Random thoughts about Negativity and Anxiety for June 30th, 2016

I wonder now and then about consequences. Can what we feed our minds effect our behavior and our choices? As I flip through channels and look for something uplifting to watch, I am amazed how many shows are about murder and mayhem. Television series abound about criminal behavior, public servants such as police personnel, clandestine agents, and similar subjects. In addition to these shows based on violent behavior and the supposed causes, consequences and techniques to “solve” cases, we now have shows about the “un-dead”, futuristic violence, and apocalyptic endings or near-endings. What is more perplexing to me is that these shows abound because enough people are watching them to make it profitable to air them.

I’m also fascinated by the quality of the unending news media coverage of everything from politics, jihadism, religion, violent crime, etc. It is no wonder that the American public is possibly more anxious than any other time in our history. We are inundated 24 hours a day with BAD news…bad, disdainful and slanted toward opposite-sides politics, bad news about violent crime, bad new about this and that and more bad news about something else. As the airwaves have opened up for more media, the media have found more ways to fill airspace with every piece of negative anything that they can find. And what is more perplexing is that all that bad news actually sells. We appear to like it.

What happens to our minds when they are filled with negativity every time we sit to watch something? What happens to our spirits when we are inundated with violence, negativity, hatefulness, and bias on a continual basis? As our society continues down a pathway of negativity and anxiety, how does all this affect us as human beings?

Another piece to this that I’m curious about is the notorious celebrity we attach to the people who perpetrate crimes and violent actions. Every time we advertise the face, the name, and the “reasons” behind the violence, we actually encourage others to seek that attention… Every time we splash the names of jihadists who are guilty of their crimes against us, we add to their martrydom, to their “celebrity.” We make them “famous” instead of making them nameless, faceless, pitiful examples of hatefulness. When we publish the names and faces of those who commit crimes, we give a certain satisfaction to the sick mind. In this media culture, it is too easy to confuse celebrity and fame with notoriety and infamy. We also help to spread the word about these organizations that recruit sick or marginalized individuals to join their causes.

With all of this barrage of negativity blaring at us 24/7, I wonder about the consequences. Is there a way to have an intelligent conversation about more responsible ways to report a happening without sensationalizing it, feeding into perpetrators need for recognition, and the human tendency to happily ingest all this negativity without so much as a thought?

Sometimes I don’t have the answers, but I have a lot of questions. Sometimes, I wish I could find others to talk with, to struggle with them, to listen to…there is much to ponder in life. And no one can find the answers in a vacuum…alone. All I know is this. The negativity barrage doesn’t fill me with anxiety. It makes me sad. We are better and bigger than this. But we’ve settled…for the ugliness.

Life is too precious…too sweet…I don’t want to settle anymore.

A Post about God’s Presence for June 29, 2016

It is an interesting period of life when one is faced with aging parents, disease, and the need to move. Such has been the last six months of our lives. Faced with a new illness for my father, we decided that instead of waiting until death to deal with the estate, the state of their home, their personal needs to be closer to a dependable adult child, and the new health challenges, we opted to face everything directly. Within three months, we had moved my parents to Florida to be close to us. It has been, at the very least, quite an adventure.

At first, we were all a bit numb. Daddy was sick. Mother was feeling quite vulnerable. We lived over 700 miles away and there was that pesky promise I had made years before. I had put my arm around Mother’s shoulder and said, “Mother, when the time comes, don’t worry. I’ll be there.” That was all well and good. But in truth, I was not there…but over 700 miles away. What should we do? How were we going to deal with this? My only sister who lived close-by has been and continues to be “needy…”, even when my parents were beginning to struggle with their own new-found neediness.

I was very unhappy with the distance between my parents and me. Every time I talked with my mother, her vulnerability screamed out at me over the phone. It was tangible. It was palpable. It was un-nerving. My husband looked at me one night after a particularly difficult conversation with my mother. He just simply said, “We’re not doing this. This doesn’t work for you and it is not working for them.”

I looked at him quizzically. I asked, “So, what do you suggest?”

He nodded emphatically. “We move them here. There’s got to be a unit here in the building that we can buy, prepare and get ready for them. What do you think?”

I was stunned. He was serious. More than serious. He was emphatic. And so, in the next couple of days, my husband did what he does so naturally. He looked around for that perfect condominium unit, found several options, and suggested the idea to my parents. To my shock, they agreed. I realized then how providential it had been for them to have come to help me back in September when I had surgery. They had loved it here. Those five weeks had been great weeks. It was as if Someone out there was preparing the way for us…like that Someone often does when we aren’t paying attention. Those Footsteps go before us…pave the way…open the doors…set things in motion.

In the next few weeks, we had a unit in play. My husband had made an offer. It was accepted and was within my parents’ price-range. My head was spinning. It was a done deal before I could barely breathe. Now, faced with a 700 mile trip both ways every time I traveled, we began the process of readying my parents to move and preparing the unit for them.

The unit was a mess…mustard yellow and slap-you-in-the-face-bright-sky blue. The carpet was filthy…forty-years filthy. The bathrooms weren’t in good shape and my mother deserved better than that. The balcony was not enclosed and they needed that…for sitting and watching and enjoying the corner of Animal Planet and NatGeo that lives just outside our building. The kitchen was a disaster and the appliances were dinosaurs that had fossilized years before.

Somehow, I had to dig deep and find a way to help them where they were and get the unit whipped into shape for moving in. My time frame? Well, in my heart I figured if we could get everything done and them moved by the end of April, we would have a bonified miracle on our hands. Daddy had different ideas. No. October was a better time frame. I smiled. It didn’t feel right to me. Something heavenly was afoot.

My husband and I got a contractor on board who was responsible for the obvious things…remodeling the master bath with pocket door, safety shower doors, walk-in shower to replace the old tub-model, new toilet, new vanity, light-fixture and faucets and shower-fixtures. The floor had to be replaced—it was just awful. The carpet had to be replaced in the entire unit. We needed new blinds in the windows, etc. Strip it. Fix it. Make it right. That was their job.

I took off on the 700 mile trip to my parents’ house. Through gentle conversation and careful deliberation, we decided on an auction company to help with the estate sale and the sale of their house. At 85 and 88, there was so much they loved but so little they needed. Sixty-three years of memories had to be sorted through and decisions had to be made. It wasn’t easy. In the midst of all that, there were doctors visits and blood transfusions, periods of sickness, weakness, anger, sadness, frustration and small explosions. My Mother was an angel. Her Virgo practicality would win the day in those moments when my Pisces Father didn’t want to let go of something.

I would pack for a couple of weeks and then return home to paint, design the kitchen, fuss with nitwit contractors (literally), encourage my husband who was carrying that load all by himself, and try to prepare things for Mother and Daddy. When I got as much done as I could do, I would turn around and drive back, to pack some more, help with more decisions, offer comfort and encouragement and LOVE my parents like I’ve never loved them before.

And there was my sister to consider. Through the years of a fairly dysfunctional life, she had become unusually dependent on my parents. Co-dependency and enabling happens so subtly. But it was there. I encouraged her to move on, to literally move closer to her daughter, where she could start over again, spend time with her grands, and blossom in a way she had never before. Thankfully, she was also resolute. She understood the dynamics and I admired her for that. It wasn’t easy. She had some tough stuff to face and she did. And she did it on her own. I am very proud of her.

I had thought that we could do all this by the end of April. Daddy was pushing for October. In fact, he got angry several times and called me a “tornado.” And then, the auctioneer who was handling the estate and the house sale made the decision for us. “I have you on my calendar for March the 17th and 18th. We’ll have the house sold by the end of March.” Daddy was stunned. So was I. We freaked a bit. We laughed when we realized that it was right around the corner. It was already then mid-February. And then, we kicked into high gear.

Somehow, we got it done. The house was emptied of the “best stuff” with which my parents wanted to surround themselves. The truck was ordered and filled. My husband came to drive it and my parents filled their van. I drove ahead a couple of days to finish painting and the cleaning so everything was ready for them. The contractor had been an absolute nightmare of flooded units above and below the new one. There had been delays and snafus. Somehow, it was done. The day I was due to arrive at night, they finished the carpeting. Whew!

I set about to finish the kitchen, clean the unit, make sure everything was “mother-ready” and find a moment to breathe. I got it done. Meanwhile, Mother and Daddy, and my wonderful husband stopped along the way overnight. Smaller distances were a necessity. Daddy can’t do the long distances anymore. They made it late Tuesday and we had crew due on Wednesday to unload them and get things in their places.

It is now three months later. They are settled in and just today worked with one last handyman to get shelves in two closets so they can unpack the last of the boxes and clear out the front room that’s been used to store them. It is almost finished and they look so pleased. Everyday, they express thanks to us and thanks to God for bringing them here…for preparing the new home…for making this last adventure a good one.

God is like that…you know? Sometimes that Presence is just working behind the scenes making our lives work in wondrous ways. Sometimes that Presence works through others. Sometimes that Presence works through unknown means…and life enfolds and presents itself to us in all God’s richness and glory. Sometimes, that Light surprises…And it is always done in such a perfect way.

Hindsight helps us see how that Presence has been at work. It wouldn’t be as precious if it were obvious. That Presence still catches us off guard…causes us to catch our collective Breath…catches us unbeknownst…catches us. And we smile. We feel the warmth of that Present Face who looks in favor on us, even though we don’t deserve it. We thank God that God loves us, holds us, protects us, goes before us and puts the right people and circumstances in our pathway. And yes…as my sweet husband so often says, ‘It is all good.’

Advocating for those without a voice: June 27th, 2016

Today, I found myself in a very serious conversation with my mother. I am so grateful for her wisdom, life experience, and close proximity, now that they live so close. We talked of many things, but found our passion today focused on those young girls in the world who have no voice. This is an unhappy topic, but one free women everywhere should discuss, ponder, and concertedly search for solutions. Thousands of little girls are trapped in families whose religious practices include the unthinkable act of genital mutilation. Strapped down by their elders, they are forced to endure the removal of their clitoris. If they are “lucky,” it is done by someone who won’t mutilate them too badly. At worst, they suffer disfigurement so bad that they endure untold dysfunction for the rest of their lives. The only purpose of this evil is to rob them of any sexual pleasure…thus somehow making them more acceptable wives and bearers of children for their religious cultures. It is for control and domination. It is a deplorable and terrible practice.

No one wishes to talk about it. We free women turn blind eyes and plug our ears. We don’t want to acknowledge it, nor do we want to stop it badly enough to risk what might be necessary. In my thoughts, this problem began centuries ago when girls were first labeled as “father’s property.” Girls and wives (and all children, even boys, up to a certain age) were considered and treated as property. They had no rights, no privileges, and no protections. We still see vestiges of this in our own American culture. How many times do our pastors ask during wedding ceremonies, “Who gives this woman?” (When I was a pastor, I refused to ask that questions and indeed, taught the history behind it.) As property, the girls had to be kept pure and untainted in order to fetch the best price or to entice the best family to seek their “hands” for their sons. Different religions created spiritual reasons for this need to keep the property pure. Virginity was seen as one of the necessary requirements for the contractual passing of property from father to husband. “Who gives this woman?” was the question asked of the father as he literally put his daughter’s hand into the hand of the man chosen to be her husband and new owner of her as his property.

Women have endured all sorts of tests for virginity through the ages, including humiliating examinations of all body orifices…and in some cultures, their virginity was to be taken by the chief of the tribe…and in others, friends and colleagues got to watch the happenings on the marriage bed to attest to the woman’s discomfort and bleeding as her virginity was stolen from her. Her virginity became a kind of commodity to be bought, sold, or stolen…all ways of controlling and dominating the female.

The physical pleasure of women has often been seen as evil and the reason for wives who commit adultery, or daughters who “dishonor” their families. Indeed, in some cultures, adultery and dishonoring a family is punishable by death. Rarely is the man put to death…normally it is just the woman. In many religions, women are seen as the one who brought “sinfulness” into humankind. Just read the etiological tale in Genesis and you will see how Woman is blamed for the Sin of Humankind. In some religious cultures, the purity and control of women is so demanded that they are willing to disfigure and mutilate their women in order to control them, to constrain them, and to dominate them. It is wrong. Simply wrong.

What can women in the free world do about this? We need to speak up. We need to make each other aware that this is still being practiced…in the United States among those involved in religious cultures where it is demanded, in Europe…in the Middle East… in Africa…all over the world. And yet, there is no outcry. These little girls have no voice…no loving sister-humans who will speak for them, protect them, rescue them…

This is an uncomfortable and gross subject. It is a necessary one. It is time to talk about it…to advocate for these women and girls… TO STOP IT.

Please take a look at this link and discover 16 organizations that are working to stop this practice. Join us in the fight against it and become a voice for the voiceless.

16 Organisations, Charities and Grassroots Groups Working to Stop Female Genital Mutilation

 

A Quiet Heart: Sunday, June 26, 2016

So, it is Sunday, June 26th. It has been another lovely day here in South-Central Florida. My husband and I went to church with my parents today. It was an interesting experience to say the least. My parents have struggled to get going since moving here a couple of months ago. But, my father felt well this morning and they were ready to begin their journey of visiting churches. Off we went to one of the local churches. It is always interesting to go somewhere new for worship…to be “the guest” and try to find one’s stride amidst the assumptions that the homefolks are used to… We were all glad to have been, but it was an off-morning there. The Spirit whispered anyway through the audio-snafus and the VBS introductions and the longer-than-normal get-together. God is always present when one opens one’s heart. It makes worship possible even when it is difficult. And an open heart can find solace and comfort in God’s presence.

I am glad for a quiet heart in the middle of all the anxiety in our culture. In a world where the automatic response to everything is fear and hatred, a quiet heart is immeasurably valuable. In the midst of all the political shenanigans of this election cycle, a quiet heart is comforting. It keeps me centered and able to think clearly, instead of reacting to what I hear. A quiet heart helps me to cogitate on all the information and to form opinions and shape my thoughts very carefully. I am thankful for a quiet heart.

There is a lovely verse (Psalm 46:10) that simple says: “Be still and know that I am God.” In the Hebrew, the sense of the words “be still” is CEASE STRIVING. In a world full of such heightened emotional reactivity, resting in God’s presence is key to being able to CEASE STRIVING. It gives space in life for God to create a quiet heart. “Still” doesn’t have to mean without motion, as in “to sit still.” We can live and move and engage the life around us and CEASE STRIVING in the midst of it all. I am thankful for a quiet heart.

For this next week, I pray that you will discover a quiet heart, and that your quiet heart will shape your week, give focus to your life, and open you to the joy of God’s peace and presence.

Until the next time…

Poetry on June 25, 2016

HOME

 

We can see forever

Up here on the eighth floor…

The birds, the lake,

The Florida clouds and more.

 

This little place has become

Our refuge, our hideaway, our home.

It is a place to return to

When there is nowhere else to roam.

 

The blue walls and sandy carpet

Bring Florida inside each day.

The Tampa Bay woodwork

Reminds us of the bridge, The Skyway.

 

The hutch and the Waterford

Bring Munie* into our midst.

Her memory is sweet…

A gentle face to be kissed.
The Last Supper painting

And the clock on the wall

Bring Bernardine to us.

She blesses us all.

 

And Maba is here, too,

In blue and white dishes…

In pitchers and family pieces…

She fills my heart with wishes.

 

And Margret’s here, too,

Bernie’s sweet little sis…

Her picture, the lovely linens

She can’t be dismissed.

 

My children and grands

Float around on the walls.

Memories of their laughter

Fill our short halls.

 

And our memories hold it up

Surrounding us here and there.

Photos, common things, the stuff

That says, “Life is dear.”

 

I look at Bernie there

Sitting on the lanai…

High above Lake Grassy,

And a tear comes to my eye.

 

We are so blessed

And a smile fills my face.

The world is so full of strife now,

But none of that is in our place.

 

Today in the heat

There is a stillness on Lake Grassy.

A slight breeze and humid heat

Make this lake glassy.

 

We are home and still.

Our hearts are full of love and peace.

Here on Lake Grassy,

We share Life. We’re at ease.

The purpose of Thayerwriting.com

I am thinking today about what I’d like to accomplish through thayerwriting.com. It is pretty simple. I hope to stimulate thought, encourage my readers, share a positive twist on life with my readers, and take advantage of this space as a place for creative and purposeful writing. In my book, An Epilogue for Eleanor, I “fussed with” what a woman does when her life explodes. How do you sort through your life and come out better on the other side? How do you open your heart again to life, laughter and love? I learned as I wrote the book that learning to see that “it is all good” is a choice… and happens not by chance. Life has dealt me some interesting cards, but in the end, where Life led me is better than where I was. I struggled against the explosion. In time, I let go and leaned into the new direction into which I was blasted. I was carried in a new, different direction. I found parts of myself I had forgotten or never known. I discovered it was truly “all good.”

Here at thayerwriting.com, I hope to share writing and thinking that helps you to see that “it is all good…” More often than not, Life’s biggest explosions propel us forward. Forward is always better than backwards. It isn’t without heartache or struggle, pain or bewildering moments. A forward motion in life comes like a little one learning to walk for the first time. One gets up. One falls down. With each motion, the life-muscles get stronger and the effort becomes less and less. And then one day, that little one takes off running and squeals with delight.

I hope the adult in you never forgets how to squeal with delight. After divorce, after a death, after being fired or accused, or after an embarrassing event, the ability to practice getting up and down in order to learn to run forward again is crucial. That practice strengthens your spirit-muscle. And once up and running again, your spirit can find an inner delight with life… once again. With any luck at all, squealing with that delight will catch you off guard and make you smile.

Since my life explosion back in 2010, I have had to practice getting up after falling down. It hasn’t all been easy. But, as my spirit grew stronger, my inner delight with Life returned…perhaps stronger than ever. I got in touch with a part of myself I had buried and forgotten. My daughter calls it my bohemian side…that side of my personality that is free and easy…that enjoys simplicity…that has learned that love can be carefree and freeing. I like this “me” I have found since my other life exploded in pieces. Life now is “all good.” That “all-goodness” is what I’d like to share with you…here…at thayerwriting.com.