Friday, May 26, 2006

If I start running, can I have his apartment?


As much as I like to think of myself as a back-to-the-earth kind of gal, I have to admit I have a huge fascination (almost an obsession, really) with gadgets. I'm looking forward to setting up a few playlists on the iPod to listen to in the Prius (augh! all these brand names!) on our road trip next week, and I'm still all aflutter over my new computer at work. Cell phones, stereos, these super cool bike pedals I just ordered from England ... if it's small and sleek and new and expensive, I'm interested. All the better if it also has tiny little colored lights.

So my latest obsession is these shoes, which, according to the press release, can actually talk to iPod nano (they don't call it "the iPod" – it's just "iPod") while you're running, and tell you all kinds of information about what you're doing. Oh, blah – don't bother to read the press release – watch the movie!

I guess that's what I really respond to with this stuff, more than even the stuff itself: it's the marketing I love. The truth is I get more pleasure out of watching this little movie of a beautiful man with a beautiful apartment running around a beautiful city than I would out of actually buying any of those products (or even living in that apartment, come to think of it – look at that giant van parked right outside his window!).

Sometimes having a new possession really IS all it's cracked up to be. It took me more than two years to find the right bike, and even then I came within inches of buying the wrong one – but now that I have it, I fall in love with it again every single day. The new car is cool, but I don't think of it as mine. It's more like a really expensive tool that Mr. A needs for his work. When we got new cell phones last year I at first succumbed to the super-fancy Motorola that had all the gadgets and blinky lights I love, but within a week I had a bad case of feature overload and exchanged it for another low-end Nokia. My stereo is eight years old and since the remote (which I would need to set the time display) is still hidden away in one of my boxes in the garage I can't even have it plugged in unless I'm actually listening to it, or the flashing "12:00" will keep me awake all night.

So maybe I'm not all that obsessed with owning the latest technology. But I do love watching the commercials.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Vay-kay


As in, vacation! I've been the recipient of a very long run of good luck lately, culminating in the totally unexpected approval of my request for a couple of days off next week to accompany Mr. A to a job on the Central Coast. We're going to be staying here. It's a fun, funky and very friendly kind of place we've stayed at before, only this time we decided to splurge (well, I decided to) and booked a room with a private deck overlooking the beach. This will be fun for me, since I'll have the whole day to myself while he's out working. (P.S. Up at the top of this post is a photo from the community rooftop patio at this hotel. I can't wait to take a nap there again!)

A few more examples of my recent good fortune:

1. A couple of weeks ago the HR person handed me an envelope and said, "I was looking through the books and noticed you never cashed one of your paychecks from last year. So here's a replacement check. Now go to the bank!" Cool! Even though theoretically it was money I should have had last year (and I'm not sure how I managed to overlook it), I still feel like I won some kind of mini-lottery. Two weeks' pay! Yay!

2. Varous people keep coming up to me to say great things about my new section. A friend's wife who works at one of the big beautiful high-end spas said that her department bulletin board – which by official decree may display only the very best and coolest printed items available – recently featured my entertainment calendar as its centerpiece. Also, the Big Boss called me into his office the other day to personally congratulate me and give me a really nice bonus.

3. This morning in a very brief but very formal ceremony I was awarded (in front of the whole company! yeesh) the Ink Stained Brave Heart Medal, for my "hard work, dedication, talent and loyalty ... courage and perserverance under trying circumstances and extreme challenges." It's an actual medal! And it came with a gift certificate to my favorite bookstore.

4. I lost about four more pounds.

5. Our IT guy ordered me a new computer with a big wide screen and almost 2 gigs of RAM. It's so much bigger and faster than my old computer and I love it so much I want to kiss it and buy it chocolates.

6. A friend at work who knew about my studio-building angst told me about a website she'd seen featuring some really beautiful little buildings, but she couldn't remember the name of it ... Then on Tuesday she came in and said, "I found it!" We looked it up and this guy – whose shop just happens to be only about a half hour away – is building the most amazing things! I bookmarked it so I could give him a call later, then went back to the web to download the syndicated stories for this week, and just by coincidence or blessing or magic or whatever, the first story I opened was a feature about this very same guy. It seems almost like some kind of a sign, doesn't it? Anyway, I'm going to call him next week – he lives in a handmade house that's only 75 square feet! Do check out his website, then scroll down to the interior photos of the XS House. It's amazing to see how beautiful and complete such a tiny little building can be.

7. Finally (there's more, but I have to get back to work), though it's maybe not strictly speaking "lucky," I was inspired by Julie earlier today to order this dress. Maybe it will be here in time for me to take on our vacation! I've been wearing dresses and skirts almost every day lately and really enjoying how much more comfortable they are to ride in than pants. You just hike 'em up and go.

Actually, there is one last thing. It's been such a relief and a real blessing lately to feel myself relaxing into myself and my life again. Sometimes I feel like my entire 30s were eaten up by anxiety and stagnation. In another month I'll be 41. Our new assistant just turned 21. I told him the other day, and was surprised to find I was telling the truth, "It only gets better from here."

Monday, May 22, 2006

Our new possession


We picked up the new car over the weekend. It's cute and comfortable and fun to drive, with lots of secret little cubbyholes that light up when you open them. You can plug the iPod into the stereo, and talk on the phone through the steering wheel. On the 25-mile drive home from the dealership I averaged just over 50 miles per gallon.

We got the white because it looks the most like the kind of municipal vehicle you would expect to see parked in an off-limits area where a pipeline is being torn up and examined. Also, theoretically at least, white cars stay cooler inside in the summer – especially when the windows are tinted extra-dark.

So this is what Mr. A will be driving to Sacramento every day for his new job. We're not moving – he's going to commute there. He accepted their offer last week after much deliberation ... I think it will be good for him, at least for awhile, to do something that feels like a risk but which has been called a smart career move by several industry people whose opinions he respects.

In other news, it's been raining again for the last three or four days. I've been outside every minute I can spare, savoring the last moments of truly fresh air we're likely to have for the next five months. Last night I pushed the windows all the way open and slept with just a sheet.

Oh, and I gave baths to both dogs yesterday so they, too, for the moment, smell delightfully clean and fresh. Next up: the summer haircut. I started it last night by trimming about one brown paper lunch bag's worth of dreads and feathers off Tater's left thigh. Tonight I'll do the right side, then his feet, and then the rest of his body starting next weekend.

Speaking of which, I was given tickets to the jazz festival here in town next weekend – we're going to see Herbie Hancock, with Ricki Lee Jones opening. With any luck it won't be hot.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Indra's net, Sonoma style

Last night in the dusk on my way to SFO I drove by some sheep browsing in a field and spent the next ten minutes or so contemplating why I feel so friendly and comfortable approaching animals I don't know, and so anxious and shy with new people. I would love to just walk right up to those sheep and feed them, and scratch behind their ears, and talk to them. I also thought about various dogs I know, and certain raccoons, and all the assorted lizards, rats, and rabbits that hang around our house ... I was just letting my mind drift around the topic of animals.

A few minutes later, as I came around a curve onto an overpass near Corte Madera at 74 miles an hour, I saw the pale shape of what looked like a long-legged naked woman flashing in the headlights of the tan Mitsubishi in front of me, about a hundred feet ahead. There was a sound like someone crushing a paper dixie cup in another room, and then I saw something big fly straight up into the air above the Mitsubishi – it went more than three times as high as the top of the car. In the dim light I lost sight of it for a split second, and then it was falling straight toward me.

The way it had flown up in front of the car, and the color in my headlights as it came down, made me think for a moment that it was nothing but a big piece of brown cardboard after all, a broken box or a giant shopping bag that was being blown around by the passing traffic. But then I saw it hit the ground and spin as it slid across the pavement and slammed into the bottom of the barrier at the edge of the freeway, like an ice skater who's missed her landing, and as I zoomed past I saw its long twisted neck and its legs with their little black hooves splayed out helplessly, and caught just a glimpse of its big dark eyes staring right at me. I hoped it was dead.

The car that had hit it hadn't even swerved. I stayed behind it to see if it was going to pull over, but it didn't – and then it passed an exit. I pulled up next to it then, thinking maybe I'd somehow imagined the whole thing – I was starting to realize I was feeling a little shocked. The driver was alone in the car, a white-haired man with both hands on the wheel, staring straight ahead at the road in front of him over the caved-in front end of his car. Looking at the damage it was hard to believe it was still running. I kept thinking, "Is he going to keep on driving forever? Does he not realize he just hit a deer? Why isn't he stopping to look at his car? Is he okay? Is he afraid? Should I follow him and tell him I saw what happened, and offer to sit with him if he's freaking out?"

In the end I decided to keep going. I was already running late for the airport, and I was starting to freak out a little bit myself. It all happened within just one or two seconds, and literally right in front of me – it could easily have been me who hit it. And the way the deer was thrown, it's a miracle it didn't land on my hood, or under my wheels.

Also, to see an animal the size of a person fly twenty feet into the air like a tissue in a hurricane – that made an impression on me. Driving has always been something I try not to overanalyze ... but especially now that I'm not driving much, it's hard to set aside the awareness that my fragile, soft little human body is actually zooming along at close to one hundred miles an hour, encased in tons of metal, mere inches above a hard asphalt road, and that any false move by me or anybody around me could bring it all to a screeching, tumbling, crushed and bloody halt in a matter of seconds. If I let myself think too much about how dangerous it really is to drive, I would never get anything done.

And that deer. It must have been so scared, up there on that overpass and unable to figure out how to get down. All those cars screaming by. I know deer are not an endangered species, but I still hate to see them dead. This is the first time I've ever seen a car kill such a large animal. When it happened my heart clenched and slammed in my chest as if I were the one who'd been hit. The adrenalin didn't dissipate for several hours. It still kind of hurts even now.

About 20 minutes before the deer, when I was driving along the bay, the air was so thick with mosquitoes that their bodies hitting the windshield sounded like rain. By the time I got to the airport the front of the car was completely plastered with them, like a layer of thin gray fur. It wasn't until today that it occurred to me – the Mitsubishi ended the life of one deer, but I ended hundreds of lives last night – maybe even thousands.

All this brings to mind a passage I like from Gary Snyder, on the topic of (among other things) vegetarianism and the First Precept, in an essay titled Indra's Net as Our Own1:
Every living thing impinges on every other living thing. Popular Darwinism, with its emphasis on survival of the fittest, has taken this to mean that nature is a cockpit of competitive bloodshed. "Nature red in tooth and claw," as the Europeans are fond of quoting. This view implicitly elevates human beings to a role of moral superiority over the rest of nature. More recently the science of Ecology, with its demonstrations of co-evolution, symbiosis, mutual aid and support, interrelationship, and interdependence throughout natural systems, has taught us modesty in regard to human specialness. It has also taught us that our understanding of what is and is not "harmful" within the realm of wild nature is so rudimentary that we should not bother to take sides between predators and prey, between primary green producers and detritus-side fungi or parasites, or even between "life" and "death."

Between cars and deer, too, I wonder? Or mosquitoes? I suppose the key phrase here is "within the realm of wild nature." Cars are not exactly wild, or natural.

This morning Mr. A called me into his room to look out the window: just a few feet away, under the tallest sycamore where the branches reach all the way to the ground to make an enormous green room, a young deer was standing up to its chest in grass and poppies (we need to mow the lawn again), nibbling on leaves.

"They like it in there because it's shady and protected," he whispered.

I thought of that deer on the road last night, and of all the deer (and lizards, toads, birds, snakes, insects, spiders, rabbits, rodents and all manner of what he refers to as "shy creatures") Mr. A has made safe places for on this property.

Not sure how to end this. It just felt good, after last night, to see that little dear feeling safe and enjoying her breakfast. And to feel myself safe, too, and grateful to be here to enjoy seeing her.

1I couldn't find the whole essay online but you can read it in this bookFor A Future To Be Possible: Commentaries on the Five Wonderful Precepts, by Thich Nhat Hanh et al. It's the only book I pretty much always carry around with me, the way some people carry a bible. Well worth a look if you're interested in such things, even if all you read is this one piece.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Sugar Challenge, Part II: Bordeaux

Did you know you can buy Pepperidge Farm Bordeaux cookies online, at Amazon? I didn't either – who would buy cookies from a website? Especially these cookies, which are everywhere. Everywhere! Which is exactly the problem, and the reason I had to go to Amazon to find a picture of them to go with this entry: because over the last 48 hours I've eaten a whole bag of them, and it made me so sick – both to eat them, and to see myself being unable to stop eating them – that I've decided to renew the Sugar Challenge and stop eating sugar altogether again.

Well, except for fruit. Fruit I can handle. But those cookies! It's like I imagine an alcoholic must feel when they think they can have just one little drink ... I can't stop until the bag is empty. Then the nausea, realization, self-loathing, bargaining, etc. – it all begins again. Bleah.

Anyway. I've been feeling the need to be online lately, even though I have nothing much to say. Mr. A is somewhere in the middle of the continent right now and I haven't heard from him in a couple of days, which is starting to worry me just a bit. He's usually very good about keeping in touch.

Also, I've been having the strangest lucid dreams all week. All night long I toss and turn, narrating the action to myself and contemplating its meaning as I go – "Okay, now here's a door – what's going to be behind it?" and imagining a variety of possibilities, and then deciding to let that go and enjoying the surprise when the door is opened – asking myself, "Hmm, now I'm in the basement of a parking garage – dream buildings represent the self – but why a parking garage? The basement might possibly indicate I'm exploring the hidden depths of the psyche - or is it the body? Maybe it's more of a chakra-based system? Hmm, and there are big dust bunnies drifting around against the walls ... Do I need some kind of deep cleansing? Psychotherapy? An enema perhaps? Or should I pick them up and pet them? Bunnies ... hmmm ... " They just continue to get more and more bizarre, with many levels of consciousness and deliberation ... Interesting and kind of fun to watch, like a movie, but not exactly restful.

When I first learned how to "do" lucid dreaming, I thought it was kind of cool. Now I'm thinking it would also be cool to learn how to shut it off.

Yesterday at work I was given a new computer that has (among many other amazing features) a built-in camera for videoconferencing. So of course I've been watching myself all day, and there's no doubt about it: jowls are beginning to form. Also, just the slightest suggestion of baggy under eye-ness, as well as several new silvery hairs I did not notice until I went into the bathroom just now to inspect the jowls. Damn. I guess it really does happen. Somehow I never quite believed I would ever get old. But I'm looking at the evidence right now on my web cam. If you're very nice to me maybe I'll post some of the snapshots I took ... man, this thing can do everything. Except make me look 25 again!

Friday, May 05, 2006

I want blue sky


Riding to work the other morning I was crying from stress over having just talked with Mr. A about something painful I’ve been fretting over for the last couple of months or so. I’d picked a terrible time to spring it on him – five minutes before I had to leave – so of course nothing was resolved and I was left with a tsunami of emotion that had nowhere to go except right back into my own head. Or heart. Or somewhere. It felt like ten thousand tons of water surging around inside my chest. Heavy, dark and utterly overwhelming.

So I was riding along feeling doomed and depressed, thinking miserable thoughts about how now everything is going to be ruined, and how I’m too weird and demanding and loser-ish to ever be loved, etc. etc. etc. – and suddenly out of nowhere I was interrupted by the thought, “Yeah, but it doesn’t have to be a problem.”

Wow! It was like somebody had sat me down with a big coffee table book in my lap, opened it up and started turning through the pages. See, here are all the thoughts you’ve taken hold of so far this morning. Here’s the one where you think everything’s ruined. Here’s the one that says you’re too weird. Here’s where you think it’s all a huge problem.

I could see all the thoughts spread out on the page. And then we closed the book.

It’s not the same as denial, where you try to pretend you’re not really thinking what you’re thinking. It felt more like I was just recognizing a habit my mind has had – to grab onto thoughts about things I feel unhappy about (“problems”) and declare myself personally responsible for solving them – and realizing I don’t have to keep doing that. I’m not required to sit on the couch all day staring into the pages of that book.

Remarkably, perhaps a little pathetically, this is kind of a new idea for me. What a relief to finally start recognizing them for what they are. Just ideas. Not “the truth.” Not “the way it really is.”

Maybe that’s part of the reason I’m not feeling as compelled to write as I used to. For the longest time I’ve used writing as a way to deconstruct all the feelings I didn’t want to feel, until I got them broken down into manageable pieces I could find a way to feel good about or at least accept. Possibly with practice I’ve learned to be okay with more of the original messiness without needing to break it down or clean it up. Or maybe not okay, exactly – I still hate feeling the way I felt the other day. And actually I still feel kind of crappy and dissatisfied right now, which is why I’m writing, if you haven’t already figured that out. But I don’t feel as desperate to try to DO something about it.

Maybe it’s just that I’ve noticed that it doesn’t seem to matter much if I do anything or not. My feelings don’t change on demand. Though of course they always do change eventually. So the whole imperative to take charge somehow just becomes less urgent.

All of which is not to say I’m planning to do nothing. It does feel good though to plan to do something different: try seeing things as not a problem.