15 July 2009

Resistance


I've been going to the gym more often this summer. Not only do I have more free time as well as more time to kill (yes, the two are different!), I am also going to be running a 4 mile run in Central Park this weekend - the New York Road Runners Central Park Conservancy run/walk. The walk part of the name is particularly important to me. While I can average 10 minute miles for 4 miles, I always end up walking of it. Granted, that time was on a treadmill without a lot of hills (I still have to go over the route, but it's Central Park, there will be some changes in elevation!), I feel fairly confident that I'll be able to finish the 4 miles before the kid's races start an hour and a half later

There is one thing that I noticed at the gym. Some days, I just can't face running, and so I head to the stationery bikes. As I enter the settings, I must admit that I cringe a bit when I put my age at 26. Yes, in many ways, I'm still extraordinarily young, and I recognize that. But there's also a faint twinge that I'm in my late 20s. I'm not overly sensitive about my age, yet I feel as though there are things that I should have done, or should have happened by now. But that is a topic for another day.

Every time you sit down at any of the cardio machines, you have to enter a "resistance". It starts at "1" and goes up from there. At first, a lower setting is ideal; it takes time to get into the rhythm; your muscles and your breathing has to adjust. Above all, I need a rhythm, a pattern to my movement. Much of it is based off of the music I'm listening to. Ideally, the movements of my body match the beat of the music, and if it's close, but not quite the right tempo, I find it frustrating. But again, I digress.

As I get into the rhythm and begin to sweat, if the resistance goes back down to where I started, it makes the biking difficult and jerky. The wheels are spinning faster then I'm pedaling, frustrating my efforts and throwing off the rhythm and pace. There needs to be some resistance, something to work against, for the workout to keep progressing.

This is something that to keep in mind as I continue through life. Without some resistance, some friction, some difficulty, I'm not going to progress. So when it hurts (as it often does at the end of a workout as the legs begin to ache and the lungs start burning) and it seems difficult (really? there's still another mile to go?), that's actually a good sign. It means that somethng is happening, or going to happen.

12 July 2009

Sunflowers and Wheat

In celebration of my grandmother (see the entry below), here are some etsy shops with some lovely Kansas and wheat related items.


Clockwise from the top left:

A year and a day


It has been a year and a day since my mother's mother died. My grandmother. A woman my grandfather, her husband, first described as "a real peach". Last summer I was tortured by a combination of factors. And I wrote about my grandmother. This is part of what I wrote.

In the evenings, she would grow lonely and restless. She called out to anyone; demanding they come to see her right then. Right at that moment. She could feel an otherness creeping upon her as the sun began to go down. In the long afternoon hours, her Sunday afternoon feeling swelled and morphed. She became not herself. Whatever relative that happened to be on hand, that had answered her desperate call, was likely to be met with anger and frustration when they informed her that they were not there to take her home. Why would you come here and not take me home? Why do you always leave me here? In a room that is never warm enough. Where you have to push a button to use the bathroom, wait until the urge has passed and the aide instead has to get you a fresh pair of Wal-Mart brand Depends.

Family came to her in the hospital. To sit with her and to hold her hand. She leans over and asks if they are here to say goodbye. She asks if she can let go; it hurts; it hurts. It is difficult to hang on with oxygen flowing into lungs clogged with pneumonia, into a brain scarred with strokes and Parkinson’s. Each morning, the doctor arrives earlier and earlier so as to avoid the family, in particular the eldest of the two daughters. She accosted him last week, demanding to know why there were no answers, why nothing was happening. Why every time that she asked about something, all he said was that she was holding on. Was she to let go? How do you let go?

Her face and hands and hair were made beautiful in death. Before, after weeks in the hospital, months in the care center and years helping on the farm before SPF 50 and wrinkle reducing moisturizer, her hands were rough and mottled black and blue from too many sticks of the IV. Her smile sagged on one side from any number of strokes and mini-strokes. Weight was lost and then gained, cheeks and jowls sagged. Eyes were puffy from too much sleep. Hours had been spent putting in rollers at home and going to the local salon for a permanent. In the hospital, it hung straight – washed on a semi-regular basis with a shower cap placed upon her head, massaged, let to set, then removed. Another item on a to-do list of a nurse or an aide.

The doctors didn’t seem to visit much. First do no harm. There was no harm that could be done, nor any good, except for the morphine drip that increased at night when legs got restless and the mind couldn’t sleep, as it searched for the reason for holding on, for the reason that it hurt, that the last days were so unbearable. A woman who had spent her life serving others. No saint, surely, but saintly in the way of a farmer’s wife and a teacher and a mother. A quick end, a smooth end would have been deserving.

She waited. She waited until the wheat was cut. She waited until her youngest daughter had said good night. She waited until her husband was at home, sleeping in the bed they had shared. 3:00am in the morning, the quiet hour, the night before the dawn, she let go.

Her obituary fits neatly on a page. Listing those alive and those who passed before her with a summary of her hobbies. My cousin and I called her Magic Fingers as she taught as how to sew; we couldn’t fathom how fingers could make such small and even stitches as our stitches wavered across the fabric. Nora enjoyed sewing. She made outfits for five children, including underwear out of feed sacks. My mother didn’t get her first store bought dress until she was 18. She made outfits and quilts for all of her grandchildren. Do some anecdotes, some personal touches bring her any closer? Do they do any more then Nora enjoyed sewing?

When asked by the pastor for memories of their mother, her children sat silently at the table. My own mother decided, in an oddly obstinate way, that she would not say a word. She was not going to help him. She would sit there in silence and let someone else talk. My aunt, a daughter-in-law named Eileen, chimes in. Eileen and her husband who found it so difficult to get off the farm to come to Christmas celebrations even when they were only a 30 minute drive away. This is the woman who has all the memories. This is the woman who decides how my grandmother will be remembered in the pastor’s sermon.

She filled a silence, though, she filled a void that wouldn’t be filled with the ponderous, slow to speak and not ever quite able to deal with emotions children. The gap had to be filled and she did her best. More than the other daughter-in-law who began to lecture, a few days before Nora let go, my mother and her sister on the care that should have been given. Living only an hour away, as compared to the 3+ hours of all the other family members aside from Eileen, she came only at the end. She voiced her opinion only at the end when there was nothing that could be done. When her opinion was simply filling another kind of void, that space of time as they waited to see how long Nora would hold on. The space the doctor kept calling Nora’s balance beam that was narrowing by the day.

This was the daughter-in-law who practiced medicine and her husband who did the same; let’s call them Mae and Paul. Mae and Paul came on their own convenience, squeezed in between trips to Milan, Israel, China, England, New York City and San Fransisco.

They were not there to hold her hand as she called for help and asked if she had to keep holding on. They did not feed her the mashed up food the care center fed her near the end. They did not wash her hair, put on her socks, brush her hair back from her forehead, hold a cold cloth to her lip that she bit so hard in pain or with the shudders and twitches of Parkinson's she had to have stitches.

They come in as time has run out. As their opinions cannot be acted upon. As though they had all the answers and if they’d had their way, she would be fine. An unconscious presumption or unknown guilt, for whatever reason, she spent hours detailing to Miriam just how Nora’s care should have been administered. Who does that help? How does that help?

I wonder at the tale of the prodigal son. Did not the first-born son have a right to be just a wee bit annoyed? Here comes his brother, welcomed back in without a second thought. Are we expected to be so forgiving? As we forgive, we let go of that small self-satisfaction, that conviction that we are somehow, in whatever small way, better than these others. I sent letters and flowers and I held her hand; a cautious, selfish and guilty whisper inside me tells me that this makes me better than those who came only to say goodbye. If I forgive them, I am no better than them. It is good that the Word can be seen like poetry – metaphors and symbolism, able to be interpreted.

88 years of life can fit neatly onto a page and even more neatly onto a grey granite headstone. A list of her children’s names. Her husband’s name alongside hers. No extra decoration, no frills and elaboration.

10 July 2009

Thinking of Greece

I have been in New Jersey all summer so far, and my vacation is going to be heading home to Kansas for a few weeks. While it will be nice to see family, it's not quite the same as heading somewhere exotic and exciting. And as I've been thinking about exotic and exciting, I was remembering my visit to Greece. The main reason that I wanted to go was because of the beautiful blue and white style architecture/design prevalent on many of the islands. And these great etsy items all made me feel a little less sad about being stuck here in dirty Jersey.


Clockwise from upper left:

Beauty and Talent


I am continually amazed at the talent and skill of people in the world. One new favorite artist is Miss Cassia Beck of http://cassiabeck.etsy.com/. I got this lovely print from her - the fuschia flowers in Brighton were some of my favorite flowers. The mix of bright pink and purple were stunning, and I'd never seen flowers like them before I lived there. I have the image hanging over me as I type, and I couldn't be more pleased!

Isn't it beautiful! Funnily enough, as I got the package in the mail from England, I realized that she lives on the cross street from one of the houses where I used to live. One of my favorite pubs was right at the end of her road!

It is, in fact, a small world.
I noticed last night that nearly all of the pictures I have hanging or on display in my little apartment have to do with England and most specifically Brighton.

Above my bed is a collage of images related to England, by my desk are 2 photos by the wonderful cassiabeck, above my easy chair I have a picture of the hills of Sussex and the photo above of fuschia. Over my table is a reproduction of the now iconic "Keep Calm and Carry On" poster. Above my couch is a reproduction of an antique map of Great Britain. My bookcase is lined with photos and ephemera related in someway to Brighton. I may have a theme here that borders on obsession.


I moved away from Brighton at the end of January 2007. The very last day I could stay until my visa expired. I had lived there for about 3 years. It's been over 2 years now, and I still dream of my days on Brighton beach. While I had some stressful/bad times there, nearly all related to the twat-ishness of English men, overall, I absolutely and overwhelmingly loved it.

06 July 2009

Mail

I have an obsession with checking my email. Constantly and continually wanting to see if anyone has contacted me. It used to be part of an obsession with certain men, and still seeing emails from a couple of specific addresses makes me feel flush, faint and a bit nauseous. Though right now, I'm waiting (seemingly in vain) to hear back from publishers and job interviews. I have two job interviews where I should be hearing any day now. And I'm trying to get work published, and so I seem to constantly be hoping and waiting for an editor to write back and say, yes, your idea sounds like the perfect fit for our magazine and we'd love to pay you $5.00 per word. ($5.00 per word is obviously beyond hope, but I'd take .50 a word!)

I feel like email has gone the way of "real" mail; too much of it is junk or spam or simply forwards. But this morning, I got the lovely surprise of waking up to my jewelry being featured in a blog! The wedding blog, http://inventingweddings.blogspot.com/, posted my pearl ivory and peach bracelets as a part of their "peach and teal" color theme.


Also featured:

White Handmade Wedding Tutu Skirt by kaedankrafts

The Scent of Lisabetta Necklace by soradesigns

Stackable and Stretchable Pearl Bracelets by kristinmc

Shabby Jungle Brooch by walkonthemoon

Locket Charm Necklace by dreamamlittledream

Adelaide Save the Date by MewPaperArts

Peaches and Cream Bouquet Set by modagefloral

03 July 2009

Double chin

I have a fear that I'm beginning to develop a double chin and a bit of a beer gut. Well, I suppose to be technical it's a rum gut, but all the same.

I have been going to the gym about 4 times a week recently. Since the semester has ended, I find myself with more spare time, and so I've been headed to the gym more often. It is also to try and stop the widening of my waistline and the inexplicable loose skin beneath my chin.

I remember the day in high school where my friends decided to have a bra-free day. I was in absolute agony. Mostly because the bras I wore day to day added one if not two cup sizes on their own. I was terrified of showing just how flat-chested I really was. For even with my extra padded bras, I was still most definitely not Pamela Anderson.

And now, my agony over my chest is the unexplained reason that I would gain weight solely under my chin and around my hips and not on my boobs. It makes no sense. I really only go to the gym to ensure that my stomach doesn't stick out past my small cup size. I don't have a lot of room to work with, so my weeks of eating chips and drinking very quickly leads to a bit of a crisis.

I went to the gym today, lifted some weights, did some time on the elliptical and on the treadmill. I generally felt good about myself. And yet when I get home, I follow up my workout with a plateful of wavy lays dipped in ranch and a triple rum and coke. It seems...not ideal.