Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Musical Bridge


"I never feel age ... 
If you have creative work, you don't have age or time."

-- Louise Nevelson

Last Saturday my friend Rick and I had the privilege of playing a tribute to Woody Guthrie for a small group of folks at a local retirement community. In the shade of a large Oak tree we played and sang Woody's dust bowl ballads and work songs, shared stories about Woody's life, and drank spiked lemonade. Our guests sang along with true heart and soul to every song they knew the words to. And at the end they thanked us warmly for coming and sharing this music with them. But I'll betcha not one of them felt more gratitude than I did.

The event was organized by a woman named Judy from my church. She heard me sing Woody Guthrie's song, "Deportee" one Sunday morning and began a campaign to get me to help her create this small event. For weeks she pestered me about it. She loved Woody Guthrie and wanted to celebrate his 100th birthday with her friends and his music. I put her off for several weeks. I had a busy summer planned, I said. I have to work, I have an exchange student coming, I'll be away on vacation for Woody's birthday. But she would not let up. Eventually she won me over (or wore me down). And what I began with reluctance, I finished with pure joy.

Of course learning some new Woody Guthrie songs and researching his life was fun and interesting, but the best part of this experience were the connections I made with Judy and her friends. I learned that Judy was a bit of a radical when she was a college student at Antioch University in Ohio. She became a Unitarian Universalist just two years ago after meeting our Minister Emeritus who is a resident of her retirement community. And she feels right at home in our congregation of liberal free thinkers. She is charming, funny, determined, generous, and likes to shake things up a bit. When she offered me a cup of lemonade spiked with gin before I sang, I knew this woman and I could be good friends.

When Rick and I finished our set something really magical happened. One of Judy's friends, a frail looking man with a North Carolina accent, came up with his guitar and a small well worn notebook filled with typewritten songs (as in typed on a typewriter). He got out his guitar and invited us to join him on "Down By The Riverside." I harmonized and Rick played guitar with him. And this lovely gentleman came to life. We played more songs together with Judy and a few others adding their wise voices to the mix. When we finished, this dear man said we had made his day. But you know what? I'd arm wrestle him  over who received more joy from that experience. I felt like I was the one who was handed a rare gift. 

And then I thought, why does this have to be rare? I'm going back as soon as I can to sing more songs with these wonderful people. Thank you, dear Judy, for pestering me. You knew what was good for me.



Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Time To Bang Some Pans



101 California Street Shootings is the name given to a mass shooting that took place July 1, 1993 in San Francisco, California, claiming the lives of nine people, including the shooter. The killings sparked a number of legal and legislative actions that were precursors to the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, H.R.3355, 103rd Congress (1994). The Act took effect in 1994, and expired on September 13, 2004, through the operation of a sunset provision. (Wikipedia)
***


In 1993 I worked as a claim's assistant for an insurance brokerage firm on the 22nd floor of a San Francisco high rise at 50 California Street. It was mind numbing work, but it paid the rent. The brokers I worked for were young, ostentatiously rich, foul mouthed and loud, politically and socially conservative, yet surprisingly supportive of this liberal psychology student processing claims to get through graduate school. I was a fish out of water in that world of designer suits and three martini lunches.


But on the afternoon of July 1, 1993 all differences between us were temporarily erased. On that afternoon we were all simply human, all equally vulnerable, and all stunned as we stood in our conference room, watching stretchers with the bodies of dead and wounded people being carried out of the office building across the street. 


It began with an alert that shots had been fired in the 101 California Street building. As a precaution, our building was locked down. Radios were tuned to news stations in an attempt to figure out what was going on. My friend Wayne worked in the 101 California Street building. I repeatedly tried to call him but phones were not being answered. Wayne's wife Sarah would not hear from him for some time. Fortunately, he was safe on another floor of the building. It would be several hours before the police would discover the gunman in a stairwell, dead from a self-inflicted gun shot wound, after he had taken the lives of eight people and wounded six more. No clear motive was found, only a largely unintelligible letter left by the gunman including a list of odd complaints and bizarre accusations. 


The recent shooting spree in Aurora, Colorado, took me back to that day in 1993. I experienced the same horror and outrage I felt on that frightening summer afternoon. And shame too. Shame for my country. How is it possible for a mentally ill man to obtain a semiautomatic assault rifle more easily than a motorcycle driver's license? I don't know how Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of and spokesman for the National Rifle Association sleeps at night, or how he or anyone else can use the second amendment to justify the sale of assault rifles to the general public. We can all point our fingers at the NRA and the politicians beholden to them (and we should), but we also need to look at other cultural influences that lead to these tragedies.


While the vast majority of people with mental illness are not violent, we need to look at how we as a society view, treat, and contribute to the type of mental illness that would lead a young man like James Holmes to open fire in a movie theater. While mental illnesses occur all over the world, definitions, understanding of cause, stigmatization, treatment, and even the expression of symptoms are culture bound.


In a January, 2010 article in the New York Times magazine entitled, The Americanization of Mental Illness (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/10/magazine/10psyche-t.html?pagewanted=all), writer Ethan Watters says, "we can become psychologically unhinged for many reasons that are common to all, like personal traumas, social upheavals or biochemical imbalances in our brains. Modern science has begun to reveal these causes. Whatever the trigger, however, the ill individual and those around him invariably rely on cultural beliefs and stories to understand what is happening. Those stories, whether they tell of spirit possession, semen loss or serotonin depletion, predict and shape the course of the illness in dramatic and often counterintuitive ways."


We are a culture that places rugged individualism over interdependence. We are a culture where celebrity is highly prized. We are a culture that marginalizes our mentally ill and regularly cuts funding for treatment, resulting in higher and higher numbers of mentally ill people living on the streets untreated and self medicating their symptoms with alcohol or illegal drugs. And, sadly, we are a culture that cares more about protecting our individual "freedom" to own any kind of gun we choose than protecting our citizens, particularly the most vulnerable among us. Is it really any surprise that this tragedy occurred? I think it's surprising that it doesn't happen more often.


I do not have any easy answers. But that does not mean I should sit on my hands and do nothing. I agree with writer Anne Lamott's response to this recent tragedy when she says, "All I can think to do is what we've always done. We work towards peace and non-violence. We register voters. We create art and music in the face of madness. We light candles. The praying people pray: Lord have mercy. The meditating people meditate. We create Love and beauty as radical acts. We take care of the poor, and teach people to read and write. And as Molly Ivins would urge us to do if she were still here, we bang our pans. We rise up, peacefully, take to the streets and we bang our pans and we make a ruckus, and we stop this war, too." 


May the banging of pans begin in earnest.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Keeping the Shark Alive


"Sometimes I wonder if men and women really suit each other. 
Perhaps they should live next door and just visit now and then."

 --Katharine Hepburn

A couple of weeks ago, I shared a reflection at my Unitarian church about the wisdom I received from one of the disabled students I work with. The things I learned from her were: Everyone wants to be seen, everyone wants to be heard, everyone wants to be touched, and patience gives you time to really see, hear, and care for a person.

I think I do a pretty good job putting these lessons into practice.... 

At work.

At home? Well, I have a confession to make. I am not always very nice to my husband. Sometimes, by the end of the day, I'm tired of being patient and understanding. I'm done being nice. But why is that? I don't think I'm alone in this. Why is it sometimes so hard to be nice to the people we're closest too? Why do the people who know us the best, bring out the worst in us? 

I don't have any easy answers. If I did, I'd probably be a nicer person. I'm hoping some of you will have some answers that might help all of us married people. I have a few thoughts though. I think a lot has to do with with the mundane, day to day chores and tasks of family life. They take up a lot of time. And it's easy to neglect spending quality time with your spouse when you've got kids to raise. But we do so at our own peril. When we don't make time to just be together (without kids, bills, chores) we forget what brought us together in the first place. He becomes the guy who leaves the bread and jam out on the counter every morning. And I become the woman who squeezes the toothpaste tube the wrong way. 

So I want to take a look at those lessons I learned from my student again:

Everyone wants to be seen: I think my husband would like me to see him as more than the guy who cleans the cat litter box. I KNOW I would like him to see me as more than just the woman who never has dinner ready when he wants to eat. I think we both want to be seen for the things we are passionate about. What brings him to life? What makes me light up? Where is the spark in each of us?

Everyone wants to be heard: Sometimes I forget to ask my husband about his day. I'm guessing he would like me to ask him how he feels more often. He'd probably really like me to listen to the stories from his day that made him smile, laugh, feel frustrated, angry. Really listen and ask questions. This is how he spends his days after all, and therefore his life. I would like him to be interested in hearing about the things that excite me. I would like him to be curious about me.

Everyone wants to be touched: We've been married a long time. We forget to give each other a kiss when we say goodbye, a hug when we return. When was the last time we held hands? Why don't I ever offer to rub his back when he looks tired? I firmly believe people need touch to feel cared for. 

Patience gives you time to really see, hear, and care for a person: Ah patience. That means slowing down and being fully present, letting things unfold as they may. That is so hard to practice with work and kids, bills and chores. I'm sure my husband would appreciate it if I didn't always sound like I was annoyed with him. I know he would like it if I slowed down, made more time for him. 

Marriage is not for the faint of heart. As Woody Allen says in Annie Hall“A relationship, I think, is like a shark, you know? It has to constantly move forward or it dies. And I think what we got on our hands is a dead shark.”  Our shark is not dead. But I think marriage means spending a lot of time resuscitating that shark. And I think kindness is necessary for basic life support. I'm going to try to remember that.