Something big has to happen for me to leap.
A four foot snake sliding under my Adirondack chair—I am levitating
in about 2.8 seconds.
A bad MRI for my brain tumor kid—I sign up for a half
marathon, even though I hate running far.
But getting into a pool—I go slooooooowly. Oh so slowly. No
leaping. Not enough reason to willingly freeze.
Even when everyone is yelling—I can’t leap.
In high school we went on a trip with a bunch of other
families up to New Hampshire, and at some point in the trip we went to this
rope swing on the side of a hill. Everyone was excited to try. You had to jump
off a rock while holding this rope, and then sort of flop onto the board that
served as a little seat thing. When my
turn came, I stood on the rock paralyzed. I just could not do it. The drop
seemed so far, the chances of landing on the board so uncertain. The folks in
charge helped me down to the little rock that served as a smaller leap spot,
and I was still paralyzed. Younger kids were yelling at me, everyone was trying
to get me to go…
I could not do it.
I was mortified, but finally gave up. I still remember the
kids making fun of me.
I am not upset about it anymore, but I remember.
So leaping is not my thing. I have realized more and more the
power of intrinsic motivation. I have to have a really, REALLY good reason for
leaping.
I have to have a why.
More accurately, a WHY. All capitals.
More accurately, a WHY. All capitals.
In some ways that is super un-zen, right? I should just zen
for the sake of zen. But my zen needs a Why. Everything I do needs a Why.
Anxiety tries to outweigh the Why with worst case scenarios
that will happen if I leap. Nightmares. Crabbiness. Ever-spiraling circles of
thought.
But Why can be so powerful—more powerful than anxious second
guessing. That snake was a Significant WHY for me to stand on top of a chair
even though normally I would not recommend balancing on an Adirondack chair’s
arms like stilts. . The bad scan was a huge WHY to make me run, even though I
look like a cartoon character when I galumph along, and everything hurts–the
Why was my daughter’s future. As I
slogged through the streets by my house in the August heat I kept repeating my
why like a mantra … “bleep NF…bleep NF”…you can fill in the bleep.
As I try to work towards zen, I keep coming back to Why.
My brain needs order and reason at the same time my brain
tends towards colorful chaos. I have to work to organize myself in a way that
seems to come naturally for others. And
the anxiety really does work against my forward progress, stirring up all the
thoughts even as I try to put them back in orderly-ish boxes.
But in this time of medical respite, I am finding I am able
to grab on to the why to make myself do the “hard” things.
When my daughter was so ill, the Why—surviving the catastrophe,
getting her well, keeping a brave face on for her and her siblings, getting out
of bed in the morning even on the most hopeless days—that Why simply kept me
going. I think in the midst of crisis that is what the Why does. When people
would say, “I don’t know how you do this!” I was always a bit befuddled. What
choice did I have? It was my kid. Anybody would try to keep going for their
kid.
I see my friends who are navigating rough waters with their children right
now, their tenacity in putting one foot
in front of the other, and the power of Why just shines through—even when that
power is just barely enough to keep a family above water. The Why helps you
survive, even if thrive seems inaccessible.
With space from catastrophe, I am trying to take advantage of
the Why and to figure out what my Why is now, now that we aren’t at the
hospital 4 times a month, or dealing with improbable yikes of other kinds. I am
still not used to having the courage to commit to anything more than a few
weeks out.
So I am tackling “hard” things, trying to take little leaps (things
that are admittedly not so hard for other people—but hey, I have to be ok with
me being me. It is what it is).
* I took on a new work project that
ended up going really well—Why? Because I need to figure out how I can best use
my passion for education and research, and the only thing holding me back from
this project was my fear of not doing it perfectly.
* I scheduled (and went to-no wimping out!) my
annual-ish physical—Why? I need to be healthy for my kids, my spouse, my own
future. So far so good.
* I then scheduled (and went to-gosh I wanted to
wimp out) another annual sort of appointment that maybe I hadn’t done in 8
years. *cough. Same Why as before. Even
though I kind of broke the machine…another story for another time.
* I am trying to be open to opportunities—WHY?
Because I want to live with vision and purpose, and right now I am figuring out
what those are in this new season of my life. I want to work at something that
helps the world be better.
* I am getting on a plane this week for the
first time in almost 8 years—WHY? Because I know I need to be there for my R
when she competes in Florida, this might not happen again, and I want to be
there for her—and last year I could not go. I am remarkably zen about this,
actually, which is a little weird.
(side note, if I don’t make it—because…airplanes--
know that I truly have no regrets about going. Being brave is better than
hiding from life. I keep telling myself that. But really—you can pray for me on
Thursday when I get on a plane (and then again on Sunday—and my husband and
daughter who are on different flights), that would be awesome. )
Side side note: this is why I have
not blogged. All my energy went to these things. Womp womp.
I want to do the things. I want to see the places. I want to
not hide from the disasters that I still see around every corner (a Pavlovian
response to 2004-20015). Why?
Because I want to be zen. For me. For my husband. For my
kids. For my friends.
It’s like the old Hoobastank song, “The Reason”. This song helped
me so much when I signed up for that first half marathon (I had 5 times worth
of Why for 13 miles. Urp). Having a Why, a reason, can counteract the power of
anxiety—especially when that reason is the people we love. I am working on
having my OWN Why (ie for me) being enough—and I am starting to figure out that
when I am intrinsically motivated to do things for my own improvement, that
actually makes me a better wife/mom/friend for everyone else.
Sorry, should have had everyone sit down for that Captain
Obvious kind of newsflash. Hmph.
Anyway, having people cheer (or yell derisively) or push won’t
do it. The motivation has to be intrinsic—helped along by the outside
circumstances, perhaps (GIANT SNAKE!)—but the Why has so much power, if we can
just take the time to identify what the Why is, and how it drives choices.
Focusing on the Why helps me tell my anxiety to shut up already. I have more important
things to focus on.
And yes, I have to repeat it a lot. My fears are super
persistent and naggy and talk just as fast as I do.
So—what’s your Why? And where has it lead you to leap?
Not sure i have a why just because! lol - and I'm with you - no leaping into the water - slow and steady even though it would be better to get in quickly like Dave in the polar plunge - but no leaping for his mumma whenever she braves the ocean. Rosie will always cherish you braving the flight for her. Take care - be safe - love and prayers always
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