Vacation as a Mother

Vacation as a mother means

taking the nap I’ve been meaning to take for nearly 2 years
walking on someone else’s cleaned carpet
letting my arms linger a few moments longer on Nick’s shoulders

Vacation as a mother means
having a roomful of excited people watch Isaiah so I can sit by the lake
letting the shower drip off me at its leisure
sipping, not gulping, a cupful of water

Vacation as a mother means
having time to walk without a stroller in front of me
watching an old man ride his bike down the empty road
hearing Isaiah giggle from another room

Vacation as a mother means
softer pillows and even breathing
updated windows and newer fixtures
someone else running the vaccuum

Vacation as a mother also means
realizing how blessed my life truly is
and finally having time
to be grateful for it

Answering the Unanswerable: The Spirituality of the Body

In graduate school, I took a class called, “The Spirituality of the Body.”

It was an intense course, and took on the questions of life. The kinds of questions that are so deep, so mysterious that most people gloss over them in regular conversation. Or, in the discomfort with the unknown, find a short-fit answer and tuck it into their packets, satisfied to have to no longer struggle over the unanswerable questions of body and life. It seemed fitting that an entire academic course could be devoted to tackling such formidable questions.

There was a particular class that stands out in my mind that addressed the issue of mental disability. Specifically, we looked at mental retardation, individuals whose brain growth was either stunted or limited in its capacity. The class was confronted with a question: In the context of Catholic faith, how do you explain why some people are born with mental retardation?

It started a discussion that spanned nearly two weeks of class.

We tackled the answers that were passed down from other generations:

There was a sin somewhere in the family line and this is a direct result of that act of disobedience.
There are only certain types of people and families that can take care of someone with special needs and that is why that certain family was hand-picked by God to take care of “God’s special children.”
People with mental retardation serve as a reminder to those who are “normal,” that we are blessed and graced by God, and we should be grateful for those blessings.
People with mental retardation have special struggles in this life because they chose this path before they were born.

Each one was carefully considered at the heart of its meaning and intention and each one was eventually struck down.

It was then that the professor decided to let us know her thoughts. And even though she had finished her graduate work and dissertation at Harvard and taught some of the most distinguished theology on the planet, she offered a very simple reasoning, “Perhaps this is the regulation of life. We are not normal. They are not special. Nor are any people with special circumstances that require extra care for basic function. Perhaps this is the natural course of life. Whatever or whomever life comes from, this is the churning of it. It’s a part of life. There’s nothing to figure out. There is no why. This is – we all are – what life produces.”

I’ve been thinking about that a lot: the natural course of life and how much value and preservation we put into assuring “normal” people in our births and pregnancies and realities. Over the weekend, a close friend V* shared a recent miscarriage from a few months ago. Even though it’d been a few months, even though she had a healthy son, even though she was pregnant again, her and her partner’s eyes filled as they told us the pain and question of what that miscarriage brought them. The heartbeat of new life and possibility simply stopped beating, with no explanation.

“There’s nothing to say,” V* told me. “There’s no consolation, no words, nothing. There’s nothing you can do or say. All I know is that life is so incredibly fragile and the line that separates life from death is very, very thin.”

She went on to tell me what doctors told her about miscarriage: it happens all the time. It’s a natural course of the body. It’s what the body does. It can produce life and sometimes only sustain it for a short period of time. It’s a mystery yes, but is it uncommon, no. The words “natural” “this is what happens” “normal functioning” were used. And while that did not comfort my friends much, it did ring bells of familiarity in my head.

It reminded me of, “The Spirituality of the Body,” and how some of the basic questions of life have no answers and our acceptance or refusal to accept the normality of pain, suffering, death, passing, illness, is entirely up to us when determining our realities. The more we accept, the more peace we find. The more we insist on artificial and superficial definitions of normal, functioning, healthy, productive, worthiness – the more disruption we’ll find in our spiritual lives.

The more we prize able-bodied, traditionally educated minds on two walking, shapely legs, the more we lose in our ability to see life – in its perfection – at every stage and age and state. Life.

Life.

I see my son differently because of this reasoning. I don’t see children as small things waiting to grow up. I see them perfectly whole and acceptable as they are. Every inch precious and fitting in the time they are born and in whatever step they are developmentally. When they cry, it’s from a place as real as my need to breathe and feel love. When they laugh, it’s every bit as joyful as when I slap my couch with loud squeals and giggles.

Children are not adult in waiting. They are complete as is, gifts today as they were yesterday and the day before that.

My cousin who is diagnosed with profound mental retardation is not part of a man. Or a sad story. He’s a 28 year old man.

****
I once had a mentor who said, “Life is sweet as it is short. Life is fine as it is fleeting.”

Like one sip of port wine. Like a faceful of an August breeze.

The longer you wait to accept life as is – as fair and unfair, however long or brief that time is, in whatever condition it is birthed – the more time you spend in the land of wishes and worry, and less in the world of learning and compassion.

The Power of Healing

You know what I thought about today — the way people don’t question or assume anything when the word “healing” is used.

In circles of medical professional, doctors, even spiritual ministers, when someone is “healing,” it’s as if there is a quiet reverence for the process someone is going through to get back to place of normal functioning.

No explanation is needed, no direct or intrusive questions follow. It’s as if when the word “healing” is used, it’s commonly understood that some sort of trauma has occurred and that’s all that needs to be said or known.

Healing —
it could be from an oven burn, or a nasty voicemail, or a violent past.
It could be from an extramarital affair, or brain surgery. Or a broken relationship.

The respect for the power of healing is great, and rightfully so. In my circles of activism, spiritual mentors, and family, the word “healing” is often very little to do with the physical scars or injuries, and has more to do with the inner conflict and uproar that needs time to settle and stabilize.

Healing. Do you give it the space and respect it deserves?

89 Infants Recovered from Kidnapping Reveals More than Just Male Preference

The question always comes with good intention, “Why are you a feminist when women have already accomplished so much?”

Meaning, women in certain cases have achieved similar ambitions in life as their male counterparts, so why raise ruckus when women are doing so gosh darn well?

Well, for one thing, things like this are still pretty horrific in the world when you read a headline like, “89 Kidnapped Infants Rescued” At first glance, it may seem unrelated to women’s rights – just a terribly disturbing story – but when you take a close look, you’ll get why nearly all social problems stem from a kyriarchal problem.

In certain parts of the world where males are favored, it has disparaging effects on females. These effects ripple and grow in ways that most people don’t want to acknowledge. Gender preference, for instance, is no more prominent than in the birth and children industry. How many times do you see fathers’ congratulated when their first child is a son? And how many mothers do you see congratulated when their first child is a daughter? Answer: The former happens ALL THE TIME. And that’s just a mild US-centric example.

Look at China, where there is not only a warm glow placed on males, but combined with a strict one child birth restriction, forces women and children into human trafficking. According to the article, “The report said that police have uncovered 39,194 cases of human trafficking in China since April 2009, the majority of the cases involving women or children.”

It’s not just about preference. When it comes to kyriarchy – where boys born in a privileged family with resources in a country without birthing restrictions – the line is drawn and girls are left in unknown conditions of life. Human trafficking is modern day slavery where girls and women are made to be either domestic slaves, abused entertainers, exploited caretakers, or at the beating end of violence.

So no matter how many glass ceilings are broken by white-identified, privileged, economically advantaged US citizen-ed women, as long as 10 day year old girls are being born in secret to be sold into slavery around the globe, there is no true liberation taking place for anyone.

That’s why I identify as a feminist. I measure liberation by the freedom of the least visible.

Flashmobs and Dancing in Cleveland

So when I danced with Matt last night, I noticed that Cleveland news, channel 5 was standing by to capture the happy event. 30+ of us loyal dancers were waiting for our turn to dance badly and represent Cleveland the best way we knew how.

The news anchor interviewed a family from Indiana who drove all the way to Detroit yesterday for their dance, but missed the filming by 10 minutes. So they drove home and then drove up to Cleveland to be a part of our dance.

Everyone applauded for the family’s efforts and I suddenly felt bad for silently complaining about my 35 minute commute downtown in our poop car that doesn’t have air conditioning and nearly imploded behind the RTA transit bus that was going slower than a senior citizen on rollerblades.

I wasn’t interviewed, which was fine with me. The last thing I wanted was to be talking about how AWESOMELY ADDICTED I am to the YouTube video that I watch regularly after a bad day and when Nick walks through the door, he finds me giggling hysterically with tears rolling down my face and flooding my eyes as I blindly reach for the mouse to hit PLAY again.

“I think you’re responsible for about 400 of the 37 millions hits on his video,” Nick hypothesized.

At least, I thought.

So, last night, on the evening news at 11pm, Nick and I were waiting to hear how the dancing sensation came to Cleveland and the small cult that loyally showed up to be apart of the next dancing movement. We were half listening to a story about the recent flashmobs that have caused a bit of a ruckus here in Cleveland and then suddenly, I see a small version of myself on the news, arms crossed and staring at the ground, waiting for the dancing to begin. Nick points and yells, “THERE YOU ARE!”

I was wearing a cream and lavendar sundress and was easy to pick out.

The news narrator was talking about the difference that can exist in “flashmobs.” When social media is used for good (insert quick video of the group dancing and I see myself dancing SO HORRIBLY and PROUDLY), community grows and everyone enjoys it. When social media is used for bad reasons (insert footage of teens fighting in Cleveland after someone Twitters a location for teens to meet and hundreds of teens with nothing to do show up and trouble begins), “the city will come down hard on these individuals who cause disruption to society” —

CUE THE UPCLOSE FOOTAGE OF ME DANCING LIKE A MAD WOMAN AND TWIRLING IN MY SUNDRESS SWEATING LIKE A WRESTLER.

Oh. My. LORD.

Nick starts man-squealing and half-hugging me, “THERE YOU ARE!” He points out again.

A whirling nightmare of creme and lavender blotch up the TV as I watch myself dance. OH GOD.

What have I done?

I have decided to wear sunglasses as a disguise in case anyone watched the 11pm news last night.
And I am considering whether or not I should burn that lavender sundress, too.

I Danced with Matt in Cleveland



If you don’t know the video “Dancing,” you probably haven’t spent much time with me. Roughly three years ago, someone sent this link to me a of a random guy – Matt – who ended up going around the world (42 countries) and dancing with strangers while capturing it on video. The music, “Praan” is sung in Bengali and is an adaption of a poem, “The Rhythm of Life.”

All in all, it’s my all-time favorite video and one of YouTube’s most watched videos in internet history.

The video makes me giggle, it makes me cry, and I’ve introduced nearly everyone I know to its power of watching the globe dance badly to a beautiful song sung by a teen girl with the voice of a angel.

I love it so much that I signed up to be in the next video if one was ever going to be made and in driving distance to Cleveland.
I got the email 3 days ago that Matt was coming to Cleveland and dancing downtown in front of Cleveland landmark.

On one of the hottest days of the year, I drove downtown and danced badly with a group of 30 or so. Participants will get a heads up if and when the Cleveland video is used when the final edit is finished and released on the internet. To date, the dancing vid above has over 37 million views.

Afterward, I hung around, bought a tshirt that reads: I Danced with Matt, World Tour 2011 and then talked with Matt afterward. I thanked him for dancing badly with the world and I used the video as a joyous link to encourage my friends and family to get up and dance as I announced that I was pregnant over 2 years ago. He told me that he is now a dad and travels with his 3 month old. we swapped infant stories and snapped a picture. I didn’t want to be a draping dance groupie so I kept it brief but thanked him for the dance.

So, world, wait for the next video. If there’s one thing I believe in it’s dancing, and if there’s something I believe in even more, it’s dancing badly.

A Question of Forgiveness

I think about forgiveness a lot. I even took a class in graduate school about it. “Violence and Forgiveness” was one of the most compelling and challenging courses of my life. It wasn’t the texts, or the papers. Or listening to how one Rwandan took it upon himself to try and forgive the Hutu militia who murdered his entire family.

Forgiveness. What is it?

That was the question that led every class – twice a week for 13 weeks – down a twisting, controversial path of exploration and examination.

Is it the same as letting go? Turning the other cheek, even offering the other cheek? Is forgiveness when you forget? Does it happen with time? Is it always necessary? Is it divine grace? What does it look like? What does it feel like? How do you ask for it? How/When/If do you give it to those who seek it from you?

Within the field of sexual violence, it’s often the word “forgive” is associated with the survivor contemplating forgiving the perpetrator. Some have claimed it’s a healthy part of the process. Others have adamantly stated it’s purely optional and not a mandate for moving on with one’s life post-trauma.

About half the time, though, that I see survivors struggling, it’s often not over whether or not to forgive the perpetrator (if that’s even possible or necessary is always in question), it’s more that the survivor needs to find a pathway to forgive oneself. For whatever reason, survivors – with two hands – take a large chunk of responsibility for their trauma, as if somehow they were in control of the violators’ actions. It’s probably one of the most frustrating and heartbreaking elements of healing: self-forgiveness and acceptance.

When survivors accept that what happened was not their fault (this is especially difficult of adult survivors of child abuse), they are free to rightfully channel that anger and energy toward the person who committed the act: the perpetrator, and thus begin a two footed walk toward healing. It’s awfully scary to accept that we are only in control of so much and we have minimal control (if any) over the universe, people, and other people’s actions.

When we do self-forgive, it opens up a wonderful door to a greater depth of freedom and understanding of what true power is. We have ultimate and pure power over who and what we are in response to the experiences life hands us. Nothing more, nothing less. What we ingest might be sewage, but what agree to internalize is entirely up to us. Choosing to forgive or choosing to stay in the grey of the unknown is a radical act of self-actualization, one that most dare not confront. To own up to our power, we must first face ourselves. To do that we must, paradoxically, see that we actually have very little control, but what we do have control over is quite monumental: ourselves.

The Clocks’ Arms: Companionship, Time, and Loving a Survivor of Sexual Violence

Many survivors do not have the luxury of using the phrase, “time flies” because oftentimes survivors find each day is slower than the last.  Each hour, sometimes minute, seems to pass at an excruciatingly tedious pace.  Pain simply does not make time go faster.  Trauma puts survivors in worlds where the clocks’ hands do funny things.  Clocks’ arms tend to be heavy and lazy, taking minutes to move one minute and hours to move one hour.  Sometimes it even appears that the clocks’ arms have stopped moving altogether.  Survivors live in timeless worlds because the focus is more on getting through the nightmares at night and triggered memories during the day.

Friends and families of survivors have often asked me how to be a better friend, sister, mother, father, confidant, partner, person to a survivor.  Allies want concrete strategies to help their loved ones “get through this time” and want to boost their spirits in any way possible.

My advice for loving friends and families, for concerned activists and advocates, for anyone who finds themselves in a position to truly witness the healing of a survivor is to try and walk in their world of timelessness.  Healing has no clocks, no magic, no pills, no quick fix.  Look at the process of a deeply cut wound.  Even when the bleeding has stopped, a slight tap to the wound can prompt a gush of new blood.  Even as the days pass, it is raw, sensitive, and needs intense care and vigilance.  And isn’t it true that those deep wounds, the ones that we think will heal on their own and “in no time,” are the ones we end up looking at even weeks later and finding ourselves surprised that it’s still healing and not yet ready to be a scar?

Take that process and multiply it by a thousand.

There are some wounds that will surprise you with its need for timelessness.  Step into that world with a survivor.  Put away your expectations, your ready and practiced sayings and understand that violation, at this level, cannot be put back together according to your timeline or an expert’s approximation.

If you want to be a true companion, a true advocate, a true friend, the best thing to do is to put away your clock.  Sit.  Be flexible to what s/he needs.

Love without time restrictions.