Archive for the ‘Coping with Change’ Category

Reinventing Community

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Last week I went to shul. My friends’ daughter was getting married and on the Saturday morning, the Jewish Sabbath, prior to the wedding the bridegroom was ‘introduced’ to the Torah according to Jewish tradition.

The service was held at a relatively conservative synagogue where the men and women are still kept separate during the service. In this case, the men were downstairs and the women upstairs.

Draped in their prayer shawls and sporting the traditional yarmulke, the men paid close attention to the prayers, exhortations and ceremony conducted by the rabbi and various male congregants. They actively participated in the service, only periodically glancing up at their women above.

For the women this was a perfect opportunity for a good catch up. Multiple generations of several family groups who have been closely associated – by blood and otherwise – seemed to delight in the opportunity to add another happy event in their long shared history together. Older women absolutely revelled in seeing the little ones and poured a shower of affection over them all.

I sat and observed this wonderful community as they celebrated the happy union of two of their own. It reminded me that this sort of intense experience of a community that embraces more than just ones’ family is almost totally absent in my life and I momentarily became slightly regretful. Community is a major casualty of the fast-paced, geographically disparate life I, and so many people these days, lead.

I’m convinced community is one of the relics of our past that needs to be resuscitated, and reinvented. The time is rapidly fading for social groups that exclude on the basis of insufficient connectivity – blood, race, ethnicity, nationality, age, gender or socioeconomic class. The time has come for new and expansive forms where everyone who desires to participate is welcome.

A society where everyone feels unconnected to those around them, where anonymity and emotional distance divide and separate us, is not a society to be aspired to. There needs to be some care for the needs of the group, not just for those of the individual.

I’m not sure what the answers are, but I think it’s about time we wrench the debate that currently excludes all voices other than the large corporations, who have a deeply vested interest in a large and densely-populated metropolis, and the politicians who are in their grasp.

In his novel Her Infinite Variety, Louis Auchencloss writes:

“Before the Renaissance, men looked for God in the sky. Since the Renaissance, they’ve looked for God in other men: Napolean, Lincoln, Hitler, Stalin…But in the Renaissance, men looked for God in themselves. Consider this wonderful young [protagonist]…He doesn’t trouble himself with visions of heaven and hell or dream up ideal societies to make the miserable creatures around him more miserable than they already are. He will settle for the one life he has and make it a beautiful thing.”

The predominant, if not the sole, concern of most people is survival. But life has to be more than just survival. How to make life a ‘beautiful thing’ is something we need to ponder.

We all pretty much know what we need for a healthy body, and we even have a good handle on what we need for a healthy mind. But a healthy soul needs connection and a sense of oneness, an appreciation of the ‘God’ in all of us, which community helps to foster.

It’s All About the Turkey

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

I flew with my kids to Cleveland, Ohio to spend Thanksgiving with old friends, the most loved of American holidays, Although sometimes the food ingredient combinations perplex me as an Australian, you just cannot go past Americans’ open-hearted hospitality and their love of tradition and ritual.

I find the American’s dedication to ritual both fun and reassuring. It’s a stake in the ground used to tether our affections, reminding us of who and what we really value and love in our fast-paced life, and to nudge us to devote our time and attention accordingly.

It seems to me, though, that the trick is not to be too attached to what the ritual celebration actually looks like in the end. This is where many a family relationship seems to falter. Relationships built on decades of loving care crash on the rock of inflexible and intransigent expectation, splintering into the lesser states of duty and obligation.

We all love our family and want to spend time with them when we know it will be a happy and peaceful experience. The most common obstacle to this is expectations based on past experience. Some people are so attached to the past they want to see it played on re-runs over and over.

But we all change and we all want and need different things as we change. Ritual celebrations like Thanksgiving, and Christmas, would be so much more fun – and more in the spirit of their purpose – if families could adjust and expand their notions of what these holidays can look like.

After all, the pumpkin which would sit alongside the turkey in Australia is customarily baked  in a pie with sugar and pecans. Even more bizarre to the antipodean taste, sweet potato is sometimes combined with marshmallows (I kid you not!) or baked, instead of apple, with a crumble topping.

Family members might come late, with their tattooed and/or gay partner, or not at all.

Whatever the details of the celebration look like, they are irrelevant. It’s all about the love that binds us which, like the turkey, just never changes.

One Of Those Days!

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

I remember listening to a CD by Sonia Choquette a couple of years ago, about those days, or times of our lives, we all experience when everything seems wrong, out of sync or just plain cruddy. Rather than resisting the situation, pouring all our effort and energy into trying to change it, she recommends we find what exactly it is we need to cope with the circumstances, to find peace and acceptance.

This is simple, yet profound counsel. However, while it may be simple in concept, it can be difficult in practice.

Firstly, we have to know ourselves, our desire, well enough to know what works for us. Most of us don’t even know what we need in any given situation, let alone know how to find it and acquire it.

Then we have to be able to listen to the dictates of our own heart without allowing it to be hijacked by the needs or demands of others. Most of us have been raised to believe that we should meet others’ needs before our own, that anything less is selfish. And yet, how can I share my oranges with you if I have none in my basket?

Choquette is right because just doing what we think we should be doing is unsustainable in the long term. We can only keep it going for so long. Eventually my empty basket impoverishes everyone in my life.

We find the insight and inspiration to determine what would make the circumstances bearable in the short term, and transformative in the long term, by looking within.

i remember a time when I was so down and depressed I would have been happy to end it all. It was 18 months after Ian had died and I had just moved my son into the college that his sister was already living in. I was sitting in my empty house wondering WTF I was doing.

The irony of my situation was excruciating. Since the birth of my daughter 20 years before I had been (almost literally) counting the days when it would just be Ian and me again – what I used to call, our pure selves (without all the complications of parenting and family life). For two decades I felt Ian was the love of my life – he was certainly my sense of home, the fulcrum around which my heart and soul centered. With Ian in my heart and life, everything seemed possible.

Now here I was – both of my kids successfully through school and into the University courses of their choice and optimistically launched into their new adult lives – sitting in my empty house with no one to care whether I got out of bed each morning or not.

I confided in my friend Alison that I was having increasingly urgent suicidal thoughts. She posed this question: what would I do if I could do anything? What plan could get me excited about life again? In Choquette’s terms, what did I need to be ok with my situation, without trying to change it or resist it, but to work with it?

I went home and meditated on this. I immediately knew I had to get out of my head. To do this, I had to change my surroundings. I already had a trip to Europe planned, my departure four weeks away. I called the travel agent, changed my flights and left within seven days.

I jumped on and off trains and buses all around Scotland and in my quiet meditative moments I had some of the most profound spiritual experiences of my life, nothing like I had ever experienced before. So many things that I believed, hoped, suspected to be true were now physically manifesting so that I now knew them to be true.

Like my kids, I was now launched on a whole new path, and life. It made old habits, routines and attitudes irrelevant, blasting beliefs about myself and the possibilities of what my life could look like into a whole new stratosphere; now, my life looks absolutely nothing like the life I had for 20 years as wife and mother.

And it all came from that simple question: what do I need to make this ok for me?; and then being prepared to listen to, and act on, the answer.

Transparency

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

The world only becomes transparent to man when man is completely transparent, when he is what he truly is.  Chao Yong

Transparency is the issue of the day, perhaps even the era. As we approach the transition that is part of the 2012 shift, truth and honesty, at every level, will be crucial if we are to make a peaceful and harmonious transition.

Chao Yong makes an important point about the connection between our own personal transparency, our willingness to live completely in our truth, and our ability to understand how the world works. This is particularly poignant during all the changes that are, and will continue to occur in the next few years.

In truth there is no such thing as evil, darkness or devilry. There is only Light, and the shadow that appears as dark or dangerous is merely an absence of Light.

However, if we use the darkness or the shadows for our own purpose – to conceal truths about us – then we make a reality of what is in fact nothing, but seems to be something because of our desire to make it something.

The law of attraction dictates that we experience what occurs first in our thoughts. If we seek out dark corners in our minds and in our lives to hide our thoughts, words or actions, then that darkness will become a very real experience for us.

As Chao Yong points out, this darkness has a two-way function. The veil of concealment that we rely on to prevent others from seeing in, also acts as an obstacle to our own clear view out. Thus the world will always seem confusing – nothing more than random waves of calamitous and even tragic events that flow over us, pushing and pulling us to places we wish we’d never seen.

The meaning of life, the answers to our existential questions, the constant peace that we all crave, the lasting love we all innately believe to be possible, will all continue to elude us as long as we choose to dwell in the shadows.

Transparency – the ability to be who we truly are, the willingness to act and speak in accordance with our deepest thoughts and desires – is the path to the peace, love and meaning.

Keep An Eye On the Kids

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

I’ve read and heard a bit about Gen Y kids, that they expect the world but aren’t prepared to do the hard work to get it. They seem to cause Baby Boomer employers quite a bit of grief.

Baby Boomers are used to being boss. They have retained their positions of authority by menacing the threat of unemployment over recalcitrant workers to get them to do whatever the bosses want and are perplexed when these threats have no visible effect on the younger ones. (more…)

A No-Brainer

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

So, I have another friend. She’s left the workaday world and headed off on an international adventure. This is exciting, even exhilarating, because the potentials seem endless. Anything, even her heartfelt desire, just might be possible.

But it also can be scary. So scary that in these circumstances we are all tempted to consider, as my friend is, returning to circumstances (in this case, a job) similar to those we have just mustered the courage to leave. (more…)

The Miracle of Change

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

The husband of a friend of mine walked out a few years ago. My friend struggled with all the obvious emotions – shock, anger, resentment, hurt, betrayal – but like most mothers I know, she never let any of this to distract her from her commitment to her children.

No matter how much was required of her, no matter how uneven the division of labour between her and their children’s father, she continued to do whatever it took to ensure her children were safe, happy and thriving. She is not a martyr or a moaner. She does it all gladly and with an open heart because, as she says, her children are her passion. (more…)

What’s Happening

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

The only things that are collapsing are those that are unsustainable.

This was the observation made by Gregg Braden at a lecture he gave in San Francisco on the weekend.  Speaking to the enormous changes and turmoil that the earth, its people, and its institutions and societies are experiencing, he argues that we are at the end of what he calls a Great World Age. Everything, he argues, that is not fit for the new age will not survive the transition. (more…)

All Our Dreams

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

A friend of mine recently found herself in the most enviable of positions. She had two excellent job offers on the table and she couldn’t decide which one to accept.

The first one was well within her experience and skill set, rather like the job she’s been doing the last few years. The people seemed nice, and it felt safe. (more…)

Brilliant Failure

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

Brilliant failures, a term coined by an organization that studies them, are those where people with all the right intention and commitment actually fail in their efforts, but then go on to recover and achieve brilliantly as a result of what they learned from their failure.

After failing to establish my career as a lawyer, largely because we kept moving countries due to my husband’s career, I decided to retrain as a journalist. Journalism, it seemed, could cross political and temporal boundaries. (more…)