good life choices, hey world. here i am., make a little bird house in your soul

The Namaste Manifesto

i don’t know how to make depression funny anymore.

i’m not sure i ever did, but i really don’t now.

i don’t have it in me to pull forth the effort to blather on about my hair with funny turns of phrase.

though it does look wonderful, don’t get me wrong. i went the perm route. i look fabulous. i’ll tell you all about it later, when i’m done being all melodramatic. (gotta fit that in, too.)

thing is, it’s not an overwhelming sadness or intense social fear. jsure, those pop up with the regularity of the wonky j in my words, but they’re not it. “it” is more of an ugh, mixed with a quivery chin, sprinkled heavily with some meh and topped with dissatisfaction. it’s a poor little rich girl complex and the guilt that brings, plus the actual bad shit that’s actually real and the actual health shit that’s actually shitty.

but here’s the big difference: i think i’m legitimately ready to do something about it, starting with the empirical, the tangible, the right-here-before-me-i-can-fucking-do-this part: my body. 

and so we come to real reason i finally got myself to write again: my Namaste Manifesto.

see how cute baby mer is?

GAH I WAS SO ADORABLE.

Once upon a time there was a little girl with freckles who lived life in ALL CAPS, badgered her big sister and dressed her little brother in flowery frocks and lipstick.

Once upon a time there was a little girl with pigtails who knew that her big, handmade Lincoln logs were better than your stupid ones from the store.Once upon a time there was a little girl with green eyes who agreed with her mother that pie crusts were just too hard and, besides, the ones from Kroger were just as good and took far less time and cursing to make.

Once upon a time there was a little girl who wore a tutu around her head and called herself the Queen Mum sitting down for tea with Elizabeth, BearBear and Mrs. Symie.

Once upon a time there was a little girl whose body did what she asked of it, mostly, and the worst consequences were ant bites, skinned knees and stitches in her side from running too soon after lunch.

* * *

I remember her. But the thing is, I don’t remember her as ME. I remember a lot of things I DID and a lot of things I WATCHED and a lot of things I touched, tasted, felt, smelled. But I don’t really remember being in that little body and throwing it around and watching/feeling it doing what I asked it to do.

What I remember is being fat.

Now, I wasn’t. I was never a gangly skinny thing or toned and ripped, but I wasn’t fat. I wasn’t even big until a few years ago.But I thought I was. I cannot remember a time since I began to judge my body when I did not find it lacking. Worse yet, I cannot remember a time when I did not measure my own worth without my weight or dress size or squishiness as a (negative) part of the equation.

i've learned just how powerful "blue steel" really is.

i’ve got my blue-steel down pat.

Frankly, that’s bullshit.

I’m hysterical. I’m pretty. I’m fun. I’m damn smart. I’m good at a lot of things. I drink a lot of water. I grow vegetables, care for animals and volunteer on at least one project a year, if not long campaigns of do-good-ery. I bake a mean homemade twinkie, give good back-scratches and love with all of my heart, an organ I’m convinced takes up most of my internal body cavity.

The shitty thing is, I can’t take my body out of it. But I realized: I don’t have to. Sure, I have to stop body-shaming and beating myself up about it – that’s not a new realization or decision, and it gets easier to do with every step of every moment of every day – but a corollary there is that I often find that in attempting to lower the focus and negativity I place on myself about my body, I minimize the importance of my body overall.And that’s the real bullshit.

Whatever my (your) beliefs may be at any given time, this is the vessel in which my spirit / soul / mind / consciousness from parasitic alien life forms travels around this earth. Maybe it’s just a vehicle, but it’s the one I’ve got and I’m not going to get another one, no matter my preference for the bionic.

* * *

Over the last year and change, I have struggled with myself – with my self-esteem, my hairdos, my communications skills, my family’s crazy, my crazy, my boyfriend’s crazy, moving in with said wonderful boyfriend, not killing the selfsame boyfriend, not killing the selfsame boyfriend’s family, my health, my lack of health, my skin’s propensity to manifest every emotion I’ve got in one dermatitial form or another, my body’s comfort with inflammation and open wounds, my unemployment, my underemployment, my wonderful employment, my schedule, my volunteer work, my religion, my nail polish color, my pants size, my stretch marks, my eyebrows, my clothing, my lack of clothing, my music, my writing, my loving – and in so doing, I feel pretty confident stating that each time I take an inventory, I like what I see more and more.

So, with just the obstacles of my life as my guides, I am becoming a person who is more patient, thoughtful, kind, honest and loving. With the fights and kisses and eye-rolls that are part and parcel to my relationship with this amazing man, I am becoming a better partner, lover, friend and mate. With the rollercoaster of a connection I have with my mother, I am becoming a better daughter, helper and gardener. With the lifeline I hold to my pregnant sister, I am becoming a better sister, aunt, friend and confidante.

moral of story: boobs.

While all of those trials have also taught me I’m probably a bit borderline, definitely living up to my dysthymia, major depressive and generalized anxiety diagnoses, usually prone to panicking but always good in a physical crisis, they’ve also brought me this moment, wherein I know with a certainty I find confusing that I am the one who has to be in charge.

It seems so simple. Fuck, I can even admit that it IS simple. That just doesn’t make it easy.

So I’ve decided the way to remove body-shaming from my equation is to remove the shame.

To be continued.

 

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giving hope, good life choices, I thought this was supposed to be easy?

embroider it on a pillow for me.

The fascinating thing, if I can back away from the emotions themselves, is how I describe them.

Choking, drowning, smothering, pushing me headfirst into a cement curb – these aren’t experiences I’ve ever had – thank whomever – and I don’t physically lose the ability to breathe, see or live.

And yet, the phrase “moving like molasses in January” was coined, it seems, for days like today, when talking myself into hanging up three tee shirts, putting on shoes or taking a towel off the floor are herculean.

I don’t feel desperate, gasping or broken. I am not so sad I can’t see, but I’m the physical embodiment of “been down so long, down don’t bother me.”

Down would be nice. An improvement.

The worst part? I’m in love. I’m madly, happily, disgustingly in love.

I’m making progress on life goals I let lie dormant for too long.

I sleep next to the person I want to spend my life with. Sister mercy, I want to create other people with this man. From scratch!

I am (what feels like) spitting distance from really tackling my chronic maladies and beating them back into the hell from whence they came.

I even lost three pounds.

And yet, the prospect of doing the laundry – which I have always enjoyed (that’s another why-am-I-psychotic post) – overwhelms me, sends me into the corner of the only sweatshirt still big enough to be comfortable and leaves me begging the dog for affection.

But they do say what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger, and while I’d slap the cliché off the face of whatever bitch actually came up with that phrase, I can’t help but hope it’s true.

I could use some strong right now.

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good life choices, hey world. here i am., make a little bird house in your soul

that time i really didn’t phone it in

Time is nuts, y’all. It is currently the middle of the month of May. That’s the one that comes after April and before June, Rebecca. My short, glorified career as an internet social icon notwithstanding, it’s been a rollercoaster of a 2011, my friends.

Indeed, Shit. Actually. Happened. in between the spilling of the soup and the acquisition of the pretty man on whose shoulder I drooled through an entire episode of “Dr. Who” last night.

This spring, both Sally & Kit celebrated the anniversaries of their respective births and got, thusly, older.

I love consistency.

During this vernal season, we discovered a new -itis in the stupid stupidness of my body and its stupidity – yes, of COURSE it mimics heart-attack symptoms and scares everyone in the vicinity of my screaming, narcotic-needing self.

Just today, I found the prospect of choosing a meal for dinner completely overwhelming and stared at the screen for over an hour. We call this PMS or normal… or something.

In the span of one week this spring, I got a new car, a new boyfriend, new business cards, a new job and a brand-spanking-new bout of HOLY-SHIT-I-HAVE-TO-SCHEDULE-EVERYTHING-RIGHT-NOW calendar-anxiety.

One of these days, make me tell you about how new boyfriend feels about that one. It’s a damn riot. Really.

Last month, I thought it would be a faaaaabulous idea to host 35 of my (geographically) nearest & dearest for an only slightly off Passover seder involving the removal of furniture from three rooms of my house, the use of three refrigerators, a professionally formatted yet typo-filled Mer-written haggadah (you’ve all forgotten I edit for a living, right? Good.), 32 bottles of wine and beautifully decorated plague signs. Obviously.

We’ve finally finished the leftovers, but all the borrowed dishes are still out. I figure they’ll come in handy in about five months when I discover what a great plan it would be to host fifty for Thanksgiving.

You didn’t, like, want them back any time soon, did you, Stacy?

This spring I was handed the leashes of about eight high school students and asked to mold them into better versions of their musically talented selves. So I denied them food and threatened their lives.

It worked.

Throughout the passing of this time, I, of course, had ambitious plans for a variety of posts we all know I haven’t written, like these:

  • the one about Kit overcoming his upbringing as a small, disenfranchised African-American child on the streets of South Philly to become the Jon-Hamm-like superhero of a Dr. Sally husband he is today;
  • or the one for Sally’s 30th birthday in which we celebrate each of the individual cells that make up her particular neuroses and I start a letter-writing campaign to get her on the ballot for the 2012 Nobels – any of them;
  • then there was the post about the new boyfriend, who I think we should call something along the lines of Captain Amazing or Señor Awesome, if only to watch him blush and squirm awkwardly, awaiting in fear the day he fucks up and loses his fancy moniker – this is obviously evidence I am the best girlfriend EVER;
  • there was this one post percolating about how angry I am with God, Shakespeare, Martin Sheen, Disney, Wal-Mart and most of the Western world, but after I put off fleshing out the outline – I DID ACTUALLY WRITE AN OUTLINE – I got laid and reprioritized everything else in my life towards the goal of “more getting laid;”
  • or maybe a serious post about identifying as a Jew again, complete with prayer and services and davening and making snarky comments behind my prayer book;
  • there’s the post about how proud I am of Bestie Kazz, who has taken the reins of her life in a way I will always envy and admire, tackling the mountains of addiction and recovery and the deserts disappointment and struggle and love with a grace I didn’t know anyone could muster;
  • and the one about my babyfever, which is currently so overwhelming I apparently can’t see a small child without finding a way to have him or her in my arms within a brief 15-minute introductory period – we must all give Captain Amazing kudos for not once running from me, screaming, any of the approximately 74,832,067 times I’ve melted into a gooey mess at the image or sound of a baby, and for mopping up my sloppy, sappy self each time this happens;
  • or the time Captain Amazing brought me flowers, took me to dinner and the symphony, helped with the out-of-control seder when I was too sick, carried all my stuff when I wasn’t allowed to, helped me buy a new car and get into a credit union, talked me through awful family shit, sat on the dirty floor to win over my skittish dog – ok, ok, I’ll stop gushing.

I’m very good at gushing. I do enthusiasm well.

So I had all these plans and did all these things, and y’all? I’m a fucking grownup. And WHOLESOME.

I feel like I need to run out and get another tattoo just to hold onto my freaky self. The urge to buy a pack of cigarettes and just hold one between the first two fingers of my right hand is out of control.

I don’t actually want the nicotine. I just wanna look badass. You know. Me and my Virginia Slims.

For the record, I feel a bizarre urge to swear I have never smoked a Virginia Slims cigarette in my life. And certainly not out of a shiny gold cigarette case while wearing fuck-me-red lipstick. That so never happened.

But what I find, really, when I open my eyes far too early each morning or suck down cough drops like candy after singing for four hours straight, is that I like this life, this far-too-busy, must-learn-to-say-no, 11-hour workday, actually-have-a-social-life existence? Is pretty fucking rad.

Even when everything falls by the wayside, this crazy, lovely, out-of-control moment in my life – despite pain and illness, exhaustion and debt – is maybe the most beautiful I’ve ever known.

I’m so glad I get to share it with you.

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good life choices, hey world. here i am.

and let the music play.

March 17, 2009.

That’s the date I last saved my iTunes library.

Two years ago.

That’s the last time I let music be an integral part of my life.

I’ve written about it before: letting my life get away from me, discovering I’d spent months miserable, upending my life to improve it, making conscious decisions to get back to who I want to be.

Hell, I’ve invited sexy back into my life, held Mariah dance parties and Jennifer weepy ones, begun to remember the taste of sweat and smell of sex.

Memories are important, people. Mmhmmm.

And step by painstaking step, y’all:

It’s working.

January 17, 2011.

I stepped back into the intersection of Judaism, Youth and Music – and was begged to never leave.

February 24, 2011.

I took the reigns back from illness.

March 24, 2011.

I signed my name on the dotted line to write, teach and record music for little Jewish children.

April 1, 2011.

I prayed. And laughed and kissed and talked and shrieked.

April 5, 2011.

The music began to play.


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