Up In the Air

December 30, 2009

What spark happens when you meet and simply cannot take your eyes off each other? In the film “Up In the Air” a man sits in an airport lounge sipping a drink and begins to flirt with the woman at the bar. Sophisticated cultural talk draws her in? Erudite art history references? Nope. They fire off reasons why Hertz has more perks than the local car rental company. When their sexual tension really heats up they move to share a table together and start slapping down plastic. That’s right. They bond over who has more plastic privilege cards for which traveling salesman moment.

We have seen this character before in Willy Loman, as he portrayed in the play Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, a haggard salesman politely fired after a couple decades on the road and poor sales figures. Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) is almost replaced with a computer screen, but he tenaciously protects his niche–firing people in person. But Loman has a wife he loves and two strong sons. Ryan has no one. Literally. Yet the two suffer the same ennui. They can’t see the point. Why have they lived the life they did? One commits suicide and the other falls for the girl with the plastic, Alex (Vera Farmiga).

The card as object to spark romance for Ryan and Alex is consistent. Before sex, Ryan is forever flipping through plastic cards to open the hotel room door. This is one aloof guy and yet when his character finally softens some, he offers her to take his plastic room card. She is more than flattered. Turns out the plastic cards represent their emotional texture; he has fabricated an entire life on artificial material and she plays her boyfriend for a card-carrying fool in the end.

Funny how film can evoke intense emotional portrayals through simple objects. The camera can also do the same through physical movement. We constantly see Ryan in motion as he has refined entering and departing an airport in record time. That’s all these two are together–robotic movement and plastic commitment. Actually that’s an unfair line because it is not completely true. On screen Ryan and Alex show real chemistry–especially Clooney as he begins to fall for her. He even makes a heroic dash to find her in Chicago. I won’t spoil for you what he discovers when he arrives there. Alas, in the end, it is Ryan who suffers most from not knowing what he wants.

That’s the key. Simply knowing what you don’t want is a real challenge but usually easier to define. Yet truly knowing what you really do want is freeing. And film provides anyone that fantasy space to toy around, to ask the question: what would I do if I were that character? The story on the screen forces us to reflect in the dark.


Moon Dance

December 29, 2009

In a few days I will be standing on a beach, warm air circulating around me and staring rather perplexed at the ocean where for sure it looks like someone is simply holding a bright fluorescent light directly over the dark night water’s surface. Not so, of course. That’s simply how the full moon appears on the ocean in Kailua-Kona on the Big Island Hawai’i.

Depending on which beach we decide on, my younger brother and I will hear a soft crash of repetitive waves or perhaps lapping water as it softly makes its way up the sandy beach incline and then recedes just a little. Sounds are crystal clear at night in this small beach town. Sure, you hear random partyers belly laughing, but mostly the geckos, wind, and ocean create a pleasant humm of life that sounds so sweet. These two sensory experiences–sight and sound–never grow routine to me when I visit Hawai’i over and over again.

They always surprise and comfort me. I could probably use a little of that happy reward arriving so easy from nature as I finish out 2009. Flat out true that this last year kicked my butt. Not an elegant or sophisticated confession, but there you go. A few weeks ago I sat on the sofa in this house where I’m staying temporarily and a name floated into my mind, dropping in like a sea bird swiftly, suddenly and from no where. Literally. I plopped the woman’s name into Google and sure enough she is a somatic therapist in Petaluma.

Tomorrow I’ll finish my fourth day working with her–two last week and two this week. Why? I couldn’t stop crying. Clearly I go to work, engage in my life, participate as I need to, and yet then the tears fall unpredictably and steadily. So early in the morning I drive the half hour commute and arrive to this poster charming town, mixing trendy expensive cafes with 7-Eleven–always the high and the low so artfully at play in Americana. I’m grateful, of course, for artisan coffee and pastries. Never one to complain while I am enjoying my white privilege. Only after so many financial splurges–including the therapy for goodness sake–do I recall vividly living in a neighborhood four years running where every evening I would step over a body or two, sound asleep on the sidewalk concrete, so I could unlock the front gate. But I digress, yes?

This woman and I, we do this work together in a simple but powerful way. She has a spacious office and a tree in fall colors sways outside the window. Could have sworn I saw her at Costco the other day stocking up on Kleenex boxes in anticipation of our next session. I go through those suckers by the handful. Not on purpose.

This is stored up grief. I sound happy about my grief because I am. For once I can open up enough to let go of stale and dusty pain. This means all the sideways behavior I’ve exhibited all my life is at long last taking a hike. Truly. Early childhood struggles, challenging adult relationships, and experiencing criminal behavior can all take their toll over the years. Mind you as an ex-drunk much of the struggle created itself because of the drink. For that part I will always take responsibility.

And some say that trauma can lodge in the body. It’s true for me and so we simply visualize how to welcome deeper breathing and creative visualizations. Meditation helps so much with this. And the moon. After these sessions, I hike in the Petaluma hills in a beautiful stretch of city designed park. Last Tuesday I looked up and saw a sliver of the moon. I knew the moon would be full by the time I arrived in Hawai’i and so my winter work in this way will connect to the reward of a vacation later and to the moon’s global presence.

That’s the insight that intrigues me so deeply this season. A few days ago I experienced this book by Ekhart Tolle, A New Earth, Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose. I write that I experienced it rather than I read it because the words suggest shifting your life around in the moment–right here and now. Title sounds a touch new agey but Tolle’s thesis is simply that we humans today live by our ego and to sustain our existence we need instead to communicate through acceptance, enjoyment, and enthusiasm, creating a spiritual discipline. He advocates that our primary purpose is to cultivate an inner life and then your secondary function will appear–like your day job. I know this all sounds far fetched and strange, yet there it is.

A strange name appears to me and I follow it. I cry. I watch the moon during the day and cry, anticipating (and not staying in the here and now!) when I will view the same moon just changed and at night in a different land. All of which is to say that I can hardly wait for New Year’s Eve! I am not making a single resolution other than to stare at the big bright moon. And bring tissues just in case some residual waterworks happen. Even so I am pretty sure I will take a few dancing steps under the full moon to celebrate such welcome change.


Winter Windows

December 27, 2009

One time I remember looking through a tall kitchen window at a banana tree in the back yard. In my arms I held a very alert ten-month-old infant girl. The backyard was so vibrantly green she reached to touch the color and her hand collided with the window. She looked up at me in fear. I smiled and laughed, holding her closer while sliding the window open. This time she reached her hand out and now touched fresh air–all fear gone. I closed the window and we practiced noticing it. I breathed on it and made a little smiley face. This infant taught me what a window is. But we spent most of the time with the window open, creating space to just be in the moment of wind, sunshine, and color.

This winter I have been opening and closing many windows. Sometimes you are just enjoying your day and put your hand up to explore and yet discover the window is closed even though the view seemed clear. Mostly I assume people are transparent but what a surprise to learn their windows. Many are encased in a glass shell that only seems visible until you try to share a discovery together. I am open to learning though and having a better ability to see.

On the morning of Christmas Eve, I jumped out of bed in a rush to complete errands for the day. My hurried steps came to a halt when I saw an elderly woman sitting on a milk crate right next door. I just watched her for a second, trying to notice her window. She appeared impatient and unclear.

“What are you waiting for?” I asked.

“Here,” she said, stabbing the air with a UPS tag.

“Oh, the truck is on its way?”

“They don’t understand. Call and no understand. Talk and talk, no answers,” she retorted in a thick Russian accent.

She is scrawny in the way old people sometimes shrink; her face carries many wrinkles; her skin appears grey and stressed especially around her grimacing mouth.

“Let me call for you and see when they will arrive,” I offered.

She eyed me suspiciously and then waved as if to say suit yourself. The UPS woman sounded surprised that a Russian grandmother had perched herself on the street in protest of not knowing when the package would arrive. I explained that her door buzzer does not work and walking is difficult for her. Sure enough the disappointing news was confirmed. Arrival time was a three and a half hour window.

I reported back to the sceptical grandmother and she looked off in the distance, saying I told you so without words. But a window had been opened.

She turned to me smiling a little, cautiously. The whole time I had been chuckling in understanding; “Geesh, people these days. They can’t even deliver a simple package.” I too was expecting a delivery, so we bonded over our shared dilemma.

“You know computer?” she asked me.

“A little,” I said.

“I pay you to teach me e-mail? Come over help. Everything on screen not understanding,” she admitted sheepishly, without blame this time.

“Sure, I would be happy to help,” I said, smiling and wondering what the heck I was getting myself into.

The next morning at 9 a.m. on Christmas Day, I called her landline and she buzzed me in from the second floor. Climbing the stairs was easy for me, but I worried how she managed every day with no elevator in the building.

She greeted me happily though and showed me her immaculate one bedroom apartment. She had a flat screen TV in her bedroom blaring loud and one in the living room. She had made us tea mixing Rose Hip and Mango in a soothing blend that I enjoyed with two lumps of brown sugar. And she told me her story.

Born in 1938 in Russia, Natasha fled her native country to escape the Nazis. But her father and many of her mother’s relatives were not so fortunate. She found safety in Europe and then finally moved to Southern California as a young adult. She was tall and extremely overweight, which caused her trouble with her feet. So she visited a female podiatrist, a doctor who had just earned her degree. Eventually she would slim down some and in the meantime had formed a friendship with the doctor, who asked Natasha if she thought she could open her own practice.

“What’s to ask? Either work or not. Just try,” Natasha said, staring at me as if to say people ask the dumbest questions. Natasha took a job in the new office and worked there for 24 years.

As she aged, she decided to move north, so she could be closer to her brother who lived in Marin. Her mother was living in a senior community home behind the Jewish Community Center in San Francisco. She bought her condominium four years ago and her mother passed away recently. Plus her brother moved to Venice Beach, where he opened a restaurant and lives with his wife and their daughter.

She had pictures everywhere of family. They are all tall, fair skinned, blond, and beautiful. In one photo Natasha stands around five feet eight, wide set, and elegant in a business suit. Today she is probably around five feet five, grey hair that is thin but still full, and maybe 120 pounds. She had dressed up for my visit in black slacks, grey sweater, and a gold necklace. A dramatic change from the boots and sweatpants she wore when I first met her.

She’s cantankerous, but smiles when I laugh at her ornery spirit. Old people help me see the future by observing closely the way they create their present moments. She was lonely but still fighting and she knew it.

“What god? God allah, god jesus, god where? I don’t believe in God,” she blurted.

I waited patiently.

“But in the morning, you know. I think maybe worse,” she said touching her the top of her head. “Wasn’t cancer just a tumor. Took it out but then bad infection. My niece found me on the floor,” she started to explain.

I stopped chewing on the bagel, cream cheese, and salmon she had served me.

“What happened?” I said, hooked for sure.

“Nothing. Top of your head just scalp. Brain fine,” she laughed despite herself. “Leave off, leave off. Brain covered fine. In the morning I say to power not god some faith higher power, thank you not worse, could be worse,” she finished.

She motioned for me to touch the back of her head and, yes, the round top part of her scalp was missing. She feels fine, she said, and functions well, but sometimes she says she notices her memory is off. She asked me to recall a word she had used to describe an item on the menu in her brother’s restaurant. I did and we moved on.

She was ready to begin her lesson. We shuffled to her bedroom where her laptop sat. She pulled out the chair for me to sit in front of the computer, so I could write down the steps she would need to memorize. Instead, I found a chair in the kitchen and returned. She looked proud to sit in front of her laptop. I only said a few words and quickly the Yahoo account she had not used for four months was up and running just fine.

We experimented by her sending me an e-mail and then she went into her contacts–13 of her friends–and sent them a friendly holiday note. She looked teary-eyed and I stared at the computer screen as if it were a window. I almost put my hand on the glass.

We returned to the living room and relaxed on her sofa. I reached for her cell phone and said I would send her a text message. Now she seemed totally verklempt. She grumbled some about her family ignoring her and telling her she was too old to learn how. I wrote a jokey line about seeing her in the ocean so we could learn how to surf together and then sent it. I told her that a 13-year-old had taught me how to text message around a year ago. Before that I would receive texts, but have no idea how to reply.

One thousand one. One thousand two. One thousand three. One thousand four. We waited forever.

Ching-a-ling-ling chimed a bell from her cell phone. The look on her face was identical to the look on the infant girl’s face when we opened the kitchen window together and she could fling her hand freely into fresh air–surprise and joy. Right then my younger brother called from Hawaii and while I chatted for a few minutes, she read her text.

We reached for a calendar she had on her living room coffee table and scheduled a time for me to return for lunch and more learning. She didn’t rush me out, but narrated that she had two buses to catch in time to have her nails done before joining friends for dinner at a Russian restaurant on Geary Street. Busy lady it turns out.

On her calendar she wrote down when it was time to change the flowers. At least four vases were full with different kinds of vibrant color. She had healthy potted plants everywhere; they glistened green in the sunshine. She walked with me outside to her fire escape, which doubled as a veranda where she had hung outside flower pots.

“But only one now. Told me only one,” she said, waving to the back wall of cookie cutter condos that stretched as far as the eye could see. Hers was the only flower pot. “Don’t understand,” she muttered.

Standing in her doorway, I said with a huge smile that I would text her a delicious menu for our future lunch. She literally doubled over in laughter. I waved good bye and she gently closed the door.

What’s that old Chinese saying about when one window closes another window of opportunity opens. This winter I’m learning to watch for and appreciate those moments.


Fantastic Mr. Fox’s Signature Moves

December 23, 2009

I guess we all hope to discover our true nature. In the stop-motion animation film “Fantastic Mr. Fox” each character reveals what she desires the most. Mr. Fox (George Clooney) strives to settle down as a family man, but over time his instinct to steal returns. Living comfortably underground in a happy hole with his wife, Mrs. Fox (Meryl Streep), and their son Ash (Jason Schwartzman), he admits that the locale makes him feel poor. So, against his real estate agent’s advice–that is, Badger (Bill Murray)–he moves his family up–way high into a tree. A fresh coat of paint and all three settle in as foxes in a tree might do.

But a fox is a fox is a fox. Soon Mr. Fox persuades his possum friend Kylie (Wally Wolodarsky) to adventure into the night and steal chickens. These two nocturnal buddies can’t help themselves and soon commit three nights of vandalism, which brings the entire animal community to ruin as humans retaliate. To survive, Mr. Fox calls on every animal’s unique talent to synchronize, so they can defeat the big bad guys hunting them down.

The story is for children and yet adults probably understand more deeply that we are stuck with family–either the daily one around us or the one found in wider community. Mrs. Fox admits she shouldn’t have married her husband because he is so incorrigible. Her son Ash listens to her confession and by the story’s end accepts that like his father he is oddly different, but in service to others his talents are vital.

This time of year such an honest storyline reminds me how life is what happens while we plan for the future. Mrs. Fox keeps imagining that her husband will change, but he is who he is and will continue that way. She still loves him though. And through this model her son learns to accept the cousin, Kristofferson (Eric Anderson) who visits and places Ash even more in the shadow because this Kris really has obvious strengths–he can run fast, meditate, and thinks before leaping impulsively. By the end, Mrs. Fox is pregnant again and so the story will repeat with her husband promising to resume predictable family life and then most likely recycling to his true nature–stealthily stealing chickens by moonlight.

So we humans also move forward through time accepting each other in such animated and valiant ways. Sometimes redemption happens as with Rat, who guards the apple cider moonshine and flirts outrageously with Mrs. Fox. For this he will die, but before he floats downstream, he reveals the location of a kidnapped youngster. Even if we have woefully gone awry in our instincts, movie stories, like life, give us that second chance.

Only the humans remain truly and still clueless in the end. They believe after countless attempts to capture the animal rascals that they can succeed simply by watching the manhole and wait for the critters to surface. Instead, the Fox family burrows their way into a massive supermarket and stock up on goodies to dine on.

Every character’s signature gesture is obvious: Mr. Fox whistles and snaps his “fingers,” Mrs. Fox paints beautiful landscapes with streaks of lightning, Ash wears a towel around his neck as he strives to achieve super feats, and Kristofferson curls up in a yoga position to meditate, which he learned from his ailing father.

One of the final scenes shows possum Kylie sashaying his hips and Mr. Fox confirms that is now his signature move. We all bring a unique finger snap to our families; without that how would we all succeed? Without joining an insular first and then later neighborhood tribe, how would we discover ourselves–our true nature?


Chris Henry

December 19, 2009

I wish I hadn’t seen the newspaper photo of his three kids. All three beautiful and adorable, one in the middle staring happily straight into the camera while the other two each took a parent’s lap. The one-year-old in hers and the two-year-old in his. The four-year-old gluing everyone together. The mother has beautiful pale blue eyes set in a face the color coffee takes with a healthy dollop of cream. Her fiance was slightly darker. She is present tense and he is past tense. Yesterday he died in an auto accident.

His name is Chris Henry, and he was an incredibly talented receiver for the Cincinnati Bengals. Now those children will mourn losing their Dad and celebrate enjoying Christmas in the same week. This winter season belongs to children and reading that story in USA Today threw me down hard. That’s how Henry died, actually. Fortunately my free-fall was just empathizing the children’s pain for a minute. But Henry was flung off a pick-up truck that his fiance drove. Loleini Tonga isn’t charged right now because the couple were fighting to the point of unintended tragedy.

Funny the way drugs take people down. Henry had been arrested on a DUI once. The other arrests were for different reasons sometimes drug related. The consequences resulted in losing his professional status in the National Football League (NFL). He returned, though, once making concrete changes to follow the rules. Users don’t often play by the rules, until the consequences become bad enough to painfully force change. Henry wanted his job back, probably to keep his family.

But at 26, knowing how to return home calmly after a long party run is not so easy. In most sobriety circles word is that using alcohol or drugs prepares you for three directions: suicide, insanity, or humility. The second result often happens after somebody stops drinking because what behavior is there without the jump numb on life? Paradox of extreme drinking is that you are in total control. Nobody can touch a drunk, right? See who wins? But try taking the drink away and see how that drunk tries to control. Woo hoo, let the fun times roll when a dry drunk enters your life. That’s the addicts insanity whether dry or wet–trying to control everything and everyone, so he doesn’t have to feel a damn thing. Feeling takes too much work and alkies at heart are cowards, sorry to say–at least while drinking. After sobriety starts, the courage can arrive.

Sometimes when a drunk realizes how little control is actually possible, then suicide might follow. Depression can result as the rage over not being able to control life turns inward–darkly so. Or killing yourself becomes an innovative threat to exert more control. This is where Chris Henry steps in. He stood in the truck’s bed and shouted to his fiance that unless she stopped driving so they could talk, he would kill himself. She didn’t stop. He fell out as she bumped along a rutted road and Henry tumbled out. And he hit his head too hard to survive the fall.

Before receiving a free newspaper today while they changed the oil in my car, I had never heard of Chris Henry. He looked so handsome in the snapshot, I was curious to read his story. And then further into the newspaper they propped up the family photo. All five are incredibly beautiful together and now four of them will have to start all over again. That’s where the third direction of addiction comes into play. Humility braces you like a soft cushion in case you fall. Drama cannot happen when humility is around.

December belongs to kids. Our children need this month to believe in family. They need the adults in their lives sober and responsible and humble. This goes for real kids and the kid in an older person. Perhaps the Henry story resonates for me because this winter I’m still hoping to create a family. Droplets of melancholy happen in a healthy way as winter rain falls too. This is a mixed season expressing deep gratitude for what is. And wishing some for what could be, maybe. And accepting that some people I love are not here with me and that must be. Humility.


A Gray Hair and Green Pepper

December 16, 2009

Could not believe my eyes the other day when I saw a gray hair bouncing around with many other dirty blonde ones in my bangs. Huh? I have never had a gray hair that visible. Cool! How wonderful to see that after all this time I can now reap the rewards of getting older. Gray is sexy, yes? I have never colored my hair, not even once, and plan not to now either. Alright dammit, if she makes a request, I’ll probably immediately cave. But until then bring on the gray. After a disastrous cut around ten months ago, I finally enjoy the length and thickness my hair has now. When I venture to Hawaii in a few weeks, simply squeezing lemon juice in and hitting the sea water will change my low-maintenance hairdo-a-do several shades lighter. Aaaah, the inexpensive ways to shine healthy hair.

My body even feels a touch luminescent these days. Go figure. Walking by several different farmer’s markets during the week, I keep picking raw veggies and fruits then nibbling away throughout the day. Today after finishing the last of six classes taught these last two and a half months, I rewarded myself with a raw green pepper. Huh? This is a don’t ask, don’t tell vegetable policy. I’m pretty clueless why my appetite recently strays towards light simple snacks that are cheap and not sponsored by Frito O’Lays or 7-Eleven. I’m not questioning any events during the day right now. I’m on happy-go-lucky auto-pilot. Even without the girl, I can still joyfully celebrate a gray hair and green pepper day.

Or take this morning’s trek to the Safeway a block away for bread. Yesterday I gave my pizza slice away and today a local bread distributor gave me a loaf for free. The baker is Alvarado Street Bakery and I’ve eaten their delicious slices for a while now. The coupon he gave me was not a real one, but the smiling store manager gave me the loaf anyway. When my day started this way at 7 a.m. I could predict the pay-it-forward momentum had gathered energy overnight. For sure I’m a loyal customer after researching the company at http://www.alvaradostreetbakery.com and discovering their vision. Michael Moore even portrays Alvarado Bakery in his most recent renegade documentary, “Capitalism, A Love Story.”

In our English writing classes we analyze food and all its angles–personal, local, national, and global. And if how you choose to spend a dollar is equivalent to a strong vote in our democracy, then today I was actively political. Wait a minute. I didn’t actually spend a dollar on the bread. Who knew that a vote could be earned without being purchased? Another reason why I love San Francisco.

Really, though, my au natural hair color, farmer’s market bell pepper, and Alvarado organic sprout wheat bread are all signs that I’m becoming more elitist than ever. Can a humanist be part of America’s power elite? My access to actual power has its obvious limits, but my preferences for all things quality becomes relentless. I simply need what I perceive as the best in food choices. In the classrooms where I teach, we have been analyzing deeply the food we Americans eat. I have read backwards and forwards Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma. And so now I wish to eat and drink well. Pretty simple to do so as a middle class privileged white girl.

That’s my political vote. For example, Peet’s is a local coffee company and makes a strong brew that sometimes is too much. I had a cup the other day that went down the wrong way. Instead, I stopped by a garage on Folsom Street turned into a coffee vendor location for Blue Bottle Coffee. These guys make coffee that sits like dark chocolate on your tongue–sweet, smooth, and bitter, the welcoming kind. Again, the story behind the business is easy to read at http://www.bluebottlecoffee.net I learned that buying local feels great, feels personal, which we all know is political, yes?

Probably obvious that I wrapped up a class titled Government and Politics today. In some areas, the class turned disastrous as I tried, and did not quite succeed, to design a clear curriculum, but the goal to ask questions always and dig beneath the surface of assumptions is an activity that we practiced pretty well every week. Good to ask questions. Good to have no answers. Good to keep asking. Funny thing is the activity builds community. While sipping an amazing cup of Blue Bottle (never needs sugar or milk), a friend I haven’t seen in a long time appeared strolling up the street by “accident.” My shopping local as an aware political decision meant I created the opportunity to have a fun chat with another local, a neighborhood friend.

Strange how serendipity works better the more those conscious moments to share random acts of time happen as a result of intention. Do we create meaningful accidents? I believe so. My father once told me that luck is the residue of design, a phrase that surely resonated all through this day.


Random Acts of Time

December 15, 2009

Life is so short that I am amazed how much time we waste wondering what more we can get from the moment. Sounds damn preachy and in light of making pretty much every wrong life move possible, probably I’m not the most credible source to hear this from. Read on or not–and, of course, I hope you do wherever you are out there–because I write this for you. I suppose that’s how writing works. Reading other people’s blogs adds a random spark to my day; good writing feels like kindness. And sharing anything less than a random kind act or two or three every day seems like a waste of the time of your life. Sometimes people instead share grudges that last for a long time and only detract from rather than add to the gift of a very short life span. We have so little time and that’s why I gave my pizza slice away tonight. Here is what I mean.

I am finishing up another teaching quarter and this work is so strange. You take all these vulnerable risks to connect with others since real learning requires that flint honesty on all sides. And then it’s over–kerplunk. Circles back to time spent well or wasted because change is the only constant we have. Even a Mt. Everest control queen like me would not try to control the element of change. Can’t change change–it’s gonna change no mattah what.

Makes sense because I’m only operating those damn turbo control issues I’m so good at when a feeling makes me change. That is, me and feelings are still learning how to hang out and play well together. For now I don’t run with scissors because when it comes to others and their feelings, I’m accident prone. Still somewhat new at discovering my own emotions, I can cut others without realizing the moment. I try not to though and truly I’m at a place where I start to play well with others.

One of the best ways to achieve this playful state is to commit random acts of kindness. Somebody else already grabbed his cell phone to call an ambulance when a woman so blottoed on alcohol fell over in the 7-Eleven doorway and so I could not help. Walking up Market Street on this cool winter night, I felt grateful to hear the loud ambulance screams as a bright red wagon raced by. They would take care of her. Sure enough I would have my turn.

“Got any leftovers,” a gaunt clean cut man asked me.

“No,” I said protectively saving the second slice of pizza for breakfast; I’d bought two slices for $5 on sale at the restaurant just before they closed. And my heart went ping-ping. What a waste of time to save that slice of pizza all the way to morning when this guy’s night hunger was so immediate. The grudge I held against him for bothering me left swiftly.

“Sir,” I shouted up the sidewalk for he had long legs and had made some distance quickly.

He turned around right away.

“Here,” I said.

“Thank you very much,” he said without a smile but surely grateful. He opened the box slowly wondering if I’d played a mean trick on him since I’d said no so fast the first time. Once he felt confident, he reached right in and folded the pizza lengthwise and took a big, big bite.

Last Saturday morning in an ordinary American diner near Philadelphia, PA, super random acts of kindness lasted for five hours straight. The restaurant’s owner said that in her thirty years she had never seen that. What happened? One young couple paid the check for another table without asking for credit of any sort. And that table paid for another meal ticket, also in anonymous fashion. This paying it forward lasted for five hours. One waitress employed there for these last ten years started to cry some at the kindness. She’d never seen this behavior before. So simple. Such a good way to spend time. The cost of the breakfast meals ranged from $12 to $30 dollars. Not much but how generous. Reminds me that I don’t have who and what I want, but I have absolutely everything I need when I give freely of my time.


Teary Change

December 13, 2009

Hanging out by the light

What a contrast in emotions to walk down Ellis Street in San Francisco and see people suffering so badly. Bottles tipped, needles angled, tears shed, yells heard, clothes stained, kids hungry, pain visible, open wounds, and fickle hopes–all there alive and well on the sidewalk for anyone to see if he or she wishes to look. I kept my eyes open. But then I trudged way upstairs to the last seat in the church balcony (accounting for why this photo I shot angles from so far back in the last pew) and started to cry. Why? Just another routine service at Glide Memorial Church that brings the rafters down and emotional pretense, too. Music does that.

This one lead singer in the gospel choir took his deep baritone voice and just kept reaching for those notes about life’s grace, the hope there. Only a few dry eyes left in the house and ushers kept walking around offering either a fan to wave the heat away or a tissue from a Kleenex box. No joke. Today we listened to a sophisticated Hispanic man retell his story of sexual abuse and redemption found. Then we witnessed a heavy set African American man catch on fire in his speech while celebrating Hanukkah. Finally, a wide caucasian lesbian woman brought the house to its feet by repeating that we have no time to wait when only the mighty privileged who already have it all and plan to guard theirs, when these same people say it’s too early for change, wait some more–well, then we have the time to wait not another second to create change. Instead it’s now. Today. Here. The moment is ours.

A well-coiffed woman in her 60s entered the church and hesitantly took her place next to me with her husband. Within ten minutes she too had started to cry. I gently challenge you to go and try not to cry. The service simply moves you to tears for a thousand reasons. Yet after you feel so light. Good old Glide remains the same over the years and I am so happy to return.


Mostly Blind Love This Year

December 12, 2009

Driving early this morning to an office with a computer that works (my laptop is finally fixed but not until later in the day), I looked to my right and saw a couple, perhaps in their 30s. Winter pale skin and also thickly dressed for the cold, they appeared so cozy together. She gingerly grabbed his arm and they nearly stood cheek-to-cheek, each with shiny chestnut brown hair, his short and hers long. And they were each blind. Two long white canes stood still as they waited for the red light to change. We had an incredibly grey and rainy day here in San Francisco today but this couple had a little light around them somehow. Cheesy but true. Maybe that’s love. Together they would find their way.

How many different kinds of love I experienced these last 12 months–2009, the year I am most happy to wave goodbye to and to never see again. Exactly this time in December last year, a young woman was my sponsor (a sobriety mentor) and sat on my living room sofa for six hours to listen. In sobriety we complete what’s called a moral inventory, also known as the 5th step. The talker recounts life incidents that sparked resentment and then, finally, admits his or her role–the responsible part–played too. The listener recounts similar times and so bonding between the two begins. Many of the stories can be harrowing, so the purpose is to provide support and freedom. How well this step five in the twelve steps works. I certainly felt free when she left that afternoon. What amazing philanthropic love she shared.

And we also say in sobriety that providing such service helps one stay perpetually sober, too–giving away the love someone else has so freely given you. That’s how AA works–continuous reciprocal love on and on forever, quite a program actually.

I remember how incredibly difficult Christmas was last year. Mind you I had all the goodies–a warm and safe apartment. I am lucky because during super challenging times I tend to lean into hobby-like activities as helpful diversions. So, I read mystery books, ate good food, watched all the CSI shows I could stomach, and walked everywhere with Tigger. Not quite sure I would have fully sailed through that holiday time without Tigger. He sat on the sofa when I shared my stories with my sponsor. Occasionally tears would fall and, as always, he would come right up to me and put a paw out for comfort. Literally and no joke. And, of course, I smoked. A lot. At least they were the quality Canadian Export smokes.

How grateful I am for that experience. Yes, sounds strange and yet it is true. Pain on that level usually creates one result and that is humility. This year I’ve lived with awesome guilt: what could I have done differently? But my life is so radically changed that my ego no longer indulges in guilt. Because if I truly wish to help others then how can I indulge guilt? My story will stand as a warning to others in the world of surrogacy. And perhaps that’s why the event happened. Wherever she is, and however she is handling her current business surrogacy negotiations, I can only wonder how Elimisha Brown Fussell wakes up each day. My first reaction while going through this fraud experience last year was simply concern–for her. I worried about her karma. I suppose I always will.

So, this year I no longer smoke. I eat super well and exercise all the time. Inside I feel super happy and hopeful. Whenever I can give back wherever I can, I am ready. Healing has happened and that feels awesome. I mailed Christmas presents to my older brother and his family. The gifts arrived two weeks early to his home overseas in Europe and that’s a first for me.

The calm simply feels like an inner self-love that is new. Wow, that’s a little new agey California style back there, but true. Perhaps that will help me become the very best parent I can. I read the other day in Freakonomics, a Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything that the number one statistic influencing how children develop is simply this: who you are. The authors explain that leading by example is absolutely everything for a child. So, all the lectures, lessons, plans, and designs reduce down to little compared to how you behave. Yes. That’s the best predictor I can hope for as a future parent. Daily I’m pretty good; I show up eager and active. I always sensed that the more engaged I was in my adult life, the more a child learns by example rather than lecture. Good news and probably means good, fun times ahead.

So, this year 2009 has showered me in diverse types of love: friends, mentors, brothers, and colleagues. Oh, yeah, and dogs. Actually, now that I write this and look back, what a great year it has been. For sure I celebrate the difficult times, too. I was just asking for a small break perhaps. Maybe now.

And that other kind of love still remains mystery to me. Just a simple cup of coffee with her and I cannot sleep or eat for a good while. I can only laugh now, truly. What a funny 2009 trick. Sweaty palms, nervous thoughts, and all I can do is stare at her because that makes me happy. She is still beautiful, still wickedly smart, still firey desire and still elusive. Maybe next year? Maybe I’m delusional. Either way I’m at peace happy to have the chance to feel for real.

I have to say that mostly my fear is palpable; I feel it in my body and yet it’s my eyes that cloud up. I cannot see straight when in real fear. But humility erases fear and that’s what I have left over. Pain creates humility that erases fear so you are less blind. Happy New Year’s then.

Standing in the elevator after an awesome workout at the gym, I felt tired and relieved. A petite chunky Asian woman with long black hair and oily skin stood to my left; to her right stood a tall gangly white guy with black rimmed glasses, faded jeans, and an uneven beard. My Bakar gym is affiliated with UCSF and so science students are afoot. I definitely qualify as nerd material but these two were giving even me a run for my money. But inside I had a wide grin at how awkward they were around each other. He could barely look at her and she blushed just because, well, you know their physical proximity and all. Clearly they weren’t together yet.

“Oh, I pushed the wrong number,” he said quietly, analyzing the tips of his scuffed sneakers.

“That’s ok, really it’s fine,” she said, taking a step closer to him, but still keeping some actual distance.

We arrived to her floor and her car was right outside.

“Well, have a fun weekend snowboarding,” he said, finally looking up a little.

“Sure, thanks. Take it easy,” she said, feigning nonchalance when really neither wanted to leave, desperate to stay together a while longer, and yet the elevator door gently closed on them for today. A little love reigns in every corner.

I’m so glad this winter I’m feeling that–removes the fear some, so I can start to see, maybe even become a little less blind.


Champagne Season

December 5, 2009

Probably more honest to say that I wish I hadn’t looked into his eyes. The Dennis-the-Menace clean cut young fellow I rode a bicycle with as a messenger a decade ago sat at St. Martin de Porres, the well-known San Francisco soup kitchen. He occupied a table spot by himself. This time I looked more closely and his wool suit topped off by a pine green wool fedora hat were stainless–in fact, impeccably clean. And he held his shoulders as if ready to spring from his seat quickly if necessary.

I carried a clean damp cloth to wipe tables and stood close enough to see an elegant rectangular black box on the ground flush against his shoe. At first I thought it was his briefcase. When I looked closer, though, I saw that it was a Mumm’s Champagne box wide enough to tote two bottles. While I was looking up from the box, his eyes met mine over sunglasses that he wore inside our well-lit dining room. In them I saw pain, fear, and anger–definitely anger. I thought he might actually snarl if I said a word so feral was his eye-contact and body language. The street had taken him.

What a day of contrasts in people I witnessed while clearing tables after people enjoyed a complementary Thanksgiving dinner. I watched one young man literally burst around the kitchen and dining room because he had so much energy. He seemed to hover over the ground surfaces in his tennies shoes. A light went on and I remembered him. He worked super hard to pass a Plane Geometry class I taught at Archbishop Riordan High School many moons ago. Flat out I could not believe this young man was the same kid I worked with. He absolutely greeted people as if the Dalai Lama were his coach. Mind you a picture hangs in the kitchen with the Dalai and Barbara Collier, Martin’s amazing matriarch who recently passed away, taken when he visited this place a few months back.

“That was a different life, right?” said the beaming youngster.

“I can remember you from Riordan, but I’m sorry I can’t remember your name,” I sputtered.

“Derrick,” he replied about ready to wrap himself around me in his common bear hug of the century. I stepped back unconsciously and he stepped away too.

“What do you do, here?” I asked.

“Actually I’m fully part of the community,” he said waving his hand over the entire dining area and kitchen. Then he danced away. Later I saw him handle a snarly woman I’ve seen in the AA rooms with a smile and a joke coaxing her out of a super grumpy mood. Amazing.

The year I met him I taught Algebra, too, a subject I failed in high school once and then passed with a D the second time. For some reason my brain takes on topics I tend to distaste when not in sobriety, but once I return, I wander to peculiar hobbies. Could prove interesting this time around, too.

But I remember Derrick as a student and thought he had the kindest eyes even if he might always feel challenged to learn school topics in a formal education environment. And now here he was changing lives without a single exchange of rational thought. That’s why winter in San Francisco always feels so champagne to me. Just sipping from the surprise bubbles of life makes you feel giddy right away. An all natural high that I love about this time of year and drink from at random.

Or take Jonathan who wore a name brand sweat suit and Ed Hardy baseball cap. He stood to the side and didn’t smile much, so I walked right up to him. As a true straggler myself, I always notice my fellow-kind. Sometimes I launch a barrage of questions because I’m so damn curious when I sense the peculiar. This guy still carried his Alabama accent and told me that he spent the holidays away from his conservative religious family because he had started to carve out a new path by enrolling in the University of San Francisco’s Masters in Philosophy program.

His final goal is to earn a PhD from the Univ. of Hawaii, Manoa in Eastern Philosophies, studying in Japan or another country to complete the degree. At 40-years-old his life took an abrupt turn from the previous 15 years he had spent in the US Army Marine Corp. He also wore tattoos up and down his forearms. One of many reasons he said that he couldn’t go home to his original family.

With blond hair and dimples, this guy has a similar spirit to my bike messenger friend when I had met him ten years before. Not this Thanksgiving though. Still a total surprise to me why some of us receive enough grace to make it, or, at least, enjoy a life of creature comforts–healthy emotions, shelter, enough food, and family–of one sort or another. On this day everyone I met became mine, a motley spiritual family of sorts. Grateful for that.