Recently, someone posed the question, "How do you take care of yourself?"
The first thought that popped in my head was "work."
And I realized that it's true. Work is a way for me to take care of myself. Not every day, of course. Some days are exhausting and hard, but eight mornings out of ten, I wake up excited and ready to go to work.
I feel privileged that I have a job I love. I know not everyone does. I feel so thankful that I do what I do and with whom I do it. I'm honored to be surrounded by individuals who have dedicated their lives to helping others. I forget, sometimes, that any one of them could be working a better job, making more money in the private sector and yet, here they are, next to me, striving to help people help themselves.
How fortunate I am.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Dirty, Beautiful
I love seeing my daughter dirty.
I love when she has dirty, bare feet and flushed cheeks, slightly damp sweaty hair, smelling like the outside. The joys of childhood run deep and it is a beautiful thing to watch her unselfconsciously exist in this magical moment of complete freedom.
I love when she has dirty, bare feet and flushed cheeks, slightly damp sweaty hair, smelling like the outside. The joys of childhood run deep and it is a beautiful thing to watch her unselfconsciously exist in this magical moment of complete freedom.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Vocabulary Lesson
The last few days, I've been caught up in reading a popular YA trilogy about war and revolution in a futuristic time. It's nothing mind blowing and it's a quick, easy read, but I am absorbed in the story line. When I get focused on a good book, I have a hard time doing anything else but sitting and reading. In fact, even as I sit here, the other part of my mind's eye is pulling me towards my Nook, to rush through whatever I am doing, asking to refocus on the story, to reach the conclusion sooner rather than later. It's a good thing that I'm an incredibly fast reader (my one skill) otherwise, I'd be bogged down for weeks every time I opened a book.
But as I started the third book last night, a word I see every day jumped out at me on the first page.
Refugee.
Staring at me. And for a minute, I was overwhelmed at the meaning of that word.
I know what it means. Every day, I say the word refugee, see it written a thousand times. At least once a week, I'm explaining to a stranger the nature of my work, the individuals whose lives I am privileged to be a part of, even for a brief moment. The weight of that word is so heavy. War. Pain. Loss. Grief. Dehumanized. Fear. Desperation. Flight. I live in a world of privilege where I am allowed to look how I want, speak the language I know, practice my religion how I see fit. I've seen poverty, sadness but truly, I don't know what it means to lose everything.
The individuals I have met have endured the most horrific things imaginable. Wars, sometimes continuous over decades, wars that never end, just a different group in power. Persecution because of their ethnic group, their language, their religious beliefs. Watching people die. Rape. Tortured for what they know, or don't know. Aggressors stripping them of what makes them human. Fleeing what they knew, leaving behind homes, towns, family members and friends, knowing they will never ever go back. Illness in camps. Deaths of children from diseases that no longer exist in other parts of the world. Discrimination in their nation of asylum because they look different--their skin is darker, their accent is odd. Arrests, interrogations simply because they don't quite fit into the norm. Always on the run, the defensive, waiting for the next blow. Never quite being safe.
Every story unique, every story different, but somehow, every story the same. Heartbreaking.
Refugee.
The weight of that word is so heavy. Strength. Resilience. Safety. Forward. Ahead. Future. Hope. People come here, sometimes with one bag, holding the only belongings that anchor them to this world. They come here with only the family they have left. Or, they come here alone, leaving their families behind. They pick up the pieces of their lives as best they can and keep walking forward because it's all they can do. Sometimes, they do it for themselves. Sometimes they do it for their children. And sometimes, once they get here, they can't do it at all. They are finally safe and that's when they give up, go under and just let go.
I know most of my clients would think I'm ridiculous for having these overwrought thoughts about them and their experiences. "I'm just here. I do what I have to do. You would, too." I am certain that several of my colleagues who were refugees themselves, if they ever read this, would outright laugh at my wonderment at their experience. "You just have no idea how the rest of the world is. This is how it is."
But truly, the meaning of the word refugee is so far beyond my comprehension of reality, that when I really stop to think about it, really dwell on what that would mean for me, now, to become that word, to put myself in their shoes, I don't know that I would be one who made it. I mean, I white whine when I'm told the restaurant I'm dining in is out of ranch dressing. How could I possibly deal with the reality of fleeing for my life?
I'm humbled to know these individuals, my clients, my coworkers, my friends. Their lives are a testament to the sheer will of humans to survive. Their lives are a reminder to give thanks for what I have and continue to give back to those who have not.
"You are forgiven for your happiness and your successes only if you generously consent to share them."
--Albert Camus
But as I started the third book last night, a word I see every day jumped out at me on the first page.
Refugee.
Staring at me. And for a minute, I was overwhelmed at the meaning of that word.
I know what it means. Every day, I say the word refugee, see it written a thousand times. At least once a week, I'm explaining to a stranger the nature of my work, the individuals whose lives I am privileged to be a part of, even for a brief moment. The weight of that word is so heavy. War. Pain. Loss. Grief. Dehumanized. Fear. Desperation. Flight. I live in a world of privilege where I am allowed to look how I want, speak the language I know, practice my religion how I see fit. I've seen poverty, sadness but truly, I don't know what it means to lose everything.
The individuals I have met have endured the most horrific things imaginable. Wars, sometimes continuous over decades, wars that never end, just a different group in power. Persecution because of their ethnic group, their language, their religious beliefs. Watching people die. Rape. Tortured for what they know, or don't know. Aggressors stripping them of what makes them human. Fleeing what they knew, leaving behind homes, towns, family members and friends, knowing they will never ever go back. Illness in camps. Deaths of children from diseases that no longer exist in other parts of the world. Discrimination in their nation of asylum because they look different--their skin is darker, their accent is odd. Arrests, interrogations simply because they don't quite fit into the norm. Always on the run, the defensive, waiting for the next blow. Never quite being safe.
Every story unique, every story different, but somehow, every story the same. Heartbreaking.
Refugee.
The weight of that word is so heavy. Strength. Resilience. Safety. Forward. Ahead. Future. Hope. People come here, sometimes with one bag, holding the only belongings that anchor them to this world. They come here with only the family they have left. Or, they come here alone, leaving their families behind. They pick up the pieces of their lives as best they can and keep walking forward because it's all they can do. Sometimes, they do it for themselves. Sometimes they do it for their children. And sometimes, once they get here, they can't do it at all. They are finally safe and that's when they give up, go under and just let go.
I know most of my clients would think I'm ridiculous for having these overwrought thoughts about them and their experiences. "I'm just here. I do what I have to do. You would, too." I am certain that several of my colleagues who were refugees themselves, if they ever read this, would outright laugh at my wonderment at their experience. "You just have no idea how the rest of the world is. This is how it is."
But truly, the meaning of the word refugee is so far beyond my comprehension of reality, that when I really stop to think about it, really dwell on what that would mean for me, now, to become that word, to put myself in their shoes, I don't know that I would be one who made it. I mean, I white whine when I'm told the restaurant I'm dining in is out of ranch dressing. How could I possibly deal with the reality of fleeing for my life?
I'm humbled to know these individuals, my clients, my coworkers, my friends. Their lives are a testament to the sheer will of humans to survive. Their lives are a reminder to give thanks for what I have and continue to give back to those who have not.
"You are forgiven for your happiness and your successes only if you generously consent to share them."
--Albert Camus
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Rewriting
Before CEWG was born and during the time I stayed home with her, I wrote. A lot. Short stories, novellas, full novels, tiny memoirs. In ABQ, I had a fantastic group of writer friends and each week, we came together to read each other's stories, share ideas and laugh about bad plot points.
But after moving to the Valley of the Sun, leaving my writing group, rejoining the workforce and juggling mothering and working meant all that writing went by the wayside.
Except it shouldn't have.
I have no other creative outlet. In fact, I would argue that I'm not a creative person at all. I can't paint, draw, sketch, play an instrument, read music, or sew. I blame my private school upbringing where there was no art class or opportunity to stretch oneself creatively. However, I can write. But even in my writing, I find that I'm not particularly creative. I've reconciled myself to the idea that I lack an artist's soul.
Even so, it's nice sometimes to sit down and have actually done something with my time. Not just worked to produce education, knowledge or behavior change as in my day-to-day work, but actually have a product, something I can hold, wave about as proof of my existence. See world, here I am, I am real.
I have no excuse for not sitting myself down at least once a week and just doing it. The Doctor's nighttime work schedule means I have ample evening time to write after CEWG is in bed. It's just a matter of choosing to put words on paper. So one night a week, I am going to start choosing to write instead of reading celebrity gossip websites, lingering on Facebook and doing work.
But after moving to the Valley of the Sun, leaving my writing group, rejoining the workforce and juggling mothering and working meant all that writing went by the wayside.
Except it shouldn't have.
I have no other creative outlet. In fact, I would argue that I'm not a creative person at all. I can't paint, draw, sketch, play an instrument, read music, or sew. I blame my private school upbringing where there was no art class or opportunity to stretch oneself creatively. However, I can write. But even in my writing, I find that I'm not particularly creative. I've reconciled myself to the idea that I lack an artist's soul.
Even so, it's nice sometimes to sit down and have actually done something with my time. Not just worked to produce education, knowledge or behavior change as in my day-to-day work, but actually have a product, something I can hold, wave about as proof of my existence. See world, here I am, I am real.
I have no excuse for not sitting myself down at least once a week and just doing it. The Doctor's nighttime work schedule means I have ample evening time to write after CEWG is in bed. It's just a matter of choosing to put words on paper. So one night a week, I am going to start choosing to write instead of reading celebrity gossip websites, lingering on Facebook and doing work.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Secret Fulfillment
I love being domesticated. Leisurely weekends, cleaning, cooking and making my house a home are my favorite weekends. It is my secret fulfillment to center myself around my home, even for just one day a week.
Busy weekends are enjoyable, of course--catching up with old friends, dinners out, nights out, play dates and pools. But I love Sundays when I wake up slowly, drink coffee around the house in my pajamas, catch up on reading. I sort the mail in my bare feet, plan out my menu, make lists of what I need to do.
I love to do the wash, make the bed with clean white sheets, put out fresh towels for the week.
I wear my inside clothes all day, put on my apron and cook meals for both tonight and later in the week.
There is something sacred about a day of creating order in preparation for the chaos of the week, knowing that as the busy days march forward, I have groceries stocked in the refrigerator, my counters are clean and I am ready to start the week.
Busy weekends are enjoyable, of course--catching up with old friends, dinners out, nights out, play dates and pools. But I love Sundays when I wake up slowly, drink coffee around the house in my pajamas, catch up on reading. I sort the mail in my bare feet, plan out my menu, make lists of what I need to do.
I love to do the wash, make the bed with clean white sheets, put out fresh towels for the week.
I wear my inside clothes all day, put on my apron and cook meals for both tonight and later in the week.
There is something sacred about a day of creating order in preparation for the chaos of the week, knowing that as the busy days march forward, I have groceries stocked in the refrigerator, my counters are clean and I am ready to start the week.
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