Friday, April 5, 2013

Face Your Fears, or Whatever


           Every once in a while, I try to face some of my fears.  For instance, I’m afraid of bees.  So I will sit Indian style in the grass and try to become one with nature.  If a bee comes near me and starts buzzing dangerously close to my ear canal, I will try to sit perfectly still.  This is extremely difficult for me because normally, if I even spot a bee in the distance, I start screaming at the top of my lungs and running around in circles like I’m on fire.  And sometimes I cry.  I am also afraid of heights.  So I will practice becoming comfortable with heights by standing on a curb and looking down.  When my dizziness gets to be too much, I walk away and tell myself I’ll try again tomorrow.  But one of my top ten fears of all time is going to the dentist.  I would rather be tossed out of an airplane than sit in a dentist’s chair.
            People sometimes say to me, “You have such nice teeth!” and I say, “Thank you! I do absolutely nothing to maintain them!  Sometimes I even fall asleep with candy bars in my mouth!”  Well, they may look okay but lately they’ve been poking their roots into my business, entering my dreams and whispering, “Floss me!  Take me to the dentist!  Don’t you care about us?”  If ever I find myself jogging (which is very rare) I can feel the teeth on the top rattling and threatening to come loose.  If I floss, they will fall out for sure.  I chew everything with my front teeth, like a rabbit—except chocolate; chocolate I just let melt on my tongue because chewing it is not an option.  Well, the jig is up.  I can no longer live in tooth denial. 
A few weeks ago, I was eating a piece of cheese and my tooth fell out.  I gasped and my seven yr. old daughter asked me what was wrong.  I showed her my tooth and she said, “Well at least it will grow back!  And the tooth fairy will come!”  I didn’t have the heart to tell her that neither of these things would happen.  So I just looked at her and smiled—a big toothless smile.  It was time to face my fear and call the dentist.
At my appointment, I was so embarrassed that I started rattling off so many excuses as to why my teeth were so jacked up.  Well, my tooth genetics are very bad. I mean, neither of my parents even have teeth.  This half of a tooth I’m pretty sure is just a baby tooth that never fell out.  Oh and I was pregnant twice and my babies totally drained all of my calcium from me.   None of my excuses included the fact that I hadn’t been to a dentist since I was fourteen. 
It didn’t help that the dentist I randomly choose based on nothing scared the crap out of me.  He was a big Russian man who had zero tolerance for sissies like me.  He said, “Vhat?  You scared?  Don vorry, I von’t feel a thing!  Muahahahahaha!”  And then, as he was coming towards my face with the needle, he did the strangest thing.  He started making robot noises like, Beep-Bop-Boop-Bop-Beep.  A Russian robot was about to stick a needle in my face.  He knew I was scared so he was treating me like a baby.  I am not a baby! I shouted inside my head.  I wish I were a baby because then it would be acceptable to poop my pants right now!  But then I calmed down…kind of.
I told myself that I could do this, that I could be strong, like bear-- like Russian bear.  And I thought my throat was closing and that I was having a heart attack but the dentist told me, “Don be ridiculous.” So I prayed for death. It sucked.  Every single second of it was the worst ever.  But I did it anyway because I don’t want to look like a pirate. 
But the moral of this story is, facing your fears doesn’t always make them go away.  Bees sting, heights are scary, and going to the dentist sucks.  I have to go back to the dentist for a root canal, and I’m still afraid.  Next time I think I will beg them to knock me out because it is a fear I don’t feel like facing without drugs.  The end.

Because I'm Awesome


Every once in a while, I wake up and my morning feels like a Folger's commercial.  There's a smile on my face, the sun is shining, my back doesn't hurt that much, and I really feel like I am ready to conquer the day.  I tell myself that I'm going to be a good person today, I'm going to clean my house, take my kids to the food store where they will stay in the same isle as me, on their feet, rather than on their backs kicking and screaming and going coo coo for coco puffs.  I'm going to make a big healthy salad when I get home, I'm going to eat it, and I'm going to LIKE it! It's going to be a good day--I can feel it.

And then...I walk out of my bedroom, slip on a banana peel, catch a violent stomach flu on the way down, land on a pile of Leggos, and crawl back into bed where I swim back down into the dark abyss in my ocean of self loathing.  A bit dramatic, I know, but you get the gist.  Life has a funny way of knocking you down as you're getting back up.  

Well, today was one of those days.  But instead of drowning in my dark abyss, I felt it was more of a bottomless well; where if someone wished upon a coin and cheerily tossed it in, it would fall with such velocity that it would crack my skull and slip through my brain, killing me on impact. 

And then I received a gift.  A text message from a friend.  I miss you so much it hurts.  And then another.  I know we don't see each other very often, but I love you daily.  These gifts are our ladders--to climb yourself up and out of whatever dark place you find yourself in.  And when you reach the top and squint into the sun, you can tell yourself, "somebody misses me, somebody loves me. And it's because I'm awesome." 

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

The Day I Was a Dancing Guitar


           One day, about five years ago, while I was lying about listlessly with no money, no purpose, and a complete lack of ambition, I decided to bite the bullet and look for a job.  I browsed the internet, looking for anything that would allow me to put my skills to good use.  This proved to be very taxing on my self-esteem because I lacked every type of skill required for each position listed.  Not only was I completely computer illiterate, I couldn’t even confidently say that I had “good people skills”. 
After some time, I came across a listing for a music store that was: looking to hire an enthusiastic individual to promote the business. Must be able to play guitar at beginning level.  Well, my enthusiasm matched that of a wet blanket, but I could fake it, and I could play Pink Floyd’s, “Wish You Were Here” and Metallica’s, “Nothing Else Matters” on the guitar.  It was perfect. 
On the day of the interview I felt nervous and eager at the same time.  I would get the job, start making some money, and start living like a person, rather than some slimy creature who lives under a rock.  The owner of the store was a tall, gruff, older man with a white, scraggly beard and unforgiving eyes.  I stood before him wearing my best enthusiastic face while he scanned me up and down, silently, for what felt like an eternity.  When he finally opened his mouth to speak, I half expected him to say, “No one has ever loved me and I eat rusty nails for dinner.” Instead, he said, “You’re perfect.  Follow me.”
I scurried fearfully behind him down a long driveway and into a cold, empty warehouse.  The rain was coming down in diagonal slants, pelting the windows and the aluminum siding.  Is this man going to kill me?  No.  No, he wasn’t.  But he was going to strip me of whatever dignity I had left.  I wasn’t sure which was worse.  Without warning, he held up a giant foam guitar and started to pull it down over my head, the fake enthusiasm draining out of my face.  Something most people don’t ever think about, ever, in their whole entire lives, is how hard it would be to pull a thick foam guitar costume over a thick wooly sweater.  I spun in circles trying to force my arms through the sides. I hopped up and down and I wriggled like a worm on the sidewalk.  It was like a foam straight jacket.  Together, this old man and I wrestled with the costume until my arms fell limply over the sides and my red, sweaty face was perfectly framed inside the sound hole. 
“How does it feel?” he asked.  “Okay, I guess.”  For the first time that day, his face lit up a little.  “This is my creation.  It took me years to make.  As soon as I saw you I knew you would fit perfectly inside.  Can you dance?”  My eyes met his, mine woeful and pleading, his hopeful and expecting.  The neck of the guitar bobbed back and forth as I nodded my shameful reply.  “Yes, I can.” 
He instructed me to go out into the rain, and walk up to the busy intersection and dance.  This would bring him more customers.  I took a few steps outside, paused, and turned to him, fear and desperation pulsing through my veins.  “I can play “Wish You Were Here”.”  This did nothing.  I marched up the hill towards the street, the guitar costume absorbing the rain like a sponge.  My legs weakened under the weight of this man’s cumbersome “work of art”.  Half way up the hill, I turned my whole body around (turning just my head was not an option) to see if he was still watching me, and he was.  He shooed me forward.  I stood at the top of the hill, cars whizzing by, and waited for cheeseburgers to come hurtling towards my head. 
This was my time to shine.  I tried to muster up some charisma, but all I could do was sway to the side whenever a stiff breeze blew by.  I was a sad, sad guitar—a classical guitar, I thought.  So I descended back down the hill, the neck of the guitar slumped forward, not looking up as cars honked at me.  I gave the man his costume back and told him I’d be back in the morning.  I drove away and watched him get smaller in the rear view mirror, both of us knowing I wouldn’t be back.  But neither of us would ever forget that day—the day he finally got to present his masterpiece and the day I was a dancing guitar.

Monday, April 1, 2013

What do you want to be AFTER you grow up?


Most kids are asked, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” and to a child, there is no dream too big.  When we’re children, we don’t put limits on ourselves, which is why you often hear: I want to be an astronaut, the President, a magical unicorn pony.  Why not?  When I was a kid, my expectations for myself weren’t quite so high.  I wanted to be wild and foot loose and fancy free.  And I was.
I rode that dream well into my twenties.  Not to say that my dreams as a child included alcohol abuse (they didn’t) but I drank way too much anyway.  I dropped out of school and I continued to make really poor decisions.  I had a serious disdain for all types of authority and I burned a lot of bridges.  I lived that “dream” until it eventually became a nightmare and I finally decided to pinch myself awake.  The world looked different then.  What was my dream now? 
I had babies.  Although I had (and still have) moments of pure profound joy with my children every single day, I did suffer from post-partum depression and OCD.  My hormones went berserk and my brain was overrun with overwhelming thoughts that something horrible was going to happen to my children; the most common of them being: they are going to stop breathing in their sleep, they’re going to slip from my arms as I walk down the steps. In a moment of pure exhaustion, I am going to run a red light with them in the back seat of the car, I am going to get plowed and they are going to die and I will be left to live the rest of my miserable life locked inside a padded cell in a mental institution.  I didn’t sleep, I didn’t eat, I cried in a lot of corners, and I climbed a lot of walls.  My life started to feel like one big bad acid trip.  I went to the doctor and he told me to take a chill pill—a real one, like Valium, not a figurative one.
In a moment of drug induced calm, when I was finally able to stop my mind from strategizing about how to fight a bear if ever one tried to threaten my children’s lives (this is how unreasonable I had become) I made a decision to just stop—stop the freaking madness.  It wasn’t easy and it still isn’t easy.
But who I am today is someone who knows that it’s okay to start over; to revisit yourself as a child and ask a new question: “What do you want to be AFTER you grow up?”   When I took the time to reconnect with my authentic self, I looked little me in those big sad eyes, hugged her like she was my own daughter and a small voice inside me said, “I just want to be me.  I want to be courageous and strong, and I want to write about it.”  No limits.  Our dreams are ever evolving, just like we are, and it’s okay to start over.