Shared Loves

I saw this on Think Smarter (Twitter) today. I smiled. It reminded me of a conversation I had with my husband just the other day. We were sitting on the couch with our daughter, and of course, all three dogs decided that they should be close by, too. So there was the three of us, and all three of our canines, all squished together in one small space, of an entire house. We liked our shared energy, I guess.

Looking over at our daughter, and Trip, our spaniel, all cuddled up to my husband, I said to my husband that I think that a big part of every love story is your shared loves. A huge part of any close relationship (family, friends, lovers, etc.) is that you share a deep love and appreciation, for a lot of the same people, places, pets, homes, plants, neighborhood spots, schools, spiritual houses, restaurants, teams, vacation spots, activities etc. You share a profound love for a lot of the same memories. And it’s these two individual loves that are co-mingled to form this very strong and protective cloud of love, over you, and over the object(s) of your shared love.

When we were on vacation, all four of our mostly grown children were blessedly with us. Sometimes they would get into “teasing mode” and they would start laughing about little bedtime songs which I had sung to them when they were young, or goofy things that my husband and I said to get them “into line.” Not in a morose way (moreso in a reassured, peaceful way), when they were doing this, I thought to myself, “When I pass on, these are the things that they will laugh about together, when they are old and grey. These are the memories that will keep them intimately connected.” The great truth is that all four of my children all love, and yet, are also deeply, deeply loved, by the same mother. We all share a big, big love. And that love is extended with their father, and with each other, and with our shared family and friends, and with the houses we have lived in together, and with the pets who have shared our lives, and with the adventures we have shared together. This is how Love connects everything.

I love the Earth and creation. I know that you love the Earth and creation. This is how I know that we are all covered by a beautiful protective cloud of love, together, all around this Earth. We share a fathomless love for the miracle of life, and we are all loved by that same immeasurable force of Love. Sometimes I sit with this thought for a few minutes, and I just sigh into the peace of that thought, and I try to keep that wise, knowing peacefulness with me, all day long. Love’s got us covered.

Are you passing on love or are you passing on pain? Heal your pain and pass on love.

Postcard

Dear Friends,

Consider this a postcard from me, who adores you! Happy Fourth of July! I hope that you are enjoying wonderful celebrations with your family and your friends. I am enjoying a lovely, amazing adventure with my family. We are all happy and healthy. We are going to be fine. I am in a extraordinary place where apparently, every person reads on average 2.3 books per month. This is a good place. What I love best about traveling to places that are new to me, is the feeling of overwhelming, childlike wonder. I love being forced out of my own frame of reference. It’s humbling and exciting, awe-striking and rejuvenating, all at the same time.

I realize that I need some quiet time right now. I need to stay in the moment and to experience my current escapades, quietly and distraction free. So, I’m not likely to post again this week. Please forgive me. Please stay with me. I’m just lickin’ my wounds and yet feeling incredibly blessed, all at the same time. That’s just the story of life, right?

I love you. I appreciate you. I will be back with newly refreshed perspectives soon. Much love and gratitude. xo

Robert Anthony Quote: “Our consciousness, our ideas, our frame of reference  and our belief system determine whether we go to the river of life ...”

Are you passing on love or are you passing on pain? Heal your pain and pass on love.

The Funny Thing About Life

Life is funny. Life gets really interesting when you start to dig deep. Life is truly at its best, when you are willing to scratch beneath the surface and to truly experience it, at its most authentic, interesting fullness. Life gets really real, when you let yourself deep dive into your feelings. This past 24 hours I have gotten to know, and to love, people who I have known since I was a child, even better than ever. This past 24 hours, I have made new and fast and devoted friends with people whom I had once kept at a cautious and competitive distance. This past 24 hours I have grown an even more massive respect for my child’s coach, only because his pure humility never allowed him to share, with any of us, his true and poignant story of hope and triumph, until I pretentiously pried it out of him. This past 24 hours I have prepared myself (as much as I can) for the upcoming ceremony that says to me, and to the world, that another child of mine, is striding into his adult life, with me being relegated as a supportive and loving witness and cheerleader. In these past 24 hours, I let myself fall into a pure and open and intricate and trusting and total experience of staying in the present. It feels like I may have dropped another layer – a layer that I had once created with the thought that it was there to protect me, but instead was only working as a hazy muffler, to the purest sounds and vibrations of a life lived fully, and intensely connected to the moment. This last 24 hours was so amazingly good, even though everything didn’t always adhere to my “shoulds” and to my hopeful expectations and to my plans. Life is funny. Life gets really interesting when you just let it happen. Life is good. Life knows the way.

“The purpose of life is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experience.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

“What day is it?” asked Pooh.
“It’s today,” squeaked Piglet.
“My favorite day,” said Pooh.”
― A.A. Milne

Are you passing on love or are you passing on pain? Heal your pain and pass on love.

Happiness

Fun things that made me happy lately:

+We were on the beach with Trip, our Boykin spaniel puppy, and he was racing around chasing all of the little, perky, harmless sandpipers into the water. Then, in the distance, he saw the BIG game. Big Bird (an enormous prehistoric looking heron) was standing on the shore in all of his glory. Trip bounded towards Big Bird, full speed ahead. Big Bird, looked annoyed and scoffed at the puppy, and he firmly held his ground. Trip, realizing that Big Bird was not going to go the way of the sandpipers, instantly put on the brakes, and the skid marks in the sand, were several feet long. My husband said that the sand looked like bunched up carpet. Nature and animals make me happy.

+I was at the beach last night watching the sunset with my good friends. Another group of women were laughing and celebrating close by. One woman was dancing around with her long beautiful gray/white hair. When we all headed to the shore, to take pictures of the sunset, we noticed that the one woman in the circle of friends, with the long hair, wore a t-shirt that said, “I am 70 today!” She made 70 look fabulous, and I instantly pictured myself in the future with my dear friends, 20 years from now. Friends and celebrations make me happy.

+We had our weekly Facetime chat with our four “children” last night. One “child” is a grown adult man who lives in another state, two of my “children” are college men away at school, and our daughter, who is a junior in high school, chatted from her bedroom, while my husband and I sat in front of my husband’s iPad in the kitchen. I’ve noticed as I’ve gotten older, that I really enjoy “the chatter” and “the banter” of my family. I try to pay attention to the details of the conversation, but I often get lost in just watching the familiar mannerisms and energy that make each person who I love so much, themselves, and also the chatty, teasing, loving, supportive, easy energy that is the true essence of my family. My family makes me happy.

What makes you happy? Just focus on that today. Put your attention towards what makes you happy, and let the rest just be. Give yourself a happy day. You deserve it.

Motivational Monday | Amy Tangerine | Positive quotes, Reasons to be happy,  Words

Lessons of the Muffuletta

Every year, around this time, I get itchy for more routine, in the life of our family. My kids joke that around three weeks before every summer ends, I ask, out loud, in an irritated tone, and to no one in particular, at least a few times a day, “When does school start back up again?! When?! WHEN?!” I get tired and bored of the lazy, hot summer days. But then and reliably so, also every single year, when the kids actually do head back to school, and everyone in my family does get back to their individual “busy-ness”, I feel sad. I grieve the summer and having everyone buzzing around the house more, despite also having a growing yearning for summer to end. People who are never satisfied, drive me crazy. The fact that I am sometimes one of these fickle people, drives me even crazier.

My eldest son went back home to New Jersey, yesterday. My middle son heads to his university today, for his senior year in college. Within two weeks or so, my youngest two children will be back to their busy school routines, as well. And I am sitting here, feeling empty, staring at a “fall-time-of-year-To-Do-list” that is three miles long and yet I feel absolutely no motivation nor energy to get to it. The transition stage from summer to fall languishes in heat and grief and reflection and longing, for a few weeks every year, before the crispness and aliveness of autumn really, truly begins, to spark me into some action.

In other ramblings, did I mention the Muffuletta sandwiches? A few days ago, we decided to get take-out from one of our all-time favorite Italian markets. I have blogged about this market before. It’s a standout, but for people who don’t appreciate its special qualities, I have heard this market described as “a cluster.” This wonderful Italian market is typically teeming with excited, hungry people and it is filled to the brim with delicacies, piled high, in every corner and nook and cranny of the store. In short, despite their best efforts, this awesome little culinary gem in our town, is not very conducive to social distancing. At all. We haven’t been to this market since this whole coronavirus crisis began. Still, as a special treat, celebrating my eldest son being with us, we decided to get take-out sandwiches from the market. All of the sandwiches sold at this market are fabulous, and unbelievably priced for what you get, but the stand-out sandwich – the one sandwich that stands out, head and shoulders above the rest, is their Italian sub. So, with mouths watering and dreams of ecstasy, out of the six members of our family, five of us ordered an Italian sub, and our daughter ordered her second-favorite sandwich, being the shrimp po-boy.

Donning my thickest mask, I braved the still bustling market, to pick up our take-out order, and then while holding my breath as much as I could, I quickly paid for our order, and ran out of the store to meet my family at outside picnic tables, in a nearby park. As we all quickly, and full of ravenous hunger and anticipation, unwrapped the thick brown paper, holding the divine combination of delicious ingredients awaiting us, my son asked why the sticker holding the brown paper shut, said “Muffuletta”? Now, Muffuletta is not a big part of my vocabulary. I have looked up the word’s meaning, probably a dozen times in my life and then I have quickly forgotten the meaning, because frankly I am not a fan of olives. The thing that sets a Muffuletta apart from other meat and cheese sub sandwiches, is the tangy olive salad slathered all over it. But when my son first asked what “Muffuletta” was, I was still hazy about the word’s meeting and I was hoping that it was just the Italian word for Italian sub.

“Ugh! They’ve changed this sandwich!”, my middle son exclaimed, with disgust in his voice. “Why would they change it?! Where are the banana peppers?!?” he wailed. My son was expressing everything that the rest of us were feeling, except for my daughter who was delighting in her po-boy sandwich, overstuffed with toppling over fresh shrimp and yummy spicy vegetables. She was distracted, and focused on devouring her fulfilling and savory concoction.

My husband is actually the only one of us, who really loves olives, so he was pleasantly surprised with trying a new sandwich. My eldest and youngest sons, were just plain starved, so they decided to forgo taste, for satiation of hunger and they cleaned their “plates” in seconds flat. I’ve been wanting to lose a few pounds, so I immediately thought, “Well, this is better. I’ll only eat a few bites for energy, instead of scarfing down a calorie laden pile of pure deliciousness.” And my daughter, as I mentioned, was extremely pleased with her choice. My middle son, contemplated for a couple of minutes and then stood up, wrapped up what was left of his barely touched Muffuletta, (and despite being a reserved guy, who embarrasses easily and doesn’t like scenes) walked back into the store and got them to exchange his sandwich for what he was really dreaming about, a classic Italian sub. And he was happy. And he was satiated.

Now, as you probably have figured out by now, I overthink everything. I’m always looking for the “meaning” in any happening in my life. So, in the course of observing how each of my family members handled this Muffuletta sandwich experience, I noticed a microcosm of how any of us choose to handle any problem or crisis, in our lives, no matter how big or how small the conundrum may be. Even in this horrible year of the coronavirus pandemic, we all have handled it in different ways, at different times. Sometimes, we just roll with it. We go about our business, accepting that for now, “it is what is”, like my two sons did, as they gobbled down their sandwiches. Sometimes, we are pleasantly surprised that out of so much negativity, good things have come out of this otherwise, very tough situation. My husband has found that he likes working from home more than he ever thought he would, much like he realized that the Muffuletta sandwich was a delicious alternative choice for him, for now on, at the market. I usually tend to look for the silver linings, so when I get too dark in my thoughts and my emotions about this difficult year, (much like relishing in the idea that by ending up with a sandwich I didn’t really like, I wouldn’t wouldn’t end up eating too many calories), I look for all of the good that this crazy virus has brought to us, like more family time and a slowed down appreciation for things like nature and our home. And when I looked at my daughter, with her sheepish little grin, licking her chops after devouring her delicious sandwich, I was reminded that some people are actually having really positive experiences stemming for the virus situation, like manufacturers of vaccines and medical gear and grocery stores, and that’s okay. There shouldn’t be “survivors’ guilt”. We all have our times to shine. Finally, though, it’s also okay to admit that you are fed up and totally disgruntled with the situation. It’s okay to set out to change the situation and go after what you really want, much like my middle son did by marching into the store and getting a new sandwich. And we are all doing a combination of all of this right now, aren’t we? We are feverishly working on vaccines and keeping businesses afloat and on social change where it is needed. We are working on the problems day in and day out, but at the same time, we are still keeping the faith to hang on, we are making the best of the situation, and we are looking for the little hidden blessings and silver linings that this year has brought us. We also rejoice for the people who are doing well and prospering, because they give us all hope for the light at the end of the tunnel and the reminder that all is not lost.

In the end, when I go back to this market, I will be sure to order the Italian sub because that is really what I like the best. But this one little blip of getting the wrong sandwich, doesn’t take away how much I love the market, how much I love the experience of the market, nor make me lose hope that I will never get to eat one of their Italian subs again. The year 2020 is a blip for most of us. It’s a muffuletta year, in decades of Italian subs. The year 2020 will pass and we never, ever forget the lessons it taught us. Nourishment comes in many forms.

This Is Us

My husband’s colleague texted him from another state. He and his family are staying with their extended family this week for Christmas. He said that the house is crazy and chaotic, full of kids and dogs. He told my husband that it must be like living with our family.

We started having kids less than two years after we were married. We had four children in the span of eight years and we’ve always had at least two dogs and other pets, in the mix, throughout the years. This past fall has been strange and surreal, with it being just my husband, myself and my daughter at home, with the two fur babies, who are at least, out of their puppy stage (sort of) .

The three of us have become accustomed to a fair amount of “quiet”, only having to go to the grocery store once a week, laundry always being clean and hung up, and jugs of milk actually going sour before we drank/used it all. I better understand now, why people have always said to me, “I don’t know how you do/did it.” With the college boys home the last week or so, and the grown son coming home tonight, the quiet moments are sparse, the grocery runs are daily, the stinky laundry is piling up at a monumental rate and we’ve run out of milk more than once, already. We are all whizzing around in different directions and it is hard to keep up with everyone’s comings and goings, as hard as I try. The dogs have seemed to pick up on this whirling energy and they are behaving like two furry toddlers, way too hopped up on sugar. It is chaotic. It is crazy. And it is love. It is us. This is us. And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Your Soul is Alive

We are doing a lot of outdoorsy stuff this week, together as a family. It’s a good way to be together and yet be on our own, all at the same time. My second son asked us why people are in such awe of nature. We all had different answers. I said that nothing man has made can compare to the beauty and magnificence of nature. My eldest son disagreed. (He has always loved cities. On his fifth birthday, I had his birthday cake designed to be a tall building.) My son said that we are animals, too. So when we were all oohing and awing over a beaver dam, that is why we also marvel over the Hoover dam. I thought that it was a good point he made.

My husband said that we are in awe of untouched, wild nature because it is not something most of us see and experience in our every day lives. We all wondered if the park rangers are still in awe of the natural wonders they experience as part of their daily lives, work and experience. I hope so. I hope that the park rangers can view their work environment every day, the same way the rest of us are taking it in – with wonder, with amazement, with the breath-taking awe of an ecology living in synchronicity and teeming with a mass diversity of beautiful versions of Life.

“If the sight of the blue skies fills you with joy, if a blade of grass springing up in the fields has power to move you, if the simple things of nature have a message that you understand, rejoice, for your soul is alive. ” – Eleonora Duse

Laughing Is Recommended

I think one of my favorite things about my family is how much we laugh together. Yesterday, I spent a beautiful (and increasingly rare, as our family grows up and out) day with all of my family members and some extended family members, too. The common theme and thread of the day, no matter what we were doing whether it be eating, or talking or playing games, was laughing. We crack each other up. We’re silly. We’re teasers. We laugh hard. We laugh loud. We laugh together and often.

Laughter has been proven by science to decrease stress hormones, lower one’s blood pressure, increase the release of endorphins and strengthen the immune system. Some studies suggest that if you laugh often, you may even increase your life span by a significant amount. Laughter really is the best medicine. Honestly, though, even if I found out it were bad for me, I wouldn’t stop laughing. It feels too good. I am so grateful to be surrounded by loved ones, who find life and those who live it, to be as amusing as I do.

“A good laugh is sunshine in the house.” – William Thackeray

“Among those whom I like or admire, I can find no common denominator, but among those whom I love, I can: all of them make me laugh.” — W. H. Auden

“As soap is to the body, so laughter is to the soul.” — A Jewish Proverb