Showing posts with label elephants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elephants. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2011

Motto of the Day- Just Do Nothing



It is perhaps slightly deviant of us to drag Kandula, the beloved nine-year-old Indian elephant at the National Zoo in Washington, DC, into politics, but..... (for those of our dear readers in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, the elpehant is the unofficial symbol of the Republican Party).

So, this is the first in what we hope we will be many Motto of the Day entries:

"Just do nothing_ it saves money, gas, and utilities."

Of course, it wastes a major resource which is time! Jonathan Chait of "The New Republic" brilliantly illustrated how the Republican Party has done nothing for America since the 1930s, and we couldn't agree more!

Interestingly enough, there is a non-partisan web site called "Do Nothing for Two Minutes" which urges everyone to just simply sit and stare at the screen for 120 seconds!

SIDEBAR: In a column that was reportedly published in "The Washington Post," Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), the most liberal member of the Senated, cited Valero Energy as the nation's sixth worst big corporate freeloader. The company made $68 billion last year, but they still got a $157 million TAX REFUND from the IRS.

I should hope this would raise the eyebrows of even the most conservative Democrat, arguably Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) and/or progresive Republican, whom many believe to be Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), but they are perhaps concerned with other things. The rest of us, however, can pump gas some place else....and, I'm speaking as someone who catered to Valero!

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

A Day of Elephants and Googling


I felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest today. All of my anxiety, sadness and guilt seemed to surface at full-force, and all at once. My current state of limited mobility and isolation didn't help much either. Even though I was telling myself to breathe, the breath seemed to get stuck somewhere between my nostril and my throat, never quite making it to my lungs. I kept telling myself, Just feel the pain, it'll pass. You have to feel it sometimes. But I wanted to disappear. I started to fantasize about re-birth, about life starting over, about the possibility of nothing I've lived through having actually happened.

It was kind of crazy. It's not like I was having an anxiety attack, where there was an end-point in sight. And it's not like I suddenly burst into tears and needed to have a good cry, which also has an end-point in sight. I was just in this general state of extreme unhappiness, and it didn't seem to manifest in any particular way, so it didn't look like it was going to pass. It all made me really uneasy, and I was more than just a little bit worried.

I started to do one of my go-to activities when I'm feeling something I have no idea what to do with: googling said feelings. For a number of reasons, it always seems to help me. The random facts floating around on the internet have a grounding power over me. I learned, for example, that anxiety is mostly related to future dangers and that feeling guilty means I'm probably not a psychopath. It even helped to read the words Sadness is an emotion, over and over again. Reading these more-or-less facts about what I was experiencing made it seem like they were something outside of me, and it calmed me down. I realized that they are human experiences; a "normal" person should live life in such a way that she experiences anxiety, sadness, and guilt. Otherwise, she is probably not living life fully, but rather in avoidance or over-cautious of anything negative. Not that we should go around being reckless; on the contrary, these experiences serve to teach us, and being mindful is part of maturing and growing. I'll always wish I hadn't done certain things, that I had handled many things differently, that I had acted with more awareness in various circumstances. But it's done now. I am human, I will have regrets. Most of us will. It sounds really over-simplified and obvious, but it made me feel a lot better.

I still feel residual anxiety, sadness, and guilt. I'm pretty sure they'll stick around for a while. It's a consequence of taking actions I regret and suffering a great loss. I know that, and I know that from time to time, I'm going to have a day like today, of extreme unhappiness. I'll still replay past scenarios in my head and end them differently, I'll still send out apologetic and compassionate vibes, I'll still hope for make-up encounters in my dreams, I'll still stare out into space and wonder "what if". Maybe these are all rather pointless tasks, and I know they don't have the power to change anything, but they're part of my coping and healing process, so I'm not in a rush to replace them with useful, productive activities.

I'm not "all better", but the elephant has lifted some of its weight from my chest, and my throat has stopped intercepting my breath, which is a great relief. I learned that, sometimes, basic truths, or even general uncertified opinions on the internet, can help me get through the days that overwhelm me. Not the most sophisticated place to find relief, perhaps, but it worked nonetheless.

I'll end with a quote my research today lead me to, from new-age-spirituality.com (yes, that's right- that should clue you in to my desperation level).

"What's done is done and never can be altered. If we have adapted and grown as a result then be satisfied the experience was worthwhile. Never give up. If we have failed to achieve a particular objective first time around it does not make it unattainable. Learn the lessons, grow stronger, and try, try again."

*

Here's to learning the lessons, growing stronger, and trying again.


Image from here.

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