Thursday, February 26, 2015

Everyone Needs A Place


"Everyone needs a place. It shouldn't be inside of someone else." 
- From Detail of the Woods by Richard Siken
__________________________________________________________________________



I.

I like poetry. I like trees. I like my poetry with trees and my trees with poetry.
When I was five, my teacher-mother prompted me line-by-line to memorize Robert Frost. I can still recite "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" by heart. 


"Whose woods these are, I think I know
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here 
To watch his woods fill up with snow."

As an English major, I managed to get some credit for this in a college lit class. Bless my teacher-mother.


II.

A few days ago, I was asked to prepare an original spoken-word poem to perform in public. So, in preparation, I took a break earlier today to listen to spoken-word poet Sarah Kay. I first came across her TEDTalk performance of "How Many Lives Can I Live?" a few years ago, loved it, and posted it here on this site. I have no good explanation for my delay in tracking down more of her stuff, but today I found her performing "The Type." It's wonderful to find something real, deep, beautiful, and true all at the same time. Whether you're male, female, or transgender, I believe your humanity can connect with this:

Click Here to Watch "The Type" by Sarah Kay

She prefaces this telling with the line of Richard Siken's poetry that I included at the top of this post. "Everyone needs a place. It shouldn't be inside of someone else." Inspired, I read the rest of Siken's poem. It's set in the woods. Unlike Frost, there's no snow in sight.

III.

My friend David knows how to construct things--edifices and possibly cakes. People pay him money for this knowledge, but I bring him up because he has an international treehouse atlas on his coffee table. 

"Everyone needs a place."
A treehouse?

You build one for you. I'll build one for me. We can be treehouse neighbors like Ewoks.


IV.

““But I will bless the person
    who puts his trust in [the Lord].
He is like a tree growing near a stream
    and sending out roots to the water.

It is not afraid when hot weather comes,
    because its leaves stay green;
it has no worries when there is no rain;
    it keeps on bearing fruit."

Jeremiah 17:7-8 
Good News Translation

Some ancient spoken-word poetry from a prophet. -S


Thursday, February 12, 2015

Better Than You Think

I happened across this article the other day, and I find myself coming back to it convinced that it's a great way to count some blessings and practice gratitude.

20 Signs You're Doing Better Than You Think You Are

http://thoughtcatalog.com/brianna-wiest/2015/02/20-signs-youre-doing-better-than-you-think-you-are/

#1. "You paid the bills this month, and maybe even had extra to spend on non-necessities. It doesn’t matter how much you belabored the checks as they went out, the point is that they did, and you figured it out regardless.

#2. "You question yourself. You doubt your life. You feel miserable some days. This means you’re still open to growth. This means you can be objective and self-aware. The best people go home at the end of the day and think: “or… maybe there’s another way.”

#3. "You have a job. For however many hours, at whatever rate, you are earning money that helps you eat something, sleep on something, wear something every day. It’s not failure if it doesn’t look the way you thought it would – you’re valuing your independence and taking responsibility for yourself.

#4. "You have time to do something you enjoy. Even if “what you enjoy” is sitting on the couch and ordering dinner and watching Netflix.

#5. "You are not worried about where your next meal is coming from. There’s food in the fridge or pantry, and you have enough to actually pick and choose what you want to eat.

#6. "You can eat because you enjoy it. It’s not a matter of sheer survival.

#7. "You have one or two truly close friends. People worry about the quantity but eventually tend to realize the number of people you can claim to be in your tribe has no bearing on how much you feel intimacy, acceptance, community, or joy. At the end of the day, all we really want are a few close people who know us (and love us) no matter what.

#8. "You could afford a subway ride, cup of coffee, or the gas in your car this morning. The smallest conveniences (and oftentimes, necessities) are not variables for you.

#9. "You’re not the same person you were a year ago. You’re learning, and evolving, and can identify the ways in which you’ve changed for better and worse.

#10. "You have the time and means to do things beyond the bare minimum. You’ve maybe been to a concert in the last few years, you buy books for yourself, you could take a day trip to a neighboring city if you wanted – you don’t have to work all hours of the day to survive.

#11. "You have a selection of clothing at your disposal. You aren’t worried about having a hat or gloves in a blizzard, you have cool clothes for the summer and something to wear to a wedding. You not only can shield and decorate your body, but can do so appropriately for a variety of circumstances.

#12. "You can sense what isn’t right in your life. The first and most crucial step is simply being aware. Being able to communicate to yourself: “something is not right, even though I am not yet sure what would feel better.”

#13. "If you could talk to your younger self, you would be able so say: “We did it, we made it out, we survived that terrible thing.” So often people carry their past traumas into their present lives, and if you want any proof that we carry who we were in who we are, all you need to do is see how you respond to your inner child hearing, you’re going to be okay, from the person they became.

#14. "You have a space of your own. It doesn’t even have to be a home or apartment (but that’s great if it is). All you need is a room, a corner, a desk, where you can create or rest at your discretion; where you govern who gets to be part of your weird little world, and to what capacity. It’s one of the few controls we can actually exert.

#15. "You’ve lost relationships. More important than the fact that you’ve simply had them in the first place is that you or your former partner chose not to settle. You opened yourself to the possibility of something else being out there.

#16. "You’re interested in something. Whether it’s now how to live a happier life, maintain better relationships, reading or movies or sex or society or the axis on which the world spins, something intrigues you to explore it.

#17. "You know how to take care of yourself. You know how many hours of sleep you need to feel okay the next day, who to turn to when you’re heartbroken, what you have fun doing, what to do when you don’t feel well, etc.

#18. "You’re working toward a goal. Even if you’re exhausted and it feels miles away, you have a dream for yourself, however vague and malleable.

#19. "But you’re not uncompromisingly set on anything for your future. Some of the happiest and best adjusted people are the ones who can make any situation an ideal, who are too immersed in the moment to intricately plan and decidedly commit to any one specific outcome.

#20. "You’ve been through some crap. You can look at challenges you currently face and compare them to ones you thought you’d never get over. You can reassure yourself through your own experience. Life did not get easier, you got smarter."