Sunday, June 30, 2013

Story

story

noun (plural stories)

  • an account of imaginary or real people and events told for entertainment
  • a plot or story line
  • a report of an item of news in a newspaper, magazine, or news broadcast
  • a piece of gossip; a rumor
  • informal a false statement or explanation; a lie
  • an account of past events in someone’s life or in the evolution of something
  • a particular person’s representation of the facts of a matter, especially as given in self-defense
  • [in singular] a situation viewed in terms of the information known about it or its similarity to another

______________________________________________________________________
"Black Beauty" by Virginia Grove,
acrylic & pen on canvas
Story comforts the lonely.  Just as they had when I was much younger, characters and scenes invite me away from the full reality of now and place me within worlds where aspects of my own story are illuminated.

On Friday, I started to read Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine, a book I'd been carrying around in my bag for weeks.  The main character of the book, Caitlin, has lost her mother to cancer and her brother to a school shooting.  With the guidance of her father and her beloved Mrs. Brooks, Caitlin must navigate her final year in elementary school before heading to the same middle school where her brother was killed.  Caitlin is additionally challenged with an Asperger's diagnosis. 

A young girl with a love of the dictionary and finding the meanings of words, she hears the word CLOSURE one day and makes it her mission to figure out what closure is and how to get it.  As a budding artist, a young girl who loves to draw in black and white because the colors make everything fuzzy, she turns to her brother's unfinished Eagle Scout project and together with her father, finds a degree of closure. 

Finding ourselves in story helps us feel a little less alone.  Caitlin and I might as well be sisters.  Just like me, she searches for the definitions of words.  Just as I do, she loves to draw in black and white.  Just like me, she blurs her vision when she's trying to feel less overwhelmed-- though she calls this process "stuffed-animaling" because it makes the edges soft.  Just like me, she experiences discomfort around noise and she says she's bad at emotions.  Like me, she loves gummy worms (I'd take them over chocolate any day) though she names hers, something I'm a bit jealous I'd never thought to do.  Like me, she tries to intellectually synthesize what happens around her and only really 'gets it' in moments where her passions, intellect, and uniqueness come together. Caitlin is set to go to Virginia Dare Middle School.  In middle school, my school counselor's name was Virginia Dare.  Middle school remains one of the hardest periods of time in my life. 

As I read Mockingbird, I started to forget all of the gray and the fuzz and the confusion that's been swirling around me for weeks.  I started to pay attention to a story and started to feel connected in a way I haven't in a long time.  I've been keeping distant from connection-- distant from connection to self, connection to others, connection to just about anything I can.  I've been visualizing-- drawing and painting off of paper where only I have to worry about the images and sensations tagging along because there are some pictures other people don't want to see...there are some galleries of work not meant to be viewed.  For awhile, though, I had a friend in Caitlin and while I did, I felt OK.

She was not the first book friend I've had.

Black Beauty was my favorite book as a child, with The Secret Garden coming in not far behind. I can't count the number of times I've read the book and while I love virtually any version, the tiny copy I had will forever remain special.  I'd read and re-read that tiny copy while laying in bed at Mom-mom's house on the weekends.  Time suspended but for the blackness of the sky painted by the spin of the earth.  I read in the dark, a book light clipped to the cover.  In between chapters I'd go to check on Mom-mom. Each night she'd sleep,with her hair in rollers, on the green,velour couch burned repeatedly by cigarettes.  I never saw her use the bedroom that had been hers.  I never really understood her story.  But Beauty, I understood Beauty. 

I saw myself in Beauty.

I've always seen myself through characters who are unable or struggle to express themselves.  Beauty spoke, but I understood that animals did not literally speak as humans could.  Mary Lenox in The Secret Garden seems only capable of expressing herself in ways unsuited to her new environment.  It should surprise no one that I also had an ongoing fascination with Helen Keller because of her communication challenges and still hold a special place in my heart for the stuffed animal I sleep with every night, Teddy, because he doesn't have eyes and that leaves him able to communicate with me in very different ways...genuine ways. 

Story holds me.  Story helps me understand my own evolution.  And those who possess barriers to the ease of communication so many take for granted, help me to feel like I'm a part of a family...a family of books...a community of story.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Focus

noun
  • the center of interest or activity
  • an act of concentrating interest or activity on something
  • Geology the point of origin of an earthquake. Compare with epicenter.
  • Medicine the principal site of an infection or other disease.
  • Linguistics the part of a sentence given prominence, usually for emphasis or contrast.
  • the state or quality of having or producing clear visual definition
  • another term for focal point.
  • the point at which an object must be situated with respect to a lens or mirror for an image of it to be well defined.
  • a device on a lens that can be adjusted to produce a clear image.
  • Geometry one of the fixed points from which the distances to any point of a given curve, such as an ellipse or parabola, are connected by a linear relation.
verb (focuses, focusing, focused or focusses, focussing, focussed)
[no object]

  • (of a person or their eyes) adapt to the prevailing level of light and become able to see clearly
  • [with object] cause (one’s eyes) to focus
  • [with object] adjust the focus of (a telescope, camera, or other instrument)
  • (of rays or waves) meet at a single point.
  • [with object] (of a lens) make (rays or waves) meet at a single point.
  • [no object] (of light, radio waves, or other energy) become concentrated into a sharp beam of light or energy.
  • [with object] (of a lens) concentrate (light, radio waves, or energy) into a sharp beam.
  • (focus on) pay particular attention to
  • [with object] concentrate
  • [with object] Linguistics place the focus on (a part of a sentence).

Origin:
mid 17th century (as a term in geometry and physics): from Latin, literally 'domestic hearth'

http://oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/focus
_______________________________________________________________________________
While trying to learn how I'll come into focus, I begin seeing more clearly from the edges in...

...a week before Christmas, I'm in front of the tree forcing my eyes out of focus...tilting my head slightly left and slightly right until the auras of light from the red and yellow and green and blue bulbs spin around and into each other.  My body and the light outside of me become a kaleidoscope...


...school's out for the year. I watch the buses pull in and line up and then load full of students headed home. The teachers stand on duty between buses, checking to make sure there aren't any kids smoking. One or two of them light up a cigarette while they check. As the buses pull away, the teachers cheer and wave goodbye. The buses flash all of their lights in a celebratory dance. I watch the whole thing, letting my eyes go out of focus, watching the dance of lights blend into the nearly-summer sky...


...the heat paints me into a damp watercolor. I'm not wearing sunscreen, only a bit of tanning oil for two distinct reasons-- one, with my eyes closed, I focus not on what I'll actually see but on what I smell--the coconut oil paints a picture of a tropical oasis...bathing beauties in two-piece suits untied at the neck, so that when each girl flips over to work on her other side, she must hold up 'the girls' lest she expose them to the sun and its bathers. Two, without SPF Something-zillion, my very white, very fat self is going to burn, but with tanning oil, I'll tan just like the other girls in their two-piece suits, eye covers over their eyes rather than sunglasses to block the sun, their long hair draped over the end of their lounge chairs. I stare up at the sun with my eyes closed, watching the blur of the eclipse the image makes behind my eyelids. I watch the image move, dancing out of the frame. When I shift my closed-eye vision back to center, another dancing spot appears for me to follow. I do this until I fall asleep. When I wake, I'm burnt and my skin is patterned by the strips of plastic from the lounge chair. I stand up and stare at the indent my body has left, before folding up the chair and going back inside the house to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich...


...I sit to write in an active panic attack. I'm at work working hard to make sure no one can tell something's wrong because these are the things my life has schooled me to keep shamefully hidden. I don't know where to start. I'm focused on anxiety, anxiety, anxiety but that is too big. So I focus in on the letter A, writing:

anesthetize all
anxious animals
an anxious animal
advises as an
aborted anger
assimilates an
anxious adult
and an adolescent
as anxious as
an adult
asking anxiously,
always
aware and
always armed,
advancing
an army,
applying an
argument against
abusive authoritarians

as an adult,
absolutely absorbed,
an anxious ache
alienates
awake, awry,
and afraid
an awful
arousal arrives
asserting
adolescent
anxiety
again

and the anxiety's intensity begins to lessen. Deliberate focus, one guiding concept, melts immensity...

As I look to reach, touch, and eventually hold my core, my essence, focus does two things for me. I may use it to blend myself into whatever swirls around me OR I may use it to turn off whatever swirls around me. Shifting focus is self-preservation.  Self-preservation buys me time in which, perhaps, all the senses and sensations that are mine will be mine and with them I will shift into focus.
 
 
 

 









Sunday, June 16, 2013

Appointment

noun
  • an arrangement to meet someone at a particular time and place
  • an act of appointing; assigning a job or position to someone
  • a job or position
  • a person appointed to a job or position
  • (appointments) furniture or fittings

http://oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/appointment

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This upcoming Friday morning I head to my appointment with the oncologist. The CT scan several weeks behind me and the message left indicating said scan was 'stable' means I enter the office with a little less anxious anticipation. It does not mean I go anxiety-free to the appointment.

Little-seeming parts of these visits raise my anxiety such as whether the nurse will get a vein on the first try or whether I'll be a short-term pin cushion, whether I'll be asked to make a payment on my somewhat sizable past-due balance when I don't exactly have the money to make a payment, what the scale will show when I step on and adjust the slider myself in an effort to make my fatness less offensive to the nurse, what 'stable' actually means, what the poking and pushing and prodding will feel like, whether the smell of the office will upset my stomach and whether the flushing toilet water will do the same should I end up needing to use the bathroom.

One of my greatest anxiety producers is the list--the thought onslaught playing like a flip book where the individual frames relate but in which, from one page to the next, there exists an evident lack of progression. At times, the list feels like a fight full of one-after-the-other sucker punches.  I end up dog-paddling in details while looking for ways to connect what's floating into a chain long enough to pull myself to shore so I can pull myself to sure.

The week ahead, as it turns out, is filled with appointments and possibly even an appointment. There's a counseling session, a chiropractic appointment, and a call with my health coach. Additionally, I have a date with a business reasoning/work styles assessment, something I must complete as part of the interview process for a new position I've applied to at Prudential (a position for which I've already had two interviews and a final decision on who will be appointed is expected by the end of the week). There's also an appointment this week to give a teaching demonstration as part of the interview process for a full-time teaching position at a local college.  As a result, my Sunday to-do list feels a bit more cumbersome than it usually does but I'm trying to remind myself that the lengthy list of appointments and to-do's are all related to potential change...they can all be stitched together to create the change chain...and while, like most individuals, I'm terrified by change, I recognize change is overdue.

So while I flip through my own appointments this week, what about you? What does your week look like? What appointment do you have on the horizon? What change chain are you stitching together?  Write about appointments.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Lost


I have a special treat for you this week.  This week on the blog I present you TWO narratives on LOST.  The first comes from the fabulous Amye Archer.  Amye Archer holds an MFA from Wilkes University. You can find her at www.amyearcher.com.  Trust me...you NEED to read her work.  My writing will follow her piece. 

Please consider following the blog and/or leave a comment if you appreciate what you read. Tell me how you interpret LOST.  I am always looking for feedback and would welcome yours.

Now...let's get to the writing---------

LOST:
adjective
  • unable to find one’s way; not knowing one’s whereabouts
  • unable to be found
  • (of a person) very confused or insecure or in great difficulties
  • denoting something that has been taken away or cannot be recovered
  • (of time or an opportunity) not used advantageously; wasted
  • having perished or been destroyed
  • (of a game or contest) in which a defeat has been sustained
http://oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/lost
________________________________________________________________________
Amye Archer on LOST


I am six and the lure of a good candy bar pulls me from my mother's hip and into a story that will follow me forever.  How I scream when I turn to find her gone.  How I scream even though she is three feet away in the next aisle.  How I scream when I think I'm alone.  How I scream.

My parents divorce in a pressure cooker.  My mother sleeps on the couch, my father searches other women for a trace of her.  I am in the garden of their collapsed marriage.  It is calm here.  My roots stretch out and attach to the wrong man.  We survive the blast.

My husband moves out on a Thursday night.  I try not to scream when I notice he's gone.  I attach the prefix "ex" to my memories of him.

I am 27 and use my last hundred bucks to buy a black acoustic guitar from a small shop in Wilkes-Barre.  I buy a chord book and memorize them all, minor, major, open, flat.  I play a lot of Tom Petty.  My neighbors complain.  Then, on a hot fall night a boy teaches me to play Radiohead's Creep, my favorite song.  He presses my plump fingers down into a bar chord and slides our fused hands up and down the thick neck.  We make music together.  I mistake his kindness for love.

I walk the streets with Paul Simon in my ears.  Trees hang over me like fallen arches.  The sidewalks carry me to a new life.  I worry they will collapse before I make it home.

I look at the clock: 2:06 PM.  I still have four minutes before I have to leave to pick my daughters up from school.  Four whole minutes to cry.   2:09 PM: I pool cold water between my hands and splash my red beating face.  I drip one drop of Visine in each eye, brush my teeth, and leave. 

There are things I knew for certain two years ago: my marriage was strong, my kids were happy, I was becoming a writer, I was already a good mother, my husband was happy.  Now, I don't think any of those are true, they feel like certainties that belong to someone else and they are hers and not mine.   I feel like I have somehow shattered, like I am in pieces, like there is nothing but tissue paper gauzing my insides together.

I write secret letters to my husband.  Letters begging him to hang onto me-like I can anchor us to something bigger.  Like I'm not weightless and floating away.  I fold the notes like footballs and shove them in a drawer.  I save the notes for the other side of this.  For the other side of LOST.
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Virginia Grove on LOST


Two wind chimes sound. The bamboo chime taps out the soft sound of hollow raindrops while the aluminum chime sings Amazing Grace. I start to hum and then sing, beginning with the ascending perfect fourth--A-MA. I continue, changing gears...Do, Re, Me, Fa, ... sing the Do-Fa fourth, before returning to the -zing grace.

How sweet the sound...

I'm reminded of music theory class, wedged into the wooden desks at Marywood as an undergrad music therapy major, a book bag full of music theory, percussion methods, and vocal performance texts, practice books for piano and bassoon, and all the other things I carried...

I decided I'd major in music therapy when I was in eighth grade. To combine my love of music and helping others seemed the only appropriate way I could pay forward what music had given me. Music was, and will forever be, my first love. As I grew, music was my loyal friend, confidant, and greatest source of comfort and I saturated myself in it from elementary school through high school and into my days as an undergrad. In elementary school, I sang in my church choir, the French Choir, started on clarinet, and tried out for handbells (I didn't make the group-- my right hand didn't ring bells well, my left hand--my non-dominant hand--was the best bell ringer that side of Philadelphia). In middle school, I continued on clarinet and in school and church choir. I took private vocal and instrumental lessons. I played clarinet and started on bassoon in high school, playing whichever was most appropriate in marching band, concert band, orchestra, and wind ensemble. I continued singing in 'homeroom chorus' an abbreviated opportunity choir set up for those who couldn't fit any other aspect of the vocal program into their schedules. And then I applied to and auditioned at a handful of schools where I could major in music therapy with bassoon as my primary instrument. For as much as I loved playing and singing in a group though, the greatest joy surrounded solitary music. Alone in a car, singing to whatever was playing, I was happy. With my Walkman attached to my pocket and my headphones on, I was happy. Listening to my blue and white stereo in my blue and white bedroom while pressing play and record to tape my favorite songs off the radio, I was happy. I was happy practicing my clarinet or bassoon, particularly when no one was home. Experimenting with chords and rhythm on my white guitar or my keyboard, I was happy.

There isn't music I don't like, save for the heavy, violent, angry music my good friend refers to as the 'Kill your mother, kill your father, put the dog in the oven-----ahhhhhhh' music. I could do without most of that music (though, believe me, there are days). I went through phases of addictions to pop music, classical music, a long phase of a deep, deep love of show tunes, Christian music, country music, and nearly everything on the spectrum. Like other forms of creative expression, when I could connect with the vibration of and the story in and behind the music, the music, my friend, spoke for me and...my story...

I once was lost...

Moving away from home to go to college was disorienting. In the spin of that period of time, I eventually dropped out of the music program (frustrated with the narrow focus of the department), started as an English major (realizing how much I missed the intricacies of language) and then, incapable of going to classes post 9/11, was 'let go' from the college. Rather than withdrawing from classes for fear that I would need to go home a failure, I simply stopped going and took failing grades where only 'A's belonged. I started work as a telemarketer, a poor choice for someone who dislikes the phone as much as I did...and still do. I eventually lost that job. I left my desk to head to the bathroom one morning or afternoon and completely lost track of time and myself. After that, I'd ride to work with Kim, who would work while I'd stay in the car, terrified, for the length of her workday. I don't recall how long this went on. I started a new job a period of time after that, one where I would have done editing work. When, after training, I was told I had a beautiful speaking voice and was going to be put on the phones instead, I set up my desk as though I'd continue on, and right before lunch packed all of my things in my bag, called Kim, went to lunch, and never went back. Not long after that, I started as a temporary employee at Prudential and was hired on as a full-time employee less than a year later. And I'm still there...10+ years, home owners, car owners, four academic degrees (three my own and one Kim's), and two major health challenges (one my own and one Kim's), and one pretty fabulous wedding later.

During that first attempt at an undergrad degree, I tried hard to fix myself. I talked with the school counselor (she only wanted to talk about my family and all I wanted was help getting to class), attempted to find someone to talk to outside of the school when the school counselor didn't help (and couldn't afford to pay that one, or the next one, or the next one), and took various medications my mother had from the drug reps in an effort to gain some kind of emotional stability and to lose weight (because obviously, I'd be happier if I wasn't also fat).

My senses changed during that period of time. Smells were paralyzing. Sound--particularly repetitive sound-- turned more maddening than I'd ever remembered it being. Anything along the scale of physical contact was risky. Even my vision was impacted to the degree that I'd lose my sight entirely for periods of time. And so, I drew and painted and wrote and read and listened to music and used everything I had in my backpack in an effort feel less lost.

I could never sustain ‘less lost’ (just as I haven't been able to sustain weight loss). If anything, I felt more lost. I ended up in the emergency room a handful of times (and can think of one additional time I should have) for overdosing on prescription or OTC medication. The lone remaining Xanax sample pack I'd taken from my mother's grab bag of drugs and missed taking in the one attempt, was confiscated from the purple foot locker in my dorm room and attached to my file in the school nurse's office. I wanted so desperately to fall the rest of the way into lost...to blend into the world as part of it, but to be indistinguishable and untouchable and to, in every possible way, extinguish expectation. So I worked to push away from people I loved or who loved me. I stopped writing and drawing and reading and worked to stay still...very still...still and quiet. I wanted to be overlooked, ignored, and abandoned entirely so that everything made sense and the tension and conflict between home and away, between caring and not caring, between school and no school, between fat and thin, between safety and danger, between what some people led me to believe and what others wanted me to believe, between dead and alive, stopped. In the tension and conflict I self-imposed an expectation to equalize or diffuse--to level off-- to harmonize-- and when I couldn't, when I failed to create conditions where other people were OK and couldn't make myself OK, the degree of self-loathing was impenetrable and the words I spoke to myself could have killed me if only I'd spoken them at myself in an even harsher way.

There's a very distinct line between wanting to die and wanting to kill yourself. Wanting to die requires lining up circumstances in a way that the desired result can be produced. Wanting to kill yourself required a strength I didn't--and don't--have. There is a wise truth in recognizing not everyone wishes to live out a life sentence.

I should be dead many times over, more times than anyone knows, and figuring out what to do with that and then, if you figure out what to do figuring out how to do what you've figured out, creates a pressure and a tension that feels all too similar. Thoughts can change so quickly but feelings, once you can get them, take you where they will. I am still too much in my head with my thoughts while I try to figure out how to invite and manage feeling. So I remove and remove and remove-- I fall into the cradle of the arts and I rest.

If I could have captured that Ginny-- boxed her, framed her, painted her--I would have sat her up somewhere, like an Elf on the Shelf, and told her sit and wait it out. I'd have told her sometimes you won't find someone who can fix what hurts because sometimes you need to be lost in the hurt until you heal yourself. I'd have told her to try to feel less stupid and needy and small and unworthy when wanting to reach out for help or after having reached out for help because she wasn't stupid or needy or small or unworthy...rather, she was hurt. I'd have told her I understood how difficult it could be to believe me and that it mattered that she didn't, but that if she could pretend like she did--like she could pretend herself into other worlds worlds away from where she was lost...worlds where the wretch like her could be saved...she'd find out she was OK.

Ginny wanted to be back on her bed at Mom-Mom's house, curled up in her pjs on the blanket, curling her toes around the bumps and pulls on the bedspread, with a tiny copy of Black Beauty in her lap. She wanted her head on the rust-colored, satin pillowcase. She wanted to smell wet grass in the backyard and honeybuns baking in the oven. That Ginny wanted to get to classes and prove she could be successful. But she just felt lost and alone because, in so many ways, she was.

But now am...

found? Yes and no. I'm not that person anymore. I'm not not that person anymore. I've grown beyond her and yet she comes along. Most times, she is harmony when I am melody. Other times, she is the dissonant melody and I am left trying to harmonize.

Right now, today, her song is too long and too intense and the sensations her music brings are unnerving.

Right now, today, I'm just trying to remove myself from sensation unlike sensation I've felt before.

I'm dissonant trying to resolve.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Expect

verb
regard (something) as likely to happen; regard (someone) as likely to do or be something; used to indicate that one supposes something to be so, but has no firm evidence or knowledge

Origin:

mid 16th century (in the sense 'defer action, wait'): from Latin exspectare 'look out for', from ex- 'out' + spectare 'to look' (frequentative of specere 'see')

http://oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/expect

______________________________________

There's a TRAIN song...

"Sing Together"

If I go before I say to everyone in my ballet
Let me take this chance to thank you for the dance
If I run out of songs to sing to take your mind off everything
Just smile, sit a while with the

Sun on your face and remember the place we met
Take a breath and soon I bet you'll see
Without you I would never be me
You are the leaves of my family tree

Sing together
If you knew me from the very start,
Or we met last week at the grocery mart
Just sing together
It's the least that I can do
My final gift to you
Oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oooo

When I'm past the pearly gate, I will find some real estate
Where we can settle down and watch the world go round
We'll send down all the love we got and let them know we got a spot
For them to be and it's all free,

The sun on your face and remember the place we met
Take a breath and soon I bet you'll see
Without you I would never be me
You are the leaves of my family tree

Sing together
If you knew me from the very start,
Or not at all you're still a part, just
Sing together
It's the least that I can do
My final gift to you
Oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oooo
Oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oooo

Sometimes, when I drive, and the song plays, I imagine it playing at my funeral...imagine its simplicity...imagine who would connect that simplicity with the simple desire I had for happiness. Happy times like playing with the dog or her morning flops beside me in bed...times like the wedding or the joy of the first Spring morning after leaving the windows open for the first time after a long winter.  In those moments, I know I'm not a bad person so I look back for them. But when I look back, I find a great deal of other 'stuff' mixed in and that leaves me hurting.

I've felt sick for a very VERY long time. When cancer emerged, I was almost grateful that something someone else could recognize, proved that I was, indeed, full of disease.  Scans and bloodwork proved it.  I felt heard. What I'd held, what I'm certain I was born with, had finally boiled over--sent  splatters flying over the edges of my skin leaving burns.

I received a voicemail from the oncology office on Friday that my CT scan was stable. I missed the call and despite the invite on the voicemail to call if I had any questions, I didn't call back because I didn't want to bother anyone. That is something I do when I feel like I have the past few weeks. I lose the kick to move and should I start to feel myself move, I effectively kick myself back down. When you believe you deserve to be kicked, the safest way to be kicked is to kick yourself.

I expected the good news to alleviate some, if not all, of the anxiety I've been feeling for the past month. That hasn't happened. By no means does that indicate that I'm not grateful for the results and for the chance to move another year into this person others seem to believe me capable of becoming. But I'm stubborn. I fight them, because I don't believe them. The expectations are too high. But I can set them higher. High enough that they aren't attainable because that way, all I do is fail myself and can be, and remain, solely responsible, solely to blame. And I've always felt at fault.

I don't know what forward looks like right now. I don't know when this pattern will break. I don't know what I'm expecting of myself.  But, as always, I'm trying. I push myself...hard...maybe too hard and maybe, sometimes, in the wrong direction. Now that I'm done waiting for the phone call, I feel like I'm waiting for the next thing. In that place, I'm bringing in incredibly vivid pictures of old things....a song setting off a memory I'd never had before, a dream I wake anxious from that is full until I try to store it. 

This week, I'm going to try to borrow patience from you and expect that I'm going to feel better soon. Because my body is tired and my mind is exhausted and I'd rather be delivering happiness than trying to determine what I'm expecting.