Shaken and Stirred

Entries categorized as ‘connection’

Now, more than ever, yes.

April 6, 2008 · 3 Comments

I was emptying drawers yesterday afternoon. I know I haven’t given you the novel I promised on why things with the genius are falling apart. It will still come, just not before I interject: I’m moving back to my home town. I do not wish to pay another month’s rent here, so I’ve got the rest of April to put all the pieces together. 

Six months of intense soul-searching has brought me to this strange precipice. I’ve known it was coming, this life-altering decision I would have to make. I was afraid that there wouldn’t be any sign-posts along the way and that I would just have to leap, terrified, into the unknown. Clinging to the hope that I wouldn’t have to go so blindly, I was bouyed and I’ve been rewarded.

When I finally started to do something about all the mess I’m in, puzzle pieces came into view. I don’t want to say I’m jaded, but with each little step I have to keep questioning and doubting and hoping. It’s a new life. I don’t want to lose the urgency to live wide open. There is much to do. There is much to hope for.

I raised a sport purse out of a deep drawer, and when I opened the purse, a fortune cookie fortune greeted me from a clear pocket: “Your dearest wish will come true.” It’s not really one wish in particular. It’s a schema of wishes. At a time when everything seems ripe, I want to say yes to life. I still waver with uncertainty, but I’m now taking steps, no matter the measure, instead of lying stagnant in fear and confusion.

(The link to “yes” in the previous paragraph is one of the best stories ever. Read it. It’s worth it.)

Categories: connection · happiness · life · shake/stir

Food is Love

December 31, 2006 · 3 Comments

Cooking. Creating consumable food or beverage(s) for others is an act of love. This thought didn’t occur to me until recent years. My husband manifests his love primarily by making delectably tasty goods on (or in) a dish. One Sunday night, I came home to a sampler platter of pork tenderloins cooked six different ways — the tenderloins, mind you, had been cut into small medalions. It was still too much to eat in one sitting, but everything was so delicious. Too, each version of pork loin was an adventure of flavor. Jack really communicates with food. He likes to create rich tasty things for the people in his life.

Sally posted a while back about how she and her husband, Dan, share the kitchen chores — when one cooks, the other cleans. In that post (to which I cannot link until an insurance matter from Dan’s accident is cleared — grrr), Sally put her finger on it: Cooking is an act of love. While you tend to details of putting a meal together, you think of that person or people. Sometimes life becomes cluttered with too many stimuli, and our minds race while we go through motions. Sometimes we leave out ingredients or cook a dish for too long, but even distracted cooking is a statement: I care enough about you to make sure you have a meal to eat.

Sharing. When a person has a death in the family, or if a major accident has a loved one debilitated, friends and family pitch in by providing food for the aggrieved family. This is one way that people reach out in love. Sometimes there are no words to assuage the pain of loss or injury, but food is a constant. It is a common thread for all people. Food can bring communities together and speak volumes when words cannot.

On a funny note, when I was in college, the popular way for guys to propose to their girls was to cook a fancy meal on their own and have an evening of wooing before popping the magic question.

Eating. It takes time to sit down and enjoy a meal with others. Especially if you’re with someone you care about. You take a bite, you commune, you enjoy the presence of dinner companions. Food can be a form of adventure. My husband and I were thrilled by several culinary experiences during our visit to Las Vegas in August.  We’re foodies, so each restaurant we visited was subjected to our unspoken and unofficial checklists. Food quality? Presentation? Balance of flavor, too rich or bland? Customer service? Atmosphere/Entertainment? There are many things that occupy our attention when Jack and I sit down together for many a meal. Not that we scrutinize when we’re visiting friends or family! And not every meal at home for us is gourmet; we’ve had a few mac-n-cheese or PBJ nights. The thing is, when you share a meal with someone, it’s a moment of companionship. A binding together of all persons involved. A social intimacy that cannot be avoided.

In a rushed society, eating on-the-go is ever more popular. Not only is eating fast food (especially in the car!) unhealthy physically, it robs us of time. On our own, a meal on-the-go prevents the slow-paced eating that keeps us from over-eating. There is no down time to catch up with the momentum of our thoughts. With others, not only are on-the-go meals consumed too quickly, but the companionability is shattered. Sharing a rushed meal has all the intimacy of passing someone in a hallway. Slow down. Enjoy yourself and the ones you’re with.

Categories: connection · food

Be The Change

July 5, 2006 · 2 Comments

I’ve been spending a lot of time reading through www.one.org lately. I finally got to the “Partners” page today, and there is a long list of affiliates. Check it out. Ghandi is quoted on the MercyCorps site: “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.”

This statement grabs my heart with an iron fist. I have wishes and intensions to be active in some way toward the betterment of society, but there is no evidence. All the intentions in the world aren’t going to move a single grain of sand until I lift a finger, get myself out of the house, pick up the phone, donate something to someone. I need a good kick in the pants!

There are so many people in this world who are starving for something — whether that be food, shelter, love or something else. I want to be involved to help in some way, but the best I can to is take care of myself and my family. And, honestly, I don’t even do a good job with that. I’m a bad steward of my own health and possessions. I’ve never had to suffer what many experience every day, and yet I take this life for granted that was bestowed upon me.

The change I wish to see in the world is for people with time and copious amounts of money to realize what they have to offer. Volunteer. Donate your time, energy, money, possessions, blood. What bothers me about the higher classes in our society is that there are people who seem to never come to terms with the reality that there are other people in existence who are suffering. Wake up and have some compassion! I suppose now is the time for me to get out of my chair and begin somewhere. Anywhere.

Categories: connection