Archive for May, 2009

May 11th, 2009

Riding the Roller Coaster of Life

DSC04751I was off on another mini adventure this weekend, and this time it was with my favorite mouse.  Yes me and the hubs headed to one of our favorite destinations, Disneyland, for the upteenth time.  Though we had tons of fun riding my all time faves like Pirates and Big Thunder, it was a different kind of magic that befell me and that inspires me to write this entry.

It all starts with my love of roller coasters.  Let’s just say though I can’t get enough of them, they scare me to death.  Even though I’ve ridden Matterhorn and Big Thunder Mountain a hundred times, I always get stricken with fear right before I get on.  My husband thinks it’s funny that, for example, I always look down when approaching the gigantic mechanical snake in Indiana Jones because I’m too scared to look at it, or that I get so nervous before any ride even though I’ve been on it a thousand times.  But here’s what’s so magical about it.  I realized that these “rides” were symbolic of CHANGE in my life.  Right before I get on, there’s a lot of waiting which leaves time for anticipation.  And questions such as, “Can I handle this?  What if I don’t like it?” make my palms sweat and my heart beat faster.  I start to question whether or not I’m prepared for it.  Then, I began to doubt myself.  Wouldn’t it be easier, for example, if I just stuck with something safe like, “It’s a Small World”?  Sure, it may be a big bore, but at least I know what I’m in for.  Yet, though there are enough excuses not to try, there’s only one reason why you should.  Because life isn’t supposed to be about predictability and safety.  Life is about living.  It is hard and it is challenging but it is meant to be fully lived.

And so in the end, I always take the plunge.  Although I’m afraid of the challenge, I can’t risk what I’d be missing.  And the result?  Well it’s a lot like life.  You feel the fear and adrenaline as you climb, but when you let go and move with the flow, it produces the most awesome kind of ride.  The kind where you feel alive.  While I was racing through the dark in sharp turns and unexpected dips, I screamed until my voice was hoarse but I was laughing at the same time, and I realized that this joy I was experiencing was not just the magic of Disney’s Magic Kingdom but that it was also about that magical little gift that we call life.

May 7th, 2009

A Wink in the Right Direction

I first began tracking my “signs” when I read a book called When GOD Winks on Love: Let the Power of Coincidence Lead You to Love by SQuire Rushnell.  It was a tiny little book with a BIG message!  It’s all about observing signs from God which Rushness calls a “wink” that tells you when you’re heading in the right direction.  I actually began taking notice of these signs as far back as 2004 and notated everything from having a water bottle almost hit me on the head when I was extremely thirsty to finding a Masters program in a topic I was interested in while perusing a newspaper.  Five years later, I’ll admit that I haven’t really been dedicated to my search for signs.  That’s why when I had a “Godwink” moment today, I couldn’t wait to share it here.

Recently, I’ve been feeling the effects of modern day busyness.  I often feel like my body can’t quite catch up with my mind.  And the end result?  I get sick and need to take time off to recuperate.  And I know I’m not the only one.  Lot of women feel the pressures to “have it all”: great relationship, successful career, perfect family life.  And as Cher would say in my favorite 90’s movie Clueless, “As if!”  

Recently, I wondered how I was going to continue to work full-time, exercise, write new articles and keep up with two of my blogs.  Then, I got it!  Literally.  I got the answer to my prayers in a package that came from Amazon.com that I wasn’t expecting.  And the title?  The Life Organizer: A Woman’s Guide to a Mindful Year.  The book is all about how to obtain your dreams and written for the busy woman.  I know I must have ordered it, but I honestly don’t remember doing so.  All I know is that I’m grateful to have received the right book at the right time in a Godwink and am SO looking forward to receiving more!

May 5th, 2009

Anger Redefined

Anger is one of those emotions we’d rather not express, experience, talk about or feel.  In fact, especially as women, it’s one emotion we like to keep hidden.  We store away this socially unacceptable emotion until we can’t hold it in any longer and let it out on who else, but our family.  Yet, have you ever watched a child when they get upset?  There’s no holding back with kids.  Anger is seen in loud outbursts, arms flailing, and sometimes a bit of stomping.  Even my little rabbit will thump and growl when he’s upset.  So why is that when we get older we try so hard to dishonor it?

For one thing, no one wants to see an adult throwing a tantrum.  And for another, anger has been given such a bad rap.  When we see someone red faced and yelling, the last thing we want to do is be around them.  And the act of holding in our anger is absurdly valued and believed to be a virtue instead of a flaw.  Yet, holding in your anger can be like holding in a sneeze.  Instead of getting rid of all those toxins from your body and releasing the energy into something that feels good, you’re inhaling, repressing, and storing all of that negative energy and irritants inside.  Ironically, although we might avoid confrontation with friends or hold back our anger at work to prevent fights and the end of a relationship, the opposite tends to happen when we don’t act on it.  

The good news?  Expressing anger isn’t as scary as you may think.  In Finding Your Own North Star, Martha Beck’s statement that “well-used anger lies at the heart and soul of making the world a better, more humane place” floored me.  She gives examples in her book of how Rosa Parks and Gandhi, people who we revere as peacemakers, used their anger to change the world.  That gave me goose bumps because previously my impression of anger was of the “throwing your hands and feet on the floor” type.  I didn’t realize that anger could be the catalyst for positive change.  It’s already helped me on one occasion where I chose to use my anger toward a few drunk people’s insensitive remarks to help me write a new article on racism.  Because anger is such a powerful, adrenaline inducing emotion, it can help motivate you to do something significant and life changing.  So the next time you’re feeling angry, remember that this seemingly negative emotion can contribute positively to the world.