Soul box

Can you remember how old you were when you started putting things in the box?

I was nine. My parents divorced and I put the uncomfortable feelings of rejection and fear and insecurity in the box. I held on to the shame, though. It’s too bad you can’t control which ones you stuff and which ones you allow to permeate through your entire sense of self.

And no, I had no words, at the age of nine,to describe what I just wrote. I had no idea the box existed. Or the emotions. I just knew I felt horrible. Bad. That’s how the box works. No one ever taught me otherwise. There’s no manual for the box.

I stuffed some more in there when I was thirteen. Similar emotions to the ones from four years earlier. I used to say thirteen’s trauma was way worse than nine’s, but it doesn’t really matter. That box weighs the same, no matter what you put in it. No point in comparing stories. A heavy box is a heavy box.

I tossed a towel over the box so it wouldn’t be staring me in the face. Stuffed it deep into my soul and kept myself busy with other things so I wouldn’t notice it. I always knew it was there, but if I made my life busy enough, or hazy enough, I could forget it was right inside me, even if for a little bit. You don’t notice things so much if you’re numb.

I wasn’t even aware I was putting things in there. Only in hindsight can I tell you about this. That’s just how it goes. I don’t make the rules. No manual, remember? It just is what it is.

It’s no different than putting a box in the corner of your living room and leaving it there for a few decades. Eventually, you become so used to it being there, you don’t even notice it anymore. It becomes a normalized part of the scenery.

Until something happens, like maybe you rearrange your furniture. Then, it sticks out like a sore thumb, and you say, “That ugly box has been sitting there forever; I’m getting rid of it.” If only it were that easy with the soul box.

I rearranged my life a few years ago, and boy, did I suddenly notice the box. I couldn’t believe I’d normalized the weight of that thing for almost my entire life. I had become so used to it, I almost forgot what was in it. No wonder I was so tired. Lugging that thing around, letting it determine my life.

I had to rip it to get it open. I clawed it open till my fingers bled while walking through a firestorm. No, not really. That’s just an analogy for the pain one feels when opening the soul box. Everything I had stuffed in there oozed out, like a can of crescent rolls. Can’t fit that stuff back in there once you open it. It was everywhere. Messy.

I let the contents go. Sounds so simple. It’s not. But it is. It’s both.

I’m so light now, I can fly. Soar, really.

Sometimes, I catch myself tucking something in there again. I think it’s human nature. The key is to be aware it exists. Know we all have the box, and it’s OK that we want to put things in there. Learn how to walk inside there and learn how to get out. Be comfortable with the mess, so you aren’t afraid to clean it out. And instead of normalizing the weight of it all, we need to learn how to normalize the lightness of an empty box. Normalize the release of emotions. Experience them, and let them go instead of ignoring them and stuffing them down. Society needs to stop normalizing the stuffing of the soul box.

Wait, did I just write the manual?

This post was written in response to Linda G. Hill’s Stream of Consciousness Saturday

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Magnet for the marginalized

I spent most of my younger years trying so hard to be cool. I desperately wanted to fit in, to feel normal. But, the harder I tried, the more different I felt. The other kids knew it. As much as I tried to keep my secret from them, and even from me, they knew it. I was different.

Life continued, with me watching from the sidelines. Marginalized. Things happened. Experiences shaped my perspective, and even changed the trajectory of my life. That’s what happens to all of us, our experiences become the filter through which we view life. Good experiences give you a great view. Bad experiences, well…

Eventually, I escaped the sidelines. Somehow, I fabricated a better version of me, and no one caught on that the old me was still inside. I finally appeared to fit in. No matter that it didn’t feel that way to me. I was fine with the illusion.

Fast forward a few decades: I dropped the illusion and uncovered the real me. I put in a shit ton of work on her, and didn’t care about fitting in anymore. Funny, because that’s when I developed the most authentic relationships of my life. Go figure.

Of course, we all know that letting my light shine was a bit too much for some, so again, I was marginalized. It stung. But that’s ok. I’d outgrown them, anyway. It’s just a sad story, now.

Revealing the real Jami meant she could do anything she wanted. That’s what authenticity is, right? On top of the world. Badass mom. Best friend. Superstar nurse. The sky’s the limit.

But what I found I wanted was to connect with people who were like the old me. Or, the current me, depending on who you are asking. The marginalized. I was drawn to them like a magnet. Volunteering for the most difficult to love patients in my work life. Connecting with lost souls, hoping my offering of validation would allow them to be seen.

People just want to be seen, without having to earn it.

I spent a good year caring for a patient named Bill. No one else wanted to. His house was dirty. He was dirty. He didn’t care. Well, he didn’t seem to. He swore at most of the nurses and turned a lot of them away. He was the kind of guy most would roll their eyes at when they got assigned to him. But, for some reason, he liked me. And even though he never did anything I instructed him to do, I enjoyed taking care of him. I pretended his house wasn’t a mess. I pretended he wasn’t a mess. Or more so, I overlooked those things. They didn’t define who he was. They were just symptoms of something else. Like a fever.

I looked him in the eye when we spoke. I complemented him on his taste in music. I laughed at his jokes. I didn’t rush through our visits. I treated him like a human being, not a burden. He felt seen.

I wasn’t pretending. I did see him. No one will ever feel unseen around me, because I know what it’s like to be invisible. I may be a badass mom and a superstar nurse, but I identify as marginalized. The people who made me feel this way did it to punish me, but the joke’s on them. It’s actually a gift. It keeps me humble while I change the world, one little interaction at a time.

This post was written in response to Linda G Hills Stream of Consciousness Saturday

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Maximizing by minimizing

2020. This was supposed to be THE year. The year I held my first retreat. The year I gave a TED Talk. The year I graduated from college at the age of 48 and finally took all the little side gigs I’d been doing, like writing and speaking and recording my podcast, and maximized them into something big. I remember telling my friends, referring to my laser-sharp focus on my goals, “2020 is the year for clarity!”

Instead, Covid happened. Everything was postponed. My retreat, my TED Talk, my speaking engagements, my podcast. Luckily, I DID graduate. And instead of doing those things, I kept working. Unlike most of the world, I worked even more during the height of the pandemic. I’m a nurse, so…

My last post on here was in April. I suppose that’s the side effect of nursing during a pandemic. The post was me writing about all the emotionally reactive feelings I was having about the virus, and people’s responses to the pandemic. Kind of like everyone else in the country, I was scared, and people were pissing me off. I suppose triggered is the more correct way to say it. We are all human.

I’m not as reactive anymore. I think if you do something enough, even if it’s scary, you get used to it. Complacent, even. I’m at the point now where I feel like “you do you, I’ll do me,” and that seems to get me through it. Through the pandemic, through the election, through my own personal battles.

I’ve been maximizing my time, and my life, by minimizing what I have to do. This includes tasks as well as thoughts. I’ve started minimizing my personal belongings. I became certified to teach meditation. I say “no” to things I don’t want to do. I’m enjoying every bit of conversation with my teenage boys while they are home. I’ve lost my FOMO (“Fear Of Missing Out). I don’t try to change people’s minds anymore. Well, not as often. I’ve come close to mastering the art of surrender. I know gratitude. I don’t waste my time arguing anymore, though I will speak my truth. Someone dulls my sparkle? I move on. Well, most of the time, at least. Remember, I’m human.

You are, too. So, cut yourself some slack. Even if you think you don’t deserve it.

Turns out, 2020 IS the year. In the midst of loss, tragedy and fear, I’ve found joy, peace and accomplishment. And love. Anyone who has followed my blog will understand my struggle with love. I’m amazed at how this year has been a joy for me, despite the tragedies. Like how life grows new after everything’s been burned down by a forest fire. The phoenix rising from the ashes. A mosaic made from broken tile. The Japanese art of Kintsugi, which fills cracks with gold, to make something broken beautiful. You get the gist.

I’ve seen neighbors helping neighbors. Communities uniting to support each other. People shopping local. First responders kicking ass. Teachers stepping up, despite being scared. Single acts of kindness changing someone’s entire perspective on life. The down-time has allowed for connections which we are usually too busy for. These are everyday miracles. It’s time to start noticing them. 2020 is still the year of clarity.

Beauty and joy are everywhere, even in the middle of a pandemic. Sometimes, you just need to minimize your thoughts, and everyone else’s, in order to maximize what’s right in front of you. Clarity. It’s yours for the taking. And for the giving.

What’s your miracle today?

This post was written in response to Linda G. Hill’s “Stream of Consciousness Saturday”

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail