These are the
happiest days of my life. These are the saddest
days of my life. Read that again. Is this even possible? Can we be up and down at the same time? These two sides to all things. This yin and this yang. This duality.
Balancing between these two opposing forces. Trying to live somewhere in the middle. The more that I work on myself. The more that I let the things that don’t
belong to me go. The more that I let
myself be happy. The more that I also
open myself up to sadness. There is no
other way. I have come to understand
that living is really about feeling. All
of it. And in order to feel happiness,
we also need to be willing to feel sadness.
One cannot exist without the other.
All the same. All one. This continuum. Life’s circles. Winter solstice. The shortest day. The longest night. Closing this loop. Mother nature showing us that a time for
recovery is necessary after a time for prosperity. That both darkness and light are a necessary
part of life. She is our true rhythm. We can try to resist her. But we must understand that mother does
indeed know best. May we have the
courage to accept her dark season’s invitation to feel our own inner
darkness. Feel it to heal it. As we patiently open to this re-emerging
light.
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Winter Solstice
Friday, December 17, 2021
Authentic connection
Exhausting. Walking around pretending. One too many fake smiles. More than enough phony conversations. How’s it going? We don’t really want to know. We’re just trying to be polite by asking the
question. Hypocritical small talk. Is silence just too uncomfortable? I guess that’s why I prefer working from
home. I guess that’s also why I prefer being
alone rather than socializing. I just
can’t stand the fakeness of it anymore.
Instead of squandering empty words into the air, I much prefer authentic
connection. I need it actually. It feeds me.
Lifts me up. Reminds me that life
is so much more than all this pointless babble.
Last Friday. The day after the
coldest night of this season. Feeling
underdressed. Rolling down my snow
covered driveway. A slap to my body’s
face. Blood pumping. The spin of my legs cranking up my inner
furnace. That’s my favorite thing about
getting out in the deep cold. It shocks me
into the present moment. The crisp air instantly
bringing me back to my body. This
thermal emergency. The frosty air
entering my lungs making me more aware of my breath. Cold air is clear air. Clear air is clear mind. Cleansing.
As much as indoor riding has simply become too exhausting for me, riding
outside in these harsh conditions gives me the authentic connection that I
crave. My bridge back to myself. My bridge back to nature. Me here for life. Now.
Life here for me. Now.
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
My very own board game of days
Eyes closed. Tucked in
under these white snow blankets. These
stripped trees. Sound asleep. Just like so many of these wild animals. Hibernating.
These beings of light. Their deep
rooted innate sense of knowing.
Understanding that this dark season is rest season. Recovering.
Renewing. Taking the time to pay
the bill for what the prosperous months have served. This circle of life. For as long as I can remember, I have always
pictured calendar dates as a road map of sorts in my mind. Kind of like the square boxes that player
pieces move through when playing a board game.
Each day its own box. With its
own feel and challenges. All strung
together in succession. The last box of
the year adjacent to the first box of the year.
This illusory track that I have been looping around annually. Its path not quite circular. But not exactly square either. Subtle turns on pivotal boxes. Like on the first day of school in
September. And straightaways during the
uneventful times of the year. Like the
main summer months. July and
August. Easy. Just cruise through the unbending open lane
of boxes and enjoy the ride. December is
in the top left hand corner of my year circuit.
On a slight upward slant. And the
shade of the boxes is noticeably darker.
Leveling off and brightening up around Christmas. My very own board game of days. Painted long ago with the honest creativity
of my inner child. Unchanged my whole
life. Forever clearly plotted inside my
head. A pale spotlight highlighting the
current day box. The now. A few weeks before the shortest day of the
year. The darkest box. A time when all that I have suppressed during
the brighter boxes is coming back up to the surface. In my face.
Begging for my attention. Eyes
closed. This rest season. Recovering.
Renewing. Purposefully waiting
for my player piece to move onto brighter boxes.
Thursday, November 25, 2021
Racing to our grave
Racing to our grave. Faster and faster. Fooling ourselves. Calling it progress. The evolution of this society. Endlessly pursuing these promised rewards. Going for the win. They keep dangling these carrots. But I’ve come to a point where I just can’t keep chasing them anymore. What’s the point? Too many empty promises. Hopefully waking up from this trance before it’s too late. The cemetery is already full of way too much regret. This one and only life. Shouldn’t we be taking our sacred time? So much advice to help us live longer. Eat healthy. Exercise regularly. More years. More time. More moments. But what’s the point if we insist on rushing through them? To get more things done? To check more things off our bucket list? Longevity and speed. Can they really feasibly co-exist? Caught up in all these comparisons. The seeds that breed our separation. The cause of these wars. I’m done fighting. No winners. Only losers. Standing here. On my own podium. Everything that I need to be healthy and happy already inside of me. In unlimited abundance. Everyone is beautiful. Everyone has so much to give. The problem is that we’re not shown how to shine. Just too damn busy. Caught up in this endless grind. Racing to our grave.
Monday, November 22, 2021
Who is this feeding?
Is this feeding my ego? Or is this feeding my soul? I have been asking myself these questions a whole lot lately. Every single thing that we do fosters one or the other. Or a combination of both. But one of them is always at the very least slightly being favored. My ego. This inner voice in my head comparing and measuring how and where I fit in. This learned mental construct. The fake me. My soul. This intuitive knowing feeling deep in my heart. This love. This compassion. Eternal. The true me. Yesterday I surpassed my total mileage ridden from last year. The most since my concussion in 2016. My ego really got a buzz from that. It lives by the numbers. But It also isn’t happy for very long. Fueled by fear, it just keeps wanting more and more. It’s an asshole like that. If you have been in the sport long enough you have probably noticed that ego driven cyclists don’t last. They ride and perform for a few years then disappear. Their egos get bored after a while and lose interest once they stop improving. Lifelong cycling is a soul inspired endeavor. It has to be. It may even be something that we’re born with. In our blood. Coded in our genes. Above this season’s numbers, I gratefully recognize the moments of deep peace that I have felt during these rides. That grounding feeling. Bringing me back home. What does my riding feed? Does it feed my ego or my soul? There is certainly a bit of both, but I truly feel that these ever so subtle soul whispers are what entice me to keep pedaling. Thank you cycling. It’s been a great year so far.
Wednesday, November 10, 2021
November's Weight
The heaviest
month. If I had to choose, my least
favorite month would have to be November.
March would be a very close second. I have been feeling it much more
these last few years for some reason.
November’s weight. Autumn is such
a sensual season. The musky-sweet
smell. The eye catching colorful
foliage. The crunchy sound of drying
leaves. The cool sensation of the fresh
breeze on our skin. The universal
pendulum. Coming down from summer’s
high. Nature gently slowing down. Life peacefully hushed to sleep. Past this fall peak, November starts with the
most stubborn discolored leaves still desperately holding onto their mother
branches. And ends with naked trees and
wide open forests. Transparent. Empty.
Nighttime temperature lows are now mostly below freezing. It’s only a matter of time before we wake up
to a bright white snow blanket covering this vacant land. The end of daylight savings making me feel
even more melancholic. Emotional. A certain mourning. Is it simply the extra downtime as the days
continue to get shorter? Or is it more
than that? From my then 2 year old
daughter’s Type 1 Diabetes diagnosis 19 years ago this month to Remembrance
Day, November has an undertone of grief for me.
A reminder of the inevitable losses we all eventually face in this
life. A time for healing through
feeling. Sunday morning. My ride taking me through the valley, out to
the historical church in Beaumont.
Overburdened. I lay flat back on
the barren building steps. Sun beaming
on my face. I slip into a deep
meditation. Feeling the light melt this
sorrow. Lifting me up. Nature induced vibrational therapy. My spirit restored. My inspired heart and legs guiding me back
home. November’s weight. Maybe it has a purpose? Maybe simply acknowledging its load makes
carrying it more bearable?
Friday, October 22, 2021
This Autumn Whiff
Behind my life experiences. Beyond what I project on the outside. Below this clutter. Underneath this trauma. On the other side of this fear. I’m still there. As always. I never left. What I notice most about the autumn season is the smell. This dank scent that instantly takes me back to simpler times. Jumping. Rolling. Hiding. In these fallen leaves. Laughing. Living. In the moment. The fall season always seems to reawaken memories of my childhood. That young boy growing up near Boston in the early 70s. Oftentimes, I wonder how different I would be today if my family had never moved back to Canada in 1976. How would I look? Would I be riding bikes? Would I have a family? Would I be eating the same foods? Would I be reading the same books? Would I be writing the same words? Would I still have the same values? Would I still be me? Even if pondering things that could have been is in essence pointless, I still find it fascinating to contemplate such scenarios. My interest has nothing to do with regret. It’s more a way of making me realize who I really am by showing me who I am not. Revisiting the early years of my life brings me closer to the blessed state of pure beingness into which we are all born. A time before we were broken. A time before we developed all of these hang-ups in order to survive. A time before the emergence of our ego. A time before we started playing these social characters. A time before assuming these grown-up roles. A time before all this loss. I’m not sure how, but for some reason, the aroma of these fall leaves make me feel closer to my true self. Closer to the pure consciousness that I am. Closer to the untamed me. Can you smell it? This autumn whiff.
Thursday, October 14, 2021
Thanksgiving
Both knees
gently resting on my yoga mat. Both
buttocks firmly seated on my meditation bench.
Simply staring into this abyss.
Noticing the textures and nuances of the darkness behind my eyelids. These ripples. Gently unrolling with each and every
breath. I feel like I’m sitting in a
pool of water. Submerged up to my lower
lip. Breathe in. Breathe out.
Let it all come up. Let it all
move through me. Things have been a bit
rocky as of late. My anxiety getting the
best of me. Simply sitting with these
feelings. May I be happy. May I be healthy. May I be safe. May I be at peace. Ever so slowly I begin to feel it all trickle
down into the floor below. The water level
slowly subsiding. My breathing less
labored. My shoulders that much
lighter. Grounded. Ready to tackle this weekend. I long to get out there. To taste the spaciousness of these quiet
roads. On the cusp of this autumn peak,
the tree tops are on fire. Reds. Oranges.
Yellows. Breathtaking. Much cooler than it was the day before. The wind has changed. Blowing from the north east as if it is
trying to extinguish this treetop color explosion. 103 kms, a metric century on Friday. 51 kms of gravel on Sunday. And 31 kms on the mountain bike in Fundy
National park on Monday. So very much to
be thankful for on this Canadian Thanksgiving weekend. Health.
Family. Friends. My yoga mat.
My meditation bench. And of
course my bikes.
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
This deep cushiony leather chair
“We may not be
responsible for the world that created our minds, but we can take
responsibility for the mind with which we create our world.”
― Gabor Maté
My
psychologist breaks the silence of my vacant gaze as she reaches out to hand me
a pen and some paper. I have come to see
her in a desperate attempt to get some help dealing with the fact that my
broken brain no longer allows me to ride and race my bike. And without that, to be honest, I don’t
really know how to continue to exist anymore.
She asks me to list the past traumas in my life so far. My top 5.
Or more. Whatever comes up she
says. I don’t really get it. What does such a list have to do with my
concussion? But I don’t have the energy
to reason or argue with her. All that my
bruised and battered cerebrum can do is follow her instructions. I start writing. As I gently lay my pen to rest, my distorted
focus lands on the dust particles dancing in the bright early winter sun
beaming on the wall behind her. The rest
of the universe seems to be business as usual.
The sun still shines like it always has.
Why can’t it brighten my days like it used to? Even these gyrating specks of dust seem more
cheerful than I am in this moment.
How many did
you write down? Her words startle me as
if I’m lost in a deep trance. I got
five. After handing her my list, I look
for her reaction as she’s reading it, still trying to figure out how this is
supposed to help me accept the reality that I am sinking deeper and deeper into
this dark hole as my bikes are gathering dust.
She repeats the second one on my list.
Sexual abuse. Hearing her say it out loud makes me fidget. This deep cushiony leather chair has suddenly
become even more uncomfortable. How can
something that happened close to 35 years ago still have so much power over me? Literally only a handful of people know that
I am a sexual abuse survivor. My
parents. My wife. And a couple of psychologists. This skeleton in my closet. My deepest secret. Always there.
This hidden truth. This lie that
I keep telling myself over and over.
For as long
as I can remember, bikes have meant freedom to me. Freedom to roam. Freedom to explore. Freedom to feel that in the end everything is
going to be OK. Heartfelt freedom. This life-giving freedom that has been taken
away from me by this head injury. Maybe
its purpose is to shine light on this secret that I have been holding onto for
so very long? If the saying “the truth
will set you free” is indeed true, then maybe working on healing my sexual
abuse trauma is a first step in reclaiming this lost freedom? Authentic freedom isn’t about half
truths. It’s an all or nothing
deal. Maybe my broken brain will only be
able to fully heal by putting the parts of my fragmented true self back together? Maybe the only way forward is to put an end
to this lie and finally rid myself of all this guilt and shame embedded inside
of me? Maybe it’s time to start
embodying my truth and stop living this half-life? Every single thing has changed along with
this new cloudy brain chemistry that I am now floating in. I figure all I can do is give in and let it
change me. I follow my psychologist’s
lead. Let’s do this. As much as I feel like I’ve hit rock bottom,
strangely I feel like I’m finally ready to go there. I’m all in.
For the next
two years, every three or four weeks, I sit in this deep cushiony leather
chair. Revisiting the past. Shedding these timeworn tears. Kicking.
Screaming. Recalling. Feeling.
The chair doesn’t change, but somehow it slowly becomes more and more
comfortable. This work isn’t just in
this chair. I also begin devouring books
that inspire my true essence. I
meditate. I practice yoga. I start journaling. And ever so slowly I also get back on my
bikes again. I’m not sure how, but
verbalizing the details of my sexual abuse in a safe setting enables me to let
go of the emotions attached to it.
Psychotherapy somehow lets the buried and denied parts of me born from
this trauma come up to the surface. The
bulk of each appointment isn’t about my concussion even though the symptoms
continue to linger. It’s about
revisiting these traumatic events, allowing myself to feel what I wasn’t
equipped to feel when it happened and mourning what was lost. The more I open up, the more healing momentum
I create. Unblocked from my past,
breaking free from these shackles, so much positive energy now flowing without
any resistance. The physical healing of
my injured brain fueled by all the emotional work that I am doing. Being healthy isn’t just about getting enough
exercise and eating the right foods.
It’s also about our bodies being in balance with our psyche and our
emotions. This equilibrium is the key.
Fast forward
five years later to 2021, my physical brain has mostly healed. I can ride my bike comfortably again without
any post-concussion symptoms. But I’m
not the same person that I was before my accident. I’m more content. I’m more at peace. I’m more true. And I’ve become very comfortable being
alone. So comfortable, that I crave
it. Alone on my bike. Alone in nature. I’ve really come to enjoy my own
company. One of my basic needs. As September expires into October, I load my
bikes and gear into my truck and head north.
This Xperience Kouchibouguac cabin providing the amenities to enable me
to host my own private gravel cycling meditation retreat. The national park trails leading directly
into the parking lot of the cabin complex.
Three days. Two nights. And three amazing rides as well as a few
hikes. Something about the vibrancy and
stillness of the forest that reawakens the life breath inside of me. This cool moist air. Purifying.
These forest trees.
Mesmerizing. No hidden
agenda. Simply living fully in the
moment. Pedaling through this protected
forest, I ponder how far I’ve come since first sitting in that deep cushiony
leather chair. How did I get here? The truth is that I was never the lone
occupant of that seat. The young
greasy-haired naïve teenager in me was also there, sitting right next to
me. My inner child. He needed to be there. He needed to finally be heard. He needed to finally be held and hugged so
very tight. He needed to be healed in
order for me to become whole.
Every single
one of my life experiences live inside of me.
Every single one of my former selves make me who I am. And they accompany me everywhere I go. At work.
At home. And on each and every
one of my bike rides. Befriending,
supporting and nurturing every single one of them is how I continue to heal and
live a full life. Comfortably by myself.
Peacefully alone but never lonely. Reassured and comforted by all of my former
selves. That’s why this work is so
important. My life’s work. My longing to reach my expiry date
empty. Nothing to hide. Nothing more to say. Nothing more to do. Nothing to let go of. We are the only ones that can save
ourselves. It took me a while to
understand this, but once I did, everything changed.
Thursday, October 7, 2021
Is this suffering optional?
I suffer
whenever I believe that there exists a point in time when I will no longer
suffer. The promise of a future nirvana
started with the fairytales that I listened to as a young child. “And they lived happily ever after” is how
they all seemed to end. As I got older,
and life became more complicated, it was a matter of “if I can just finish
school”. That became “if I can just
graduate from university and have a career”.
But even with that first real job, I still had to pay my dues. Underpaid.
Overworked. Push through it. It will be worth it in the end is what I was
being told. The cure for the lack that
you are feeling is to work your way up the corporate ladder. Life gets better the closer you get to the
top. Such a believable illusion manufactured
by our capitalist society. That dream
job. Does it even exist? Peace and salvation from our suffering always
seems to be right there. Just around the
corner. The next thing. After we finish this thing. This never ending cycle of broken promises. Middle age.
And still agonizing.
Uncomfortably sitting in this painful void. What can save me now? Retirement.
Is that when I will finally be free from this suffering? Is that why they call it the “golden years”? So much of our suffering happens in our
minds. When how we think things should
be don’t match what they actually are. Tormented
by our expectations. Will I ever be able
to drop my attachment with a certain outcome?
Is it even possible to live in harmony with reality? It seems like there simply will always be something. The eventual breakdown of our physical
bodies. Sickness. Aches and pains. Trauma and loss. Maybe our fear of this pain is what makes us
suffer most. Endlessly afflicted by this
human condition. Strangely, whenever I fully
accept the fact that there will always be suffering in life, the less that I
suffer.
Monday, October 4, 2021
Truth and Reconciliation
“The truth was a mirror in the hands of god. It fell, and broke into pieces. Everybody took a piece of it, and they looked at it and thought they had the truth.” – Rumi
I remember seeing a swastika hand written on a
desk in middle school before knowing what it really meant. I remember learning about the holocaust a few years later. At the time, these stories didn’t seem real
to me. It felt more like a fictional
horror movie . Surreal. As the reality of it all sunk in, I remember
thinking how ashamed I would feel if I were German. Even if I were not alive during the second
world war, how could they live and walk on the same soil that these unthinkable
atrocities took place on at the hands of their ancestors. But I wasn’t there. It wasn’t me.
And things like these would never happen in Canada. When I first heard about Canadian residential
schools from my daughter a few years ago, I didn’t understand what it really meant. They still existed when I was her age, so
maybe that’s why I didn’t learn about them when I was in school? Or maybe I did but didn’t really understand
what it all meant at the time? As this
reality slowly sinks in, my heart breaks into pieces for all the trauma
suffered at the hands of my ancestors. On
this National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, I pause to recognize and honor
our First Nations, Inuit and Metis brothers and sisters. Even if there is no way to undo all the unthinkable
wrong that has been done, please allow me to also feel even a tiny bit of your
pain and know that I stand by you as you mourn all that was lost. Some things in life can never be fixed. They can only be carried. At the very least, please know that you are
not alone to carry this burden.