tamarjacobson

Looking back and thinking forward

Category: Uncategorized

Blogging on my mind (Update)

This semester I am taking a faculty course, Writing Across the Curriculum. Riding on the train to Philadelphia this morning to see my favorite dentist, I was reading an essay by Kenneth Bruffee about collaborative learning and conversation of humankind, which is part of homework for next week’s class.

As I was reading, it occurred to me that a lot of what he was saying was appropriate for blogging. Especially those types of blogs that allow comments, dialog and interaction. He wouldn’t have thought of that back in 1984 but I kept thinking, "Hmm … this applies so well to blogging."

For example [from pages 641 and 642]:

the human conversation takes place within us as well as among us, and that conversation as it takes place within us is what we call reflective thought … human thought is consummately social; social in its origins, social in its functions, social in its form, social in its applications [quoting Clifford Geertz].

And now, look at this:

If thought is internalized conversation, then writing is internalized conversation re-externalized … writing is at once two steps away from conversation and a return to conversation. We converse; we internalize conversation as thought; and then by writing, we re-immerse conversation in its external, social medium. My ability to write this essay, for example, depends on my ability to talk through with myself the issues I address here … what I have to say can, of course, originate in thought, and often does. But my thought itself is conversation as I have learned to internalize it. The point, therefore, is that writing always has its roots deep in the acquired ability to carry on the social symbolic exchange we call conversation.

Wow. Is blogging always on my mind?

Do I see, hear, feel, sense blogging on trains, at the dentist, reading essays, raking the yard, feeding birds, doing yoga, on the treadmill, driving to work, teaching students, watching TV, going to the movies, having lunch with friends, playing with the cat, everywhere, any how, all the time?

Am I talking to me?

A year ago at Tamarika: Dream state

Update:

Quote of the day:

Descriptions of purely inner musings are self-obsessive and irrelevant to anyone else. Andy at Older, But No Wiser.

Coming and going

The weather is good. Warm and sunny. Birds are everywhere sharing the glee with me, not even waiting for me to complete pouring their food into the feeder, calling to one another all around the tree tops as I walk away with the seed bucket, and swooping down almost, just almost on top of me.

Spring break and lots to do. Coming and going. Yesterday I had lunch with a friend and she urged me to play this week. I wonder what I will do? Walk by the Wissahickon perhaps? Read something not related to work? Free, fun time. She said, "You deserve it!" What a friend, eh? I can take extra time with my yoga postures, breathing exercises and meditation. Yum. I love that. Ada can sit for a long while on my lap while I stroke her and stare out at the woods in silence. I love that too. Her little body warming my legs, purring finding its rhythm into my heart, steadying its pace and bringing peace into my chest and lungs.

Beautiful day in every way. I allow it to define my mood, mold my inner turmoils and soothe the stormy thoughts that otherwise take over the brain with tension and anxiety. Blow it all away. Listen to the chaos, fear, violence, garbage out there in the world, close to home and think of the mess, the almighty mess, greedy dominant men in government have made to feed our minds and souls.

Breathe in the beautiful day and blow it all away.

Adventures of Priscilla

Queen of the Desert.

Assumption, my dear Mitz, is the mother of all fxxck-ups. Marion

Mamma Mia!

Virtually

Quote of the day:

A good friend is worth ten thousand relatives. Latin proverb

I have just returned from a blogging tour. I spent quite awhile reading up on what everyone is doing, thinking, opining, feeling, ideology-ing, describing, living … about. I became involved. Laughed, shed a tear or two, ruminated, reflected, became excited, yawned, nodded my head in agreement … felt whole … in a way. I realized I have come to care about people I do not know, have never seen, haven’t even had coffee or tea or lunch or dinner, or a walk in the woods with. I really don’t know anyone at all.

Virtual relationships.

It seems safe, even supportive when the odd one or two writes a comment. But, suddenly, too, it just feels lonely, alienated and weird. Why do I do this? Share myself so openly and completely with cyberspace, people I don’t know and will never see?

I have always been lonely. Since I was a child. Always looking for community and family outside of my own, where I might feel accepted and acknowledged. Leaving Buffalo two and a half years ago all the abandonment buttons of yester-year were pushed, pulled and loaded to almost explosion. Fear of loneliness and anonymity was tremendous. I turned to blogging. I was virtually saved. Or so I thought.

I can never virtually replace my reality.

But perhaps, I might grab some courage out of this thin cyber-air, this virtual, lonely, alienated and weird space, to let go of my myths, denial states, illusions I have created, and just face reality.

Alone.

A year ago at Tamarika: Blogger blues

Rituals (Update)

Watering my plants on Sundays is one of my weekly rituals. I light a couple of beeswax candles in my study that give off a golden yellow light, and nag champa incense in the little Buddha incense holder that Madeline and Milya once bought me for Christmas. Ada settles on the shelf below the violets. She seems to enjoy the mist when I spray the plants after dousing them with water from the burgundy, plastic can. The water fountain Tom gave me for a birthday gift many years ago splashes and tinkles water gently over pebbles and stones gathered on the streets surrounding the old Synagogue in the ancient Juderia of Rhodos last May. As I walk between the rooms watering and spraying the flowering cacti and violets, ferns, and all the other plants reaching for the in-coming spring light, I sigh peacefully and sometimes hum a tune. If Tom is awake I put on music. Perhaps the new Beatles album: "Love," Phillip Glass: "The Hours," or Emmy Lou and Mark Knopfler. They accompany the watering ritual. Candles, incense, Ada, music, fountain.

This morning we started a little later because our clocks have changed. I don’t think the plants noticed, although Ada was a little impatient because her treats seemed a little late in coming this morning.

Treats for Ada is a daily morning ritual. After she has awakened me with a gentle tap of her paw on my cheeks or lips, she runs to the study, jumps up onto her blanket next to my computer and waits. I have to put on my slippers, pour a cup of coffee, complete a few early morning ablutions, and when I finally walk into my room Ada becomes ecstatic, rolling over this way and that and tucking her head up with her lips pulled back into a strange expression. As I open my top drawer she sits upright and stares at it impatiently. I place six little treats on the blanket and she settles down to crunch them up, purring all the while. I turn on the computer, sip at my coffee and stroke her little, warm, furry, gently-vibrating body listening to the crunch and munch and soft purring sounds.

Ada and I start up each day this way.

A year ago at Tamarika: Blimey, what a week that was

Update:

Words of advice about "enjoying the rest of your life." [hat-tip, Ilene]

Blogging the blues away

Quote of the day:

I won’t tell you how to run your blog; don’t you tell me how to run mine. Ronni Bennett

I have been thinking about Winston‘s comment the other day: "just wondered if you share these feelings, or even the blogs themselves, with your therapist." At first, when I read his words I laughed out loud, heartily, and replied back to the computer screen, as all sane bloggers do, "Winston, the blog is my therapist!" And then I realized the trouble with that, I guess, is that sometimes it is going to be about anxieties, fear, emotional confusion, and, yes indeed, even pain. None of which, I imagine, are the most comfortable to read about or participate in. I am always grateful and surprised when people stop by to read what I write, comment, and sometimes even share personal stories so that I know I am not judged, and not alone.

The last time I saw Bob-the-therapist back in Buffalo was almost a year ago. It became, I realize now, a type of sum-up session of all the years of hard work we had shared together helping me to know how I came to be me with all the complexities, ambiguous, conflicting feelings that make up Tamarika of today, here and now. I remember his warm, smiling face as he seemed to shine with pride about me. He talked about how I had become skillful at recognizing ancient wounds and pushed buttons, and weighing them all against the present realities of my life and ever-developing Self. It was a sad session, a farewell, because we knew that I would not be needing him any longer. But it was a very sweet feeling too. Almost like when we send our children off to college, strong, confident and free to make a new life for themselves apart from us. But it was sweet mainly because I realized that Bob’s finest gift to me was to trust what I understand about myself, my life experience.

Oftentimes, after I have written a particularly challenging piece about emotions and relationships, I feel invigorated, energized and wide open with confidence, forgiveness of self and others, and love. It is so much more than just blogging my blues away. It becomes almost a revelation and discovery about yet another side of myself that I had not thought about or encountered prior to writing about it. Sometimes, I find that while writing about my feelings and putting them into some kind of order for myself, I rediscover old habits that have now taken on different meanings.

For example, recently I discovered that I don’t know when I decided to stop beating myself up. It wasn’t a conscious decision. I didn’t sit down one morning and say to myself, "Kid, that’s enough! No more beating yourself up!" It was more like slowly but surely I found myself in situations where I chose a different route. Plain and simple. This path would lead to pain and misery, and that one to peace and comfort. I started choosing the peace and comfort avenue. Beating myself up has taken on many different forms: feeling badly immediately after a successful moment; walking into a marriage I intuitively knew would be disastrous; eating or drinking to numb out feeling neglected or angry; and, I am ashamed to say or face, including even physically beating myself up. Up until not so many years ago, if I felt like I had been bad or caused trouble, I would pound my chest or thighs until there were bruises, or slap around my own head until I had a violent headache. Yes indeed, literally beat myself up. It is a terribly difficult thing to admit to myself but amazingly wonderful to know that I finally stopped doing that. I cannot even remember when was the last time. But suddenly there it was. Thank goodness. One day, I just stopped doing that.

Holding my deepest, most vulnerable Self up to a mirror has been the only way for me to combat the most difficult, shameful feelings of all: that I am not wanted, unlovable, worthless, and no one’s priority. Unearthing that awful truth I learned as a young child has given me freedom to choose a different way. It is slow going, certainly, because it took many years to develop my childhood psyche, and relearning a different paradigm takes many years too. But, actually, lately I’m feeling as proud of myself as Bob-the-therapist did almost a year ago. Because, even though at times it doesn’t sound like it on my blog, I am a much happier, more peaceful person than I have ever been. My relationships with friends and family members feel more authentic, I experience joy, enjoy the moment, laugh out loud, am not as stressed out and anxious as before, and have a lot more fun generally.

My blog is not about trying to find political solutions for the world. Nor is it a diary of daily, topical news events, although sometimes I share what I think is going on in all these areas. The political affects the personal and vice versa, no doubt about it in my mind! As my new-found friend, Ilene asked right here on my site the other day:

Why does one write? To make things right? To explain and exorcise? To rework the script? Is writing therapy? Or is it a way of pushing beyond the limitations put on us by childhood pains, of working the world out in a way that gives us power: gods and goddesses of the page.

I write for all those things but especially to explain to myself, exorcise ancient wounds and fearful demons, rework [my] script … therapy. It has become a safe emotional environment for me to bounce off ideas and confusing feelings where, finally, I have my own power to validate my experiences as I see and feel them, and not as significant others told me how I saw and felt them, or how I should see and feel them. I need those checks and balances more than most people I know, because for so long I believed, so very deeply, a Truth that is not true for me, not healthy, nay more than that, which is very, very bad for my personal development.

I loved what you said, Winston, as a conclusion to your comment:

You have been through a lot, endured much, and worked hard to earn your "position" in life. So have I. We deserve and we have earned the right to waste time, relax, enjoy, do nothing, if we wish. No guilt. No regrets. No worries.

However, I find that I can reach that much desired state of which you speak so supportively and encouragingly, through doing all the other hard work of self-understanding – through wrestlng those ancient wounds down to the ground and staring at them hard directly at their core, right here, right now on this very web-log-site. Only this time, instead of sharing it with my therapist, I share it with you, my readers, if and when you like and can stand it.

But, mostly, I share it with my ever developing Tamarika Self.

Quote of the day

You spend your whole life biting your tongue. You’re married, you’re biting your tongue. You go to work, you’re biting your tongue. So it’s nice to go someplace to see some guys and women exercise free speech. And if it’s funny, even better. Chris Rock

Surprise!

I will never forget the party Tom organized right after I had defended my doctoral dissertation. The defense had turned into quite a party by itself. My favorite colleagues had all shown up to observe and participate with questions, and my three advisors put on a great show, debating the pros and cons of qualitative versus quantitative research. The discussion was as intellectual as could be. I was ecstatic. I had so much fun and enjoyed every moment of it. I could not believe that I had accomplished the doctorate in the first place, and then to enjoy the discussion as much as I did was a hugely added bonus. What a gift!

A few days later, Tom and I had arranged to go out for dinner. We were still dating in those days, living in separate apartments. He was supposed to pick me up for our dinner date when, instead, he called to say his car had a flat tire, was in the "shop" for repairs, and would I please come by his place to pick him up instead. I grumbled and moaned to myself as I drove off to collect my date. When I arrived, my closest friends and colleagues (many of whom had been at the defense a couple of days before) were all there. Shining, smiling faces, flowers everywhere, gifts on the table, an assortment of congratulatory cards, and wonderful foods arranged all about the room.

At first I stood and stared with my mouth wide open not understanding what was going on. After I realized what was happening and succeeded in finally closing my mouth, I sat down and spent close to twenty minutes or half an hour just staring at everyone quietly. I was completely and utterly stunned. Mostly, I could not imagine that anyone would think I was important enough, to do something just for me: organize, plan, keep it a secret, all that stuff. I have never taken for granted that I am anyone’s priority. It felt like a dream come true, a Cinderella story.

Surprise parties are really an act of love, aren’t they? People taking time, working in secret behind the scenes to shower a person with gifts, friends and fun. I have experienced two of those in my life, and I must admit they were amazing! Both times I spent the majority of the party in a state of shock and disbelief. At first I was reeling with the realization about the web of tales told to me to get me there. And for the rest of the time I was stunned that people could be so loving and caring of me to take that much trouble just for me. In short, it was quite traumatic, I must say.

In a good sense, naturally.

Oh happy day (Update)

Femur   

Well, well … Monsieur Kramer … remember me?

I remembered you …

11843_2

They say it’s your birthday …

Happy Birthday to you …

Wink, wink, nudge, nudge …

Update:

There is just a whole lot of partying going on over at Communicatrix! What fun to be included in her fantastic Carnival. How we all do love our Neilochka. Oh Happy Day!

Blown away

Windy_1 

Almost blown away

Holding tight to the steering wheel

Feeling the car sway

From side to side

As if I have a say

As if I can control it

Wind swirling and whirling

As it may

Holding my breath

As I wend my way

Slowly, carefully

Home to Ada Mae