In which sitting around being passive isn’t working, so it’s time to get positive.

There are these two people I know. They’re awesome. They’re my friends. I love them. (They each possess some of the shiniest, thickest, healthiest hair you’ve ever seen in your life.) They sent me an email the other day suggesting that I read this cheesy self-help book. He said, “read this and then see what you can do,” and she said, “I know we’re all jaded about techniques, but this is one that has proven to us to have some value about it,” and since it was a free Kindle download, why not go ahead and read it?

Um, because it’s cheesy self-help crap and I’m so totally beyond that?

But these two people are verily the embodiment of teh awesome (plus it was free), so I downloaded the book and started to read it. And it was, of course, totally cheesy self-help crap, written at a forth grade reading level and filled with repetition, and I couldn’t figure out why such smart, deep people would be suggesting such material to me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I thought, halfway through Chapter Two, I know all this. What the hell, they think I don’t know this?

And then it began to sink in. Sure, I know this, but I don’t know it. If I were living it, I wouldn’t be feeling so… bad. Useless. Lost. Pissed off.

The basic premise of the book is this: love yourself.

That’s it. Just… love yourself.

There’s a bunch of material pointing out the ways in which we don’t love ourselves, and some little exercises to help get the mind out of the way, but essentially it’s just a reminder that people who are inside-out are working too damn hard. Quit trying to get love/affirmation/acceptance from the outside world, and go back to the source: yourSelf.

Duh.

Every year I go and see my Sat Guru and every year I re-learn that I am love, and then a few months later I’ve forgotten it again.

I’ve really really forgotten it in the past couple of years, and the result has been directionlessness, dissatisfaction, negativity, guilt, irritation, and random waves of hellacious panic attacks that leave me feeling helpless and hopeless.

I spent the day reorganizing the inside of my head, pushing back the habits of the mind, and disabling my “I suck” soundtrack. My shoulders dropped about two inches as I let go of the stress.

Oh. Duh.

I don’t suck, I’m not stupid, there’s no reason to beat myself up for {insert whatever it is that I’m judging myself about}, everyone is cool, the world is cool, I love myself, I am love, it’s all groovy.

HOLY SHIT, BUT THE MIND IS A STONE-COLD NEGATIVE BITCH! I’m just sayin’. And I know this, have known it for years, but it’s so easy to identify with the mind and live there in judgment and then get all, “This sucks. The whole thing. All of it. Fuck these people, fuck this situation,” and stay there while still believing that you’re the awesome radiant being you want to be.

Hell. Literally. It’s hell.

Anyway, there’s also a focusing aspect to the book, so I’m compiling this list of Rando Things That Would Be Cool To Do. Incomplete and in no particular order, it currently looks like this:

  • Travel to India.
  • Stay/live in Amritapuri.
  • Visit London.
  • Become a flight attendant.
  • Be free of panic and anxiety for good.
  • Get a cruise ship gig.
  • Vacation in Egypt.
  • Be a full-time musician.
  • Feel smart.
  • Take piano lessons.
  • Love exercise.
  • Be free of debt.
  • Have money.
  • Hang out with inspiring, engaged people.
  • Get divorced.
  • Get paid to travel.
  • Get more tattoos (particularly the karajishi I’ve wanted for, like, six years).
  • Fix the bike and ride it instead of driving.
  • Accept love without doubting its intention.
  • Be the leader of the band.
  • Get a job with great pay and a steep learning curve.
  • See more old friends more often.
  • Drop the self-doubt and regret thing.
  • Record an album. My album.
  • Do more spiritual practice. Want to do more spiritual practice.
  • Quit being afraid of death: mine, my dog’s, my family members’.
  • Celebrate pretty much everything.
  • See more high-quality live music.
  • Say yes more than no.

I think I’ll finally go get a passport next week. Why not be prepared, yeah? I’m not quite ready to do much else yet in the concrete sense, but at least I’m not sleeping all day and feeling stupid and guilty about it.

So, yeah. I guess the moral is that the truth is the truth, regardless of the source (even if it is way cooler from the East, with cute aphorisms instead of repetition). And P.S., your mind is a tool, not your identity. And P.P.S., your friends are freakin’ wonderful.

6 Responses to Rando Things That Would Be Cool To Do.

  1. josh says:

    Record your album and then send it to me! CAN’T WAIT FOR YOU WIN THE GRAMMY FOR BEST FEMALE POP VOCAL PERFORMANCE! And I thoroughly enjoy the new format for your site!

    A Grammy win would suck because what the fuck would I wear? Also: thanks, hon! -m

  2. Amy says:

    Thanks for the reminder….I needed that! Love myself and stop my negative mind script already. Now I just need to keep that in my sight.

    Me too. Let’s be awesome together. (Also: Hello! I love when you drop by, girl. Big love.) -m

  3. Heather says:

    What an inspiring list!! I’ve found that while some of those books are definitely cheezy, I still gain benefits from going through the exercises, and also found that actually going through the exercises is quite different from just reading them and thinking “Oh yeah, I get the point of that/what they are trying to get me to do.” which lets me stay comfortably in my mind…

    And it seems like a lot of those things could be combined – flight attendant or cruise ship musician could get you to some of those places you want to visit. Spiritual practice helps with the emotional stuff and vice versa I think. 🙂

    This blog might give you some insights about the cruise ship musician thing: http://www.musicianwages.com/blog/cruise-ship-musician

    I’m learning that when one isn’t healthy, one doesn’t practice. It’s a Catch-22 situation. And the guilt – in my case, at least – of not doing what I know I “should” be doing for my own health? Makes me crazier. Whee! -m

  4. karen says:

    So say we all!

    I had an epiphany about this very thing about a year ago; haven’t had the time or perspective to write about it yet. (See, these small humans that live with me? They take up all that time I used to think about blogging. And knitting. And geekery. But they give me much cooler things to think about, like the whole “what am I providing to them?” – the answer being Me, and hopefully, The Very Best Me I Can Be. Nothing else really matters anymore, and it’s all good.)

    Anyways.
    Love the list. Can’t wait to see what you do with it. 🙂

    Me neither! Seriously. -m

  5. M,

    You write a challenging list. The only thing I’ve done on this one is London, but not for nearly long enough and not for 25 years. We have some cross-over goals with the fear of death thing, panic, self-doubt, exercise, and a paying job that doesn’t take me to the bleeding edge of boredom 5 days a week. Most days I feel like I celebrate a little, because I am consciously grateful for my amazing partner, the roof over my head, the fact that I can be in school, and that I’m pretty healthy.

    41 is a weird-ass place to be. It’s half gone and it’s half still-to-be-revealed. I just have to learn to let go and try not to engineer everything. Have a little faith in forward momentum. Breathe. Stay curious. Not care so much what other people think.

    take care,
    t

    This isn’t exactly a To Do list. It’s a “what do I dig?” list. I’m looking for themes, I guess. Here’s to joy! -m