And for continuing to talk about living together. I can’t wait!
03.04.16. Thanks for texting me to tell me you couldn’t make it before falling asleep.
03.05.16. Thanks for sharing the secret of the tables at Kriskoff’s with me.
03.06.16. Thanks for driving all the way over just for dinner and ice cream. And always being on board with getting ice cream.
03.07.16. Thanks for making it to trivia on your first day back to a long-term project/job.
03.08.16. Thanks for going to sleep early-ish with me even though I’m sure you wanted to watch HOC.
03.09.16. Thanks for showing me Clerks II
03.10.16. Thanks for supporting me when I was nervous about my presentation @ work.
03.11.16. Thanks for not being too upset when I was too tired to watch a movie.
03.12.16. Thanks for watching Blue Ruin with me at 4AM because we were both awake.
03.13.16. Thanks for Salsa and Seinfeld and chicken parm.
03.14.16. Thanks for another fun night of trivia. And for checking if my skin rash had spread to my back,
03.15.16. Thanks for letting me know when you got home from work.
03.16.16. Thanks for being prepared for me to cry every day about Milo.
03.17.16. Happy St. Paddy’s Day! I hope you wore green. And thanks for meeting me for a beer after work.
03.18.16. Thanks for letting me cry to you for a few hours on and off.
03.19.16. Thanks for getting me excited about basketball.
03.20.16. Thanks for being fun in the shower, and going to Zootopia, and just being wonderful.
03.21.16. Thanks for letting me know about using our relationship to make a point to Bo. I appreciate being kept in the loop.
03.22.16. we bought our tickets to NOLA!
03.23.16. Thanks for giving me the idea to take Meghan to the Blazers vs. Mavs game. It was lots of fun!
03.24.16. Thanks for sleeping over not to just be closer to work but also closer to me.
03.25.16. Thanks for trying to help me with my crazy body image issues. Know that while it’s something completely internal, it helps immensely to have such a supportive and wonderful guy around.
03.26.16. Thanks for finally taking me to Sisters Coffee. Good thing there was no Catholic music. +RUN!
03.27.16. Thanks for showing me Team America. And having coffee with my parents.
03.28.16. Thanks for coming over even though it was late and you had to be up early.
03.29.16. Thanks for listening to my explanation about my food issues and being open to working TOGETHER to figure out this work stuff.
03.30.16. Thanks for getting ice cream w/ me when what you really wanted was a beer.
03.31.16. It was fun grabbing a beer after work. Glad I got to make that one up to you so quickly =)
04.01.16. Happy April! Thanks for getting Italian w/ me. I didn’t think it was so bad.
04.02.16. Glad I got to pretend like we were in college together at the basement/tree/flip cup party. All this accentuated by your fratty hat! We more buy you more hats!
04.03.16. One of my favorite mornings w/ you to date: “OK let’s have sex. Then breakfast. Then we’ll drive down to tulip festival.” And I got to go to your favorite thrift store to boot! And no line @ cup + saucer! And I got to take model shots of you with tractors.
04.04.16. 2nd place in trivia + we beat trash pandasssss!!!!
04.05.16. salad. salad. and more salad. GYM!
04.06.16. Teaching you about fartleks. Thanks for being curious.
04.07.16. Thanks for calling. It’s weird only texting for days now. It feels like backtracking. I hope this gets easier for me w/ your work schedule. Thank you for giving me time to adjust and freak out.
04.08.16. Thanks for convincing Bo and me to go to Milwaukee. I like Laurelwood brewery.
04.09.16. Thanks for taking me shopping with you.
04.10.16. Thank you for being a wonderful partner: waking up early on Sunday to drop me off at my race. Calming me down, spending the whole day with me, AND being a wonderful human being in general. I love you so much.
04.11.16. Thank you for letting me vent to you about my frustrating day at work.
04.12.16. It was awesome watching Princess & the Frog. It reminded me of one of our earlier dates watching The Emperor’s New Groove and making out on the Sofa King couch. I can’t believe how long ago that feels nor how far we’ve come. Love you so much!
04.13.16. Thanks for coming with me to my first Timbers game!
04.14.16. This week has made me really excited for our moving in together. Whenever that may be.
04.15.16. Thanks for letting me cry when I need to.
04.16.16. I like that you asked Lia to hug you. That’s why I made you do it again when we left.
04.17.16. Thanks for going to sleep early. I’ll let you know in advance next time.
04.18.16. It was fun being silly @ trivia. Until the tired hit at least. I like being willy w/ you.
04.19.16. mmmm great sex!
04.20.16. Thanks for allowing me to wake up early.
04.21.16. Pizza dance =)
04.22.16. Thanks for sitting through seder with my family.
04.23.16. Thanks for getting wings with me after the movie.
04.24.16. I love just reading somewhere together. And thanks for letting me fall asleep on your chest.
04.25.16. Thanks for always respecting the way I’m feeling and not making me feel little for feeling them.
04.26.16. Thank you for keeping me in the loop about the Clippers injuries.
04.28.16. Thanks for sharing that creepy-ass pic of you as the can driver on set.
04.29.16. Good times w/ Blazers winning first round!
04.30.16. Morning hike and an awesome concert! Plus I finally got to try the banana beer at Prost and a burger at bar bar?! woah!
05.01.16. Finally tried Gravy. So cool that it made your top brunch in Portland! Can’t wait to get bottomless mimosas with you.
05.02.16. Thanks for sharing pics of the set!
05.03.16. Thank you for being open to natural family planning and supporting my desire to go off hormonal birth control.
05.04.16. Thank you so much for calling this morning. It really quieted my worries. Thank you for being patient with my struggles and being understanding with me. I love you so much.
05.05.16. You’re done w/ filming! So happy you called when you got out early and we got to hang out unexpectedly!!!
05.06.16. Thanks for taking me to year of the fish finally. The wrap party was fun too.
05.07.16. Thanks for accompanying me to Seattle.
05.08.16. Thanks for talking in your sleep which led to some of the more laugh-inducing conversations we’ve had lately.
05.09.16. I just want to move in together this summer.
05.10.16. Thanks for being my partner, walking to the store with me, helping me do the dishes after dinner, buying me ice cream, introducing me to music, sharing your fears with me, and being a shoulder to cry on.
05.11.16. Thanks for keeping me in the loop today.
05.12.16. Thanks for suggesting I get the Mocha Fudge cake @ Rimsky’s. It was delicious!
05.13.16. Thanks for coming out to Beaverton for the night.
05.14.16. Thanks for coming out to Beaverton even just for an hour of shopping so I get to at least see you for a little today.
05.15.16. Thanks for picking me up for our dinner + a movie date!

And that’s it. Halfway filled with things I was grateful for about my partner at the time. Three months of things that made me happy about him and about our relationship. Ninety days of staving off severe anxiety that I was too much and he was going to leave at any second. But we made it through that rough stretch. And another. The third one got us. We never ended up moving in together.

And I’m grateful to have found this. Grateful to be reminded of the lengths we went to. Grateful to see how often it was the tiniest thing that made my day. Grateful to be reminded that I was and am worthy of love. Grateful to be feeling the hope that someday, again, someone will just let me cry and feel anxious and walk with me to the store.

P.S. It was SO hard to not correct my grammar and spelling in this but I wanted to keep it exactly as it was!

On Inertia and Winter Climate

This week I’ve been getting some order in my life. I wake up and spend an hour or so in bed reading, looking at Instagram or TikTok, or doing Sudokus on my phone. Then I get up and do yoga, make my all time favorite breakfast, and eat it while watching Big Mouth or something cooking related on YouTube. Then I go for a long walk.

The walks have been an on-and-off thing in my unemployment. And this week they started because of the sun. It has been truly beautiful in Portland this week. Some days were, dare I say, even warm! But even the cold days have been sunny and bright by around eleven–the time when my morning routine generally wraps up.

On my walk today, listening to some podcast or other, I remembered that four winters ago Portland was cozily napping under over a foot of snow. I remember my newly exed partner and I traversing SE Portland in search of a meal and happening upon a dark but modern bar on Division where I had a great burger. On our way, stopping every so often, unsure of what was open and closed, we noticed that Salt and Straw was open and empty–a rare occurrence at that time of day no matter the weather. We walked in and were met with assurance that they weren’t closing early, and we could come back after dinner for some scoops. Relieved, we trundled on.

We had both spent a good chunk of our lives in the Boston area, so snow was not new to us. And yet, because this volume of snow was new to the city, we faced this snow with the childhood wonder of seeing snow for the first time. We joked that our ice-cream on the eve of his flying had become our little tradition, as this was our second year, not knowing it would be our last. Though we vowed to stay friends, it turned out that what soured our romantic relationship would not go away with a change of label.

It is odd to realize that four winters ago there had been so much snow, and this week, on this year, in this winter, it was not only sunny but had managed to get warm.

It is odd to realize that I don’t know if I will keep doing yoga every morning or going on a walk, at least on nice days. I hope I do. I know that doing at least one of these things helps me be kinder to myself and to the body I still struggle with the shape of at times. I know that doing these things eases my mind and quiets my very loud overthinking brain; even just twenty minutes can be a relief.

I also know that inertia has been pretty uneven in my experience. Sure, things in motion tend to stay in motion and things at rest tend to stay at rest. But it’s always felt much harder to get moving from rest than to stop moving.

I know that my struggle with joyful movement has been much longer lasting than my struggle with food. And I wonder at that. And every time I manage to move my body consistently for a few days or weeks I gather more information about why I move my body. About all the benefits of movement that have nothing to do with the shape of my body. The experience of being centered. Of being kinder to myself. Of being able to have a break from my brain for a short while at least. Of having more space to respond rather than react. Of being embodied.

It is really strange returning to my body after years of blatantly ignoring it and shutting it down. There is a peace that comes with being in it. An unexpected sexiness and love that comes from being present in it.

A joy.

Who knew?