Monday 28 July 2014

Is kindness love?



I came across a small book in a shop at the weekend called 'congratulations by the way'. It's a transcript of a commencement speech, the sort of rousing, spirited call to go forth and conquer speech which American universities seem to love, to lap up. As do I.

You can read what I think is the whole speech on the New York Times website here: 
http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/31/george-saunderss-advice-to-graduates/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=1&

The author, George Saunders, talks about kindness being a by-product of ageing. He says someone once said "I'm nearly all love now" because they'd lived so long.

I was thinking about this as I stood in the bookshop reading it, taking a photograph of the cover so I'd remember to look it up later. I am seeking kindness. It's a major pillar of who I think I am going to become or want to become and the main reason for this blog, the search for losing myself, my selfish self, my boundaries and instead to try and merge with others and 'see' them. His book also got me wondering how many others are there trying to do this? And how can I meet some of them? Also I wondered is it true that we all come to this, to a step of trepidation towards kindness. I'd love to be able to say trying to be kind is easy or even a leap of faith, but it's definitely more like a small step for me, and one filled with doubt running in rivulets down its face, some of them eroding, exposing anything false which lies beneath. All the same, it's encouraging to read someone else stating the need, the inevitability of growing towards kindness so eloquently, stirringly.

So much is written about ageing, you'd be forgiven for thinking, if you were young, that it was all grim once you stepped past 40, 50. I'm very happy it isn't, not just for me, but for all of us. I wish my parents had lived long enough to see if this was as ubiquitous as it is now appearing to be. 



Monday 21 July 2014

And then this...

Today I was looking for a book to read and from all the books on shelves and piles in my house I just pulled a random one out that I couldn't remember if I'd read and opened the pages, thinking I'd recognise it soon enough if I had. 

Just as I began to get into the story, out of the pages ahead a photo fell. It was of me, close up looking sideways from the lens. I am younger, not significantly but enough to recognise fewer wrinkles, better hair. The look on my face is one of utter joy. 

I knew then the book belonged to her, as did the photo. It was one of many relics she left behind which so far has included three dust covered mismatched socks behind the drier (she has a particluar love of socks and would have missed them), a brand new cashmere jumper she was given one Christmas by her aunt, still in its tissue and box, which I found in a small cupboard I thought was empty in a hard to reach corner behind the bath, and which I am guessing she left on purpose. There are numerous tiny, pretty hair clips that she wore scattered throughout her hair lying in wait for me when I do DIY or try to clean too close to the edges of carpets and behind radiators. The stash of them in my bathroom is faintly embarrassing given I will never wear them. There are some CDs and DVDs of course, and a photo of her aged about three, and once, I found a not-quite-empty bottle of her perfume which had special powers over my mind when she wore it and later, after she had gone, I took to walking round clutching it like a cigarette, taking a furtive sniff now and then. It took me weeks to throw that away. She also left many, possibly all the gifts I'd given her. I still feel the need to sit in the garden chair I bought for her because it reclined so deeply and she loved to lie back and sleep in it, pretending to read, ever watchful, no matter how exhausted, of the arrival of anything or anyone in the garden. When I sit in it for some reason I adopt the exact same pose she used, even though it feels, to me, unnatural. I've positioned it far from the house so it's only catches the sun for the last hour of the day, giving me barely any opportunity to sit there, conjuring up the same spirit of reclining while remaining alert. 

There are so many reminders of her, each arriving like fresh footsteps in the carpet or whispers of wings at the window, ghostly, supernatural, powerful and primitive. 

After I'd looked at the photo for a long time, trying to remember it being taken, trying to remember where I was and if I'd ever seen it before, trying to remember being that much younger, I noticed there, at the edge of the frame, her. It was just her nose and a bit of her forehead, barely in shot at all, barely there. But there she was kissing my neck and taking my photo and there was I as happy as I've ever in this world been. And I remembered.

Saturday 19 July 2014

Go to the edge, look out, report back



Had a weird day today. Drove almost right up to the door of my former lover (love-of-my-life lover who I called time on nearly two years ago when I realised the relationship was killing me, us both). Stopped short, in a lay-by, and went for a short walk in a field. The straw was lying in heavy damp piles, waiting for the sun to make it dry enough to store for the winter. I smoked a few pretend cigarettes (have been on e-cigarettes for nearly a year now) and sat in the shade of a tree hoping she would magically just come by. 

I longed to see her.

This is the text I wrote while I waited for her in the field, and which I didn't send:

Why won't the missing stop? I'm going to go to my grave missing you and not knowing if I'm a fool for loving you, a fool for losing you, a fool for wanting desperately to win you back. I know nothing at all except I can't seem to breathe when I think about you and to my surprise and endless frustration, I think about you every day. I am not sorry for texting. I am not sorry I love you still. I am only sorry I can't seem to find a way out of this hole no matter how I try. I asked God to stop me messaging you if it was the wrong thing to do (I ask him all sorts of crap, as you know) and so I half expect a sign like a bee to sting me or a wild horse to suddenly jump out of the hedgerows and trample me to stop me sending this. Half (at least) of me hopes I won't press send. I don't want to unleash more pain for you or for me. Heaven knows we've both had enough. But you are the only person in this whole world I can tell, I can't seem to get over this person I once knew and it breaks my heart anew every day. I hope you're better than me, better than this.  

Then I cried. 

Because she wouldn't come by. She'd be out living, doing something fun like captaining a boat or cycling too fast down a steep muddy hill or playing with someone else's puppy. She would also not come by because she is okay, doing well, surviving and definitely not driving around her neighbourhood on the off-chance I might be hiding in a field near her house with a great view of cow parsley. 

Obviously.

I knew my tears were pathetic and self-pitying and after a while I began to realise what I really needed.

I didn't need her exactly, though I'd have loved to see her, to put my face deep into the fold of her neck, to feel her narrow back enfolded in my arms and to find the words to tell her I've finally learned some things she needed me to learn and am, I hope, better at loving, at understanding. What I need and want and was crying about was having or, in this case, not having someone to love who loved me back. 

It's insulting to her or to anyone that I could assume a former love could slot back into my life to fill the hole of gaping need, just because they had filled it once before. 

Once I got a grip on myself I had a long think about this and about how many others must feel like this. We all want to love and be loved, we all hope someone will magically walk up to us in a deserted field or supermarket or office or footpath and look into our eyes and everything will suddenly be all right. Everything will suddenly make perfect sense. The world and our hearts will sing. 

But it won't. At least it probably won't. It does happen for some people but not very many.
Instead I realised I had to do more work, I had to live and live well and stop moping about hoping to be found, rescued.

I have to do what I'm here to do. And that, for me, is to go to the edge, look out and report back what I see. 

I'm not sure if I am supposed to report back in writing or painting or the way I live and offer friends whatever support I can, but I'll try all of those and see if any are useful to others. Underlying that most basic human need to be loved and seen and wanted, is, I think, an even greater desire to be useful, do something valuable, worthwhile and meaningful.


Sunday 1 June 2014

Letter to my younger self

The general idea behind letters to our younger selves seems to be to gently encourage and support and warn. To my younger self I'd say wow, you're way ahead of me on some things, you burn with a passion I struggle to recall now.
On other things you're exactly like me, you are me, in mineral form maybe. Elemental, so it's like looking in the mirror and waving a little self-consciously, not entirely sure which is the actual and which is the reflection, freckles and a mild blush of embarrassment on both faces, the same eyes, the same sight, here or there.
One thing I've learned which you also knew or, rather, sensed and which you are bang on about is your belief in envisioning your future, creating your future. Yes, it really does work, it is true, though you didn't envision this reality. Even so, some snapshots along the way have proved pixel perfect. You are making me even now. Remember that vision of an old woman in an orchard? Long grey hair? I'm a few years off that yet and my hair is still short, but I don't doubt we will one day meet her too.
So to you, what would I say?
Relax. Keep seeing, learning, listening, looking. Never lose faith in the peace and wisdom in repose. Or that gained in action. Balance is what you're aiming for. It's harder than it sounds, but you can do it, you will.
Your instincts are amazing, sure.
There are some things that get better and you don't have to either grasp or deny them. Mobile phones, the internet, your interest - finally - in fitness, your children, the view from 35,000 feet of the red earth of India, sex with a woman, love, the slow erosion of ego. All these will come and astound you whether you want them or not. Live. Joy is a by-product rather than a goal.
Your Mum dies young. Be kinder to her now. You'll miss her much, much more than you can imagine. You'll transpose your need for mothering on to random women then, eventually, on to white feathers so you can be found by her at some level always, but especially in the Spring, the season when birds fly the nest. You left yours so young, you still carry the bruises of too many falls.
I love you, I whisper it through the veils of time, opaque mists in the valleys like bowls of milk between hilltops of then and now.
I love you.
Hold on. Believe. 

Friday 28 March 2014

Love, love, love

I've been thinking again about why I started writing this blog, what I was hoping to achieve. I wanted to record attempts to love people, everyone, anyone, and what happened on those moments when I managed it. I wanted to grow bigger, lose the ego, become tough at loving even when disappointed. 

Here I am a quarter of the year already gone. It isn't imperative this fitted neatly into 12 months, but it helps me to have a frame and 'a year of living in love with the world' sounded more manageable than a lifetime. At least to start with.

Loving people, strangers, colleagues, neighbours, friends and family is both incredibly difficult and easy. I am finding it much easier to love strangers, because strangers lack the detail of closeup, the nitty gritty of familiarity which can erode kindness quicker than almost anything. It's relatively easy to walk around thinking 'I love you' as people walk past in the street, but much more difficult to think lovingly towards someone you see and know and talk to and depend on and are bound to day in day out. I am astonished at the rewards of being more loving to people at work. Sometimes these people irritate or mystify me or make my life harder or make me feel bad, but that is the human condition not them as individuals. I am trying and trying and sometimes it works to stop and think before reacting, to love them or more precisely to try to "see" them, to understand what they might mean or want or be afraid of in that moment they seem to be difficult, and work has become a great deal more pleasant as a result.

I don't think I'm any closer to reaching a new plateau. More often it's as if I'm in a maze -- and isn't life a maze really, when it all comes down, just a series of paths taken or not, the walls sometimes closing in and sometimes opening out into clearings, the sense of there being a destination but having no idea what or where it is, of running, walking, crawling along paths which feel sometimes like someone else's paths, of decisions, of backtracking, of looking upwards and seeing the sky and hoping you'll find the point of it all before the sky becomes dark.

That sounds as if life is lived in a panic or a daze and that's not quite right either. I dont feel panicked or frightened or defeated, but I do wonder if I'm doing it right.

I was reading Maria Popova's blog (which is great, by the way) on love:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/01/28/love-2-0-barbara-fredrickson/
- this post is about a book by psychologist Barbara Fredrickson's book Love 2.0: How Our Supreme Emotion Affects Everything We Feel, Think, Do, and Become (UKpublic library).

and on that page, this leapt out at me:



I hope this comes out big enough to read...but if it doesn't, here it is transcribed: 

First and foremost, love is an emotion, a momentary state that arises to infuse your mind and body alike. Love, like all emotions, surfaces like a distinct and fast-moving weather pattern, a subtle and ever-shifting force. As for all positive emotions, the inner feeling love brings you is inherently and exquisitely pleasant — it feels extraordinarily good, the way a long, cool drink of water feels when you’re parched on a hot day. Yet far beyond feeling good, a micro-moment of love, like other positive emotions, literally changes your mind. It expands your awareness of your surroundings, even your sense of self. The boundaries between you and not-you — what lies beyond your skin — relax and become more permeable. While infused with love you see fewer distinctions between you and others. Indeed, your ability to see others — really see them, wholeheartedly — springs open. Love can even give you a palpable sense of oneness and connection, a transcendence that makes you feel part of something far larger than yourself.

And it's true love in all its forms is akin to an ever-shifting, never fixed weather pattern, the winds of time, storms, rain, the warmth of sun. Also, that love bestows transcendence, a sense of largesse. It is hard, it is without significant milestones to help light the way or signpost through the maze, but it is what I'm aiming for.




 

 

Saturday 22 March 2014

Tiny beautiful things


I have been reading the beautiful, loving, deep, thoughtful, charming, moving and sometimes funny book by Cheryl Strayed, Tiny Beautiful Things. 

It's one of those all-too-rare highlights. For me, the only other authors I feel similarly about, who resonate as deeply, are Khaled Hosseini and Simon Van Booy. I must read more to find more. 

Like people or places which "get" you, and which you feel you "get" right back, this book is not everyone's cup of tea, but she writes so beautifully and, I'm surprised how unusual this is, about pain and love and loss and longing and all those wonderful ghastly human things we all endure or pine for or try to catch or avoid in a way which honours us.

I long to be as wise and strong and true as this woman and to use that wisdom and strength and truth for some good purpose.

Is it so very hard to be this honest, as honest as she is, about life and what it is to be human? 

Is it so very hard to be useful to others in the way she is? 

And is it better to just get on with life privately and productively than to pick at the edges of people and tell them what you see underneath? 

All I know - and reading her book makes it somehow concrete rather than a mere dream or fancy - is I want to do what she does. 


Wednesday 12 March 2014

Becoming the un-disfigured self

I used to have this clear picture of what I thought I was. A disfigured tree, blown sideways by the winds over time but growing still, bent but breathing. 

I suppose I thought being tortured was romantic (only because poets and musicians can seem tortured, so it was all vanity, embarrassingly. All the same, I looked upon the tree as a fair analogy of my view on life and accepted it was me, my truth.)

But in the past 18 months much has changed and I no longer feel comfortable trapped inside a shape imposed by outside forces. I want to find my own shape. 

Today I was talking with a wise and funny Irishwoman who said: "maybe it's time you saw things how you were born to see them." Which I thought was a beautiful expression. Imagine just for a moment what that would look like, seeing things the way you alone were born to see them, your own original, valuable, necessary-to-the-rest-of-us "take" on life.
 
For many years, too many, my "take" on life was the view from someone bent sideways and low. I have learned in the past 18 months that kindness and compassion to others (and to ourselves) is far more beautiful.

If I was a tree, I would now rather look like this:-

 

Friday 21 February 2014

Winter

The days and weeks tick by. Sometimes I feel I am on watch in a cold, grey place surrounded by deep mists and everlasting twilight, as if I have to remain ever-alert, ready to act, hour after hour. I am growing lazy, all this standing and walking, a rifle or cupid's arrow slung over my shoulder, my feet cold, my mind at once swimming with ideas, hopes, possibilities and empty as a painter's canvas, white, virgin, masquerading as a white on white heavily misted interpretation of the woman I want to be or think I am. The sort of painting if hung in a gallery would not be to everyone's taste, but one needs just one heart, one pair of eyes to see, to love, not thousands.

So I am on watch in a place where nothing happens, an apparently plain canvas with nothing to say, no artfulness.

This is not good.

Should I try and leave the frame, go in search of adventures, life? And how? I am praying for colour to return and, at the same time, I am content, excited, hopeful, alive. I am thankful, grateful, amazed. 

Meditation

I am trying to learn to mediate. I want to do it regularly. Sometimes when I use the app I have downloaded for it (love the sound of the woman's voice) I feel as if I'm in a soup with bits in it. As if I'm in a blender on slow speed, bits of me, my worries, fears, neuroses, concerns, all swimming round and round in a cloudy soup and I feel mildly panicked. Then I remember or am shown or am drawn to a stillness in the centre, a place of utter peace and stillness. It feels like the beginning and the end, the source of love, light, all that is real and, unlike the soup, it is solid and light and I am it and in it and I know it to be true. Is this meditation? Am I supposed to do more with this? Go further? I remember "your job is to stand, simply stand" as the storms go past. So I try to not try, to strive, but simply (complicatedly) to just be. 

This is happiness. Yes, I want for a companion, a dearest to be around, laughing, a best friend. But despite their absence, I am the happiest I have ever been in my warm, white little house with a fire laid for later, a candle burning, a 7-mile walk in my loins, dinner ready. There is a pulse underlying the bricks, the blood, the stuff of "real" life. I am blissed out here at home, on my own, sated, full to the brim with thanks and things I love, people I love. This is happiness, this ordinary pleasant whiteness. 

Something deep in me has been seeking this pale peace forever. And here it is. I reach out into time, past reality, through the ages and rock and my soul kisses yours. I love you long time. 

Tuesday 4 February 2014

I keep failing but apparently that's normal


My attempt to love others and be more open minded and positive and less judgmental would so far earn me, at best, a poor C grade.

Probably not even that. 

And that'd be on a good day.

In the last few weeks I have made some new friends and won over a few colleagues I'd never spoken to and who I had assumed a long time ago I didn't like and would never like. One is an older woman, she is mumsy and purses her lips as if judging everyone's round her. I couldn't stand her and would avoid her face, her looming sort of judgement. If she walked into a room I would turn away. 

The other day I was forced to sit next to her in a training session. Turns out she is quite funny and quick to learn things. She was good to work with. She might be judgemental, I'm not sure about that, but she wasn't at all dull in the same way nobody is dull once you get close enough to see them. 

It's both harder and easier to re-wire my thinking than I'd expected. I am enjoying trying to do it, but I'm far from making the changes I'd assumed would be simple.

But (and there's a saying that it's only what comes after the 'but' which counts) I recently met a man who told me how hard he had found studying for his PhD alongside working full time and he said: 'over and over again I failed, it felt I'd never get to the end, never achieve what I set out to, that I'd been kidding myself.' 

He persevered and three years later did earn his degree, though of the initial cohort of 14 candidates only seven lasted the distance and graduated alongside him. He told me that when he kept hitting walls and thought it was too hard, he learned that intelligence wasn't enough. He needed to think differently. So he learned resilience.

It's not very sexy, but resilience seems to be the golden ticket to lots of things in life.

I may have earned a lukewarm pass in my project so far (and that is flattering myself) but I'm going to try to keep going. 

Dictionary dot com says this about it:

re·sil·ience

  [ri-zil-yuhns, -zil-ee-uhns] 
noun
1.
the power or ability to return to the original form, position, etc.,after being bent, compressed, or stretched; elasticity.
2.
ability to recover readily from illness, depression, adversity, orthe like; buoyancy.

Origin: 
1620–30;  < Latin resili ēns ), present participle of resilīre  to springback, rebound.

To me, 'Return to the original form' after being messed  around by life, by prejudices, by mistakes, is deeply comforting. 

I borrowed the picture from http://pattischmidtcoaching.com/articles/bending-with-the-wind/

Monday 27 January 2014

Cliche cliche cliche


Cliches are cliches for good reason - pride comes before a fall is the cliche which came and snapped at my feet his week. Here's me thinking I'm on top of life, following bliss, learning to be kind, rising above petty nonsense, blah..... And then crash. The details of what happens aren't what matter, all the matters is I hit a wall. I must have let pride sneak in. 

Here’s some things I’ve learned...

1.       If I start to see someone as a potential new mate then the old flame I never quite got over will almost inevitably reappear on the scene as if by magic.

2.       If I ever think even for a moment that I am somehow better than anyone or above a certain situation, I will be taken down, usually by a small but embarrassing ‘fail’ in front of an audience.

3.       I don’t have to tell someone I’m becoming more interested in them or that I’m not.

All of these would seem normal lessons if I was 13 or 14. Not quite so great given I am a great deal older than that and either haven’t learned these things til now or, more likely did know them once, then forgot. Duh.

I started this blog as a bid to record attempts and failures to stretch my boundaries, to become bigger and better in life, in everything. I want to transcend the stupidest time-wastingly desperately tedious nonsense such as 1, 2 and 3 above.

I hoped to document that it was possible to rise above nonsense, to become bigger hearted, to live 100% conscious that we are all one, that life is bliss, full of joy and promise. And to somehow manage it while not on drugs (if you don’t count the wine, because we all know the “we are all love” stuff is not just possible on drugs, it’s kind of mandatory).  

I wanted to reach out and leap into this place and I will try again, but let’s just say for January 2014 I have become a lot more wrapped up in silly stuff than I’d hoped. Before the first month is out, my head has been turned, I’ve had a bout of jealousy so severe I had to leave the room and stomp around the block; I’ve become wrapped up in minutiae I had assumed, arrogantly, I had risen above (cue flagstone to trip over); I’ve fallen for a cliché life, like a wedding album with artful shots of shoes in black and white. The photos seem to be meaningful, an attempt to tell a story – here is my big day; here are my beautiful shoes – but the images themselves have become clichés and so, ultimately, devoid of meaning. That is what I want to avoid, becoming  a cliché, devoid of meaning.   

Roll on a new week.

Tuesday 14 January 2014

We all know bliss. It is all we seek

Some of my attempts to follow my bliss have resulted in introspection, a sort of “poor man’s bliss”. Introspection can sometimes feel like a way of manufacturing transcendence or coaxing it back to life, like those paddles used in A&E to re-start someone’s heart. But for me, introspection is nearly always a cul-de-sac of self-absorption, a place where we consume ourselves, and get drunk on our own lies and hopes and self-talk.

I doubt any human has transcended being human, untouched by anxiety and fear and loneliness, except possibly Buddha, Jesus, Mohamed and the rest of that special crew. But I imagine if you say out loud you want to follow your bliss, to make transcendence a goal in your life, you would rapidly lose your friends and maybe even your livelihood. Most of us prefer to keep our mouths, our minds and our hearts shut about a deep longing to find peace, to somehow matter. It is easier to let the detritus, the nonsense, the lies and the constructs of who and what we are underpin our thoughts and actions.

And yet bliss persists – the idea of being able to rise above self-absorption may seem at once utterly real and utterly meaningless, as if transcendence is a shadow in the peripheral vision, there and not there, but we are imprinted with bliss. Like water, we fall towards it as inevitably as a drop of water falls towards the ocean.

I love how this guy, Sean Meshorer, describes bliss: http://seanmeshorer.com/what-is-bliss/

As part of his explanation is this:
Bliss is where happiness, meaning, and truth converge. everything—and I do mean everything—boils down to our (sometimes subconscious) pursuit of bliss. We pursue money or relationships because we think they’ll make us happy. We pursue our vocation, our hobbies, and our life’s passions because we feel they are deeply meaningful to us. We explore science, religion, and philosophical inquiry because we want to know the truth of our existence. Bliss is the universal place that these intersect, where all questions are answered, where every fulfillment is attained.

The phrase 'follow your bliss' is said to have been coined by Joseph Campbell who derived it from the Upanishads. Their complete works can be read here: http://hinduebooks.blogspot.co.uk/2010/09/108-upanishads-with-sanskrit-commentary.html

They say that when you follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you. Wherever you are—if you are following your bliss, you are enjoying that refreshment, that joy within you, all the time.

Sounds pretty darn good to me! 

Sunday 12 January 2014

Thinking about love

I want her to love me and especially -- more -- her to allow me to love her. But she doesn't, won't. 

Is this love? I am trying hard -- sometimes minute by minute, at other times a whole day might go past -- to put her down, put her wrapped in my tortured feelings down gently but firmly on a shelf or, better still, in a cupboard with a door which can be closed. Out of sight, out of heart.

It's like pulling teeth. Part of me I didn't know I had screams and tries to hold tight every time I manage to surrender her. I remind myself over and over like a prayer, she is just human, she is not divine, she is merely human, full of known and unknown flaws and frailties, hurts, absences. She is not divine. And though my head knows this to be true, and I put her away repeatedly, something of me is locked away with her behind the closed door. It hurls itself against the lock. It quickens my breathing. It screams in my face. It will not surrender.

I want to love and to love others. Gently. Patiently. To reflect their goodness or brilliance or gentleness or hope or whatever fragment of godliness they possess back at them. And to wave softly across infinite time and space, my god to their god, fanning flames, rekindling my own, too.

And I think this dichotomy comes from love, ceaselessly hungry to multiply itself, expand itself, seep outwards and inwards like the tide, leaving its mark on our beaches where debris is flung, stealing it back sometimes, wiping us clean, so the shore, our hearts, our souls are ever-changing, ever the same, unaware of the moon, waiting for water and the salt of tears which tell our tongues yes, this is love, this is pain, be glad of it.

Bliss (is the answer)

My sister said once "Follow your bliss, sis".
When I follow what makes me happy, or more accurately, blissed out, I am (kind of obviously!) very, very happy. 
Here are some of the things which have blissed me out in the last week:
- Pilates class
- Huge, long walk followed by huge lunch followed by playing with an open fire on a freezing cold night with one of my best friends and her friend
- Seeing flocks of birds scatter and fly high overhead as I drive to work
- Eating salted butter on crackers for supper
I think we owe it to life, others and ourselves to seek out things which bliss us out. 



And so it starts

And so it starts

This blog is an attempt to try and soften or even lose the boundaries of who I am and what I expect and think I can be. I want to love more, live more, expand and stretch who and what I might be. My goal is to try to see others, be less introspective and more extrospective (that might not be a word but you know what I mean).

The idea comes on the heels of improvements in my life which started last April or May. Back then I had just emerged from a long-term relationship which had eroded nearly everything I had spent my life building or standing on and my first attempts at recovering were based on trying to open my mind to new ideas and people, to try new things, to try not to restrict who I would next become by wearing the small coat of what I had once been.

I figured that being devastated by the end of a love affair was an opportunity to go back to scratch and try rebuilding someone I could be proud of. And the more I reached out, the happier I became. In six or seven months I made more friends than I'd managed to make in the previous decade, I'd always enjoyed my job but I started loving it, I felt as if anything was possible. All this, I realised in the week between Christmas and New Year, could be just a start. My colleagues at work had called it my ‘year of saying yes’ but it was never about just a year and it was never about just saying yes – I want to live the rest of my life in hope, in love, in faith and in confidence. Wherever possible I am going to not let fear or any of its attendants - small mindedness, bitterness, anger – dictate the direction life will take.

This blog then is an attempt to write down the attempts, the failures, the successes as I try to be open minded, to try and see people and life as if everyone and everything is beautiful or holds the possibility of beauty within it, to be brave  and see what happens. Welcome to my naked soul blog.