shapeshifting

'When you live, make it all'

This gets better.

Monday I woke up with a migraine. Welcome to my week off. Took a pill. Sometimes the pill just zaps out the migraine and I can function pretty much at full capacity. Sometimes the pill acts almost like an anaesthetic and I'm not really safe to be on my feet. As the pill is a constant, I guess what's happening neurologically in my body must change. Migraine takes many forms even in one person.

So there I am, not yet aware that I'm about to fall into a semi-coma. I have to meet my mother at the local Te3co Superstore (see H for Hell and Holidays), along with Evie and my 5 year old nephew who is lovely but all slugs and snails and hyperactive puppy-dogs' tails. She has some clothing vouchers that she wants Evie to benefit from and frankly, we can't afford to say no. Staying upright and responsible uses all my energy so I'm snappy and impatient. I drive home (I know, I know) and then it hits me full on. I go to bed for one, maybe two hours.

Later I try to download some photos from the weekend - and there are some lovely ones among them - and also, as it happens, the photos I took of Casey on his last day. Just before we headed off to the vet.

Something's wrong with the flash card. I can't copy them off it. I try everything, every method. Even data recovery software. Nope. They're there on the card but I can't have them.

Evie has reacted to the sunscreen she wore on Sunday. She has a livid, itchy eczema all over her face and neck, poor kid.

Charlie's boss comes over for the End of Trial Period Review. When he leaves we're down an income. Face-to-face charity recruitment is a tough game - sales of a worthy product maybe, but a luxury product all the same and this area is just being really hit by the downturn. Targets are nigh on impossible to meet. Charlie tried really hard. They don't care that this could mean we have to move to a one-bedroom flat in a rundown market town. Why should they? Most of the team he trained with have also lost out.

Tuesday means another pill but luckily no coma as I'm working with the Beagles. Since the death of their lady owner/breeder her husband and son (ages, I'd guess, 90 and 60) have soldiered on with my help once a week. They can't manage and so some dogs have been rehomed. They'd said goodbye to sweet Z a couple of weeks ago. Today I go in to find that one of my favourites, lovely T has gone to a new home and the grand old lady Beagle, D, has gone to be reunited with her owner. At 15, she faded out the way Casey did. So we're down to just four Beagles. Four sad Beagles. P, especially, has not recovered from the loss of her human. Today she comes and sits next to me - not on my lap as usual but just next to me. A sad little girl, leaning against me with a sigh. She is still much loved - I think she was a favourite of her owner and so husband and son are particularly attached. I think that T and D leaving has been a bit too much for her. I reiki her while we sit in the sun and she tells me about her sadness.

At home I hear from my sister that the two big employers in our neighbouring town - the two call centres that pretty much saved a generation from disaster when they opened in the late 90s - are closing. We will be flooded with young men and women with young families and mortgages and debt, looking for the few jobs there are available. One of them will be my sister.

Today, after a quick trip to the supermarket brandishing vouchers and reward points, I pick up Evie's best friend and bring them back here. Giggling, shrieking happy girls. I don't care that they're 'making potions in the bath' or destroying some part of the house...just let them be happy. I'll clean up later. While I'm out, the vet calls. Casey's casket has arrived back. Do I want to go and collect it? Well yes, but there's the small matter of having to settle the bill and I have £3 in my bank account. So he's sitting on a  shelf waiting for me to get my working tax credits so that I can pay to have him home with me.

Twig

 

...

Y'know what? I don't want to live my life like this anymore. I'm am so, so literally sick and tired. I'm done with this. I live in a beautiful place and I have so much that I am deeply grateful for but I am guilty of using it as a distraction. It is the opium of this person. I have to break the habit.

...

 

 

 

When I think about how put things right my brain engages and then fails. I know myself to be smart and resourceful and inventive but I got nothing. The very thought of trying again just makes me fall over. Oh I have ideas. Anyone who reads this blog will know I'm always having A Great Idea but now...now I feel paralysed by it all.

And so there is only one thing to do.

Surrender. Give it up. Let go. There is a real sense of things falling away without me even having to actively release them. They are not being 'taken', they are just falling away and I think that might be okay. I understand that it has to happen.

What I need to do is return to the practice I started at the beginning of the year. Healing, meditation, acceptance and space-clearing. Once that space is clear from anxiety and panic - even for a sweet moment of respite - I can hold it open for what comes next. It will come and so will my strength but for now it's just acceptance and practice. Easy to say.

Most of all, knowing that I'm done with the distraction of beauty (not the beauty itself, just the abuse of it), I'm ready to live my life the way I want to. The way I have to.

Part of that is writing about things that matter to me knowing that some readers will a) think I've finally snapped or b) laugh or c) both the above. But I'm done caring about other people more than I care about me. So I'm going to tell you that on Tuesday night I tuned into a drum and journeyed to meet my spirit animal. She's a young wolf and her name, she tells me, is Divna. We met some time back. I thought maybe her name was Irish but looking it up I find it's Hungarian for beautiful. She's certainly that and she's certainly a European wolf. This night I wait for some heavy answer to my questions but she starts dancing. And it's funny. She looks ridiculous and she's doing it on purpose. She's telling me to laugh. I see her dancing painted in broad strokes with energy shining from it

....

I've been trying, in snatched moments to return to Kathleen Dean Moore's Wild Comfort. I read half of it a month or more ago and now I'm back. On Monday I picked it up and randomly opened a page. Now, when I do this I don't usually get some profound sign, I get an advert for dentures or double-glazing. Sorry but it's true. I don't generally have good random-page-mojo but I did this day. This is what I read:

When you die, it's done, the chance is gone. So when you live? When you live, make it all. Don't wait for the rain to stop. Climb out of your tent with your mind engaged and your senses ablaze and let the rain pour into you. Remember: you are not who you think you are. You are what you do. Be the kindness of soft rain. Be the beauty of light behind a tall fir. Be gratitude. Be gladness.

Ever since, like a mantra, I hear, "You are not who you think you are. You are not who you think you are. You are not who you think you are..." and I may well still be curled up in my tent, but I'm looking out on a whole new landscape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Apr 13, 2011 in animal medicine, Books, Casey Cat, Charlie, Dear Universe, Dogs, Evie, Life, Migraine, Reiki, Spirit, Wild | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)

Ten days

Door

Chicka meets Idgie and Ninny at their front door.

Chicka

See the beautiful blue/greens? Chicka likes to perch. They're perchers, this family.

Meimei

MeiMei - always moving. Little Brown Hen. Sweetie.

Flag

The Flag of Chicken Nation from an original design by Evie.

  Blue

Sweet MeiMei lays blue eggs. This was her first one for us.

Walking

Late afternoon. Horses in the field = Nell on a lead. #herder

Into the sun

I look at this and a sob explodes in my heart. Is he not perfect and wild and beautiful still?

Mar 28, 2011 in Casey Cat, Chickens, Dogs, Evie, Garden, Home, Love, Nature, Photography, Wild | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)

Into the light

When, hot on Christchurch's exhausted heels, came the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, the daily details of my life seemed trivial.

It sounded so trite to talk of human spirit and positivity and I winced at tweets and status updates and blog posts (including mine) about pretty stuff and meals eaten and the ever-expanding mass of How To Be Awesome Because You're Not Now e-courses.

Then I got my head out of my backside.

One thing I've learned from the less easy parts of my history is that we all deal in our own way. We each have our role to play in a dark time and thankfully, some of us are light-carriers; the ones who sensitively and with much love, ease us forward into moments of levity and flight.

Having remembered this, I was overwhelmed with appreciation for a) the light-carriers around me and b) my own ability to carry a torch for life. The little things may not appear to matter some days - and of course there are bigger priorities at times - but they do matter. They are the tiny steps that build a path to better times, to the future. And besides, I may feel sympathy and compassion but how exactly has my life been affected by these disasters? It hasn't. I'm lucky and it's supremely tasteless to wallow in another's pain.

So...to this future...I have another job to add to my portfolio. Back in November I interviewed for, and got, what seemed to be an ideal job for me. They told me that the work probably wouldn't start until Christmas but the job seemed worth it. So here we are in mid-March...nothing. Not even an email to say,"Sorry this has happened." I've chased them a few times and got fluffy, empty responses but I'm not doing it anymore. Let's leave that there shall we?

In the meantime of course I've been Beagling. I replied to an advert in my local paper that offered work with dogs. I found out later that the day I called was the day their owner died unexpectedly. I found out even later what an extraordinary woman she was (read the second part). Her dogs are wonderful and I love them; her husband and son are great people. Working with the Beagles reminded me how I love to be physically busy and how everything is better when there's a dog involved. So this week I emailed a company who do dog-walking, dog day-care, pet-visiting and so on. Their regional organiser came to see me yesterday and despite having CaseyCat do his usual "I will seduce you by head-butting your face again and again and again and then I will sit on your paperwork and dribble" routine, she offered me a job. A job I can do whenever I have time. I can keep my deskjob three days a week, and the Beagling, and do this other stuff on my days off. Apparently demand is high at weekends.

I will get to be outdoors and busy and with dogs and paid and we will get to stay clear of the Poorhouse. I'd toyed with the idea of doing this kind of work for myself a while back but seriously, in this situation the company takes care of all the admin and the booking and the insurance and the terms and conditions and contracts and security and advertising and marketing (although I can be paid to plug us too if I so wish) and I still make pretty much what I'd've been able to charge as a one woman start-up. I figure I can do it through the spring and summer and come the wetter, muddier, colder months, if I lose my enthusiasm I can find something else. But I think I'll probably just keep going if the work is there.

I have paperwork to complete and a client waiting already. Perfect for a terrier lover like me.

This has happened since I decided to back off and let me be me. Stop trying so hard. Just 'let the soft animal of [my] body love what it loves'. In the days since, I have been happier, more creative, more at peace than I have been in a long time.

So that's my little bit of light for today. What's brightening your day?

x

 

 

Mar 17, 2011 in Casey Cat, Dogs, Gratitude, Life | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)

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  • "Forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair."
    ~ Khalil Gibran