sallysings
Monday, July 31, 2017
What Do I Do With Pain
The final bit of motivation came when my husband entered the bedroom, laid down beside me and reached out to hold my hand.
"What are you thinking about?" he wondered.
"I hurt. I don't want to get out of bed," my truth sounded wimpy, voiced in the jungle of all the other bedroom noises. Fan whirring, birds outside chirping, puppy dog grooming, cicadas calling out in the budding heat.
He nodded. Snuggled closer and wiped a tear off my cheek. He didn't offer any words of wisdom. He didn't tell me I should go ahead and get up. He didn't tell me how I was wrong, or what he thought would help. He was just there with me. A few minutes later he asked again.
"What are you thinking about, now?"
His question hung in the air as I took a deep breath, shook the blanket off this stranger's body that they tell me is mine, and sat up.
"I have to leave for class," he reminded me. I nodded. He held my hand as I sat there on the edge of the bed.
I knew what it would feel like when I put weight on my legs. I knew the radiating pain of nerve damage in my hip and the reluctant ache of the fracture site in my knee. I knew how scary and strange my abdomen would feel as I unfolded and stood tall- those deep, sharp pains. If I press the pads of my fingers down, searching along the injury site as I lay flat on my back, I can still feel and count the dissolving stitches. My physical therapist likes to remind me how far I've come, but in these morning hours all I seem to be able to wrap my head around is how far I have yet to go.
The physical pain is somehow a comfort, because I know where it's coming from....but there is this new emotional pain that came out of nowhere and has knocked the hope and courage right out of me. I fought it the best way I knew how, eating healthy foods and getting as much exercise as I could, talking with friends, praying and meditating, but I was sinking. And I was falling back into some unhelpful behaviors, greeting my dishonesty and escapism like the long absent old friends that they are to me. I talked to my doctor and started taking an antidepressant.
Several times every day I ask myself what I should do with my pain. I thought that my physical pain would lessen the farther out from the accident I came, but it's worse in many ways. I've cut back on pain medication, so that is part of the issue. And injured tissue and nerve endings are rebuilding, so naturally areas that used to be numb are coming alive with sensation (and pain).
Then there is the matter of this soul breaking internal pain. The inability to "power through" sadness. Being unable to think rationally and reason with despair, hopelessness and apathy. Knowing there are people in situations that are so much more challenging than mine. Hearing, "You look great!" when I feel like the ickiest speck of sludge on the underside of a rotting log. If you've ever been to this place, you know it isn't a matter of adjusting your mindset. "Just be more positive!" sounds as unattainable as, "Just fly to Jupiter!"
What do I do with my pain? I accept it. I practice mindfulness and work to stay in the moment. I do the little things I can. I (eventually) get out of bed. I play fetch with my delightful pup. I make a list of things I am grateful for. I take my medicine and I stay away from alcohol and un-prescribed drugs. I paint. I keep all the appointments that I can. I go to the doctor. I meet up with friends. I treasure hunt at Goodwill. I pray, and read, and meditate. I ask my Higher Power to help me be of service to others. Some of these actions help me feel better. But they don't heal me.
So, what do I do with my pain?
Today, I'll just keep going.
Sunday, July 2, 2017
Nostalgia
Perhaps you know this feeling. When a song that you'd forgotten existed suddenly fills your ears and you find yourself transported to another time and place. A time when you discovered who you were, and who you wanted to be. You realized the confines of the world you grew up in were nothing but a story. A place that lives in your memory still, held in unnatural suspension from the passage of time. Every lyric floats out of your throat on a wind of hope and longing, you find the words sail effortlessly into the space around you as tears you didn't know were falling make glossy trails down your face. Oh, the people who loved you and sang this song with you! Where are they now? Oh, the people you loved as they sang this song with you! Do they wonder where you are? And then, as the last note drifts out of the speakers and catches in your throat, maybe you're filled with an ache for that time and place. You share a half-smile with yourself as you realize, you'll always ache. No matter what goodness and peace (or sadness and grief), you find, you'll never stop chasing that time, that place.
Friday, June 16, 2017
Our Dis-ease
We all have a dis-ease inside of us. An unease. A part of us that fuels self-sabotage, over-indulgence, addiction, self-pity, dishonesty, and any number of other unsavory character defects. It's the voice I hear inside my head that tells me things would be so much easier if I had a drink (or twelve). Your dis-ease is the voice in your head that tells you you aren't loved. That you aren't enough. That you should stuff yourself when you aren't even hungry. It's the voice that tells you there are ways to escape how you feel. That you'll never be who you want to be. That you can't succeed. That no one likes you. That a talent you have isn't admirable. That you can't be happy until you lose 10 pounds. That you can only be content if everyone around you is happy. You know this voice. And yeah, not to sound dramatic, but it wants you dead.
So how do we keep our dis-ease in check, and stay afloat on the stormy seas of life? I believe that the key to survival, contentedness, and happiness, lies in each moment that we are fully present. Some folks call this mindfulness. An honest accounting of our emotions as they are happening allows us to stay in balance. If we are busy worrying about what has already happened or what may happen in the future, we are letting our dis-ease rule the moment we are in.
Staying present in each moment also requires that you are being honest with yourself. Instead of worrying how something may feel in the future, or interpreting how you felt in the past, you can recognize each emotion as they are born. This is not always easy, but it is ALWAYS better. You can make a choice about how to handle these budding emotions. You can feed joy, helping it burst into bloom. You can dig into grief and sadness, pinpointing the root (source) of these feelings. Understanding emotion is very powerful. It takes the mask off the character, and let's you see the face beneath is actually yours. While we're on the subject, let's take away positive and negative descriptors from our emotions. When you are sad, angry, or depressed, that isn't "bad". When you are peaceful, happy, or excited, that isn't "good". The way you feel is simply that- the way you feel. And you should allow yourself to feel all emotions. Don't stifle the ones that make you uncomfortable. Taking steps to decipher why you experience emotions (and how they change you), is the foundation of freedom from being tossed about like a leaf in the wind. And y'all, this tossed-about-victim mentality takes away your responsibility over yourself, your actions, and your life.
Please don't think that I am saying terrible things don't happen. Awful things do happen. Sometimes we did something to cause them, but many times we did not. There are things that we go through that we have no power over. What I want to impress on you, reader, is that in many cases, you may retain the power of choice about how you feel.
Controversial thought alert!! You have a choice about being angry, happy, sad, annoyed, or at peace. Now, there are chemicals in our brains that can mess with this power, I fully acknowledge that. I believe with every ounce of my being, that the medications I have taken for severe chronic depression are often necessary, helpful tools. But you know what other SUPER powerful tool you're carrying around with you? Choice. Will-power. The decision to be willing to WORK at being the best version of yourself instead of complacent resignation. Sometimes, I find myself resenting that I have this power. It's easy to blame circumstance (things that "happen to us"), for how we feel. I want to be able to be my best self without working so damn hard! However, my experience has shown this to be impossible. Guess what? I'm happier, more productive, and increasingly prone to joy, when I am actively working on becoming who I want to be by staying in each moment.
We can let go of the past. It has no power over us. We can set aside our worry of the future. It has yet to be. Live now. Find some power greater than yourself- the ocean, God, HaShem, Krishna, Allah, a growing thing, the Spirit of the Universe, the feeling of love you have for your dear ones, the Holy Spirit, the moon, Jesus, the four-directions, a breeze across your skin- a something greater than you. And then you ask to be guided by this something that is more than you. Guided to what this something would have you be. You don't have to understand it. You don't even have to believe in it! Crazy, I know.
This is our power over the dis-ease inside us. The belief that you have a choice to work for the life inside each seed that falls to the earth. And you know what? Some of the prettiest flowers grow in fertilizer! You have a garden inside of you, and the watering can is always full.
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
How Dare You Know Me
Instead of taking a minute to get in touch with how I'm feeling, and putting forth the effort to improve my mood, I try to speed through the chore and end up dropping a plate that my mother has just given me, one with great sentimental value. It hits my favorite bowl- an imported piece of Japanese pottery- and both items acquire irreparable chips. I sit down in my wheelchair and just cry.
My husband, bless his heart, has witnessed the scene and attempts to bring some perspective by reminding me that mistakes are made, accidents happen. I cry out, "I know accidents happen, but I'm tired of everything being hard! I'm tired! Tired of hurting, tired of everything being difficult!" At this point I'm absolutely aware that I'm indulging my misery, but I don't care. I've spent 93% of my waking hours working really hard to stay positive. And for a minute I just want to fall apart.
After a minute or so, my husband gently checks-in, asking if I want to talk about it. I restate with more than a little whine in my tone that I just want something to be easy. Then, get this, he has the audacity to speak the truth. "Well, that's is your 'm.o.' isn't it? Wanting things to be easy? I mean, isn't that why you drank?" First, let me acknowledge the excellent use of "m.o.". An abbreviation of the Latin modus operandi, it literally means "way of operating". And secondly, yes, dear husband, this is why I drank.
I spent much of my adult life despairing that life was hard, and self-medicating with alcohol. It was something that worked for me for a long time. However, when it stopped working, I didn't stop trying to make it work. Instead, I increased the dosage and frequency of my drinking. My husband, many of my friends, and some of my family saw this behavior for what it was, alcoholism. But it took me longer to admit that I was powerless over alcohol, my life unmanageable. Once I did, my life became better than I ever thought it could be. I've found the best years of my life lie in each moment that I spend in the attempt to be present, practice acceptance and live in gratitude. (Sidenote: I'm very open about my recovery from alcoholism. If you have questions or are curious, please feel free to contact me.)
So, yeah. Breakdown at the kitchen sink. Momentary annoyance that my husband knows me. How dare you know me. And with my next breath...thank God for the ones who know me.
Monday, May 29, 2017
Crossfit and Heroes
I participated in my first WOD on Christmas Eve. A friend had invited me to her box (in the Crossfit world, gyms are called a "box"), to workout with her. I was greeted by so many smiles! These people seemed actually EXCITED to workout!? What on earth was I getting myself into?? My friend introduced me to fellow athletes saying, "this is her first Crossfit workout!", to which the most common reply was, "Oh, you're gonna love it!" Well, I did fall in love and I fell in love hard.
Here is the funny thing: I have always been afraid of pushing myself physically, worried that I would embarrass myself or fail. This fear held me back from trying organized sports, both in childhood and as an adult. Despite my past fears and trepidation, I gave the workout my all. Wanna hear what happened? Well, I made it through the WOD and couldn't believe how great I felt afterward! Oh, physically I was a mess, but the emotional, spiritual payoff was amazing. I think it's because the process of pushing my mental and physical limits with a group of like-minded, encouraging athletes was a new experience. Soon, I'd gained enough skill and fitness that daily WODs made me feel fantastic all around. I set and hit some important fitness goals. I ran my first consecutive mile. I conquered a "real" push-up. I was hitting weightlifting PRs (personal records) and seeing some real muscle definition. Then, just 3 months after my first WOD, came the car accident.
I was driving home from an early morning workout when I was hit by a truck on the front passenger side of my tiny little car. I broke my left leg and my right arm, and suffered abdominal trauma that required and immediate surgery as well as a follow-up a few days later. I couldn't breathe without pain. I had one good leg, and one good arm, and my core muscles were a mess. Upon impact, my abdominal muscles tensed (a natural response to the impact of the crash), and because these muscles were flexed with no give, they partially ripped off their insertion and origin points along my lower ribs, pubic bone and iliac crest. In addition, the impact punched holes in these muscles and laid a pretty intense bruise across my chest and abdomen. The up-side? My internal organs were undamaged. I had no internal bleeding or rupture...a miracle I owe to Crossfit.
I was in the hospital for 5 weeks. During my recovery, I've had moments of complete and utter despair. It was quite a shock to go from a 250 pound deadlift to not being able to lift my torso off the bed. I've cried with frustration in physical therapy, trying just to bring my broken arm above my waist. I've felt like I will never be strong again. I've felt like giving up. That feeling is what brings us to the experience I had this morning, as a non-participating spectator at the Memorial Day Hero WOD, "Murph".
“Murph” is one of a line of classic Crossfit workouts known as Hero WODs, honoring men and women who have fallen in the line of duty. This one is in honor of Navy Lieutenant Michael Murphy, who was killed in action in Afghanistan on June 28th, 2005. One of my coaches at the box had checked in with me a few days back and I mentioned that I might come to cheer and support if I could find a ride. Well, she immediately offered to drive me and wouldn't let me back out the day before when I said I felt weird about it. So, she picked me up and we showed up to the box a few minutes before her 10 am heat began. There was a group already working out, and an air of nervous excitement as the next heat of athletes gathered, talked strategy and warmed-up. I rolled outside in my wheelchair to watch them start off on their first mile. ("Murph" is a beast of a WOD consisting of a 1-mile run, 100 pull-ups, 200 push-ups, 300 air squats and then another 1-mile run.)
It was powerful to watch these amazing men and women push their bodies past what their mind said they could do, seeing on their faces the exhaustion and effort. I saw faces twisted in pain as callouses ripped open during pull-ups, I saw determination worn like a badge. I hollered what I thought were encouraging phrases like, "you got this!", "looking good!", and "way to go!". More than once I had to fight off tears as I watched. I was so proud, and if I'm being honest I was so jealous.
I know I will get better. I've had people tell me I'll come back from this and I'll be even stronger. I am so damn lucky that I will recover. I know that. But you see, it's my head that knows it, not my heart. I'll keep going, and trust that my heart will catch up with what my head knows. Until then, to the men and women who showed up today in honor of our fallen heroes, thank you. Thank you for reminding me what is important. For showing me that sacrifice is what makes us strong. I'll see you next year for Murph.
Thursday, May 25, 2017
For the Love of Pets
Incredible creatures whose
loyalty, trust, and desire to please
is all the more pure in that
you didn't ever have to ask for it.
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Being Alone and My "WE"
To the Spirit of the Universe, be with me this day as I struggle once again to find my connectedness in this world. Guide my heart and hands as I seek to serve, and make me gracious to receive the help that others offer me. Give me courage to find a voice for what I want and need, and be there in the moments that I become selfish, to help me find the fear that lies underneath these desires. Be with us all, as together we move through each breath, moment, minute, hour and day.