Category: Uncategorized

  • Writing this post is one small improvement I’m making in my life.

    Daily writing prompt
    What’s one small improvement you can make in your life?

    An underground lagoon of water inside a cave. On hot days, it is cooling. On cold ones, it’s a hot spring. Either way, it is eternally refreshed by a constant stream of clean, fresh water. High above the pool, there is a space in the rock ceiling through which sun and moon light alternating stream through. The sunlight feeds the mosses and ferns that grow on rock outcroppings on the walls.

    This cave can be accessed from a tunnel. But at first, the tunnel was very small. I’ve had to dig out the tunnel bit by bit to get to the pool. I shoveled and scraped a little bit here and there, carried out the dirt and stones back out of the back of the tunnel. I had to carry it some distance from the entrance lest it built up too high and the whole thing caved in. One day, I could finally see the pool clearly. And so I kept going. Each day, the work of widening the tunnel and carrying out the garbage became easier and easier. I could even say that I enjoyed it a bit, even though it was work.

    Finally, I could reach the pool. I swam and rested. I drank the clear water. I floated and let the water hold me. It flowed around me. I could stay in here forever. But I won’t.

    The world above would miss me if I stayed here.

    And in any case, the pool is infinite, ubiquitous, ever-present. All the work I put in wasn’t for nothing, after all.

    When I started writing this blog, I didn’t set out to write every day. Even once I found the daily prompts (or they found me, perhaps?), I didn’t set a goal to respond to them every day. And yet, here I am, having just posted to this blog fifty days in a row. I didn’t ever set this as a goal. Still, it feels like something of a milestone which, in turn, feels like an appropriate moment for reflection.

    Or not.

    I had this sort of idea in the back of my head that at some point, maybe today, I’d write a “what I learned from blogging for fifty days in a row” post. Or “what happened when I blogged daily.” Or “the benefits of posting everyday.” My understanding is that those are very SEO friendly terms … or something. (The word “understanding” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence.)

    But none of this has been about pleasing any other person (much less an algorithm, search engine, or even, I’m sorry to say, readers). It’s been about me. Making myself content. Giving myself space. I didn’t know it at the time, but it’s been about digging towards that pool of my own creativity. And there’s still possibility there.

    So. Will I be back tomorrow?

    I really don’t know. Because the other thing this has been about has been to give myself permission to just be in each moment, to do the things that feel most nourishing to me, to always look for opportunities to extend myself grace. Who knows what tomorrow’s daily prompt will bring?

    I’m just focused on the grace, the space, the nourishment of this moment, this breath.

    ***************

    If you enjoyed what you’ve read here, please check out other posts. Likes, shares, and reposts help get my writing out to where it needs to be. I’m also grateful for financial support

  • Once again: me, myself, & these writers.

    Daily writing prompt
    List the people you admire and look to for advice…

    I admire myself and I look to myself for advice. I’ve been through some stuff and I’m unlike anyone else in the world, so I’m the best person to look to for advice. No one else understands me as well as I understand myself.

    Just earlier today, I was feeling rather anxious. I asked myself what I needed and then, based on the answer, I sat down and wrote in my journal for a while to sort and sift through my anxiety and other feelings. By the end, I came to a sort of piece of advice for myself. This advice was uniquely tailored to me and this situation and yet, it’s something that I will be able to return to again and again when I feel similarly anxious in the future. And maybe at some point I’ll be able to share this advice through my writing and it will be helpful to someone else.

    I also admire and seek advice from a great many writers. Here are some blog posts I’ve written about books that have helped me over the past year or so.

    Hood Wellness by Tamela J. Gordon

    The Man Who Could Move Clouds by Ingrid Rojas Contreras

    Bad Indians by Deborah A Miranda

    Remember Who The F*ck You Are by Candyss Love

    Black Liturgies by Cole Arthur Riley

    Cancer Journals by Audre Lorde

    I will be writing about more books by writers that I admire and from whose wisdom and advice I’ve benefited, learned, and grown. If you’re interested in more book recommendations, please subscribe!

    If you enjoyed what you’ve read here, please check out other posts. Likes, shares, and reposts help get my writing out to where it needs to be. I’m also grateful for financial support

  • Yes I vote in political elections in spite of…

    Daily writing prompt
    Do you vote in political elections?

    … the fact that I grew up on DC, a place where the license plate “slogan” appropriately reads, “Taxation without representation”. Yes. Residents have no representation in Congress. And, yes, residents pay taxes. And yes, I went to school alongside the children of senators and congresspeople who lived there because they were representing their states or districts. And yet, their classmates and families didn’t have the same representation.

    …. I have to admit that there have been elections when I haven’t voted, when it was too difficult to get a ballot because I was living somewhere else… and, yes, sometimes I haven’t voted because I lived in an area where (due to electoral college or due to the high concentration of democrats)my vote wouldn’t matter (yes, even down ballot).

  • Yes. I’ve been camping.

    Daily writing prompt
    Have you ever been camping?

    … and I’d do it again, but only if my kids really wanted to go camping with me. I enjoy the comforts of my bed, a nearby bathroom and toilet, the climate control, the absence of bugs.

    Don’t get me wrong, there are certain things about camping that I still really enjoy: the simplicity, all the little gadgets and gear, a camp fire, setting up a little patch of space to make it your own, even if it’s just as big as a sleeping bag, the night sky.

    I mentioned before that I went to some very bougie schools. One of them had an outdoor education program on a few acres of land next to Shenandoah National Park. It was pretty bare bones: platform tents with cots, outhouses, a basic shower house. But there was a fully functional kitchen and a classroom building both of which had electricity and running water. Each year, we’d go stay there for up to a week with our classmates and teachers. I spent a few summers there working as a counselor.

    Once, much later on, I went camping for one night with a group of friends. It was much more rustic than that. We basically carried some blankets and beer through a stream and into the woods not too far from where some of them lived. It was nice, but in the morning, I was aching and sore, maybe even slightly feverish. One of the friends we were with had spent a good portion of time living in a jungle in Southeast Asia. He was a refugee and his life was less “camping” and more “surviving” and I assume that this version of staying out overnight in the forest probably looked pretty cushy from his point of view. My whole body ached. “You’re not used to this,” he said by way of explanation as to why I felt sick. And he was right.

    The one time I had come even close to the way he had lived in the jungle, I went to visit an army camp in the jungle on the Thai-Burmese border. For me, the hike up the mountain was difficult. At the top, there were a few bamboo and wood buildings, similar to the ones in the refugee camp where I’d been teaching. I was given a room to myself while the soldiers shared a communal one. I was the only woman at the base at the time. Tired from the walk, I slept well even with just the bare-bones accommodations of a few blankets on the floor. But that wasn’t really camping.

    I’ve taken my kids car camping. They enjoy all the coziness of sleeping together in a family tent where they can explore the myriad zippers and pockets, consider how best to set up their own spaces. And the s’mores too. One time, my daughter carried around the bag of marshmallows the whole time, as if it was a comforting stuffed animal. I think she was rather shocked when we eventually ripped open the bag and roasted the contents over the fire.

    No matter how flat the ground, it always seemed like the few times we went camping with the kids, we’d end up having shifted, rolled, and slid through the night. I felt like the princess and the pea, only it would be a rock or two that I inevitable end up on top of and would feel even through the camping mats. I suppose that enough of these sore and achy mornings and the idea of camping has lost its appeal. Or maybe I am a bit of a princess.

    Over the past year, I’ve had many nights when aches and pains from chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation have disrupted my sleep. I’ve been grateful to have a bathroom (and painkillers) so close by. I spent a small fortune on various pillows and bedding in different shapes and sizes for maximum nighttime comfort. So for right now, I’m glad I’m not sleeping on a forest floor.

    But maybe, JUST maybe… I can begin to imagine a time when my body feels well enough that sleeping directly under the stars, even with a rock in my back, will be all the comfort it needs.

  • Right now. This is a risk.

    Daily writing prompt
    When is the last time you took a risk? How did it work out?

    Every time I write, whether it’s pen to paper or hands to keyboard, I’m taking a risk. I know. It doesn’t seem like it. I’m sitting in the comfort of my own house. I’m doing something (writing) I’ve been doing every day for the last month and which I’ve been studying for much, much longer. It should be easy, right? Low-risk? Safe even?

    Nope.

    It’s time and energy towards something that’s seemingly frivolous. What if I’m misunderstood? What if I run out of ideas? What if the creativity spring runs dry? What if I wasted it all on this one post? What if the time I’m taking towards doing this would be better off spent raising chickens or cleaning my kitchen? What if a meteor hits my house right as I’m sitting here? What if I develop carpal tunnel syndrome from all this typing?

    What if I die a Taurus? What if I die on purpose?
    What if it wasn’t even worth it? What if I’m walkin’ alone?
    What if I choke on this Slurpee? What if I make it big?
    What if my car exploded
    While I’m casually pumping the gas and smokin’ a cig?
    What if my life was loaded?
    (Lyrics from Doechii’s Stanka Pooh)

    It’s putting myself, my thoughts, ideas words, images out there. Judgement and ridicule waiting just around each corner. Or they could just collapse out there in the world, unseen, unknown, unrecognized?

    But there are worse things. Like what?

    Playing it safe. I could just go clean the kitchen. I could just stand up from this desk and, well, quite literally do any number of other things: go for a walk, read, drive to the beach, buy a plane ticket to the Maldives, take a nap on the couch, blow dandelion seeds, steal a car, etc… And, yes, all of those have risks involved.

    I could do what I was doing before, the low-risk, safe option: writing and submitting that writing for someone else (a publisher or editor or judge) to “approve” my writing, to decide it was worthy of publication. But in the end, that “safe” option was much more damaging to me, to my emotional health. I allowed each rejection to be a blow to my self image, my self worth. I let them dim my light.

    Finally, I decided to stop playing it safe, to stop asking for approval from other people, and to start saying “yes” to myself. I started this blog. Each time I hit publish, it’s a risk. Someone could “steal” my words or twist my ideas. I have just enough experience in the world to know that there are ways in which what I publish here could be used against me. But I don’t spend too much time thinking about that, doing risk assessments, or trying to protect myself and keep everything one hundred percent safe. If I did that, I’d be trapped in an endless cycle of perfectionism, double checking, making sure I was pleasing everyone else all the time. I know where that cycle kept me: in silence.

    Instead, what I do is I trust. I trust the source of my creativity, I trust my lived experiences and, above all else, I trust myself. I breath. And I smash that button: publish.

  • The risks of living and writing.

    Daily writing prompt
    Describe a risk you took that you do not regret.

    I do not regret anything that was a risk. The only things that I do regret are the decisions I made that involved no risk at all, that were the easy or the safe way to go. I wrote yesterday about one of my more obvious regrets that involved very little risk: attending an MFA in creative writing. The bigger risk would have been to trust myself and go it “alone” without the so-called support of a large institution.

    This followed on the heels of a different risk that I took that I do not regret: volunteering as a teacher in Karenni Refugee Camp on the Thai-Burma border. I’ve written a bit about my experiences there here and here.

    Some of the reasons why it was a risk was that it wasn’t strictly legal for non-refugees to be living there. And the job didn’t really come with the dressings of a job in the west: a contract, insurance, union rep, HR, running water, etc…. I wouldn’t really leave with references for my next job.

    Today, I’m still trying to sort out how I can write about my time there, how the risks involved barely register now compared to how I grew from being there. I wrote my whole creative writing thesis on the topic of my time there and some history of Karenni people. And I’ve tried to shop that writing around a bit. I’ve written a few things (here) about it that have been published.

    Ironically, I think that the in moving and teaching in the camp, I took the bigger risk and I have no regrets about it. Even though I was often “confined” to my house (concerns that the refugees would get in trouble with local authorities for “harboring” a foreigner), I felt a great expansiveness and even freedom. I felt that I could be present to myself in those moments. It was trying to return to the states and live more safely that I regret. “Safe” means small, narrow, confined. In the camp, I wrote on occasion, but not nearly as much as I did when I returned to the States and entered my MFA program. The difference was that my writing in the camp was just for myself. There was no judgement involved, just expression. Not so when I was studying writing.

    I hope that in this blog, I find more ways to write about my time in Thailand and specifically in the refugee camp in ways that feel expansive and freeing and, yes, maybe even a little risky. No. A lot risky.

  • The stranger within.

    Daily writing prompt
    Describe a random encounter with a stranger that stuck out positively to you.

    When I was first diagnosed with breast cancer, I had to be transported from the hospital to the radiation center for treatment. The people who transported me usually sat with me while I waited to see the doctor or to receive the treatment. Needless to say, the people who were driving me places were strangers to me. But I had a few encounters with them that stuck out to me.

    The first was a younger woman who had driven the ambulance-like vehicle. She asked me what kind of cancer I had as we were waiting outside of the radiation room. After I answered her, she started telling me about how her mother had breast cancer too. I had just received the diagnosis and still had no idea what my treatment plan would be. She talked about the chemotherapy her mother went through and she said that the one thing was to try to eat whatever I can to keep my strength up through the treatments. The fact that she took the time to share with me her advice and to share with me a story of someone on the other side of their experience with breast cancer gave me hope. And through my treatment, I kept her words in mind about keeping my strength up. Because the advice came from a patient (through her daughter) it was probably more powerful than even what the doctors and nurses said. And I remembered them when the chemotherapy made everything tasteless.

    Another transportation person made me laugh out loud, great belly laughs that left me breathless right when I needed that. He also shared this wild story about when he was in the marines. It involved a very specific type of beer that is only made and sold in Wisconsin. It happened to be one of my favorite beers when I lived there. Our encounter was very, very brief, but we connected on such a niche subject that it made it feel somehow preordained. It made the world seem small, the specifics of my life not all that unique after all. And that’s exactly what I needed to feel in that moment.

    One other young man who helped my transport also had a very short interaction with him. He asked me almost right away, “Are you a teacher?” It was such a pointed question, that I started racking my brain, “Was this a former student?” No, he wasn’t. By way of explanation he said I just seemed like a teacher. I took it as a compliment and I think he meant it as such. Later on, one of the women who cleaned the hospital rooms and I got to chatting. She talked about some of her recent difficulties. “I’m usually shy, but you have a good energy.” Both of these comments were also what I needed to hear in those moments. Mostly because everyone I’d been seeing saw me primarily as a patient and I was beginning to see myself just as a patient. I had months (years?) of interactions ahead of me where I would be reduced to “patient”. Both of these interactions with strangers reminded me that I’m human first. They told me that even in this role as a patient and in these medical settings, I was more than just someone to be helped, that my presence or energy could also help someone else. I guess you could say that in a way, these interactions empowered me to see myself as more than a patient.

    Lastly, dear reader, you too are a stranger to me. And yet, here you are, reading my words. And maybe I am becoming something less of a stranger to you. Just as I am becoming less of a stranger to myself.

    ***********

    Likes, shares, reblogs are welcome and help us all become less strange to one another! (As do tips … Thanks!)

  • Breath, Water, Sun, Love, Body.

    Daily writing prompt
    What are 5 everyday things that bring you happiness?

    Breath Maybe it’s because I’ve had a few bad asthma attacks, but I am grateful for each breath, that I have my breath to lead me through trying times, and that I can control my breath rather than let it control me.

    Water That first sip in the morning brings me happiness. I’m also grateful that water carries away waste from where I live. And cleanses me. I once lived in a place where there was no indoor plumbing and water (for cooking and bathing) had to be carried from a nearby tank or well. I try to keep this in mind when things feel difficult and overwhelming: the gift of clean drinking water always just a few steps away.

    Sun Even on a grey day like today, I know it’s there, bringing us light and energy, growing our food and plants and other beautiful things.

    Love I was just listening to Bob Marley. For the first time, I really thought about the words, “Could you be loved? Then be loved.” What a profound directive. I can love myself. So, I love myself.

    My Body From that first stretch in the morning or wiggling of my toes… my body bring me profound happiness, allowing me to take in my surroundings, enjoy my senses, communicate (including typing on my computer right now), carry me places, sing, make music and art. I hope I take care of my body as well as it takes care of me.

  • Shake and Shimmy, if you dare!

    Daily writing prompt
    What’s the most fun way to exercise?

    The most fun way to exercise is to leap from line to line in the crosswalk. Much to the consternation of the waiting drivers, late for work or for a first date or on their way to sit with a sick relative and not knowing that the feat of athleticism that they are witnessing. The leaps are glorious indeed, a performance of the first order. They, the unwitting audience.

    No. The most fun way to exercise is double dutch (which I cannot do but which I never get to watch enough of), tearing up the grass slip and sliding (worth the earful about damaged lawns later), throwing rocks in the creek (to the the annoyance of the water spirits).

    No. The most fun way to exercise is to bop across the nearby park, to Stevie Wonder’s I Wish, with your dog, having grown used to such antics, as the oblivious partner, more impressed by the scent of another dog’s urine than by your side step, side step, spin move.

    The most fun way to exercise is to step out of the shower and shake yourself off like your dog might but rarely does and then to laugh until your belly jiggles like a bowl full of jelly and then laugh some more because jelly belly and isn’t this human body so funny?

    The most fun way to exercise is to open the shade by the front window and shake and move and groove and shimmy to Bill Wither’s Lovely Day and then Diana Ross I’m Coming Out and then Beyonce’s Halo and when your son tells you that’s embarrassing, you tell him that that’s only because he doesn’t have moves like this and so he joins you to prove otherwise and the drivers at the stop light by your house can probably see you (you opened the shade anyway) but that doesn’t matter because they don’t even know the greatness they are part of and maybe you should take this show on the road through all of the crosswalks across the land.

  • I suffer from main character syndrome.

    Daily writing prompt
    If you could be a character from a book or film, who would you be? Why?

    I’m living my own book. My life is its own film. I like who I am. I feel no need to become someone else in fantasy or in reality.

    I guess that means the answer to the question of which character from a book or a film I want to be is: me.

    Much of what I have been taught is that to focus on myself to such a degree is egotistical. Much of what I have been taught is wrong. Capitalism, white supremacy, patriarchy: all of that depends on all of us hating ourselves at least a little. Having grown up on a capitalist society, it has been no small feat to overcome these feelings. It’s no small feat to write about them right now.

    Even now, writing this, I keep hesitating. What will they think of me that I choose myself?

    But that is not my real voice. That’s a voice that was put there over many years. It’s a voice of self doubt and self censorship. And the only way to overcome it is to write directly through it, to let go of the hesitation.

    I return to the question, again and again: what needs to be written? What do I need to write?

    I am alive. I am alive. I am me.