Sunday, December 9, 2012
A Moral Obligation
Posted by
Maggie May
Labels:
Babies To Teenagers
the mr and i are in the hardest patch of our marriage that we've ever had, and we've had many hard patches. all of them relating to bipolar 11. our hard patch is not relenting. over a year now. i had a blog reader i've never talked to, never seen comment, find me on facebook and she offered to pay for three months of therapy for mr. curry and i. and i said yes, yes, thank you so much. some people could never do that, never say yes. they'd be humiliated. i'm not. i don't think it is an embarrassment; when i help other people, i can feel all the people who have ever reached out and helped me, and it makes me bigger, stronger, a better person in this world with more to give. it is part of the cycle of an authentic life, lived as best a person can. so imperfectly, but with immense heart and truth. i know my children are finding this world to be a place where People Help Each Other and that thrills me to my heart core. i have always, always wanted them to feel at home in the world, something i never felt until my late twenties. and i've always, always wanted them to feel the responsibilities of being a human being- the moral obligations. i know that is a very unpopular, dogmatic sounding phrase in our time, but i believe in it deeply. i believe that many of the best and brightest human beings were raised, poor or rich or in between, to believe they have moral obligations to those around them, to themselves. simply because we were given the gift of life, because we have a seat here on this planet, because we have hearts and souls and minds to divine, we have moral obligations. not only do i believe we have these obligations, but i also believe that in denying this, or in forgetting it, we push aside one of the most thrilling aspects of humanity- our ability to be heroic, devoted, strong, resilient, passionate, giving, unselfish. selfishly, i have found that pushing myself to rise to my own moral code- and i have failed, repeatedly- has created some of the most profound and inspiring moments of my life, moments which i remember deeply, in my cells, and help carry me through during times like this, when i feel despair clawing at me, plucking at my heart and mind. even the most mundane life can be elevated by being or working to be a person who is helpful, kind and good to those around them. keeping ego in check- warding off smugness, ego tripping and judgemental loftiness of the 'morally correct'- is a long held tradition for good people and important to keep in mind, but not a reason to abstain from generosity and living by a moral code. some days i have felt as if i could not get out of bed. remembering how it feels to create a life for my children that comforts, inspires and teaches them gets me out of bed 99% of the time. this is the saving grace of deeper meaning.
at some point it became embarrassing, cliched, cringe worthy, mocked and highly critiqued to be or attempt to be ' a good person. ' our motivations became highly scrutinized, the selfish aspect of giving ( which is there ) were so disgraceful that people became afraid to open themselves to decency in fear of being mocked for sentimentality. any failure of a human being can bring on a group attack: you sham! we cry. bill clinton springs to mind. when a person has great faults, personal demons, we are so happy to wipe our hands and smile and say i knew they were a fraud. is a person a fraud if they fail? if they have moral failures? do we really believe this? how can anyone ever live up to this expectation? i hope in raising my children i have allowed them to believe they are capable of great love and acts alongside their failures and faults. in addition to this, times of great hardship, like our economic downhill turn, can make people hoarders. hoarding love, money, energy, because it feels like there isn't enough, might never be enough, and we must keep it for ourselves and those we love most. and of course to some degree, this is true. but taken too far, it has become a prescription for spiritual despair in our society. cut off from one another in real life, feeling brushed aside and trodden on by the grumps and grinches: it all takes on a sinister, end of days feeling because we are disconnected from one another, and from the essential goodness in ourselves. when Lola had her failed hot chocolate stand, i could have felt depressed. i could have felt like everyone is a shit. i did feel sad, i felt dispirited- but i had and have the connections of good people in my mind and heart and this keeps me hopeful and comforted.
i have told all our children- well, the older three who can understand it- that this amazing person is helping us, because i want all of them to see the benefits this person brings to our family, to feel grateful, so that this feeling can permeate their hearts and flow over on to the people around them. it works this way. when Dakota was growing up, something we did regularly, weekly, was to help the immigrants that work all around here in the suburbs. they often lived in canyons ( less so now ) and had only the clothes on their backs, the belongings in a backpack and nothing else. they worked long, hard hours of manual labor for little pay, and send most of it back to their families in Tijuana, who were struggling to survive. when Dakota and I passed these men on the way into the grocery store, or Starbucks, we always stopped and offered food, or gave them some money. we still do, although there are less of these men around than used to be. we've fed large groups of men on our lawn, ( i didn't feel safe inviting strange men inside ) and developed a relationship with one man, who i based a character off of in my novel. he came to our home and worked once a month, and we also always gave him dinner and a bag of groceries. i include these immigrants, and the stark contrast of their lives and the lives of those who live in suburbia, in my novel, because it is a fascinating and sad reality. to reach out and help them was so emotionally difficult that it interested me. why was it so hard? what was i afraid of? i realized i was mostly afraid of offending them. what if i offered help and they didn't need it? what if i thought they were an immigrant but they lived down the street? identifiable by their very short stature, uniform of jeans with belt, tucked in shirt, work shoes and baseball hat, backpacks and native spanish speaking, there was always the possibility of a mistake. i decided it was worse to watch people be hungry and do nothing than it was to offend, to make a wrong move. and one time, i did. dakota and i bought a Thanksgiving style meal one Thanksgiving years ago, and offered it to a small group of immigrants smoking cigarettes outside the store. for reasons i still don't know, they refused the food. i felt humiliated and horrified. what had i done wrong? i'll never know, and it's not my business to figure that out. i teach this to my children: it is not our business to understand how our helping works, what people think or feel about it, how the world interprets it: it is simply our moral obligation to help. one fundamental thing i hope my children are learning is that is absolutely our moral obligation to feed someone who is hungry and cannot get food themselves. when we pass those asking for money on the side of the intersection, i don't worry about if it's a scam, i worry about what *i* need to do, what my children need to see, which is to give. so if i have money in my purse, i give some, every time. no matter how poor we are, i have always done this. i do believe in some kind of Universal energy, and i will continue to contribute to it in a positive way, and also benefit from it coming back.
now Dakota is the first of our pack to grow up, and at eighteen i can see the decency, goodness, generosity and honesty in action as he moves in the world. returning a wallet with money in it to an elderly neighbor. leaving our house at one am to drive a half hour away for an upset friend the other night. stopping to hold doors for people. asking a woman in a wheelchair if she needs help in the store. his reactions to the suffering of people around him, his compassion and caring make my heart swell with pride and joy. he is a human being, he struggles, he has faults, problems and challenges, but his heart? it is strong, and good, and full of love.
this holiday season, my family is being helped by my mother, who has helped us survive this year after i lost/left ( you know the story ) my job and have been unable to find enough work to make up the difference, my friend Stephanie who sent us a baby gate after hearing my upset that i couldn't afford one, and who sent a grocery card gift months ago, out of the blue, our 'secret' donor who is paying for a few months of therapy, and most likely from the gifts of my aunt and uncle, who usually send us a check at Christmas. without this help, we'd be good and truly fucked. our family, our children, continue to help those around us, and this feels like the best kind of cycle. we donated all of ever's birthday toys ( except for the ones asked not to, like bike from my mom) to the Polinsky Center. we will use part of our 'Christmas budget' to pay for toys for children who don't have any. we will feed those in our community who need food. we will offer love, hugs, a shoulder to cry on to our family and friends. we will make secret Cheer Baskets for those who need a smile. this cycle is the best of humanity and i am proud to be a part of it.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
People In Your Neighborhood
Posted by
Maggie May
Labels:
People In Your Neighborhood
Take a seat and read!
Bean Tree Soaps is run by a longtime friend of mine. Environmentally friendly, beautiful and delicious smelling to the max, her products can make it in time for Christmas! Even better, use this TBF2012 and get 10% off.
Ever's been pushing my buttons lately. This post in PHD In Parenting really helped me out. The comments section is wonderful, too. I've read the entire thing, comments and all, a few times.
Written from a momma to her toddler daughter, this essay made me feel teary, cuz it's so damn true.
I found Amy Willa and I'm glad I did.
I love nursing Ever, but I'd love it more if she'd love it just a little bit less. I've been reading about weaning, and this is one of the best pieces I found.
From The New York Observer, a post on mombloggers by a momblogger. I did agree with what she said about all the enormous heapings of praise that women tend to do for one another online. Sometimes it makes me squirm in my seat.
Che and Fidel is a blog I've read for years. She talks about the rising cost of groceries and how she's trying to manage with it here, something I've been struggling with this year.
The latest research of the way American's use mammograms is really not 'new news' but it's not what we hear in the media. |
Thursday, December 6, 2012
The Whole Blogging Truth
Posted by
Maggie May
To think about should and shouldn't when writing here is humorous. It reflects the embarrassments of my life, the things I feel shameful about, remorseful, resentful, uncertain, insecure- if I don't like to live it, why would anyone want to read it? And then I remember that for me, outside of connecting, the ultimate exercise of this blog is to tell the truth about my life. That is my touchstone. So to worry about what you might or might not want to hear is beside the point. This really isn't for you. It's for me. Flux isn't a product I'm trying to sell: this is my life. Blogs exist for many reasons and thank God- I love little slices of pie that are only sweet, no tart apple or cherry. Simply sugar and the beautiful rich colors of fruits and excellent eye candy of cut dough made into criss cross. I read blogs that are political, I write blogs that are completely based in fashion, I return again and again to certain blogs that reveal a charmed life- or what I would consider so. Good health, love, enough money, dreams coming true. Flux isn't about an angle or a book I'm selling ( though one day, I hope I will be pushing my novel here ) or about pleasing all the people any of the time. It's about telling the truth. Not every truth. I'm not insane, or selfish. I don't reveal everything, every dark crook and cranny and every heart and mind attached. I do reveal so much. And when I begin to worry about the tone here, or if you'd like to hear, one more time, about how bipolar is affecting our life, or really is another story of no insurance and bad health going to mean anything?- I remember it's not up to me to worry about the outcome. I just do the writing.
Ever since I began Flux Capacitor, I've had warnings of doom. Not one has laid out exactly what it is I"m supposed to be afraid of, just that surely, there is much to fear. You don't have to tell ME- the ultimate freckled, bookish neurotic- that there is much to fear. I know. I know! But telling the truth is the opposite of fear, for me, it is redemptive, it is clarity, it is having big brass balls, it is facing the fear and in doing so, realizing how often true ' there is nothing to fear but fear itself ' really is. Pema Chodron says that fear is a sign we are getting closer to the truth, and I know for myself this is often true. Many, many times I have felt great waves of blushing anxiety pressing POST on Flux. Revealing myself, and sometimes my husband ( with his blessing ) and in smaller ways, my children, ( also with their blessing, unless they revoke it ) has been terrifying. As a child I learned to keep my mouth shut. To protect the facade and embrace the moments of pretending, for they were gold and glitter and we could put them in our pockets to be looked at later, when the darkness fell. They sparkled forlornly. Nothing can replace the light of truth and nothing is more relieving than facing the truth after running from it. Hiding from truth is exhausting. I hid from certain truths for enough years to know the amount of energy it takes, and how corrosive it is to your mental, physical and spiritual condition.
What is actually happening is the cornerstone of sanity. At some point, here there or anywhere, it must be acknowledged and accepted to live in the real world. It is the way of the Buddha and why I love Buddhism so much. To be in the now, as Eckhart Tolle talks about repeatedly, is the way of enlightenment, the only thing that's real. Fantasy and escapism are glorious. Reality is transcendent.
After all the years here, nothing of any negative import has happened. Once, my son's friend made fun of him about a post where I wrote Mr. Curry and I had sex in the bathroom. Another time, my oldest son requested I stopped writing about him for a spell, which I did. My work found this blog and my boss and half the staff read through it. So? When it comes to the benefits of this blog and my truth telling, the list is much longer. I received financial help when we were most desperate. I have made close online friends with a few amazing, supportive women that I would have never met otherwise. I started my freelance writing career because of Flux, was asked to write at Huffington Post, was in an Ebook- will be in another this month. My relationship with my older children deepened as they appreciated the enormous amount of thought and effort that went into my decisions regarding their welfare, and in one of the most important compliments of my life, my oldest son said ' Mom? You are a really amazing writer. ' My husband has been an enormous supporter of Flux and this has strengthened our relationship.
To tell the truth is a subversive act. It always has been and continues to be so. This is why the ' who is the man behind that curtain? ' line from Wizard Of Oz has resonated throughout the years in our society: we all ask ourselves the question. We look at our President, the Pope, our Father, our lover, most terrifyingly, ourselves, and wonder: who is that person? To watch an episode of 48 Hours Investigates is to fall into the rabbit hole of wizardry and lies. Episode after episode, murder after murder, witnesses are interviewed in wide eyed confusion and fear, knowing ( and yet not knowing at all ) surely that the person they knew and loved could never have murdered a human being.
Do you know everything about me? Hell no. Is everything here the truth? Hell yes.
You can put that in your pipe and smoke it.
Ever since I began Flux Capacitor, I've had warnings of doom. Not one has laid out exactly what it is I"m supposed to be afraid of, just that surely, there is much to fear. You don't have to tell ME- the ultimate freckled, bookish neurotic- that there is much to fear. I know. I know! But telling the truth is the opposite of fear, for me, it is redemptive, it is clarity, it is having big brass balls, it is facing the fear and in doing so, realizing how often true ' there is nothing to fear but fear itself ' really is. Pema Chodron says that fear is a sign we are getting closer to the truth, and I know for myself this is often true. Many, many times I have felt great waves of blushing anxiety pressing POST on Flux. Revealing myself, and sometimes my husband ( with his blessing ) and in smaller ways, my children, ( also with their blessing, unless they revoke it ) has been terrifying. As a child I learned to keep my mouth shut. To protect the facade and embrace the moments of pretending, for they were gold and glitter and we could put them in our pockets to be looked at later, when the darkness fell. They sparkled forlornly. Nothing can replace the light of truth and nothing is more relieving than facing the truth after running from it. Hiding from truth is exhausting. I hid from certain truths for enough years to know the amount of energy it takes, and how corrosive it is to your mental, physical and spiritual condition.
What is actually happening is the cornerstone of sanity. At some point, here there or anywhere, it must be acknowledged and accepted to live in the real world. It is the way of the Buddha and why I love Buddhism so much. To be in the now, as Eckhart Tolle talks about repeatedly, is the way of enlightenment, the only thing that's real. Fantasy and escapism are glorious. Reality is transcendent.
After all the years here, nothing of any negative import has happened. Once, my son's friend made fun of him about a post where I wrote Mr. Curry and I had sex in the bathroom. Another time, my oldest son requested I stopped writing about him for a spell, which I did. My work found this blog and my boss and half the staff read through it. So? When it comes to the benefits of this blog and my truth telling, the list is much longer. I received financial help when we were most desperate. I have made close online friends with a few amazing, supportive women that I would have never met otherwise. I started my freelance writing career because of Flux, was asked to write at Huffington Post, was in an Ebook- will be in another this month. My relationship with my older children deepened as they appreciated the enormous amount of thought and effort that went into my decisions regarding their welfare, and in one of the most important compliments of my life, my oldest son said ' Mom? You are a really amazing writer. ' My husband has been an enormous supporter of Flux and this has strengthened our relationship.
To tell the truth is a subversive act. It always has been and continues to be so. This is why the ' who is the man behind that curtain? ' line from Wizard Of Oz has resonated throughout the years in our society: we all ask ourselves the question. We look at our President, the Pope, our Father, our lover, most terrifyingly, ourselves, and wonder: who is that person? To watch an episode of 48 Hours Investigates is to fall into the rabbit hole of wizardry and lies. Episode after episode, murder after murder, witnesses are interviewed in wide eyed confusion and fear, knowing ( and yet not knowing at all ) surely that the person they knew and loved could never have murdered a human being.
Do you know everything about me? Hell no. Is everything here the truth? Hell yes.
You can put that in your pipe and smoke it.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Ever's Party
Posted by
Maggie May
Labels:
Babies To Teenagers
' Meek Mouse! ' cake says ' Happy Birthday Everkins ' and flowers from my mom's garden |
Ever's new bike from my mom |
Ever saying thank you to my mom for her bike. |
I made this! |
Hanging out with family and friends... |
I held up a finger for each missing brother. Womp womp womp. Ian was at wrestling practice, and Dakota at work. |
We sang "Happy Birthday" |
and Ever kind of loved it. |
Blew out the candle like a champ. |
I'll do anything for fun! OK not ANYTHING. |
Lola off into the sunset. |
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Twitter from Anne Lamott To Myself, On Blogging
Posted by
Maggie May
@fluxcapacitor74 All writing counts as writing. Be gentle w/ yourself.You get full credit for writing a blog, communicating. #readpenguin
— ANNE LAMOTT (@ANNELAMOTT) December 4, 2012
Monday, December 3, 2012
Ever Elizabeth, You Are Two
Posted by
Maggie May
Labels:
Babies To Teenagers
Ever snuck palmfuls of the fountain water, eyeing me sideways to see if I'd stop her. |
Mr. Curry and Ever discussed the train, which runs in a circle around the park. |
Ever loves to push her stroller. We followed her all around for a half hour while she negotiated the thing. |
She also rode her little red bike that Grandma Mimi (Mary) gave her last year. |
We say 'Ever do cheesy smile!' |
Friday, November 30, 2012
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Hot Chocolate Stand
Posted by
Maggie May
Labels:
Babies To Teenagers
Lola made her hot chocolate stand Sunday, and with friends, set up in high spirits and holiday cheer. Smiling is her FAVORITE. Thanks, Buddy. |
" the stockings were hung by the chimney with care / in hopes that Saint Nick soon would be there " She set it up and out and waited with her whole Whoheart. |
Friends bought. |
Cuteness overload. |
They hollered and shouted HOT CHOCOLATE until Ever yelled back, STOP BARKING! (We have dogs. Two. Big, Barking, Dogs.) |
Monday, November 26, 2012
Thanksgiving
Posted by
Maggie May
Labels:
Babies To Teenagers
Like mother..... |
like daughter. But she wasn't tipsy. |
Dakota and girlfriend hanging with Ever. |
Champagne. My favorite. |
Blurry love. |
Ever helping set the table. |
My mom's delicious veggie mix. |
The table before plate settings. So pretty. |
The pack. |
Our four beauties. Dakota, 18 Ian, 16 Lola, 10 and Ever, 23 months |
The guys cracking up. |
Pumpking pie and homeade whipped cream... |
The look on HER face, and..... |
the look on her face! |
She's got legs, she knows how to smother her daughter with them... |
Lola's green green cast |
us. |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)