Tag Archives: love

Creative Project

My best friend convinced me to participate in a project combining my poems with her photographs.  I sent her this poem and she found the perfect photograph to go with it.

Lifted gently from my bed,

I dangle in your arms

safe and peaceful

riding dreams of breezy nonchalance

inside acorns of emotion.

Tiny kernels of light

speck frozen in vision’s grasp

just on the edge of horizon

the edge of reality

the edge of self.

A merging of wellness

and pain, fate and chance…

simplified seconds that

encapsulate infinity

between beats of my heart.

Each outward breath fills the universe

with life, spaces out the stars,

until the drawing in again

collapses solar systems,

visits death on the unsuspecting.

And as I lay me down you keep

my soul, my LORD,

my love in sleep.

-Rebekah J. Marshall

bitties

Photograph by Erica Smith. http://thebitties.squarespace.com/new-blog/

 

Mother’s Day Fail

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These are the remaining pieces of a symbol of my failure as a parent.  Let me explain…

Prior to the birth of my first child 20 years ago, I had this idea of taking photos in a rocking chair.  It was similar to my dreams of keeping photo albums of my kids, making quilts of their little outfits, framing their artwork to hang around the house, being a stay-at-home mom, and homeschooling.  Ummm…much of that did not happen, at least not to any success.  However, I did buy a rocking chair that I found second hand and spruced it up with pillows.  For the first few months and years of my kids lives, pictures were taken.  I have no idea where they are.  I’ll find them someday.  The chair followed us from house to house, but the picture idea was forgotten over time.  I chalk it up to laziness, forgetfulness, uncooperative non-participants in my household, but mostly, weariness.

Parenting never turned out to be as much fun as I imagined.  My co-parent ex-husband and I could not agree on anything, my kids found all of my ideas unpalatable, and I had to work two jobs just to pay the bills, which left very little time for arts and crafts.  Also, turns out, I hate arts and crafts, scrap booking, photography, homeschooling, and quilting.

Long story short, my kids are adults now and trying to make it as grown ups.  They resent me for never letting them have t.v., forcing religion on them, being poor, and who knows what else, but I know they also love and respect me.  I am the one they call in the middle of the night when they need someone the most.  They texted me for Mother’s Day.  They are not really at a place in their lives where I can expect gifts or cards or dinner out.  They are in survival mode.

Instead, I spent all day in my pajamas watching Netflix, writing, reading, and sipping hot tea on my back porch as it rained softly.  The eyesore that used to be my rocking chair sat in pieces taunting me for the first few hours.  I asked my husband if he knew what happened and he said that the back of the chair just slid off.  I’m not sure how the back of a chair just slides off, but that’s what he said.  It struck me that tomorrow would be recycle day and if I could fit the pieces of the rocking chair into the recycle bin, I could dispose of it.

Without thinking, I began tearing it apart.  I expected to feel sad, angry, disappointed, or some such other negative feeling.  Instead, I really didn’t feel much of anything.  I think part of me is tired of feeling regret, shame, and anger about the past.  Maybe I am numb.  Maybe I’m in denial and will feel something later.  I think I’ve just accepted that in the area of parenting, I have failed more than I have succeeded.  So, the rocking chair is disposed of and I’m planning to find a softer, more comfortable outdoorsy chair that I can share with my sweet new husband and my adorable granddaughter.

And if either of my kids decide to come over for a visit sometime, maybe they’ll let me take a picture of them in my new chair.

 

 

Once Upon a Time – (Day 30)

I have to finish these sentences:

Once upon a time there was:  a woman who thought she was fine all by herself.

Every day:  she worked, took care of her kids, spent time with friends, and enjoyed her alone time.

One day:  she met a young handsome man who she thought she could have a silly fling with no strings attached.

Because of that:  she fell in love and realized she wanted to spend her life with him.

Until finally:  she asked him to marry her and he said yes.

 

Favorite Quote – (Day 21)

Today’s assignment is to write a favorite quote, then try to rephrase it five different ways.

“The minute I heard my first love story I started looking for you, not knowing how blind that was. Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere. They’re in each other all along.” – Rumi

  1.  When you find the right person, there is a knowing that has been there all along.
  2.   I have loved love stories since I was old enough to understand them.  My soul loves to love.
  3.   In order to love someone else, a person needs to love herself first.
  4.   I don’t believe in love at first sight.  I do believe in recognizing the other – two souls seeing each other again for the first time.
  5. Love is the point of everything and loving you is my soul’s desire.

Then I found these that I liked along the same theme:

“Don’t worry about finding your soul mate. Find yourself.”
Jason Evert

“For some people, “the point of no return” begins at the very moment their souls become aware of each others’ existence.”
C. JoyBell C.

“Before you find your soul mate, you must first discover your soul.”
Charles F. Glassman

“A soul mate is not found. A soul mate is recognized.”
Vironika Tugaleva

 

 

Win Some, Lose Some – (Day 8)

Today’s exercise is to list some recent victories and some recent losses.

Victories:  Signed up for James Patterson’s Master Class that teaches writing; made my second to last payment on my college school loan – I graduated 20 years ago; found a fabulous candle that I love the smell of – Febreeze willow blossom; have lost 7 pounds on Weight Watchers so far; snagged a hottie husband four months ago; got my grades turned in on time (I’m a high school teacher); found an awesome favorite pen (thanks to my husband buying one for me); shared modern-day heroes for Black History Month with my high school students

Losses:  lost partial control of my high school girls’ neurologically impaired class…while being observed by my principal…kids suck sometimes…; let my ex-husband get my goat from afar; ate food just because I was craving it this week instead of making better choices; got a ticket for not stopping correctly at a stop sign

I think the Victories outweigh the Losses.

 

30-Day Challenge: Day 1 – Write a Fan Letter

Today’s assignment is to commit to 30 days of doing something without breaking the chain.  After 30 days I get a prize of my choosing.  I am going to commit to actually doing these exercises and blogging them daily for 30 days.  As for my prize…I’ll have to think about that.  I can pick anything!!!

Today’s assignment is to Write a Fan Letter.

Dear Dr. Martha Beck,

Thank you for all the help and guidance you have given to me in my life.  I have read every one of your books and every article written in O the Oprah magazine.  At night before I go to sleep, I read a few pages of Finding Your Way in a Wild New World.  I call you my guru when quoting you to others.

Part of my connection to your writing is the religious element.  I read your book Leaving The Saints about your strict religious background that you broke away from to create the life you have now.  Only someone who has survived such an experience can understand.  Knowing you have come from that place makes me trust your advice all the more and makes it more relevant to my own experience.

I have become more open to the spiritual element in my life thanks to meditation exercises, written exercises, and insightful quotes that you have shared in your books.  I’ve begun writing as a future career path thanks to reading Finding Your Own North Star.  And the monthly articles in give great, useful, life advice that I have shared with many a friend in crisis.  I hope someday I can afford to hire you as a Life Coach or attend a retreat, but in the meantime I’ll garner all the wisdom I can from your writing.

The fact that you love and quote Mary Oliver is the icing on the cake.  You spur me to heroic adventures that “break my heart, by which I mean only that it break open and never close again to the rest of the world.”

Thank you for your loving help through your heartfelt writing,

Rebekah Marshall

 

  

 

 

Romeo & Juliet

r and j

Today in summer school I am teaching Romeo and Juliet to a group of teenage girls.  My presentation is not the romantic drivel most of them have heard before.  We examine the play through different lenses and it becomes a fabulous cautionary tale.  Each scene is analyzed for thinking errors on the part of the characters:  Romeo’s impulsivity, all-or-nothing thinking, keeping score, and catastrophising; Tybalt’s overgeneralizations, one-upmanship, and uniqueness (thinking he is better than everyone else); Friar Lawrence’s magical thinking, grandiosity, sneakiness; etc.

The girls open to a whole new perspective when looking at these characters’ flaws and seeing their own behaviors in comparison.  This is a school in a residential treatment center, so the young ladies I am working with have seen some stuff in their lifetimes.  Many of them have attempted suicide (often over a lost love), have run away from their parents or their problems, have had numerous sexual encounters in over their heads and unprepared for the emotional fall-out at such a young age, and have been betrayed or misled by the adults in their lives who should have been better role models.

My favorite discussions with them involve re-imagining the scenes using healthy thinking, coping skills, support from trusted people, accessing available resources, etc.  If just one person had done something different in this play, something productive, something thoughtful and helpful, it might not have ended in such tragedy.  There are always more options.  “To be or not to be” (to quote Hamlet) could be a much longer list.  To be healthy, to be at peace, to understand, to be open…not to be afraid, not to be alone, not to be abused, not to be so hard on yourself.

Juliet was 13 for goodness sake.  So much more happens in life after 13.  I’m in my 40’s, have been through a marriage, divorce, children, grandchildren, and have just now found my Romeo. Building a good life takes time, learning from experiences, and resilience.  I wish for each of my students today a new critical perspective that makes each of them a “master of her own fate.” *

*from Invictus by William Ernest Henley

juliet  #

#from Gnomeo & Juliet (Juliet kicking ass)