Saturday, December 19, 2009

In my sleep

I wrote about 4 columns in my sleep.

Oops!

A phrase keeps running through my mind:

"The Peace That Passes All Understanding"

When I went to see Kim Eng, Eckhart Tolle's partner, at a retreat at Kripalu, she said this a few times. The peace that passes all understanding.

The peace that passes all understanding.

I wish that for you this season.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Hormones and the Present Moment...

Are mutually exclusive. Last night I was in a complete and total funky fest for NO GOOD REASONS - minor frustrations. I kept returning to my breath, trying to key into my observer ad just let the pain body dissipate... but instead it kept getting bigger.. and bigger... and bigger... my Ego was upset that my husband suggested shopping apart... my pain body was triggered when my mom was late for babysitting... and my stomach was triggered when there were no Devil Dogs for the breastfeeding, fat-craving mama. I bought all the wrong presents, the baby cranked all day..

Who cares? Such MINOR complaints that turned into a complete and utter funk fest - snapping at my husband, snitting around like I'd been done wrong.. even complete awareness of the ridiculousness of the funk fest wasn't helping. My dad came to the rescue with his secret Yodel stash, which actually helped tremendously. So did sleep, and a now happy baby.

Next time, what am I supposed to do with a hormone induced funk fest? Coming back to my breath - useless this time. Couldn't get my hands on anything spiritual that I could tolerate reading. But while I am adjusting to new birth control, these funk fests are to be expected for a while.

In my mom's friend's kitchen, there is a plain key ring onto which she has attached index cards. Each card has a saying that she finds inspirational. It hangs on her kitchen cabinet next to the sink.

Hmmmmm....

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

When she wakes...

She blinks a few times. Her eyes are open wide, her eyebrows raise up in anticipation of the world being a good place.. she glances around, first up, then over, then up again, then over to the other side. She tests out her limbs, wiggles her body around a little. She breathes so sweetly. Then she starts to kick and flail, stretch out, yawn, and make some noise... "Hey, I'm here, what's next? Pick me up! Show me around!"

But for those first 30 seconds, she is the picture of what being deeply in the moment looks like.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Two Hands

As of today, I can do the following things one-handed, with my non-dominant hand: change the laundry from the washer to the dryer, spread butter on toast, and type a short email to someone I know will not judge my bad spelling and telegraph-like sentences.

Nursing. An epic battle. I am shocked our species has survived. If we were cave people without support from cave-lactation consultants, my child and I would be fossils. It is the hardest things I have ever done in my life - and I have spent 3 days alone in the woods with a teenager with severe autism. Now that we are good at it, I am tempted to check email, read a book, do any number of activities while my very beautiful daughter is eating for what feels like eternity when I'm only staring at the walls.

So... presented with the challenge of boredom, I came back to: The Present Moment. And found that time flies when you're staring at something so fresh from God. I can practically see neural pathways forming while she eats and moves her tiny hands around, learning what "smooth" and "rough" and "cotton" and "skin" and "wet" mean. How brilliant that she knows her own little body so well, to pull away when she is full and cry when she is hungry. How miraculous that I keep making enough food for her insatiable appetite. Years of evolution, all for this moment, when the early early light begins to creep up on our corner of the bedroom, her tiny hands constantly in motion, like a snake's tongue, feeling the air, the skin, the milk, the air, the air, the air.

I remember a passage from _A New Earth_ in which Eckart Tolle suggests that "motherese" is a little condescending to babies because it implies they know less than us and need special speak to understand the world around them. I feel that my child is so wise, so much wiser than I am, so knowing and perceptive and intuitive. "Life is the dancer, and we are the dance"... she is the dance as Life flows through her, and someday onto the next form... she is therefore older than dirt, and so am I... but I can't help but to goo goo ga ga over her because well... the form Life took this time around is a baby!

The cliche of "the greatest joy"... when I say it, or think it, it is suddenly round, juicy, pregnant with truth... greatest.... joy. Joy of all the choirs of angels and all the sunlight you've ever seen filtering through leaves in fall and all the warmth of a day you bathe in sun like honey dripping into your tea.. joy that presses hard against the inside wall of your chest in those rare moments when you viscerally know what a miracle this common act of living is.