YOU DROPPED SOMETHING

Saturday morning. Halfway through September. It is grey and cool. Suddenly summer seems over. I can feel the change in energy. I miss the heat now that it’s gone. The autumn brings its own gifts. I feel the urge to nest but also to renew. I should do my morning stretches. The tomatoes await to be sauced. So many other things begging to be tended to. But I will sit here for awhile with my words. It’s good to tap them out. How else can I right myself again? How else can I claim my equanimity and breathe again?

It’s not that there is so much wrong with me. I’m just being human, feeling that I’m in a bit of negative grey space though not total darkness. I did what I told myself not to do while suffering sleep deprivation – brain surgery. Well, it’s not actual brain surgery. You know what I mean – serious decision making stuff. I made the wrong decision whilst a voice inside was screaming No! That’s a lesson. Things can still happen even when we know better.

No harm was done. I repaired my mistake but it’s difficult not to beat myself over it. That, too, is me being human. I’m accepting my flawed nature and going through the paces. I’m seeing how the world is and learning. I’m getting better with practice. I might suffer some but I’m not grinding myself up. I’m leaving the greyness and heading towards the sunshine.

Yesterday while on my walk with Sheba, a lady called out from across the street, “You dropped something!” I fished in my pockets, thinking doggy bags or kleenx might have fallen out. No, they were all there. I looked behind us. Nothing. I must have looked as puzzled as I felt. She said, “Your dog poop.” I replied that Sheba had peed and that I was sorry but I cannot pick it up. I received no apology for her mistake. I felt the beginning of rage and cortisol rising. But I breathed, dropped it and walked on.

 

 

Sheba and I have suffered many such incidents. I wonder if it’s our combination – black dog, Chinese woman. Another time a truck stopped right in the middle of a street intersection. The window rolled down and a woman poked her head out. “Do you have a bag?” She asked. I was really puzzled. How does she know I have bags and why? Again I must have looked very puzzled. I am also very naive. She pointed to the park where we came from. That time I was very out of control angry. I screamed: “SHE PEED!” I shook my bags at her. The truck squealed off in a hurry.

The anger did me absolutely no good. Anger only does harm. Even its memory is harmful. I feel it as I’m tapping it out. I am dropping it now. I have that lady from yesterday to thank. I have to drop the poop.

THE PARK AND THE OTHER THING

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I have always love Richard Harris’ rendition of MacArthur’s Park even though he is really not a singer and the lyrics are sappy.  I guess it’s a love song.  Can it be a love song if it’s about a breakup of a love affair?  Just listen to the chorus.

MacArthur’s Park is melting in the dark
All the sweet, green icing flowing down
Someone left the cake out in the rain
I don’t think that I can take it
‘Cause it took so long to bake it
And I’ll never have that recipe again, oh no

Sometimes I feel like I’m the cake in the rain, my icing melting in the dark.  Sometimes I don’t think I can put myself back together again.  Recipes are hard to come by, you know.  You always think you are the only one, but experience has taught me that I don’t have exclusive claims to all the misery.  I have plenty of company.  A lot of us are in the park with our dogs, melting in the rain, or freezing our buns in the cold.  We provide good company for each other.

I’ve been done with misery for quite awhile now.  I still get my blues now and then and you all know I can get real cranky like a little Chihuahua.    But I have met people there with real misery.  They look very ordinary, just like you and me.  Most of them are full of energy and joy.  They have to keep up with their dogs, right?  Then you hear their stories.

One woman lost her husband to suicide.  He hung himself.  They were going through a divorce.  Another told me she just got diagnosed with cancer.  A fair number of us just got plain old depression, Winston’s Churchill’s black dog.

So it’s not bad company.  We walk and talk.  Sometimes we fall down, tripping over our dogs playing too close.  But we get up, dust ourselves off and continue on.  That’s how you live…fall down and get up.  Richard Harris sings it better.

There will be another song for me
For I will sing it
There will be another dream for me
Someone will bring it
I will drink the wine while it is warm
And never let you catch me looking at the sun
And after all the loves of my life
After all the loves of my life, you’ll still be the one

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