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2011 - Talk Birth

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”Let me save you some money: In a life with children, balance does not exist. Once you’re a parent,<br />

you can figure you’ll be out of whack for the rest of your life...Children are not born to provide balance.<br />

children are made to stir us up, to teach us how angry we can get, how scared we can be, how utterly happy,<br />

happier than we’d ever imagined was possible, how deeply we can love. Children turn us upside down and<br />

inside out; they send us to the depths and heights of ourselves; but they do not balance us. We can’t balance<br />

them either, and that’s a good thing, too. They’re finding out how to live in the world, and the most we can<br />

do is make them as safe as possible and have a good time with them.”<br />

I have just started teaching (college) again after having a three week break and I’m teaching more classes<br />

than I ever have before, not to mention continuing to homeschool my kids and finding scraps of time to work<br />

on my own doctoral program. And, Alaina is on the move now—a seven month old baby is quite a lot more<br />

work than a younger baby! (Chiefly that she sleeps less and gets into more!) So, I’m in that time of trying<br />

to find my footing, my balance, with this new schedule and making sure I...once again...have my priorities in<br />

the right order. I have a blog post about ”surrender” that I wrote several weeks ago that I keep waiting to<br />

post for some reason, as well as some other musings about keeping my blog posts going or not. I think I will<br />

keep writing, but I’m going to just post once per week—on Wednesdays probably (though, I may prep extra<br />

posts on that day to go out on different days). I also have plans for keeping them short, less navel-gazing,<br />

using material I’ve already written, and that sort of thing. While I really enjoy writing blog posts and there<br />

is something important—but hard to identify—that I get out of it (I think it is both about [3]telling about it<br />

and [4]playing my music), in the scope of my life right now, it really needs to slip to the bottom and possibly<br />

off of my radar entirely for a time.<br />

This conviction that something I’m doing needs to change in order to be ”balanced” (or perfect, as the<br />

case may be!) makes me think the root issue is really about control—control of life’s energy and flow—and<br />

reminds me of something else I read recently in Thomas Moore’s book, Original Self:<br />

As a therapist, I often followed a simple rule...I would listen to a man or woman passionately<br />

explain what was going on in their lives and what they needed to do. This strong expression of<br />

self-understanding and intention told me a great deal about their suffering. I could see where<br />

and how they were defending themselves against life...it always seemed fruitful to explore the<br />

direction closed off by insistent plans for improving life.<br />

To free our souls, we may have to be loosened by our suffering and our problems. Rather<br />

than look for ways to be further in control, we may have to surrender to the vitality that is<br />

trying to get some representation. Rather than understand our dreams, we might be understood<br />

by them–reimagine our lives through their challenging images. Rather than get life together, we<br />

might allow life to have its way with us and get us together in a form that is a surprise. (emphasis<br />

mine)<br />

True personal strength is not to be found in an iron will or in superior intelligence. Real strength<br />

of character shows itself in a willingness to let life sweep over us and burrow its way into us.<br />

Courage appears as we open ourselves to the natural alchemy of personal transformation, not<br />

when we close ourselves by making the changes we think are best. (emphasis mine)<br />

In the following section he also says that, ”when people say they want to change, I hear a subtle rejection<br />

of the person they are...even then, a conscious plan for change usually comes from the same imagination<br />

that got us into trouble in the first place. A new project of self-transformation may land us back in the<br />

uncomfortable wallowing hole we just left.”<br />

239

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