i wish…..

sometimes i like to sit quietly and fill in the rest of this sentence: “I WISH…”

my answer is rarely about money or things or even love.
my wish has much more to do with the details of my life than the grand scheme of it.

so i sit. alone. in the quiet. and fill in the space with whatever my heart desires in the moment. and, even though i know this doesn’t mean i will get what i want,
it’s nice to know that nothing can ever stop me from filling in the blank, just the way
i want it.

when it’s quiet, what do you wish for?

 

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sushi and the guest house.

There is nothing worse than not feeling happy and not knowing why the fuck that is.

It’s a struggle when you feel like jumping off a ledge some days, and yet, everyone consistently mentions “how lucky” you are to have the life that you do.

It sucks when you don’t feel the way other people do about your own life.

You feel as though maybe you’re fucking crazy or that you’ve totally missed the point to being alive, so you seek out the answers in external things, like books, and “experts”, and “holistic retreats”, and “yoga”, and a “puff puff” here and a “puff puff” there, until you finally come full circle to realize that there is actually nothing wrong with the way you feel about your life. You’re just feeling low right now and that’s ofuckingkay.

I used to comb the aisles of books stores looking for answers to difficult questions about things. I once bought a book called, “Twenty Something, Twenty Everything”, hoping that I’d find the reason for why I was feeling so much shit, all the time: love, then hate, then confusion, then knowing I want to be a writer, then not knowing if I want to be a writer, then knowing that I want to get married, then not knowing if I want to get married, then taking that job, quitting that job, hating that person, then loving them….

Two things I’ve learned about life in general so far:  First, nobody has ever written a book that contains any reasonable answers to any of those things I mentioned above. So stop trying to find them in stuff like this. Those things can only provide insight, not the truth.

At the end of the day, you will always experience life in your own way; best you can do is try and commiserate with other people in a similar situation and be honest about what’s on your mind. But beware of telling the wrong people too much – predators come in all shapes and sizes, so I advise modesty when it comes to opening up your heart to just anyone with a trusting smile. Nowhere did I learn that the most than in my late 20s.

Secondly, I have learned that emotions are probably the thing holding you back from wherever it is you feel you want to be doing with your life, at any given moment. Having emotions doesn’t equal being “emotional”, which, for the record, is not something that’s exclusive to women. Men are emotional too. The macho ones? Emotional cripples. And the ones who are acting like they don’t care all the time? Those ones have more emotional scars than celebrity children.

I feel as though I’m getting off track here. I only wanted to relay a message that the days when you feeling like you’re really going to lose your shit or give up or tell your boss to fuck off or trash talk yourself into a depression or slouch on the sofa all day or sabotage the very best things in your life.. on those days, especially on those days, I hope you can try and remember:

This being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.

A joy, a depression, a meanness
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.

Welcome and entertain them all
Even if they’re a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.

The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.

Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.

I wish I wrote that, but that is “The Guest House” by Rumi, not me. My friend Jessica read it to me today over sushi and miso soup, and I realized that I hadn’t really ever paid attention to that poem before. And yet, those are words that say it all – we are not our emotions; they are simply guests that come and go. Treat them with dignity by acknowledging their arrival… and then kick them the fuck out.

I hope this post is something you needed today, that maybe it was even the sign that you were looking or something. It hit me pretty good when I had it read to me, and I liked it.

Thought you might, too.

-sandy.

 

 

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hanging up photos

We have some art on our walls, but not many personal photographs. Every place we’ve lived as a couple, only a small handful of favorite pictures have made it into frames. Most of those I lean up against furniture, and I can count on one hand how many personal photos have hung on our walls: four. I don’t have a reason for that. But I know I’d like to hang more personal photos on the walls in our house.

My mom, for Christmas, gifted us a gorgeous framed copy of our wedding thank-you notes: the front photo is of Rob and I – he’s looking into the camera smiling and I’m laughing with that classic bridal head-throw-back thing that always looks fake, if you ask me, although I know in that moment, mid-head-tilt, I was really laughing. I was happy. Plus, Rob is a very funny guy, you see.

So, I thought I’d start by thinking of other good moments we’ve had over the last few years – individually and as a pair – so that I, like my mom, can blow them up to a 5×7 size and immortalize them behind glass. It was a very thoughtful gift.

I debated sharing what my next photo would be, since I guess it’s a bit shallow: it’s of me. But this was a good moment in Paris and I’d like to put it somewhere I can see it, in my house, on those days when I feel whatever the reverse of home-sick is. Because that’s what it feels like some days, when all I want to do is be back here, in this picture:

Sadly, the program I used to edit this photo – picnik.com – will be shutting down on April 19. I’m think I’m going to be setting aside some time each week to edit a few more favorite photos (like the one of Rob last summer, holding up the biggest fish he ever caught) in preparation for their new homes in a mix of frames. I might post what that wall ends up looking like, but no promises. This could take some time.

-sandy.

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my night with marilyn

Last week, I said I had plans for dinner-and-a-movie for one. My film choice ended up being “My Week With Marilyn”, starring Michelle Williams. I figured it was the perfect opportunity to see it on the big screen at the Revue (one of my favorite places in all of Toronto), since Rob didn’t express much interest in seeing it. No problem. Only now, I’m disappointed. Disappointed that the film was bad and I have no one to tear it apart with. So, I’ll blog my beefs.

I’m not saying the film isn’t “good” – lots of people like it – but I thought that the character of Marilyn was annoying.

The film shows a mostly drunk, insecure, often stoned, self-absorbed Monroe in her mid-30s, with dozens of men falling at her feet because she is, after all, Marilyn. Blah, blah, blah, I learned nothing new about the iconic actress. I didn’t get the sense that I understood anymore about Marilyn – the movie star, the business woman, the depressive – than I did before. I almost left before the movie ended, but opted to stay in the hopes the plot would, somehow, redeem itself. It didn’t.

For me, the film lacked something. I certainly don’t know enough about Monroe’s life to decide whether Michelle Williams played her accurately, but I know enough about Monroe’s iconic image and infamous love affairs to know that I wanted to see this film about her. Only it wasn’t about her. It was about men falling all over her and people watching her slowly kill herself with cocktails of booze and pills and dark thoughts. Why men thought that was attractive I’ll never understand, but I can speculate that there’s something alluring about being near someone who is otherwise untouchable.That is the one take-away I can relate to, although this hardly changes my opinion of the film.

I’m no film critic and I don’t find destructive behavior “attractive” in the least, so take my review with a grain of salt. All I can offer is that, in my opinion, this film is a renter, at best.

p.s. Here is a thorough review in the Chicago Tribune from a real film critic, who sums up the disappointment with this film much better than I can.

 

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first dance.

Etta James died today, and since it makes me feel really uncomfortable when people get overly emotional over the death of a celebrity they never met, I won’t go on and on about how sad it is and blah blah… But I wanted to share this little experience I had today, which has almost everything to do with Etta James, but not because she died, but because she lived to sing one of the most pretty songs about love.

For four years, I’ve been a bit embarrassed that At Last has been our wedding song. It’s popular, which doesn’t make it very original or something that feels uniquely yours and your partner’s. I love the song but not that it’s also “our song” to about 12 million other couples on the planet.

But then you see the out pour of recognition and reminiscing that comes from the death of a songbird like Etta James – one that so eloquently managed to sum up everything that a girl dreams about when she dreams about being in love – and you realize that your special song is special because of how much it connects people on the one subject we can all relate to: love.

Around 8 a.m., I left the house to treat myself to breakfast and the last few chapters of the book I’m reading. That’s when I heard it on the radio: Etta James has died. For no reason, I decided to detour and skip breakfast. I thought about texting Rob the news I heard, but figured, nah, he won’t care. For a split second I even wondered if he’d ask me why I was telling him, like he couldn’t make the connection. Eventually he would remember and commiserate, but if he hesitated first and said something like, “whose Etta James again?”, I’m not sure my heart could take it. So I kept the news to myself and continued on my detour.

I bought eggs, fresh bread and two banana chocolate scones. As I pulled onto our street,  I could see that his car was already gone- I’d missed him. I’d long since put Etta in the back of my mind and went on with my day.

Around 6 p.m., Rob walked in the door, whistling a song I recognized straight away. I was pretty sure I hadn’t heard it all day, even though I was sure radio stations all over the city were paying homage every hour, on the hour.

“Hey, did you hear Etta James died?” he asked me as he walked into the kitchen. Me at the sink. He made a sad face as he said it, and then walked over to me and put his hands on my waist. He kissed me on the forehead, and then I put my arms around his neck.

 

-photo by 5ive15ifteen

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