becoming

On Tuesday, August 30, 2011, 12:25 pm, in big picture stuff, compassion, gratitude, just thinkin', by Lori

words to live by — not mine, they belong to other women….and the rest of us.

I need to bookmark this post for myself, because it’s filled with words that mean a lot, with ideas and concepts that I want to return to again and again. Do you know Anne Lamott? You’ve probably read Bird by Bird (if you haven’t, you must). She’s an incredible writer, and I wish I could hang out with her. She wrote this piece that was published on Oprah’s site:

Becoming the Person You Were Meant to Be: Where to Start

We begin to find and become ourselves when we notice how we are already found, already truly, entirely, wildly, messily, marvelously who we were born to be. The only problem is that there is also so much other stuff, typically fixations with how people perceive us, how to get more of the things that we think will make us happy, and with keeping our weight down. So the real issue is how do we gently stop being who we aren’t? How do we relieve ourselves of the false fronts of people-pleasing and affectation, the obsessive need for power and security, the backpack of old pain, and the psychic Spanx that keeps us smaller and contained?

Here’s how I became myself: mess, failure, mistakes, disappointments, and extensive reading; limbo, indecision, setbacks, addiction, public embarrassment, and endless conversations with my best women friends; the loss of people without whom I could not live, the loss of pets that left me reeling, dizzying betrayals but much greater loyalty, and overall, choosing as my motto William Blake’s line that we are here to learn to endure the beams of love.

Oh, yeah, and whenever I could, for as long as I could, I threw away the scales and the sugar.

When I was a young writer, I was talking to an old painter one day about how he came to paint his canvases. He said that he never knew what the completed picture would look like, but he could usually see one quadrant. So he’d make a stab at capturing what he saw on the canvas of his mind, and when it turned out not to be even remotely what he’d imagined, he’d paint it over with white. And each time he figured out what the painting wasn’t, he was one step closer to finding out what it was.

You have to make mistakes to find out who you aren’t. You take the action, and the insight follows: You don’t think your way into becoming yourself.

I can’t tell you what your next action will be, but mine involved a full stop. I had to stop living unconsciously, as if I had all the time in the world. The love and good and the wild and the peace and creation that are you will reveal themselves, but it is harder when they have to catch up to you in roadrunner mode. So one day I did stop. I began consciously to break the rules I learned in childhood: I wasted more time, as a radical act. I stared off into space more, into the middle distance, like a cat. This is when I have my best ideas, my deepest insights. I wasted more paper, printing out instead of reading things on the computer screen. (Then I sent off more small checks to the Sierra Club.)

Every single day I try to figure out something I no longer agree to do. You get to change your mind—your parents may have accidentally forgotten to mention this to you. I cross one thing off the list of projects I mean to get done that day. I don’t know all that many things that are positively true, but I do know two things for sure: first of all, that no woman over the age of 40 should ever help anyone move, ever again, under any circumstances. You have helped enough. You can say no. No is a complete sentence. Or you might say, “I can’t help you move because of certain promises I have made to myself, but I would be glad to bring sandwiches and soda to everyone on your crew at noon.” Obviously, it is in many people’s best interest for you not to find yourself, but it only matters that it is in yours—and your back’s—and the whole world’s, to proceed.

And, secondly, you are probably going to have to deal with whatever fugitive anger still needs to be examined—it may not look like anger; it may look like compulsive dieting or bingeing or exercising or shopping. But you must find a path and a person to help you deal with that anger. It will not be a Hallmark card. It is not the yellow brick road, with lovely trees on both sides, constant sunshine, birdsong, friends. It is going to be unbelievably hard some days—like the rawness of birth, all that blood and those fluids and shouting horrible terrible things—but then there will be that wonderful child right in the middle. And that wonderful child is you, with your exact mind and butt and thighs and goofy greatness.

Dealing with your rage and grief will give you life. That is both the good news and the bad news: The solution is at hand. Wherever the great dilemma exists is where the great growth is, too. It would be very nice for nervous types like me if things were black-and-white, and you could tell where one thing ended and the next thing began, but as Einstein taught us, everything in the future and the past is right here now. There’s always something ending and something beginning. Yet in the very center is the truth of your spiritual identity: is you. Fabulous, hilarious, darling, screwed-up you. Beloved of God and of your truest deepest self, the self that is revealed when tears wash off the makeup and grime. The self that is revealed when dealing with your anger blows through all the calcification in your soul’s pipes. The self that is reflected in the love of your very best friends’ eyes. The self that is revealed in divine feminine energy, your own, Bette Midler’s, Hillary Clinton’s, Tina Fey’s, Michelle Obama’s, Mary Oliver’s. I mean, you can see that they are divine, right? Well, you are, too. I absolutely promise. I hope you have gotten sufficiently tired of hitting the snooze button; I know that what you need or need to activate in yourself will appear; I pray that your awakening comes with ease and grace, and stamina when the going gets hard. To love yourself as you are is a miracle, and to seek yourself is to have found yourself, for now. And now is all we have, and love is who we are.

AMAZING. And this post, ‘it’s not going to turn out the way you thought,’ also true and wonderful, because very little happens the way you plan, or turns out the way you thought it would. And it’s ok. And this post, how to battle the blues, is about facing the “is this all there is?” feeling and making some changes.

And finally, this image, from this site:

Today I’m so grateful for the women who wrote all these words.

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mishmash

On Friday, April 15, 2011, 1:15 pm, in health, just life, just thinkin', by Lori

wisdom of all kinds!

Just a collection of things on this Friday afternoon — I’m still so heavily focused on learning how to eat and deal with exercise, it’s consuming all my extra time and energy. Who knew that it would be harder to learn to eat than to do exercise. Hmph.

Anyway, a few little things:

  • This dude — he looked in the mirror one day at 85 and thought he looked old, so he did something about it. Inspirational. How can I sit on the couch as a spring chicken of 52?!
  • Embrace change, even when the change slaps you in the face. (“Every change is good.”)
  • Eat two meals a day (“That’s all you need.”)
  • Work as long as you can (“That money’s going to come in handy.”)
  • Help others (“The more you do for others, the better shape you’re in.”)
  • Then there’s the hardest part. It’s a lesson Breuning said he learned from his grandfather: Accept death. “We’re going to die. Some people are scared of dying. Never be afraid to die. Because you’re born to die,” he said.

And in my ongoing efforts to be happier with how I look, a couple quick photos:

Have a great Friday, everyone! Knitting content coming very soon!

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please watch this. it’s 11 minutes of your life.

On Wednesday, April 28, 2010, 7:32 pm, in big picture stuff, compassion, joy, recommendations, by Lori

If you already watch TED Talks, you may have seen this, or you’ll at least be more willing to watch. If you don’t know about TED Talks, I hope you watch this one.

Ryan Lobo is a photographer who practices what he calls compassionate storytelling. I was listening to it on my iPod on the train home and I was so moved and choked up I cried, right in the crowd. And I didn’t even get to see the photos! For now I’m off to watch it too. It’s just 11 minutes long. I think it might be the best 11 minutes of your day.

If you already watch TED Talks, you may have seen this, or you’ll at least be more willing to watch. If you don’t know about TED Talks, I hope you watch this one.

Ryan Lobo is a photographer who practices what he calls compassionate storytelling. I was listening to it on my iPod on the train home and I was so moved and choked up I cried, right in the crowd. And I didn’t even get to see the photos! For now I’m off to watch it too. It’s just 11 minutes long. I think it might be the best 11 minutes of your day.

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one great knitter (or maybe two)

On Wednesday, April 28, 2010, 12:01 am, in knitting, by Lori

a couple of knitters I love, and you might too!

There are so many knitters whose work I enjoy, and whose blogs I follow (when I’m not on this blog-reading hiatus), it’s so hard to single one out for attention. In some silly way, it’s like trying to answer which one of your kids is your favorite. Even if you have one – and who does, really, but let’s assume – saying it means saying that you don’t like the others as much, and that’s just not right!

I went to my ravelry friends page and started looking through, trying to figure out how to pick just one, and I realized I was tending to focus on people who also design. I finally narrowed it to two:

#1:  Lucy, of {a black pepper}. She’s zebraknits on ravelry, and she has a gorgeous blog, too. I have several of her designs either in my queue or in my faves: the beautiful jacket Adeline; Lillian, a gorgeous sweater; Coline, an elegant neckwarmer. Not only do I enjoy her designs and her own knitting, I just love her aesthetic. The photography on her blog almost always makes me feel calm and still, for some reason, and the styling is impeccable. And her writing is thoughtful and honest, which also makes me happy! If you haven’t encountered her yet, you’re welcome.

#2: six and a half stitches, a knitter/designer/blogger from Sydney. Where Lucy is lush, Alison is spare and minimal. Her designs are so clean (think Habu) and her blog is the most restful, beautiful place. She’s another one who leaves me feeling calm and still, but she also makes me want to get up and throw out all the clutter.  She reminds me of another blogger and knitter I love, who also happens to be an architect. Since I’m following a strict blog-reading diet I won’t allow myself to look through my Google Reader to find her right now, but I’ll try to post about her another time, because if you like 6.5sts, you’ll love her too.

It’s so wonderful, this online world, where we can encounter each other in these ways, admire each other’s handwork and style and art and photography, be inspired by other people’s vision and world.

Click here for more posts on the 3rd day of this blogging event: knitcroblo3

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an inspirational pattern

On Tuesday, April 27, 2010, 12:01 am, in knitting, love it, by Lori

Ysolda’s Ishbel is nearly perfect in every way!

The point of this post was to blog about a pattern or project to which I aspire – maybe because it requires skills I don’t yet have, or maybe because it takes a lot of time. Instead, I’m going to write about a pattern that inspires me for a different reason: Ishbel, created by Ysolda Teague. I’ve knit this twice, with a third one on the needles:

purple and small, with Sunday Knits Eden

greenish and pretty big, with madelinetosh wren

big and in the works, with madelinetosh lace

Why does this pattern inspire me? First, it’s great fun to knit – and lots of people seem to agree, since Ravelry lists 6400 projects and it’s in 3268 queues. (At £3.00 GBP, Ysolda has done very well with this little project! Good for her!). The main reason this pattern inspires me so much is that it’s very cleverly written while still being a LOT of fun to knit. Scientific theories that explain a phenomenon with an economy of variables are called elegant, and that describes Ysolda’s patterns.  Ishbel hits all the marks, which is kind of great: it’s fun, it’s changeable (you can make the stockinette section larger or smaller, knit more or fewer repeats of each of the lace sections, etc), the end result is not just beautiful but also very practical, and it has clearly generated a very good amount of money for the designer while being inexpensive for knitters.

I’ve knit (or should I say, tried to knit) other patterns that were beautiful and ‘clever,’ but they were just fussy and kind of ridiculous in their cleverness. There’s no need to name names, because maybe I was just not a skilled enough knitter and others could easily manage the pattern, but there was one scarf that just made me so angry and you know? Who needs that in knitting! But Ysolda’s patterns are clever in the very best way, and I think Ishbel is a great example of her design philosophy. I would love to be able to do what she does; instead, I’ll just benefit from her talent. Me and thousands of other happy knitters.

Read the other posts on this topic:  knitcroblo2

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following light

On Sunday, February 28, 2010, 10:08 am, in big picture stuff, by Lori

following light is a good thing in the bleak end of winter

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Do you know the blog perches in the soul? I can’t remember how I found her blog, now, but hers is one of my favorite blogs in my blogroll. When I see her blog in the old Google Reader, something settles inside me, and I can reliably expect to read something that makes me happy, and to see pictures that make me smile – not least because her beautiful son is usually right there in the middle of it, with his big smile.

Here, on this last day of February, she writes:

In the month of March, we will be following light, reflecting in pictures and words on the details that light reveals in different hours of the day.

I’m in! My spirit fades and gets pretty thin this time of year. My genes are so profoundly Texan, I’m completely hardwired for a very brief winter; the long period of cold and gray up north just wears me down, man.  And yet I do know that you can find what you look for, if only you look.

Another blog I follow is needled – the blogger (Kate) lives in Edinburgh, Scotland. She’s a professor specializing in textiles, she knits, and her blog is always fascinating. And one month ago she had a pretty serious stroke. Since my dearest friend here in NY had a stroke a year ago, I’ve been closely following Kate and her progress. It’s impossible to make fair comparisons between two people, no matter what – and just as true when people are grappling with what looks like similar problems. Kate has the benefit of much better health care than we have here (so obvious it hardly needed to be said), and I obviously don’t know the extent of what she is facing, AND she’s in the early stages. But I have been so struck by her attitude of ‘ok then! time to work hard.’ Today’s post is about her gratitude for the various tools that help her regain independence. Those things are there – and what they give her – but she is looking at them, and that makes a lot of difference. She could just as easily look at her need for them, and come away with a different sense of things.

So join me, join perches in the soul, let’s follow light. The middle week of March I will be on the island of Roatan, off the coast of Honduras, where the light will be oh-so-easy to follow, but I still have the remaining weeks of March in Manhattan, where following light will require a bit more looking. I think wherever you are, though, there are days when following light requires an effort.

Happy last day of February, happy Sunday.

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