Wednesday, May 16, 2012

LAME. O. And B.O.R.I.N.G.


It’s official. I am old. I am lame. I think that sitting in a hotel room in MIAMI, by MYSELF is nice.

Yes, that is correct. I am in Miami. Away from my family. It is 8:30 at night. And for the second night in a row, I have been in my room, in my red-flowered flannel pj pants and a sweatshirt, by myself, at 7:30 PM. And savoring every minute of it.

(Shouldn’t I be in a South Beach bar buying fruity drinks at a thatch-roofed hut during my breaks of salsa dancing in a swirly skirt and bikini top while an episode of “Girls Gone Wild” is being filmed?)

If being in my hotel room at 7:30 wearing pjs doesn’t make me lame, I don’t know what else will. To quote some kid I don’t remember the name of from the movie “The Sandlot,” I am officially an L7 WEEEEEE-NIE.

My self-esteem may never recover.

I’ve been in Miami since 9:30 yesterday morning, and the highlight of my trip so far is that I have discovered that The Big Bang Theory is a damn funny show. Maybe I think it’s funny because the guys are really lame and nerdy, and I can relate. I had lots of time last night to figure out that I can relate since I watched 2 hours straight of that 30 minute sitcom.

Yes, I am in Miami, and I watched 2 hours of tv before falling asleep around 9:30. And I am extra lame because tonight, I turned on the tv hoping to find another Big Bang Theory marathon, and there isn’t one.

Other reasons I am lame: (as if the above reasons aren’t more than enough)

*My only outing from the hotel was yesterday evening…to make a ½ mile drive to CVS to buy trail mix.

*We have a cute little white Chevy HHR that is obviously wasted on me and my boss. Folks way hipper and less boring than us should be driving it. When we picked it up at the airport yesterday, we both said, “what a cute little car to tool around Miami in!” Who knew “tooling around Miami” would mean driving ½ mile away to CVS to buy trail mix

The other highlight of my trip so far was the oh-so sweet relief I felt in my back and arm and shoulder after I took 2 Aleve last night. The Aleve was needed after the hour long walk from the airport terminal to Enterprise to pick up that cute little car while dragging two 50 pound suitcases and lugging my carry-on bag over my shoulder. I think that powers that be at the Miami airport are sadists. They have to be to have decided that placing the car rental area 2 miles from the baggage claim area was a good idea.

What the hell has happened to me??

Though it’s not like I really have any choice and it’s not my fault that I am stuck in a hotel room, by myself, in Miami. With a cute little HHR sitting all lonely in the parking lot of the Homewood Suites—Blue Lagoon. The car is in Cathi’s name, she is the only one who is allowed to drive it, she likes to retire and relax early, and the closest attraction to our hotel is Miami International Airport.

It is however, totally my fault that I am really not all that upset about being stuck in the Homewood Suites—Blue Lagoon hotel. I’ve had a lot of quiet time to relax and unwind and read and watch The Big Bang Theory. It would be nice if our hotel was on the beach instead of across the highway from the airport so I could at the very least go for a walk and listen to the soothing sound of waves lapping the shore. Instead, I am making do with reading a book in my comfy hotel suite.

By this time next week, I’m sure I will be longing for all of this quiet time, but for now, I will dream about frosty drinks and bikini tops and swirly skirts and warm sand under my feet. But for now, I am going to go eat some trail mix and watch the news while gazing out over the intercoastal waterway.

If my friends could see me now, they'd be so jealous.








Thursday, May 10, 2012

Faith and Fear


Faith and fear cannot occupy the same space.



I have been writing this post for so long that it could be a small book by now rather than a blog post. I have sat in front of my computer many times and written nothing more than a few words and re-written other words because I really struggled to pull this all together. Working on this reinforced my belief that while I love to write, I could never do it for a living on any kind of deadline because I definitely write at my own snail-slow pace most of the time. Besides that, I’m sure it’s obvious to anyone who reads this blog that I also would have the most difficult time complying with a word limit. J



I read that quote above early in the summer on a Facebook friend’s page. His name is John O’Leary. John is a remarkable man, one of the most inspirational people I have ever met. I met him through my boss--he is married to her niece. What is so remarkable about this man is that when he was a child, only 9 years old, he was playing with matches and gasoline, started a fire in his garage on a snowy Saturday morning when both of his parents were out, and was burned over nearly 100 percent of his body. The only thing that saved his life was the deep snow in his front yard that his older brother and sister rolled his body in, dousing the flames that covered him. The only part of his body that was not burned was one side of his face and neck. He nearly died and spent months in the hospital undergoing painful treatments and therapies. A saving grace for him was that an announcer for the St. Louis Cardinals, Red Schoendienst, happened to attend the same Catholic church in St. Louis that John’s family attended. He shared with the Cardinal team the tragic story of a little boy in his parish who had suffered severe burns to most of his body.  A very special and “famous” Cardinal announcer on KMOX, the radio station that once aired Cardinal games, heard about John O’Leary and began visiting him in the hospital. As John slowly began to recover, this radio announcer started bringing him baseballs autographed by Cardinal players, telling him he would only bring another once he’d written a thank you note to the previous signer.



That announcer who took a burned and scarred little boy into his heart and under his wing was Jack Buck. Anyone who is a Cardinal fan knows who Jack Buck is. Jack Buck is something of a legend in St. Louis. He was a legend to little John O’Leary, too. John O’Leary credits Jack Buck with saving his life and giving him a reason to go on. He was determined to keep writing those thank you notes even though he had no fingers left after being burned. Years went by, John slowly recovered, and Jack Buck kept in touch with him and became a good friend. When John graduated from college, Jack gave him the crystal baseball he received when he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. John married, had a son, and named him Jack. He now is the father of 3 boys and a newborn little girl.



John is an internationally known motivational speaker—a job which suits him perfectly. I’ve been so privileged to meet him on a number of occasions. He sometimes attends the Share golf tournament, and I have heard him speak at two different conferences. If John O’Leary can’t motivate a person and inspire them to look on the sunny side of life, I doubt anyone can. My coworkers and I were lucky enough to be on a flight home from DC with him, and we spent several hours with him in the airport and then chatted with him on the flight, and I can’t say enough what a truly lovely man he is.



One thing that will be forever etched in my memory is something he said the first time I heard him speak. At the end of a keynote address in which he talked about his burns and the struggles he still has all these years later, he said that he was so grateful for the life and opportunities he has had, and that if he was given the chance to do his life over, he wouldn’t change a thing. I remember how shocked I was when he said that…that he wouldn’t change such a horrific event….that even in the midst of such terror and pain that he has lived with, he has managed to be grateful, not only for the wonderful things that have come about in his life because of what happened to him, but that he is also grateful for what happened to him. It was hard for me to wrap my mind around that at the time, and five years later, I still think of it, and of him, in awe.



So back to that quote…”Faith and fear cannot occupy the same space.”



 I have been thinking about this and trying to write my thoughts about it for months now. To be honest, reading those 8 little words has been rather life changing for me. I have thought about the many times in my life when I have been fearful of something. Looking back on them, I can see that way too often, I let my fears take over and prevent me from doing something I may have really wanted to do yet was too afraid to. In those cases, faith and fear really could not occupy the same space and fear won. I have also thought back to times when I did take a leap of faith, yet the fears were still there, and I never really quite let go of them enough to truly shine, enjoy, or appreciate something. It was less obvious, but faith and fear still could not occupy the same space. While there have been numerous times I have tried my hardest to overcome a  fear, I look back and wonder if the fears that I had directed how I handled situations that may have had a completely different outcome if I had banished the fear and relied solely on faith that everything would work out. I’m having a difficult time putting these thoughts into words still, but I have wondered if my fears made me act in such a way that made it more likely that those fears would indeed become reality…if I created a self-fulfilling prophecy so to speak.



One situation that comes to mind is many years ago when Tony and I were newly married and living in Omaha, I was the assistant manager for a women’s clothing store. I loved the job, and I loved my boss. A couple of years after we began working together, she was given a promotion within the company and moved away to open a new store. I was offered a promotion and given the job managing the store I worked in. At first, I turned it down because I didn’t think I was ready. However, I let my boss and our district manager talk me into accepting it. They both assured me that I was more than ready, that I would do a fabulous job. They both told me that if I wasn’t ready, they would never have offered it to me, and that I was the unanimous choice among those who decided these things, right up to the owner of the company. Wow, I was speechless. He owned around 75 stores, so it came as a shock to me that he even knew who I was. I didn’t have much faith in myself those days. Hell, I still don’t most of the time, but I was even worse back then!



So, I accepted the job. But that nagging fear didn’t go away. A few days before my boss’s scheduled departure, we were working together on some details about managing the store, and I had a bit of a meltdown. Actually, a “bit of a meltdown” is probably a huge understatement. I ended up a sobbing mess of tears, and she told me that if I didn’t get my head together, I would never be a successful manager, that if I didn’t believe in myself, no one else would either. That no one would take me seriously as a manager if I didn’t at least pretend as if I was the best damn manager out there. I tried. I really and truly did. I worked my butt off. The store looked amazing all the time, and I started to think I would really like to go into visual merchandising as I really seemed to have a talent for it. I remember the owner’s first visit after I had become manager…he raved about how fabulous the store looked, and how creative and beautiful the front window displays were. And for the most part, the store continued performing well over the next few months. But that fear that I wasn’t good enough just wouldn’t go away. The store had grown and thrived under the previous manager. Before she took over, it had been one of the lowest performing stores out of the nearly 80 stores across the country, ready to be closed, and by the time she left, it was one of the top performing stores. I had some mighty big shoes to fill, and I did not believe in my heart that I was up to the task. And in the end, I wasn’t, and I ended up leaving that job nearly 2 years after taking it, a stressed out wreck of a person on the brink of a nervous breakdown.



I always have looked at that job as one of my biggest failures. The blow my self esteem took back then was huge. But, after reading that quote, my eyes were opened…I couldn’t help but wonder  if my own fears contributed to the  way I did my job and pretty much ensured that I was going to fail? What if instead of assuming that I could never fill my boss’s shoes, I had had enough faith in myself to put on my own shoes and not worry about filling hers? Of course, I will never know the answer to this, and it doesn’t even matter any longer, but thinking about that situation led me to think about other situations, and I definitely have discovered a pattern.



I have thought of friendships I have had over the years, that I never really had much faith in them being lasting friendships…almost like I knew they wouldn’t be, so why bother putting myself out there too much? Did I act in a way that ensured they wouldn’t be? Did I not let myself really become close to people because of my fears? Again, I’m not going to go into details here, but I now realize that more than likely, I have. Reading that quote was a real eye opener to me, and I definitely can see things I have done and ways I have reacted that again, make it more likely that my fears will come to be.



I have thought of issues within my marriage and how I have acted certain ways based on my fears. I’m not going to go into details on this subject either because I don’t want to depress myself, but about 18 months ago, something happened that knocked the wind from my sails, and things have only gone downhill from there. I can’t help but wonder if the fears I have had these past months have made me act in ways that I may not have acted otherwise, which has only made it more likely that my biggest fear will come true.



It’s been a vicious circle of wondering.



This subject began to fascinate me to the point that I Googled “having faith in the face of fear.” I came upon an article that for the most part, reinforced my thoughts and reinforced John O’Leary’s quote. The author of that article wrote:  fear is all about our thoughts—where we focus them. If we think about the possibility of danger or of negative outcomes or of unwanted futures we make ourselves afraid. If we focus on our faith, or on the fact that we are okay—safe and sound—in this moment, we do not make ourselves afraid. Instead, we give ourselves courage to take a step forward on the bridge called life. He also wrote that that fear stops you from living your life fully and creating the life you desire. Fear prevents you from achieving your highest potential and immobilizes you on the path to your dreams.

How true that is. I have tried to not look backwards and beat myself up for the many times that I let fear rather than faith rule my life…not think about the times when I have focused  my thoughts on my fears, but wow, it is hard to not do that. I have tried not to think about all of the times when fear stopped me from having the courage to live life the way I wanted to. I have only written about a few examples here, when I could write about many, many more. Like I said, I could probably write a book. At the same time, while I can’t help but looking back on those situations, I don’t WANT to think about them and depress the hell out of myself.



I put this blog post aside months ago, and just came across it on Saturday when I was cleaning out and going through documents on my computer, and I was glad that I had never posted it. Like I mentioned already, I struggled with it every time I tried to write something. But finding it then was just what I needed. Once again, I am facing something that I have worried myself sick over, and I know that I have been acting in ways completely out of character for me, which has made me feel even worse. Again, that vicious circle has taken over, spinning me out of control at times. As I read these words I have anguished over the past many months, it brought to mind another quote:  Worrying doesn’t empty tomorrow of its troubles, it only robs today of its joy.



So, Saturday morning, as I downed too many cups of coffee, I gave myself a mental kick in the butt, and told myself rather emphatically that I am not going to change whatever may be happening by worrying about it, so why spend so much effort and brain power on it? I’m not quite to the having faith it will all work out part, but I am trying. Even if I never get there, at least I can say for now, I’m not fearing doomsday. If I have to tell myself a thousand times a day, “right now, this moment, I am okay, things are okay, life is okay,” that is what I will do.



I have also been thinking a great deal about someone I learned about recently who for a year has been battling a rare cancer that is inoperable. She is someone I briefly met in college, and I doubt she would even remember me at all. I found her blog, and the first night, I spent hours reading about the past year of her life and all of her challenges and struggles. One thing she wrote sticks with me now. One day, she shared that she doesn’t fear what is ahead for her because she has faith that no matter what happens, God is with her, and that faith is enough to sustain her and keep her going through whatever she must endure and banish her fears. I really wish I had that faith so strong. It is one thing I have always been envious of in people who do  have it as it something I have wrestled with for many years.





To wrap this up….one last thing the author I mentioned above wrote is that when we have faith, we simply don’t focus on the thoughts that make us afraid. It sounds simple, eh? Simple in word, but not in practice. Oh, if only things were as simple as they seem when we read them! However, while I can’t say I have complete faith that things are going to work out…that my life is going to stay on an even course, at least I can feel as if by banishing the fear, I am leaving room for faith to fill the empty space at some point, and I will pray that it does.