covid-19

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Two years ago …

Kind of an ominous start considering that nearly two years ago exactly the Covid pandemic began with school closures and business closures and quarantining and red, yellow and green zones.  Two years.  So much has happened.  So much has changed.

Also, two years ago I began my yoga teacher training journey.  I knew it was something I wanted to do, so when my studio offered their first (and to this point only) teacher training I signed up.  And I honestly hated it.  It wasn’t anything I thought it would be.  It made me resent yoga – which I think is probably not ever the intention.  I decided that perhaps, teaching yoga wasn’t for me, and when isolation began I dropped out.  I knew that my attitude certainly wasn’t very yogic and my presence wouldn’t have been fair to the other women focused on becoming teachers.

But even though I felt okay about my decision at the time, I kept coming back to the idea that I wanted to get certified.  I felt it in my bones, as though it was the right thing for me to pursue.  Maybe I just needed a little bit of time to figure out my true ‘why’ … I don’t know.

But here I am, March 2022, beginning yoga teacher training again.  And it is SO DIFFERENT than the first time.  To begin, it’s online (possibly not a strength for me but hopefully not a deal breaker either).  But it’s also not solely focused on the Baptiste method (which is the type of yoga I regularly practice and love, but didn’t speak to me during my first training).  This course is rich with yogic history and Sanskrit and all the things I wanted to learn the first time around but … didn’t.  I have cautiously optimistic high hopes that this training will be the beginning of my next phase of yoga.  And I’m nervous and excited and a little scared.

Which I’m very sure is a good thing.

Xox, g

Day 136

It’s been a minute.

To me, the last time I blogged feels a lifetime ago.  As though so much has changed that those days are nearly unrecognizable.  But that’s life … that’s sort of how everything seems to be.  Hard to remember, as though so much living has occurred between then and now.  

A few days ago the mask mandate was lifted by way of the CDC releasing a statement about the efficacy (or lack thereof) for vaccinated people. It didn’t take much more than that for businesses to change policies, for gyms and studios and restaurants to re-open their doors, their tables.

Whatever my politics may be, it *does* feel like a relief. I don’t want the world to necessarily “return to normal” because what does that even mean in the wake of Covid-19, George Floyd and the civil reckoning that has become part of American culture? It shouldn’t be dismissed or forgotten.  We’ve learned things- whether we like it or not.  We’ve had to face things, whether it’s comfortable or not.  And it isn’t over — it can’t be over.  Even if there is a strong contingency of this country who would prefer to turn a blind eye.  So no, I don’t want to “return to normal.”

But I would like to move through life without a mask, without the fear that every touch, every breath, could kill me.  There is a relief in that, albeit small.

My second vaccine shot wiped me out – took the breath right out of my lungs.  But it’s been over two weeks since then, so I am now vaccinated and able to move around again in the company of strangers.

I know that not all people with autoimmune diseases feel the way I feel.  They are angry at the change, worried for their health.  I understand that.  But I can’t live my life by anyone else’s rules but my own.  I have to feel comfortable in my own skin.  I don’t like being in-authentic.  So I feel how I feel.  And I am glad to be able to practice yoga in a studio without a mask.

And that’s where I am today.  On the eve of a beach trip and fully vaccinated.  Looking forward to Black Widow and F9; The Fast Saga.  Falling asleep with candles lit for my mother and my brother-in-law, husband doing research and Thor: Ragnarok playing in the background.  Lucy snurfling in her bed, dreaming of squirrels and rabbits and sniffs in the long grass of spring.

Xox, g

 

Day 76

I think being an adult is recognizing the need to “do the things.”

A woman in class today confessed that it took effort to leave her comfortable chair, snuggling with her dog, to get herself to yoga today.  A chorus around the room of other women, myself included, confessed they never regretted coming to class — that class itself was amazing — but getting there, especially on cold, grey days was the real challenge.

I know that even if I am tired and angry and frustrated and depressed the best thing for me to do is get dressed and get out of the house.  I think that’s why Covid affected me in a such an insidious way.  I am a loner, I am an introvert … but to stay balanced, I need to get out of the house.  I need social interaction and routine.  All that disappeared a year ago.  And while it’s come back in fits and starts, it isn’t the same.  There’s an underlying fear, there’s a wary gaze — politics and pandemics and civil rights have divided all of us and we don’t know who  is “safe” anymore.

Even on my mat— socially distanced and wearing a mask— it doesn’t feel the same as class used to feel.  It feels close, don’t get me wrong.  But not the same.

I also know that to save myself, to keep myself from spiraling, it’s imperative that I get on my mat, that I sweat and wobble and struggle through class, breathing heavily through a sweat-soaked mask.

And that is adulting.  It’s knowing that I could choose sadness and depression and sweatpants and junk food … and choosing something else instead.  Something better for me.

Adulting is really effing hard sometimes.

Xox, g

Day 74

Ever have a moment when you pause – or full out stop — and look around your house and marvel at the fact that it’s all yours? 

I had a moment like that today. As I surveyed the first floor of our house and thought – somewhat in wonderment — that this grown-up house with dishes and a dining room table and a phonograph and clean dish towels and furniture is John + mine.  We curated it (an obnoxious phrase but unfortunately, fitting).  Not only that, but we use our pots and pans and dishes and dining room table.  We even listen to records on the weekend while drinking coffee and talking about … well, everything and nothing and all the stuff in between.

It looks like a grown-ups house and I forget that’s what we are.  I got my first vaccine shot today (because I know good people not because I was necessarily responsible in any way).  I wished for my mother, or even just my husband — someone to be with me in case it was intimidating or scary or confusing.  I couldn’t find the office when I arrived and walked around the entire complex in the cold wind, my poor feet dragging on the ground as I tried to walk faster than I am able.  I wished for someone, anyone, to be there and be more responsible than me, to hold my hand and guide me.  But I have passed that part of life and know, deep in my soul, that I have to own my self.

The shot wasn’t intimidating.  It felt bizarrely fast and the clinic was disorganized but efficient.  My arm aches and I hope that’s my only side effect.

Lucy is staring at me, wanting her dinner.  Daylight savings sucks sometimes.

Xoxo, g

 

Day 57

Today was a crazily long day.  In the end, it wasn’t a bad day.  Things worked out – all went smoothly.  But I’m tired, and I can’t wait to lie in bed and drift off to sleep.

it’s strange to think that in a few days, we will be in March.  And then hitting the one year mark of lockdown.  And then a full year since life flipped upside down.

Time is wild.

Xox, g

Day 35

Lemme be real for a minute.

Life for me is like an amusement park ride.  There’s a lot of waiting, anticipation, anxiety and then there are highs and lows and everything happening in a rush … and then waiting again.

I don’t know if it’s the snow, or COVID, or just February.  But lines are blurred and up feels down and down feels sideways and I’m just bouncing from wall to wall to ceiling to wall and then floating out the window.

I’m sad and I’m angry and I’m resigned and I feel trapped and overwhelmed by the vastness of it.  I’m searching for comfort and finding none.  I’m yearning for contentment but everything feels off its axis.  I am drowning, I am floating … I am above and below and somewhere in between.  I am lost.

That’s my brain, that’s my stream of conscious thought.

I keep grasping for an anchor and coming up empty-handed.

Listen to Miley Cyrus’ Plastic Hearts.  It is my soul right now.

Xox, g

Day 18 (Day 3)

I think, in a lot of ways, we all fancy ourselves adventurers.  Ready for wherever the clues lead us, wherever the wind blows us; up for anything new and exciting.  Especially now, when there are so few opportunities to do something out of the ordinary; so few opportunities to go new places, try new things.

I used to fancy myself flexible.  And today I was reminded, with forceful clarity, that flexibility is no longer a well honed muscle in my arsenal.  Maybe … and I haven’t thought long enough to say for sure, but maybe it never was.  I just wanted it to be.

The idea of that is humbling, frustrating and depressing.  To realize that something as small as a Monday holiday (MLK Day) could so drastically throw me off my game.  Mondays are my re-set day.  They are the foundation of my week.  They are the grounding of my daily life.  And today wasn’t that.

Today should have been a great day.  A day full of fun and relaxation, no responsibility, no to-do list.  Just John and Lucy and me.  And adventure. Instead it felt claustrophobic, suffocating.  Where was my gym time?  Where was my office time?   Is this the reality of my life without work?!? FOREVER?!? 

Or is it the result of COVID?  Tipping this carefully crafted existence that keeps me sane; that is delicate and sensitive and can devolve into a tailspin with the smallest of deviances?

Am I gripping so tightly to routine, to normalcy, that anything that unbalances it I view as a threat?

I fall into deep abysses  of meandering thoughts; thoughts about existence and my place in the world, anyone’s place and purpose in the world … and come up with nothing.  Why would a change in schedule so profoundly change me, alter my mood and state of mind?  My energy presence in the world.

I have a million questions about life, its purpose on a macro and micro level.  Why we do the things we do as humans, the purpose of it all.  I have all these big, deep thoughts and then Martin Luther King Jr’s holiday wacks me so far out of orbit that I lose myself.

What is happening to me?

Xox, g

attachment

Last summer I was driving home from a hair appointment, listening to a podcast.  It was a truly beautiful day and a beautiful ride, as I used to drive all the way to my old hometown for my hair and the roads between here and there are fairly beautiful ~ winding through green, lush countryside.

The podcast was Goop (obviously).  I am a big fan of Elise Loehnan’s guests and the conversations and she was speaking with a Swami … something-or-other.  I apologize for my ignorance but I can’t seem to find the information anywhere.  What I know is that what he said has stayed with me since, drifting in and out of my conscious mind.  Lingering in the shadows of my emotions, my reactions, my life choices.  Quarantine and COVID were incredibly challenging (and continue to be so) and something that this wise man said in his conversation with Elise (I believe at one of the In Goop Health summits) has grounded me when I’ve felt like I was on the edge of a cliff.

It was about the idea of attachment.  And that our human unhappiness and dissatisfaction is always linked back to attachment.  Attachment to things, yes, but also to ideas, philosophies, traditions, the ‘way things have always been.’

It hurts and is uncomfortable to grow.  To expand.  As humans we cling to familiarity, but also with known quantities.  We describe most things in terms of other things … such as, my MS is like feeling really really tired, times ten million, all the time.  I am using the notion of fatigue as the basis for my description.  Assuming that everyone has a rudimentary understanding of being tired.  But what if that was taken away from me?  How would I describe it then?

In this year of global reckoning and (hopefully) growth, I believe humanity has routinely found itself uncomfortable.  Clinging to the known quantities.  Unwilling to expand and try a new perspective, or a new level of understanding because too much was changing, there were too many moving parts.  We (the collective we) chose to cling to ideas of safety, of ‘the good ole days’ because that nostalgia gave us peace, comfort.  Instead of acknowledging that our comfort in those times perpetuated other’s discomfort.  Yes, that acknowledgement hurts.  And it’s hard.

We are attached to ideas.  We are attached to memories, or things that we have put our faith in, built our personality on; the building blocks of who we believe we are.

I am attached to the idea of equality.  But does my definition of equality include everyone?  If I do a self-examination of (white) women’s quest for female empowerment, am I willing to concede that it did so on the backs of BIPOC and didn’t fight for the equality of all women, but merely white women?

I am attached to a notion of family, but does my family reflect that?  Have I based my ideas on reality and am I holding people to standards that are unfair?  Am I judging others on qualities that only exist in my own idea of family, rather than the reality of what my family actually is?  Flawed, human, different than me  …. How can I hold others accountable for unspoken expectations?  For wishes and dreams?  How can I be angry or disappointed if they don’t live up to what I’ve built in my mind?  … I can’t.

My mother used to say “It’s all just stuff.”  It’s simple and direct and can be interpreted a million ways.  But I think of it like this ~ what we choose to carry with us, to define ourselves, to create our foundation … it’s all just stuff.  The ideas, the belief system, the popasahn chair.  It’s stuff.  And we can be as attached as we want to be.  We can cling to things, we can be immoveable.  Or we can be fluid, we can be open to change.  I vacillate between the extremes, trying to force myself to be as open-minded and thoughtful as possible.

I don’t always succeed.  But I’ll keep on trying.

 

xox, g

and now

This morning, as I watered my meager garden, the breeze rustled the leaves and it was cool.  Refreshing.

Yesterday was brutal.  And my (occasionally reliable) weather app tells me there is more of that to come tomorrow.  Today is the respite.

This year has been … intense.  It’s hard to wrap my brain around the fact that I began it in Tokyo with my brother, my cousins, my husband.  Waking up on a mattress on the floor, shivering in the cold.  Now, I’ve been home — uninterrupted — for nearly eight months.  I have grown a garden, I have made pasta and bread.  I began working for the first time in over three years.  Husband and I survived unemployment, battles with health insurance, tricky diseases and family.  We lost his brother.  We gained knowledge and understanding of our world and our country that we had never known before.  We have been uncomfortable, unsure.  Angry.  Sad.  Disappointed.  Afraid.

I’ve spent time this year contemplating the idea of perspective and truth.  How we each come to where we currently are — what we currently believe.  How people I love, have loved, can say and believe the things they do.  How I reconcile that within myself.  How I’ve often – of late- been willing to walk away.

My experiences, my education — my life thus far has shaped how I feel I fit into the world.  There are things I cannot change.  There are things I can and I must.  I must be willing to be supremely uncomfortable, and I must be wise enough to be quiet.  Those things are difficult.  Sometimes, nearly impossible.  I was raised to have and to use my voice.  Deferring to others is a challenge.  But sometimes — and this is so important —  it is the right thing to do.

I have been forever changed this year.  Like all years.  Just more starkly, more abruptly.  There is nothing subtle about 2020.  There is no “going back.”  And for anyone who longs for that, who wishes to return to a “simpler” time — a time before COVID-19, a time before the most recent civil rights movement — you are part of what holds us all back.

We cannot go back.  Not to a time when women had no rights, no voice.  Not to a time before COVID changed our very existence: how we live, how we travel, how we function in the world.  Not to a time when white dominated and erased and marginalized all other colors.  Time does not go back.  To strive to rewind diminishes all that people have worked for toward equality, toward humanity, toward making America’s ideals a reality for all Americans.

I listen to news reports of the RNC and I wonder how people believe him, how my fellow Americans support his lies, his manipulation, his slow movement toward dictatorship and erasure of all humans who do not agree with him.  I can’t make sense of it other than these people, their lives and their education and their values somehow align with him.  And while I cannot understand it, I must acknowledge that we are not all equal, and we do not all believe and put value into the same things.  And while that feels very frightening right now, it is also what makes this America.

 

 

begin again

It’s July and we are still in the throes of Covid.  In addition to a great, much-needed civil rights movement.  As a white woman, I am doing my best to not f*ck up.  That’s the honest to goodness truth.  It’s a minefield and there are so many things I did not learn.  We — collectively, as a country — did not learn.

When everything reached a fever pitch in early June, I felt overwhelmed.  So much information, so much coming-to-terms with my own damaging behaviour.  So much hate toward white women.  It was — and continues to be — a lot.  I’ve always said about myself that I exist on the ends of the spectrum, I see things in black and white.  And what I keep learning over and over is that life and existence only exists in the in-between.  Not even the primary colors like red, yellow and blue.  But in every shade, every variation.  Truth exists like that — my truth, your truth, the world’s truth, the historian’s truth.  Everything told and played through perspective, different angles and glass tones and lighting.

I spent some time in my youth studying light design for theatre.  (I loved it).  There is a world of difference between a human standing on an empty stage in stark white light versus the same person, standing on the same stage, in any other combination of light, intensity and gel color.  It doesn’t look the same.

This, I believe, is true of the human experience.  We are all looking through filters, we are informed by our own experiences, the things we’ve been taught, the things we’ve seen.  Some of us can try to step outside ourselves and critically look at how we behave, how things have influenced us — but many of us never do that.  We are caught in the emotions, the anger, the hurt.  We have created our experience and there is nothing outside of that.  it is all-consuming.

In my brief study of yoga, we discussed the idea of our minds creating our entire reality.  Aka, what blue means to me, how I see blue, versus anyone else. How I smell orange, describe cold, consider air.  Our minds create this world that we live in, but it isn’t the stripped down truth of reality.  Our minds organize things and allow us to have an enjoyable life experience, rather than being caught in a caucophany of infinite assaults on our senses.  It molds our reality to our likes and dislikes; what we are struck by, intrigued by, turned off by.  How wild is that?

~*~

It is very hard to accept the new terms being asked of us — that we have unknowingly committed harm over years, decades, centuries.  That all of the accomplishments of great men are tarnished by loathesome behaviour that was commonly accepted.  It is hard to keep trying even when you are told every day you are wrong, that the rules have changed again.  It is asking a lot of humanity to do that.  To accept that the reality and the history of the world cannot be determined solely by who wrote it and it cannot be defended solely by who speaks loudest.  There are subtleties and information that is uncomfortable and downright shameful.  That is f*cking hard.  I have watched people I love and respect say and do things that have horrified me in defense of the history they have accepted and perpetuated for themselves and for humanity.

We are living through unprecendented times.  We are being told that while we might be capable of nearly anything, we have to stay home and wear a mask because an invisible virus could be lurking.  We are being challenged to question the status quo of history, of mankind.  It is not easy.  It is hard, hard work.  It is exhausting (especially when you’re handicapped already as I am).

But we need to do it anyway.  Because we decide to.

 

xo, g