Total words: 0 (getting a late start today!)
Manuscript total: 12,832
Yesterday, I had a lockdown first: I was so busy all day long that I forgot to blog! Between class in the morning (which ended with a delightful conversation about mullets, led by our professor), to social engagements (from six feet away) in the afternoon, to going to a virtual event with one of my favorite authors, N.K. Jemisin, in the evening, I didn’t even think about blogging until I was lying in bed at about 9pm. By then, however, I just figured everyone would survive a day without a blog post from me.
So did you survive? Yes? Okay, good. 🙂
Today I’m trying to accentuate the positive.
I spent my last post ranting about how angry I am with the United States federal government, and while that’s still true, I’m also completely aware that dwelling upon it is not good for my mental health and doesn’t change anything anyway. Instead, I’m looking for positive things to focus on today.
For starters, the self is impermanent, and each day (moment) is a chance to start again.
I took a long walk with my friend K yesterday afternoon, and they struggle with their depression and anxiety under the very best of circumstances. Like many others, right now is an especially hard time for them. They expressed to me that the worst thought was that they would wake up tomorrow morning and it everything was going to be just as $#!tty as it was today, including their mood.
I laid some wisdom on K from my Buddhist years that I still find true and useful, and that is that all produced phenomena are impermanent, and therefore changing in every moment — including the self.
Here’s how it works. Anything that is produced (anything that exists because it was created by a collection of causes) is not permanent. A tree, for example, is a collection of causes like sunlight, water, a seed, climate, etc. When one of those causes changes, like water, then the tree changes. And besides that, the tree is changing in every moment anyway.
The self isn’t any different from the tree. It, too, is naught but a collection of causes — our biology, our background, our culture, our day-to-day experiences. As the causes creating the self change (and they are changing all the time), the self necessarily also changes. And in order for anything to change, its previous iteration must perish. In other words, if my self of moment 2 is different from my self of moment 1, then my self of moment 1 is necessarily gone in order for the self of moment 2 to exist.
Therefore, it is completely valid to quote Scarlet O’Hare and declare,
“After all, tomorrow IS another day.”
Indeed, each day is a new day, a new opportunity, a new self. Each day is a chance to have a different experience than we had the day before.
K reported that this was helpful to think about. I hope it will be helpful for you, too.
In the midst of bad things, good things are still happening.
In addition to holding to the bit of Buddhist philosophy cited above, I’m also choosing to focus on gratitude for the following good things that are happening at the moment:
- On Thursday, I got my edTPA scores back, and I passed! I didn’t get AMAZING scores, and for the overachiever in me, that was hard. But damn, I passed, I don’t have to retake any sections, and that is something to be grateful for.
- All my loved ones are still healthy. One of the things that got me down the other day was reading about how the American South is scheduled to be the next hotspot for the pandemic. That’s scary for me, since I’m a southerner and most of my people are there, including my aging parents. But instead of focusing on that, I’m going to focus on the incredible fact that, at least for the time being, everyone I hold dear is still healthy.
- In California, our leaders seem to be successfully flattening the curve. I’m impressed that, thanks to the early actions of Governor Gavin Newsom, the pandemic isn’t progressing too quickly here. It doesn’t mean we’re in the clear, but I am grateful for intelligent state leadership.
- So many humans are being excellent to each other. I have recently developed an addiction to the soothing tones of Judy Woodruff on PBS Newshour, and this morning I was watching a segment on all the doctors coming out of retirement to help with the pandemic, along with the medical students who have been graduated early from their programs so that they can jump onto the front lines. Between the heroism of medical professionals to people standing on their porches or balconies to cheer at precisely 8pm, to people leading Zumba classes in front yards for their neighbors or delivering meals instead of newspapers to the elderly, there is just an outpouring of human kindness that’s happening right now. It’s touching and impressive, and something that can reaffirm our sense of hope in this grim situation.
Keep being excellent to one another.
In the words of the great Bill and Ted, keep being excellent to each other and party on. Until tomorrow, this is Judy Woodruff… wait, no. Until tomorrow, this is the self I currently am in this moment, who is making an effort to stay positive, signing off.
6 Comments
Sarah Wiseman · April 4, 2020 at 9:53 pm
Ahhh, most excellent! Such a great film!
I’m delighted, and a bit relieved, you passed your edTPA! Phew! Because of the day’s lack of blog (noticed) I feared it was because you’d not passed and were too gutted to write anything…. Argh, I had this whole catestrophic scenario running in my head… So, thank goodness you passed… I would have been genuinely flabbergasted if you hadn’t, but… Crazy things happen!
So, well done! Fan bloody tastic!
Glad you are back blogging…
This evening i had another crazy chat with my Canadian Cousins in their hot tub (they were in the hot tub, not me unfortunately) (the air temp was minus 20 Celsius! garh! )
Then we watched a very new and rather wonderful British show called Feel Good, which I think is on Netflix outside the UK… Written and starring Canadian comic Mae Martin. I’d certainly recommend it if you can get it. Some scenes in it really reminded me of To Have Loved and Lost… 😊 Its Emotional, clever, funny and incredibly relatable! OMG!
Thanks for your positive list… Thanks for sending your thoughts out there…
😬
X
Jen · April 4, 2020 at 10:41 pm
Where do they live? -20? Jesus Christ. Are they up north? It’s not even minus anything in my hometown, and it’s -40 Celsius there in winter. And what the hell, I’m jealous of their hot tub, eh.
Sarah Wiseman · April 5, 2020 at 6:05 pm
There’re in Calgary… Can get horribly cold there.
The Real Person!
LOL, I was worried people would think I didn’t blog because I didn’t pass my edTPA! Nope, just busy!
Jen · April 4, 2020 at 10:36 pm
Party on is also Wayne’s world, I think. At least GAME ON! is. Lol.
And I think there is going to be another Bill and Ted and I am jazzed up for it. I love how you make so many pop culture references that I directly relate to. I bellowed “HEY YOU GUUUUUUUYS!” from a work platform on set one day and found all the rest of the Goonies kids hidden among the crew. I’ve also said “Put them in the iron maiden” when somebody fucks up the job and waited to see who does air guitar.
You’re right about not wanting to live in the dark side of this situation instead of just occasionally visiting. People hate to hear this when they feel trapped, but a lot of our misery is directly related to how much we identify with “miserable” emotional states, like feelings are the only truth. It’s wild how much we can convince ourselves we are locked-in to our circumstances without realizing the cage door doesn’t even have a lock, and that maybe there is no door, or no CAGE at all. Perception is a hell of a drug.
If I still felt like I was an “anxious” person instead of someone who feels anxious sometimes, it would be very hard to recognize the impermanence of anxiety. If I identified with depression as a character flaw I was doomed to have forever, I wouldn’t have made it past some super hard times. Things really do pass, but now that we are here, it’s nice to be able to hold the “bad” stuff and “good” stuff at the same time because they don’t exist without each other anyway.
Keep noticing all the things and remember to stay curious. Curiosity leaves no room hopelessness (Unless you’re curious about hope as a concept, but that’s not the same. Lol)
The Real Person!
Rocky. Road.