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Wednesday
May152013

A Beautiful Thing Will Grow Out of This Very Hard Thing

Sometimes beautiful things live inside the very hardest of things.

water for coffee

Yesterday, for the first time in a very long while, I ventured outside alone to go to the corner store. I wanted to see if it was open so that I could buy something cheap and sweet, but the store was closed. It was only a short block I had to walk to get there, but I felt so exposed, so far from my nest of safety, that my collar bones ached with the tightness in my throat and chest.

I am sometimes afraid to leave my home.

Onion watching pedestrians

This fear happens when I am shifting, when I am changing my patterns of thought or behaviour. I panic, and my panic turns inward, where I question all the good of which I am capable. I have spent a week sure that I cannot write or make or do valuable things, that my faultiness far outweighs my abilities.

This insecurity is usually followed by the hatred of my own appearance, and this week was no exception. I became convinced that my own appearance was so terrible, so below acceptable standards, that I did not want to be seen by strangers who did not already love me.

"I can't go out," I sometimes say. "Strangers will see my face, and I can't have that."

coffee pot

I came home from my harrowing trip to the corner store with that familiar burn of shame running up the back of my neck while I tried to catch my breath, and I immediately asked the Palinode to come for another, slightly longer walk with me. I knew that my well-being depended on killing this thing in the moment.

I know my mind. If I let leaving be so terrible that it scares me back, and then rest into my safe spot on the couch again, I will more deeply train a pathway in my brain that confirms the messages that Leaving Is Bad and Staying Is Good. I imagined myself in the future on a talk show saying "I don't know how it happened, but one day I just stopped leaving, and now it's been 17 years since I walked out my front door."

egg

The Palinode and I walked to another drugstore further away, and as we chatted about things like whether grease is wet or dry1 and what the actual elements of moisture are, my chest loosened. The stuck feeling in my throat eased up.

That pathway in my brain, one that could have so easily become a deeper groove, unkinked itself a little bit. I bought myself some more time with freedom.

cat toy

I haven't said much about my depression, anxiety, or addiction issues over recent months. As much as I've written about them before and talked about them in front of audiences across two countries, I am afraid to write about them here.

I am afraid that no one will believe me anymore that shame can be used to see rather than punish yourself, that your courage is bigger than you know, and that fear is surmountable. I am afraid that I don't have what it takes to stay on this path I have fought so hard to find and bushwhack my way through. I am afraid that people will second-guess hiring me, thinking that I am not up to the job.

Part of my job on this earth, though, and I deeply hold this to be true, is to be very publicly human.

morning wake-up

I do have the strength, though. We all do. This is a bones deep knowledge I can't shake.


I'm just experiencing retreat after battle, or, as Brené Brown calls it in I Thought It Was Just Me, a "vulnerability hangover". You shouldn't trust someone who hasn't lived their subject, and so I'm treating this phase of change as intensive study. I'm diving in.

In the end, Ghandi said it most succinctly2:
We but mirror the world. All the tendencies present in the outer world are to be found in the world of our body. If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would also change. As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him. This is the divine mystery supreme. A wonderful thing it is and the source of our happiness. We need not wait to see what others do.
radiator and a sunny morning

This course I take repeatedly through anxiety, depression, and the hard work of sobriety is difficult and terrible at times, but the most beautiful parts of my whole life grow out of the soil it helps me to turn over.

Fear is gripping, but love and belief birth hope, growing capital-c Courage larger than the self.


And, so, a beautiful thing will grow out of this very hard thing, and you will not see me on a show in 17 years wondering why I never left my home again in all that time. This, I can promise you.



1. It turns out that grease is a non-Newtonian fluid that can be both wet and dry. Thanks goes to brainiac @jannymarie for the information.


2. This paragraph is often paraphrased as "be the change you want to see in the world", which is an unverified misquote that Ghandi never actually said, because he didn't speak Bumper Sticker.
Sunday
May122013

101 Things We Love (aka Grace in Small Things: Sunday Edition #134)

morning Onion
My kitty, Onion, is pretty darn lovely.

I asked the people on Twitter to tell me what they loved, and it turns out that they love a lot of things. They love more than a hundred of them, in fact, so I curated and edited the following compilation of our loves to spread it around a little:
  1. the sound of snapping open a fresh can of something fizzy
  2. coffee
  3. the smell of freshly cut grass
  4. reading
  5. friends who get it
  6. a fluffy cat curled up next to me and cooing like a happy pigeon while he sleeps
  7. having written
  8. a good toilet flange
  9. my husband's hands
  10. yoghurt, specifically spelled with the H in the middle
  11. holding my hand out the window of a car while going down the highway in summer
  12. a good latte
  13. great writing
  14. avocados
  15. callouses on my fingertips from playing guitar
  16. lavender
  17. my kid snoring
  18. darjeeling tea with coconut flavouring and milk
  19. the ukulele
  20. ice cold water
  21. the feel of suede
  22. new book smell
  23. the way I get goosebumps when my husband looks at me
  24. that moment in a movie you've seen a hundred times before that still takes your breath away and paralyzes you as you wait for it
  25. Hendrick's gin
  26. new jammies
  27. performing
  28. laughing
  29. hot buttery popcorn with garlic powder and hot sauce
  30. connecting again with a person you love but thought you'd lost
  31. kitties
  32. happy hour with friends
  33. cooking a good meal
  34. discovering new music
  35. British miniseries
  36. Sunday afternoon naps
  37. watermelon
  38. a clean house
  39. chosen families
  40. that kids wear costumes just because they can
  41. kissing
  42. almond biscotti drizzled with chocolate
  43. rainy days
  44. smoked swiss cheese
  45. singing loudly
  46. cheesy dance moves
  47. my dog
  48. green buds on trees
  49. thunderstorms
  50. fuzzy kitty bellies
  51. popsicles
  52. the power of music to connect people
  53. surprising my stepson
  54. pizza
  55. rain drumming on the roof late at night
  56. pedicures
  57. feeling like I belong
  58. love
  59. crunching through ice cubes
  60. cats purring
  61. burritos
  62. listening to a tone deaf person who loves to sing butcher their favourite song
  63. finding a bra that fits just so
  64. chocolate cake
  65. the first night you notice the fireflies have come back for the summer
  66. summery days with thunder clouds off in the distance
  67. peppermint
  68. street fairs
  69. pesto
  70. listening to wild birds outside
  71. Mad Men
  72. going out for brunch on the weekend
  73. crafting
  74. swimming
  75. the colour of the light at golden hour
  76. grapefruits
  77. being read to
  78. Scully and Mulder's dedication to bringing out the best in each other in The X-Files
  79. sushi
  80. photography
  81. random acts of kindness from strangers
  82. the cool side of the pillow
  83. kisses from my son
  84. drinking iced tea in the shade on a hot day
  85. finishing a creative project I feel really good about
  86. Sam Cooke
  87. cracking through the shell on crème brûlée
  88. poetry
  89. learning
  90. time travel
  91. how excited my dog gets every time he sees me
  92. dulce de leche ice cream
  93. the sound of my kids laughing
  94. clean sheets fresh from the line
  95. roasted Brussels sprouts
  96. old school rotary telephones
  97. dancing until my body hurts
  98. bowties
  99. warm sunshine with a slight breeze
  100. sleeping in
  101. long lists of things people love

Thanks to all the good people who answered my call!

What do you love?

Wage a battle against embitterment and take part in Grace in Small Things.
Wednesday
May082013

I Spoke, I Saw, I Re-evaluated What I Love: Mom 2.0 Summit

I was in Laguna Niguel, California at the Mom 2.0 Summit from May 2nd to May 5th.

Now, before you worry that this is one of those annoying conference posts that cheers RAH! RAH! while telling you nothing of import, I swear this is not one of those. Unless you don't give a fig for the state of women, social media, and the health of Us. I hope you do, because this is the future we're in, baby, and the water's fine.

Also, this might be long-ish. Get coffee.

#Mom2Summit

The conference was held at the Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel, which was undeniably ritzy.

I am one of those people who opens her suitcase, pulls out every last item, and then proceeds to throw each article across different pieces of furniture. My brain calls this "organizing my outfits", which is hilarious, because I don't have outfits. I have black, black, and more black occasionally broken up by a pattern on black or a brown shirt. Aaanywaaay, I exploded my suitcase, left the room, and when I came back, everything was folded square and placed neatly back in my suitcase.

The staff at the Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel are incredible. They are beautiful and friendly and will hang your thong underwear delicately from the bathroom doorknob if you are the kind of blogger who might indelicately leave your thong underwear out in the middle of the bathroom for your roommate's enjoyment.

Which I am not. Okay, I so am. I miss Suebob already. She was the best roommate.

#Mom2Summit

You maybe don't know this, but I'm afraid of flying, so I distracted myself on the way to the conference by making fun of a giant children's toy at the Calgary airport. Who couldn't, though?

As you can see from its plaque above, the toy is in memory of Punch Dickins, a bush pilot who flew a Fokker through Regina. The jokes just write themselves, and I'm sure that that toy must defile the minds of thousands of children every year.

I apologize for my immaturity if Punch was your uncle or something. I'm sure he was a lovely man.

#Mom2Summit

Anyway, I got on the plane, I made my peace with my place in the universe and the things I have done in it, and then I survived again, as usual.

My mind, it brings on the drama.

#Mom2Summit

The conference was a string of gorgeous events from the opening party to the last,

#Mom2Summit

with meals under palm fronds in sunny, oceanside courtyards,

#Mom2Summit

and, well, the OCEAN was there, but all of that natural beauty and the posh environs were not what made Mom 2.0 Summit a success.

#Mom2Summit
Whirlpool made me lusty after appliances and avocado pesto over pasta.

What made Mom 2.0 Summit such a success was the dedication of both its founders — Laura Mayes and Carrie Pacini — and the conference sponsors — Dove, Honda, and Lowe's, to name a few — not only to the social media and marketing end of things but also to truly meaningful engagement and social good.

This was what I found in my conversations with the attendees, as well. While we had honest discussions about our desire for professional growth in social media, most of those discussions also included ideas about how we can incorporate social good into the work we do. Sure, it was nice to get free gift bags of a company's product, but we also wanted to know how that product, that company, or our relationship with that company would work towards bettering the world we live in.

#Mom2Summit
Jessica Ashley and Meagan Francis getting manicures

I've watched blogging and social media grow and change over the last ten years, and, at least in the parent blogging communities of which I am part, all childlessness aside, it is growing up into a fine, fine thing. The people I met were mindful and focused and inspired to contribute both to the communities they inhabit and the world at large.

Gone was the childish elbowing for swag for which bloggers have been criticized. At Mom 2.0, I saw attendees, sponsors, and film and television personalities, such as Kyra Phillips and Amanda Peet, engaging with one another on more equal footing, watching and listening and figuring out the next steps through this medium together. There was an equality and a shared purpose that I had not seen before.

I say all this as someone who does not focus on sponsored content in my own work but who believes that the blogging and social media community's health depends, at least in part, on its ability to handle its connections with marketing not only well but also meaningfully.

#Mom2Summit

Women bloggers are smart, focused, and generous, contrary to The Wall Street Journal's take on us.


#Mom2Summit

I did have a low point, though. I'm not going to lie. Conferences tend to overwhelm me, because, despite the fact that I get on stage to speak, and I travel the halls hugging people and trading business cards, I am a fairly extreme introvert.

I finally broke on Saturday afternoon — too much socializing coupled with a vulnerability hangover from the "Fear and Becoming Known" talk I delivered to a couple hundred people on Friday afternoon — and so I took some time to go for a walk on the beach alone and reconsider my entire life up until that point and going forward, because why not reassess your place in the universe and freak out about middle age and feel completely lost and more than a little hopeless in the middle of one of the most beautiful places on earth?

Again: my mind, it brings on the drama.

#Mom2Summit

By the time I made it back to the hotel, though, I felt like I had been set aright again. Sometimes, all I need is a little bit of a realignment. Call it soul chiropracty, if you will.

I looked around at my community, and I was proud of what I saw. The entire community down to the last blogger is not always a stellar example representing the whole, but, by and large, this is the kind of community I have been trying to build up, hoping for, the kind of community that strives for quality, creativity, and meaningful action.

That's why getting together with my peers in the field is so important. I learn, change, go through the ridiculous process of freaking out about said change, because even good change can mean a difficult adjustment, and then I grow again, both personally and professionally.

It's a little like moulting, only less reptilian and more with the crying on the most beautiful beach in California.

#Mom2Summit
This is Polly, me, and Jim. I win in a hair fight.

In short, if anyone tells you that women in blogging and social media are just a pile of over-sharing narcissists who need to get real lives, what they're really telling you is that they have no idea whatsoever about what is actually going on.

I admit it, I was doubting the health and future of our group of early adopters a couple of years ago, but no more. There is a sea change afoot, and we're just getting started.

Dear everyone I met at Mom 2.0 Summit in Laguna Niguel, you rocked it out. Love, me.


----------------------------

And, last but not least, if you would like to see the slides from my Mom 2.0 Summit talk, "Fear and Becoming Known: Connection and Growth Through Selfish Acts", you can see them in the slideshow below.