Choices and Losses

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I’m not a philosopher, a sociologist, or a psychologist. I have no professional insight or education beyond my bachelor’s in creative writing to which to lash my theory, yet this thought is a real one, true to me, so I share it with you: I believe, as a culture, we’re taught to ignore our losses. To deny them air, pack up and move on. Especially those little losses, the ones we experience every day.

Don’t complain.

That’s what I hear in the cultural whisperings that move me here and there like I’m a marionette, wondering up at my gossamer strings. I can see them, but I can’t always reach them or bend them to my bidding.

Pick your self up. Keep going. It doesn’t really matter.

Stepping out of the shield of cynicism and quick burial of the things that matter, however seemingly insignificant, I look back on one of my big choices that led to a loss: moving to Boston.

I didn’t move, per se, I went to college. I’m one of those who left and didn’t return. And so I live in my adopted city, growing and changing while, in my birth state, my family does the same. We miss the little things that become the big things. The grey hair here, the soft summer night there. We remember one another into moments that existed for one, or the other, but not both: we manufacture memories.

This loss loops eternal. Funny how, until my family returned home following my graduation, I hadn’t realized I was choosing. Even if understood, I probably wouldn’t have chosen differently. I love my adopted city and I love my family. I live with the choice and the loss.

Sinclair and Jones familyThe beautiful ladies of my birth family

What are some of your small or significant choices and losses? You’re welcome to share in the comments.

What This Blog Is Not

IMG_5385Often, I find a good way to get a handle on something is to describe what that something is not. I’ve contemplated this in relation to Whole Heart Local, whose creation I perseverated over a great deal during summer 2011.

This blog is not (as far as I’m aware):

  • An attempt to land a book deal
  • Intended to make me a load of cash, or even enough to “quit my job”
  • Intending to attract an audience of thousands
  • A high horse (I hope!)

And for the converse (generally harder to figure.)

This blog is:

  • A place to land my thinking and writing, seeing as how my other projects (read: novels in progress) couldn’t beat a three-toed sloth in a road race, with rocket boosters
  • A home on the web to which to invite my family, friends, current and potential partners in the world of writing and arts
  • Repository for the hundreds of photos crowding my Flickr account

Accidental Meditation

Once upon a time, I mediated by accident. It wasn’t a total surprise. I had, after all, been listening to a free lecture by Jon Kabat-Zinn on mindfulness entitled “A More Mindful Society Might Depend on Us: Embodying Our Beauty and Our Wholeness in Our Live and in the World.” If ever a lecture to a packed room of interested listeners had an action item, it’d be that one!

My two companions and I helpfully held up the wall at the rear of the Lesley University lecture hall, where we’d sneaked in. We enjoyed a view of backs-of-heads nodding agreement, rueful smiles shared with nearby companions, hands dashing down notes. After describing mindfulness as a radical, world-altering force, Mr. Kabat-Zinn invited us to join him in a short exercise to be here now.

I shut my eyes and felt the force of the room, the solidarity, the respect for process and humanity, for ourselves. I followed my breath, marveling at the whirling of my seemingly un-containable thoughts, and enjoyed a secret with myself: this exercise was a surprise check-mark on my 101 Things in 1001 Days goal of “meditate for five minutes a day for fifteen days.”

Sweet.

Kabat-Zinn_bw

Many thanks to my friend Sage Radachowsky for the photo.

Librarytour: Brooks Memorial Library, VT

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This stylish bike rack was captured during a trip with my mother to Brattleboro, Vermont. Not too far from Boston, but also not too close, we enjoyed our B&B, caught some live music at a bar, chatted up the clerk at a yarn shop called Knit or Dye, toured the popular farmer’s market, gushed over the co-op food market (kombucha on tap!), and of course visited the local library.

It seems I’ve misplaced all of the photos from that tour –save for the one above.