Monday, August 24, 2015
Love this one: 13 Reason to be Jealous of Single Moms
Gotta check out this awesome article on '13 Reasons to be Jealous of Single Moms: http://www.yourtango.com/experts/tara-kennedy-kline/celebrating-all-single-mommies
Thursday, August 20, 2015
From the Worst to the Best in 6 Days
Last week I went out on the worst date. I agreed to dinner, which is unusal for me, but I was trying to be optimistic that it was worth the time investment to give someone a change. As I arrived, I realized he downed a glass of wine before I got there. When we sat down, he wanted to order a bottle of wine. I suggested going glass by glass because I was only going to have one and he said "I challenge you to finish a bottle of wine" and I said "I have to drive" and he said "so do I". After a big to-do to pick a bottle of wine (me saying 'whatever you pick will be fine'), he ordered a vegan dinner and polished off the entire bottle sans my one glass. Tipsy at the end, he asked if I wanted to hang out again. I went home with the resolve that being alone for the next 10 years would be better than repeating this dinner ever again/
Fast forward six days and I'm at a work meeting with the CEO of a company we just acquired came to sit next to me after lunch. As he walked over, I panicked, wondering what work-talk I was going to coherently make, after just having a meal and having a food-hangover. Luckily, he wasn't looking to talk shop and we quickly entered the realm of TV after I blurted out 'So did you start referencing the Heisenberg Theory before or after 'Breaking Bad' got big?' Much to my amusement, he went straight to the topic of Breaking Bad and from there asked 'have you seen Weeds?' - have I seen Weeds? Nancy Botwin is one of my personal heros (in all of her hot mess-ed-ness).
From there we took a short leap to travel and then to Africa. He's been! He fell in love with the people and the culture when he visited. I was gushing about Rwanda. The love, the heart break, the difficulty being here and strong pull to be back there. At that point, he referenced a Buddhist principle which I immediately recognized at Pema Chondron - Pema - he reads Pema! Wow!
Unfortunately our talk was cut short because the larger group meeting resumed. He said we should talk more and asked what office I was in. Long story short, we had a work email exchange and against probably all reason, logic and good advice, I found a somewhat low key way to drop in my number.
For the amount of time I've put in complaining about the lack of quality dates and connection - I decided that when a good conversation comes along, you have to at least make an effort toward it.
I have no idea if he was as amused (even excited) as I was. Maybe he meets people like this every day. But I don't feel that sense of connection so easily and I was eagerly hoping for the conversation to continue.
I'm sure that the conversation happened for a reason - maybe it wasn't go get to know him, maybe just to remind me of that the depth that I'm holding out for really does exist. It was worth going out on a little limb to see!
Fast forward six days and I'm at a work meeting with the CEO of a company we just acquired came to sit next to me after lunch. As he walked over, I panicked, wondering what work-talk I was going to coherently make, after just having a meal and having a food-hangover. Luckily, he wasn't looking to talk shop and we quickly entered the realm of TV after I blurted out 'So did you start referencing the Heisenberg Theory before or after 'Breaking Bad' got big?' Much to my amusement, he went straight to the topic of Breaking Bad and from there asked 'have you seen Weeds?' - have I seen Weeds? Nancy Botwin is one of my personal heros (in all of her hot mess-ed-ness).
From there we took a short leap to travel and then to Africa. He's been! He fell in love with the people and the culture when he visited. I was gushing about Rwanda. The love, the heart break, the difficulty being here and strong pull to be back there. At that point, he referenced a Buddhist principle which I immediately recognized at Pema Chondron - Pema - he reads Pema! Wow!
Unfortunately our talk was cut short because the larger group meeting resumed. He said we should talk more and asked what office I was in. Long story short, we had a work email exchange and against probably all reason, logic and good advice, I found a somewhat low key way to drop in my number.
For the amount of time I've put in complaining about the lack of quality dates and connection - I decided that when a good conversation comes along, you have to at least make an effort toward it.
I have no idea if he was as amused (even excited) as I was. Maybe he meets people like this every day. But I don't feel that sense of connection so easily and I was eagerly hoping for the conversation to continue.
I'm sure that the conversation happened for a reason - maybe it wasn't go get to know him, maybe just to remind me of that the depth that I'm holding out for really does exist. It was worth going out on a little limb to see!
Friday, July 31, 2015
I'm back from Rwanda and....what happens next?
I'm back from Rwanda and a jumble of emotions. The trip was uplifting yet gut-wrenching at the same time. The country is so full of love and connectedness, yet they've been through so much pain and have so many challenges in front of them.
Two weeks after I returned, my uncle passed away. And I hit the ground. Crying...that ugly, snot-running crying...until I realized I wasn't just crying for him, but for the kids from the orphanage whom we had to leave. I'm back here...but they are still there. And I don't know how to be ok with that. We lived on this constant wave of love, and now I'm back and it is gone and they are gone from my life.
I'm not sure what is the next step forward. I always know - always have a next step, goal or milestone. But now I don't. How do I make a difference? How do I fill the hole in my heart from the piece that was left in Rwanda?
I've felt 'island syndrome' in the past (where you feel you are living alone on an island with no one around) - but this time it is different. I don't know how to explain my experience and it is almost harder to relate to other people, having not processed the experience myself.
Don't get me wrong - there was so much good from the trip and I see things differently now. In many ways I am more understanding of other people, but in some ways I'm less. In many ways I feel gentler and more connected as a human being, but in some ways I feel more alone and less relate-able to those around me.
I had this vision that after I moved into our new home, sold our old house, ate whatever I wanted (to prep for the trip) and then traveled to this land of gentle kindness....that I would come back peaceful and whole. (Part of me even imagined this would be the type of time where I finally cross paths with the right person) But now I am unsure - what happens next?
Two weeks after I returned, my uncle passed away. And I hit the ground. Crying...that ugly, snot-running crying...until I realized I wasn't just crying for him, but for the kids from the orphanage whom we had to leave. I'm back here...but they are still there. And I don't know how to be ok with that. We lived on this constant wave of love, and now I'm back and it is gone and they are gone from my life.
I'm not sure what is the next step forward. I always know - always have a next step, goal or milestone. But now I don't. How do I make a difference? How do I fill the hole in my heart from the piece that was left in Rwanda?
I've felt 'island syndrome' in the past (where you feel you are living alone on an island with no one around) - but this time it is different. I don't know how to explain my experience and it is almost harder to relate to other people, having not processed the experience myself.
Don't get me wrong - there was so much good from the trip and I see things differently now. In many ways I am more understanding of other people, but in some ways I'm less. In many ways I feel gentler and more connected as a human being, but in some ways I feel more alone and less relate-able to those around me.
I had this vision that after I moved into our new home, sold our old house, ate whatever I wanted (to prep for the trip) and then traveled to this land of gentle kindness....that I would come back peaceful and whole. (Part of me even imagined this would be the type of time where I finally cross paths with the right person) But now I am unsure - what happens next?
5 Lessons Learned From 2 Weeks in Rwanda
Back from Rwanda and here is my article about the trip:
5 Lessons From 2 Weeks in Rwanda (A Letter to My Daughter)
Enjoy!
5 Lessons From 2 Weeks in Rwanda (A Letter to My Daughter)
Enjoy!
Monday, June 15, 2015
Eat, Pray, Love, Rwanda
Four years post-divorce and the landscape looks so different. Grace has grown from a baby into a child. We made a fresh start in a new house (just last month) in a nicer neighborhood, in a house that feels like a home. Old friends have all stayed in place and may new friends have become as close as family. I landed my dream job of running a marketing program. I'm now a blogger on the Huffington Post. All of this...and I'm still alone. Except alone used to feel scary and daunting. Now it feels free and empowering. All choices are mine, the path is mine, the joy is mine.
In the last 8 months I have barely dated. But I've been eating. In part to gain weight before going to Rwanda. In part because, for the first time in longer than I can remember, I don't care as much about what I look like. I no longer feel in competition with other girls for the holy grail of a stunning single man.
I've been meditating (or trying to). Using new techniques to gain perspective in times when control is no longer mine. The moving process really puts this to the test - buying and selling a house is a high stakes game and you want to come out a winner but you don't know until the dust settles how you did.
Next week I leave for Rwanda. I'm all nerves mixed with some excitement. As the day approaches I expect more nerves and less excitement and after the plane takes off I except the tide will change. I won't have any control over what happens, it is all in the hands of God, the Universe, the Higher Power. All there is to do is to let go and live....and love. Those kids who have never known a mother's love. Who don't have individual attention on a regular basis.
So although I am still alone, I feel that the whole universe is supporting me. On this journey, on this path. Moving forward.
In the last 8 months I have barely dated. But I've been eating. In part to gain weight before going to Rwanda. In part because, for the first time in longer than I can remember, I don't care as much about what I look like. I no longer feel in competition with other girls for the holy grail of a stunning single man.
I've been meditating (or trying to). Using new techniques to gain perspective in times when control is no longer mine. The moving process really puts this to the test - buying and selling a house is a high stakes game and you want to come out a winner but you don't know until the dust settles how you did.
Next week I leave for Rwanda. I'm all nerves mixed with some excitement. As the day approaches I expect more nerves and less excitement and after the plane takes off I except the tide will change. I won't have any control over what happens, it is all in the hands of God, the Universe, the Higher Power. All there is to do is to let go and live....and love. Those kids who have never known a mother's love. Who don't have individual attention on a regular basis.
So although I am still alone, I feel that the whole universe is supporting me. On this journey, on this path. Moving forward.
Monday, June 1, 2015
"So, here it is, the plan for being happy and unstoppable..."
Worthwhile read: "What to be Happy and Unstoppable?"
After
studying and teaching the science and practice of well-being,
leadership, and expert performance for twenty-five years, and in my work
with executives, athletes, adventurers, educators, activists, parents,
and students from all over the world, one thing has become crystal clear
to me: the secret to a remarkable life lies in your relationship to discomfort.
I
am not just referring to physical pain or emotional experiences such as
anger, fear, anxiety, stress, disappointment, or heartbreak. There is
an easy exercise to uncover the kind of subtle discomfort that can be
influential in your life - especially when you are unaware of it.
Without thinking about it, clasp your hands together with fingers
intertwined. See which thumb is on top. This is how you always do it -
it is comfortable. Now unclasp your hands, shift them relative to each
other, and reclasp them so that the other thumb is on top. If you pay
attention, you may notice a slightly unsettled feeling - a mild sense of
discomfort.
This
simple exercise offers powerful insight into your brain. There is a
part of your brain that is activated when it determines that there is a
current problem or a potential obstacle, or when you do something
different than you have in the past. This area of the brain then sends
signals in two directions. One signal travels toward your gut to create
sensations of discomfort, and another signal goes to a part of the brain
that prompts a habitual behavior. If you engage in the behavior, then
another part of the brain gives you a tiny reward, which you experience
as relief from discomfort. In fact, the original meaning of the word
comfort was "feeling of relief."
So
this network in your brain connects the feelings of discomfort with an
action that leads to comfort. Squirrels have the same system - stimulus,
discomfort, action, comfort. What makes you different from a squirrel
(besides longer legs, a lack of body fur, and slightly less beady eyes),
is that this is not the only brain system you have for choosing
behavior. We will get to that in a minute.
Discomfort is a natural and temporary experience. Discomfort
is just information about how your nervous system is responding to
circumstances. It may be incredibly useful information for navigating
your environment and it may be misleading information based on false
associations from the past. While discomfort itself is nothing more than
a sensation created by your nervous system, mindless and reflexive
efforts to seek relief from discomfort can cause a lot of drama. In
fact, seeking relief from discomfort can completely derail us from what
is most important. Procrastination, perfectionism, compulsion, eating,
drinking, spending, lying, cheating, stealing, gambling, hoarding,
yelling, hitting, hiding...the list goes on. While no one has ever died
from discomfort, many people have died trying to get rid of it. In
daily life, relentless pursuit of comfort and avoidance of discomfort
require a tremendous amount of energy that could otherwise go into
meaningful activities.
From
a young age we are taught that the people and the circumstances around
us are responsible for our feelings and that we are responsible for the
feelings of others. The
simple truth is that your feelings are created by your nervous system
and other peoples' feelings are created by their nervous systems. To
illustrate this point, let's imagine you are sitting on an airplane and
a toddler is screaming. The mother is feeling frustration and
embarrassment. Another parent sitting three rows back is feeling relief
that it is not his child who is making the noise. A third person is
feeling annoyance at the noise and another passenger is feeling empathy
and compassion for the mother. Which of these feelings is the screaming
child responsible for? The
more you accept responsibility for how you relate to your own feelings
and stop trying to control the feelings of others, the less complicated
life becomes.
The
good news is that human brains are equipped with more than just the
squirrel system. You have architecture in your brain designed for
awareness, acceptance, and purpose. You
can notice and accept the feelings of discomfort, you can weigh values
and priorities such as contribution, learning, growth, and connection,
and you can take action based on what is most important to you.
Doing something even when you don't feel like it is a uniquely human trait. In fact, this may be the single most impressive thing about our species. I like to use the acronym WYFLION - Whether You Feel Like It or Not - to remind myself that I am capable of doing things in the presence of discomfort. Behind every significant accomplishment in this world, there is an individual or group who took action in the presence of discomfort to achieve a goal. WYFLION gets parents up to change a diaper in the middle of the night, gives explorers the ability to peer around the next bend, pushes athletes through a challenging workout, and keeps relationships intact through rough patches - it is the fuel for heroes great and small. WYFLION is the unwritten clause of the Golden Rule - Do onto others as you would have them do onto you (whether you feel like it or not). WYFLION is the key to a life of freedom.
Doing something even when you don't feel like it is a uniquely human trait. In fact, this may be the single most impressive thing about our species. I like to use the acronym WYFLION - Whether You Feel Like It or Not - to remind myself that I am capable of doing things in the presence of discomfort. Behind every significant accomplishment in this world, there is an individual or group who took action in the presence of discomfort to achieve a goal. WYFLION gets parents up to change a diaper in the middle of the night, gives explorers the ability to peer around the next bend, pushes athletes through a challenging workout, and keeps relationships intact through rough patches - it is the fuel for heroes great and small. WYFLION is the unwritten clause of the Golden Rule - Do onto others as you would have them do onto you (whether you feel like it or not). WYFLION is the key to a life of freedom.
The real secret to lasting happiness is the awareness and acceptance that the feelings of happiness do not last. No
matter what you do, the comfortable feelings of happiness come and go
in the same way that the uncomfortable feelings of fear, sadness,
anxiety, stress, anger, boredom, frustration, and restlessness come and
go. No matter what you do, discomfort is going to show up again. When
you eat, you don't expect that you are done with hunger forever - you
accept that the discomfort of hunger will show up again. This is true
for every type of discomfort. There is no way to extinguish this
integral part of being human. The beauty is that you can use discomfort
as an opportunity to reorient your attention to what is most important. Mindfully
accepting and purposely responding to discomfort without desperately
and reactively seeking relief is the foundation of a good life. This takes practice - mindful and purposeful practice.
The
elements of mindful practice are opening up, noticing, and accepting
whatever shows up - pleasant or unpleasant. You can set aside time at
the beginning and ending of each day - 5 to 20 minutes - to sit
mindfully. You can stop 3-5 times a day for 10 - 60 seconds at a time to
practice being mindful. You can practice being mindful in any activity -
walking, driving, eating, talking, listening, working, playing. The
elements of purposeful practice are commitment, opportunity and action. There
are thousands of opportunities everyday to identify what is most
important and take some small meaningful action. This practice -
Opening, Noticing, Accepting, Commitment, Opportunity, Action (ONACOA) -
builds the core skills of exceptional well-being and performance.
So,
here it is, the plan for being happy and unstoppable: Practice being
mindful of accepting discomfort and taking committed action in its
presence. Make an attempt, fail, get up, and make a new attempt.
Practice compassion for yourself and others and gratitude for the simple
opportunity to be human. When a new discomfort shows up, begin again.
Friday, May 29, 2015
There is a Little Bit of Katie Meyler in Each of Us (And Why I’m Going to Rwanda…as a Single Mom)
(As seen on the Huffington Post)
If you don't know who
Katie Meyler is yet, it’s worth the time to find out. She is an enterprising
young woman who opened the More than Me Academy to get girls off the street and into schools in
West Point, Liberia.
When the Ebola epidemic
struck West Africa in the fall of 2014, the school was forced to
shut down. Instead of waiting for the threat to pass, Katie flew into the heart
of the epidemic and turned her school into an aid center to help victims and newly
orphaned children of Ebola. You can follow Katie on Instagram where she posts gripping photos of both the
despair and hope found within Liberia. For her efforts, she was named Time
Magazine’s ”Person of the Year” in 2014, and has earned Instagram’s “person
to follow,” designation as her posts resonate with all cross-sections of
humanity.
Why are people so drawn
to Katie's story and her work? Because there is a little bit of Katie
Meyler in each of us. She doesn't come from a wealthy family and has had no
advantages to make her journey easy - she just knew what she needed to do and
acted on it.
Perhaps Katie’s will to help is best described by Dr. Bhavna Shyamalan, co-founder of the M
Night Shyamalan Foundation, an organization that funds the More than Me Academy. “Walking by a man
lying in the street is not neutral, it is a negative,” Shyamalan says. “You are
making a choice to do nothing.” She adds that the only way forward is to
pull people up, one by one.
Although we may not have
the means or desire to fly to Liberia, seeing Katie's pictures reminds us that
we can each choose actions to improve the world around us. Katie, and others
like her, prove that one person's efforts are not inconsequential - what we do
makes a difference.
Inside we all know there
is something we can do for the greater good. We need to listen to the voice reminding
us that we are fortunate and often take basic essentials for granted - yet
others are not as lucky.
As a single mother, I
made the decision to travel to Rwanda to live and work for two weeks in the Nibakure Children’s
Village - an orphanage designed
to provide a sustainable home for approximately 20 children who were not born
into the loving and stable environments so many of us are afforded.
When I learned of the
Nibakure Village, I instantly recognized how lucky my daughter and I are to
have landed where we are in life. I wondered if I didn’t go and spend time with
these children - who would? These kids didn't choose to be born into a
difficult situation, living in one of the world’s poorest countries, but I can choose to make their world a little
bit better by volunteering my time and energy.
So I’ve committed to getting
more than five inoculations to protect against deadly diseases, such as yellow
fever and typhoid, taking meds that cause stomachaches, and flying across the
globe for 24 hours to have an experience that will both enrich my character and
provide an example for my daughter, so that she doesn’t take our life for
granted and choosing to help others will become part of the fabric of who she
is as she grows up.
Don't be neutral - choose
to help pull someone up today.
Monday, April 20, 2015
"Walking by a man lying in the street is not neutral, it is a negative"
I went to the M. Night Shyamalan Foundation event over the weekend to hear three of their leaders speak - three individuals who have been 'vetted by life' and overcame significant challenges that lead them to feel responsible to make circumstances better for others - from pulling boys in Ghana out of the slave trade, to getting girls in Liberia off the streets and into school to eradicating the signficant reading lag in K through 3rd graders in the US.
Dr. Bhavna Shyamalan said, "Walking by a man lying in the street is not neutral, it is a negative" - these three individuals refused to leave anyone lying there and are pulling people out, one by one.
I left the event feeling incredibly inspired and wondering - am I pulling as many people out as I can? Although I have my trip to Rwanda booked (leaving in 2 months!) and I volunteer on a community committee, the majority of my time is spent at work and raising my daughter. The truth is, I've always felt I should do more. I even have a shooting star tattooed on my back to remind me of what I am capable of doing, so I would not forget to never settle.
I realized that night that I haven't been at a place where I feel safe to branch further out. I live in a house where I feel under siege - between things breaking and flashbacks to the dramatic end to the marriage. I didn't chose to live in this house, I ended up living here by circumstance.
In the past 2 months I've set everything else aside and have focused on finding a home for Stella and I. A solid foundation from which we can continue to build our lives. I think (hope) I have found that place & if this one doesn't work out, I won't give up until I find the home that is right for us.
I truly believe this is a missing piece to getting my 'maslovian needs' in order - and now I want to do more - help others who's needs aren't met.
Despite wondering if 'doing enough' after hearing these amazing leaders, I attended a fundraising dinner for a soup kitchen where my team at work at served a lunch. After we saw the poor condition of their cooking supplies, we shipped boxes of sets of culinary knives for the kitchen along with blankets and coats and whatever else we could pull together to supply to the homeless people who depend on this facility each day for their meals and services. Although this was done without thinking twice, the person who runs the soup kitchen found me at the dinner and thanked me for coming through - not for saying that we wanted to help - but for doing it and taking it to the next level but sending the supplies.
Right now I have the urge to pick everyone up - that passion and buzz inside - but right now I am doing what I can. Right now, I need a home base to start from. Right now, I need to raise my daughter. But as I go along, I can help on the community committee, I can spend time at the orphanage in Rwanda, making those kids feel special and valued - and I can help a poorly supplied soup kitchen along the way -- what can you do today?
Don't be neutral - don't be a negative - pick someone up.
Dr. Bhavna Shyamalan said, "Walking by a man lying in the street is not neutral, it is a negative" - these three individuals refused to leave anyone lying there and are pulling people out, one by one.
I left the event feeling incredibly inspired and wondering - am I pulling as many people out as I can? Although I have my trip to Rwanda booked (leaving in 2 months!) and I volunteer on a community committee, the majority of my time is spent at work and raising my daughter. The truth is, I've always felt I should do more. I even have a shooting star tattooed on my back to remind me of what I am capable of doing, so I would not forget to never settle.
I realized that night that I haven't been at a place where I feel safe to branch further out. I live in a house where I feel under siege - between things breaking and flashbacks to the dramatic end to the marriage. I didn't chose to live in this house, I ended up living here by circumstance.
In the past 2 months I've set everything else aside and have focused on finding a home for Stella and I. A solid foundation from which we can continue to build our lives. I think (hope) I have found that place & if this one doesn't work out, I won't give up until I find the home that is right for us.
I truly believe this is a missing piece to getting my 'maslovian needs' in order - and now I want to do more - help others who's needs aren't met.
Despite wondering if 'doing enough' after hearing these amazing leaders, I attended a fundraising dinner for a soup kitchen where my team at work at served a lunch. After we saw the poor condition of their cooking supplies, we shipped boxes of sets of culinary knives for the kitchen along with blankets and coats and whatever else we could pull together to supply to the homeless people who depend on this facility each day for their meals and services. Although this was done without thinking twice, the person who runs the soup kitchen found me at the dinner and thanked me for coming through - not for saying that we wanted to help - but for doing it and taking it to the next level but sending the supplies.
Right now I have the urge to pick everyone up - that passion and buzz inside - but right now I am doing what I can. Right now, I need a home base to start from. Right now, I need to raise my daughter. But as I go along, I can help on the community committee, I can spend time at the orphanage in Rwanda, making those kids feel special and valued - and I can help a poorly supplied soup kitchen along the way -- what can you do today?
Don't be neutral - don't be a negative - pick someone up.
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Helpful read: A Single Mom's Guide to Career Advancement (For Any Working Mom!)
Great article from TheGlassHammer.com:
A Single Mom's Guide to Career Advancement (For Any Working Mom!)
A Single Mom's Guide to Career Advancement (For Any Working Mom!)
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Resurrecting Soup Guy
In the fall of 2013 I met a lovely guy whom I named Soup Guy. We only had two dates because I didn't feel the "wow" factor. However, in the year and a half since, I've thought of him many times as I grumbled to myself that this date 'didn't do this' or was 'lousy at that' - and would compare the less-than dates to Soup Guy who did everything right.
So when I came across him on an online dating since in 2015, I asked if he would like to catch up over a drink. We met up last week and had good conversation, he is as nice as ever. Easy going, non-judgemental, asks a lot of questions. Although the immediate "wow" factor isn't there right now, I am well aware that my "wow" factor-o-meter is a bit off and usually points to self-involved, un-evolved guys. He asked for a second date and said he has a fun idea so I'm going to say yes and see what is in store.
So when I came across him on an online dating since in 2015, I asked if he would like to catch up over a drink. We met up last week and had good conversation, he is as nice as ever. Easy going, non-judgemental, asks a lot of questions. Although the immediate "wow" factor isn't there right now, I am well aware that my "wow" factor-o-meter is a bit off and usually points to self-involved, un-evolved guys. He asked for a second date and said he has a fun idea so I'm going to say yes and see what is in store.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)