September 17, 2019

Hot yoga and sitting with your pain


I recently listened to Glennon Doyle’s book Love Warrior (which I highly recommend) and was struck by Doyle’s recollection of an experience she faced during her separation from her husband. She describes how one day, she accidentally found herself in a hot yoga class, expecting it to be a regular air-conditioned yoga class. Instead of joining the others in the stretches, she sat on her mat and let herself feel her pain. She had been distracting herself from it, keeping busy with her children and with writing, and this was the first time she sat and faced it. She chose to not run away.

And I realized how guilty I am and have often been of distracting myself from my pain. I’m a private person and prefer to grieve alone, and these days, I am hardly ever alone. But even when I do have time to myself—after the kids are in bed, for example—I do whatever is fun or engaging. It’s not even necessarily that I am currently in pain or grieving any recent loss, although right now I am. Sometimes the pain is years old and has just never been felt because I’ve pushed it away.

There are so many losses I have not let myself fully grieve, actually sitting with my pain. My favorite person in the world, my grandpa, passed away six years ago, and I foolishly missed my chance to say goodbye. I came home from his memorial service directly into a separation from my husband that led, several months later, to divorce.

When my husband left us, I didn’t have--make--time to grieve. I jumped right into the job search and taking care of my kids as a single mom.

A year later, another of my favorite people, my high school mentor, died after a five-year fight against ALS.

When my coworker Sarah died suddenly this past May during the birth of her beautiful baby girl, I actually sat in my pain. The people around me pushed me to feel the grief and made space to process the loss. I didn’t know Sarah half as well as I’d have liked, but she was so precious, and knowing how much the others around me were hurting actually validated my own pain. I wept for Sarah and those she left behind. And the act of weeping in itself was healing.

But grief doesn’t just come in the deaths of loved ones; it comes in transitions, in losses of ability, losses of fellowship, losses of stability. When a friendly coworker moved away to pursue graduate studies, I experienced loss that I never processed. Even in this, our most recent move, leaving people and a job I loved—and faculty who really got me—I experienced loss.

I used to consider myself a pessimist. Then I referred to myself as a realist. My psychology faculty last year let me know that realists aren’t on the spectrum of optimism to pessimism, that “realists” are actually pessimists. I’m still not entirely convinced, but in the consideration of the point, I’ve begun to classify myself as a reluctant optimist. Don’t get me wrong: I still get depressed about certain things, such as the state of our presidency and the plight of people in Syria. But in day-to-day things, I have forced myself to be positive, to hope for the best, to tell myself, “It will all work out somehow.” And I actually believe it. Maybe this is because of a family history of clinical depression. Maybe I’m just frightened that if I lower myself into my pain, I won’t be able to climb out again and will only sink deeper and deeper into darkness. Maybe. But whatever the reason, I make myself face forward probably more often than is healthy. I have no desire to wallow in despair for the things in my past I cannot change, but moving forward in a healthy way does require acknowledging and experiencing the pain.

Since Sarah’s death in May, I have lost two other people I liked and respected—a caring therapist who doubled as one of my Psychology faculty, and a mission-field “uncle” I’ve known since I was nine years old who doubled as one of my Family Medicine faculty. Both deaths were sudden, and my heart aches in their loss. So I will choose to make time this week—maybe even tonight—to sit with my pain, to let myself feel their loss. 

It will perhaps be my final act of love.

July 09, 2019

Cross-Country Cruisin 2019 - Day 4

Day 4: Idaho Falls, Idaho, to Red Lodge, Montana
Miles: 309
States: Idaho, Wyoming, Montana

Day 4: Yellowstone National Park (July 7)

Today, we went to Yellowstone! We drove to Montana from Idaho Falls. Took a few pictures of the Montana sign, and drove to Yellowstone.

Yellowstone isn’t like Zion. In Zion, you park, get in a shuttle, and you’re in Zion. The only way to get to things is the shuttle. In Yellowstone, you’re driving around and looking at things from your car. You can get out, though. We saw elk, bison, and rabbits. The first animal I saw was a bison. We took pictures of it. We then saw geysers. There were a bunch of them!!


The best thing was Old Faithful. We saw that after lunch, which was a very fancy bison burger at a very fancy restaurant(I was not made for a fancy restaurant). We went to the gift shop and got a few keychains and postcards. After that, we were heading toward the exit, which was about 100 miles from where we were. Luckily, we had a book to listen to called Cress.

Yellowstone Lake
After we finally got out of the park, we went towards the mountains, where there was a bunch of snow.
We were so high up!! We were 11,000 feet high.
It was amazing. It took us a while to get to our hotel. After we got there, we put our stuff down and went swimmin’.

Wyoming-Montana border on the Beartooth Hwy

Cross-Country Cruisin' 2019 - Day 3

Day 3: St. George, Utah, to Idaho Falls, Idaho
Miles: 514
States: Utah, Idaho

From Tim:

Day 3: Driving again (July 6)
Today, we were driving from St. George, UT, to Idaho Falls, ID. It was a long day. We drove for about seven hours. It took us nine hours total to actually get there. We watched Iron Man and Captain America: Winter Soldier. We also listened to my playlist on the way. It wasn’t a very active day.

Here’s a link to my playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6s42Lk4mjfKObJL57pFxZ7

Cross-Country Cruisin' 2019 - Day 2

Day 2: St. George, Utah, to Zion National Park and back
Miles: 88
States: Utah

Here's Tim's entry from Day 2.
Day 2: Zion National Park (July 5)
The journey to Zion took us about an hour. I was asleep for most of it because I was awake late the night before. Once we got there, we parked in the nearest town and waited for a shuttle to come and take us to the entrance to Zion. We had gotten to the entrance when we realized we had forgotten our National Parks Passports, so they couldn’t be stamped. We got the annual pass so that we could go to any National Park for free for one year. 


We walked to the bathrooms first and passed an enormous line. I thought, “Lucky we don’t have to wait in that line.” We went to the bathrooms and headed toward the visitors center to look around. We looked around and left. We realized that the line was for the shuttle, which was the only way to get anywhere. We had to wait in the line for an hour and a half, standing in the hot sun. For some parts, it was shady. After the wait, we finally got onto the shuttle and headed toward the Zion Lodge, where we could eat. We went to the restaurant and bought (overpriced) burgers. Anna got pizza (typical Anna). After eating, we went to the bathroom and got on a shuttle. We got off at the last stop. There is an entrance to a riverside hike at the last stop. We didn’t go on the hike, but we did get into the water. It was really cold!! I eventually got used to it, though. I got completely wet. We spent 45 minutes to an hour there. When we finally got back to the shuttle stop, there was a long line again. Luckily, it wasn’t as long as the one in the beginning. We got back to the front of the park and bought a few postcards and a puzzle at the store. We left the park and headed home/hotel. We swam for 30 minutes and then left. After that, we went to bed.

Cross-Country Cruisin' 2019 - Day 1

If you read my blog but don't follow me on Facebook, you may not already know that the kids and I are moving to Fairfax, VA, in the greater DC area, for a year or two. We're currently on our way across the country, seeing what and whom we can along the way!

Day 1: Bakersfield, California, to St. George, Utah
Miles: 412
States: California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah

Here's Timothy's take on our first day of traveling.

Day 1: Driving (July 4)


After days of packing, the day came. We left just before 10:30 this morning. We had to do multiple sweeps before we were sure that we were good to go. I had made a playlist to listen to on the way to Utah. We had just started driving and listening to the playlist when Grandpa told us that there was a 6.6 earthquake in the Mojave Desert. We were heading there and had just missed it. The trip was going to take around six hours and for the first few hours, I was fine just listening to the music, but then the playlist ended, and I didn’t want to eat all of our food in one drive. After the playlist ended, it started to get boring because nobody wanted to play the games I wanted to play. We couldn’t find the visitors center going into Nevada, so we decided to try the one leaving Nevada. Unfortunately, it was closed for the 4th of July. We had just gotten back on the road when we realized we were now in Arizona. We hadn’t realized that we had to go through a little bit of Arizona to get to Utah. The scenery in Arizona was beautiful!! We passed through a mountain river gorge, and the view was remarkable.
Virgin River Gorge, AZ

We got to our hotel and went to Cracker Barrel for dinner. After that, we went swimming! We weren’t there for very long (Anna got cold), so we went to bed.