I have never been a "natural born cleaner". Some girls are born without the chocolate gene, some come without the shopping gene... sadly, I was born without the cleaning gene. Sometimes I envy my friends whose houses are spotless, who have a place for everything and everything in its place, who have pictures on the walls and picture frames expertly displayed on a corner table, who have exactly the right furniture in exactly the right places, and rugs, and sometimes rugs on top of rugs (seriously, how can they pull that off?), and flower arrangements on tables and not a single piece of unopened mail anywhere in sight...
I recently started reading a book called The Cleaning Bible so maybe I can get some inspiration. I didn't even have to get two pages in to realize the first thing I am doing wrong! It's impossible to keep a cluttered house clean. That probably seems obvious for anybody including me, but sometimes we don't realize how much stuff we have. Sometimes we can't even identify what is clutter and what is not, and need to look at everything with different eyes...
So today was Decluttering Day One, and after just one hour of work I had my car trunk full of clothes. Some things I bought and never wore, some that I haven't worn in years, stuff that I didn't want to get rid of because maybe... some day...
I drove to Goodwill before I had the chance to change my mind, and while I watched the employee walking away with his yellow cart full of stuff, I felt a lump in my throat. There is my favorite dress, and another one, and a beautiful blouse, and another dress I wore on a special occasion, and memories, happy or painful, of a person I am not anymore.
On the drive back home I realized I was grieving someone from a different life. A time I can never go back to...
I grieved my husband, but I didn't understand until now that I have to grieve myself too. I have to let go of what I was and make room for what I can be. I have no idea what that is, but I'll never find out until I am ready for it. It's scary, because what we get after we get rid of things is emptiness, but I have to take that leap.
So, goodbye clutter. Hello future.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
Arraiolos 2
This one is my newest project. I bought the material in Brazil.
Stitch by stitch, the pattern begins to pop out of the screen...
I love those colors!
A work of love and patience...
And there it is! Beautiful!
It took me a little over a month from start to finish.
Stitch by stitch, the pattern begins to pop out of the screen...
I love those colors!
A work of love and patience...
And there it is! Beautiful!
It took me a little over a month from start to finish.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Grandma Almerinda's Kitchen
The smell of cake fresh out of the oven fills the air as
Aunt Irineia pours generous amounts of lime glaze on top of the golden brown,
slightly burned crust. And that’s the way it was supposed to be! I was home
from school; my two youngest siblings just finished their homework and are now
playing on the street with the other kids. Neyma, who lives just next door,
brings Paulo Renato in his stroller and Juliana in her belly. Dayse comes over
with Christiano, just a few days older than Paulo, and Jacqueline in her belly.
Funny how those babies always come in pairs. Cousins Monica and Elaine are
arguing, as always. Aunt Gloria and her three boys show up from across the
street. Silvina and her daughter Silvia are there too. My mom comes straight
from work bringing eight loaves of warm French bread that she picked up in the
bakery by the bus stop. Grandma Almerinda makes a big pot of coffee. There are
not enough chairs in the kitchen, so we take turns. Noise, laughter and stories
are passed along with cups and plates. That’s the image that comes to my mind
at the mention of the word family.
That scene was played and replayed every day with small
variations. It was our ritual, our identity. Those afternoons defined us and
our relationship with the world outside. We learned to talk and listen. We
learned to trust and keep to ourselves. We learned to pass the bread, but take
our slice too. We learned to appreciate imperfection and not care about the
burned crust as long as it tastes good. We learned that some people never
learn, as Monica and Elaine, now 52 and 47, still argue. We learned to offer
our seat when we’re done with our coffee. We learned from the stories, but made
the same mistakes anyway. We never used the word love (funny how different
cultures save some words like they might wear out), but it was there.
In some way, that kitchen was our womb. A warm, comfortable,
familiar place where we belong. Our origin. The place we come back to whenever
life becomes too much to deal with. There we found nourishment and shelter, and
we couldn’t possibly need anything else. But life takes you places, and that
sense of belonging also helped us let go of the blue walls and venture into the
big, real, unknown world. And so we did put down our cups, we pushed the chairs
under the table, and off we went, to conquer the world!
Time goes by. We move, marry, divorce, our children grow up, we become aunts and grandparents ourselves. Grandma Almerinda is gone... but we are still in her kitchen, whenever we need to just be. That is our true home, our comfort, our haven, our happiness, our heaven, the place we will all come back to someday.
Saturday, April 26, 2014
An Unexamined Life
I wanted to post something about Philosophy today. Actually, more about "philosophy" (no capital 'P') but in the end it all boils down to the same thing. Yep... I know I can get dozens of rabid pro and con comments just from that last phrase, but let's not go there right now. I had a rough idea of what I was going to write, but then I remembered a paper I wrote for my Philosophy class a few years ago, and decided to publish that first. The paper was about the movie An Examined Life.
So, here it goes:
So, here it goes:
My
life started when I was about twenty years old. I was in my third year of
college, unhappy, my world had changed, my life seemed to have no meaning, and
I was seriously considering ending it, but I knew my family would be
devastated. So, instead, I started writing in an old notebook, every day,
whatever came to my mind. It didn’t occur to me to read what I had written
until there was just one page left to write. So I read it, and that was the day
when I woke up. I was very surprised by the things I wrote, but even more
surprised by the fact that I didn’t know myself. Until that day I was merely an
eating and breathing machine, functioning in auto-pilot.
That
kind of self discovery is, to me, what Socrates meant when he said that “an
unexamined life is not worth living,” and my own story was the first thing that
came to mind when I started watching Examined Life.
I
was a little disappointed by the movie, because most of the interviewed philosophers
seemed (judging from the subjects discussed) to wear a shield that dissociates
the person from the philosophy. I don’t think we can really, meaningfully learn
anything if we don’t know who we are first. We can read a whole library and
still process everything above the surface, without letting the knowledge grow
roots inside the essence of who we are, and letting ourselves grow above the
surface, being enriched by that knowledge.
It
seems to me that is the case of Avital Ronell. She probably has a great deal of
“book smarts”, but that appears to be just a coat of varnish on a sterile
surface.
Dr.
Cornel West, on the other hand, is the extreme opposite. His references to
music, life, death, desire and pleasure reveal someone who internalized and digested
his books, mixed his studies with his own experiences and emerged transformed
by them. His philosophy is as alive as he is. I know exactly what it means when
he says “It takes courage to examine yourself.” But his enthusiasm shows that
it is well worth the trouble.
What
gives us the right to eat meat? I have struggled with that question a great
deal. I didn’t eat meat for three years, and I don’t feel that made me a
better, or more ethical person. It got to a point where I started to fight
friends and family to defend my position, until I realized it was causing me
more harm than good. The fact is that death is an intrinsic fact of life. Our
bodies are constantly fighting and killing microorganisms in order to stay
alive. We kill flies and roaches to protect ourselves. We kill plants. Where
should we draw the line? It is not a matter of “right”, but a biological fact
that we kill things in order to survive. Otherwise we would have to ask what or
who gives a lion the right to kill a zebra.
Michael
Hardt approach on Revolution is curious. Dictionary definitions apart, I
understand “revolution” as a tool to reach a desired result when other tools
were unsuccessfully used, especially in the context of political revolutions in
South America. Hardt mentions “learning to do revolution in America”, or
“practicing revolution”, but he fails to identify the need for a “South
American model” revolution in America. Without a cause, in my opinion, a
revolution is nothing more than a criminal enterprise.
And
Cornel West is not wearing a seatbelt. Not cool!
Friday, April 25, 2014
Physical Disability
I don't like to talk about this. Not because it's painful to talk about my life experience, but because what I write here is only half of what I really communicate. The other half is in your head.
We all judge what we see, hear, read, or touch, according to our own perceptions and beliefs. That is why it is so hard to find the right words, the right tone, to communicate my thoughts. The very title of this post will elicit a good chunk of your own agenda, and you will try to color me accordingly. I hope your mind is open enough so you can really see me.
You see... I can't give you a list of my afflictions. Because surgeries don't matter. Whether I have one, two, or no breasts, doesn't matter. Whether I limp, whether or not my spine is perfectly straight, whether or not I'm in pain, none of that matters. I'm not trying to gain your sympathy. I just want you to look beyond my imperfections, beyond my ugliness, because what really matters is what's above my neck.
My thoughts, my strength, my refusal to give up, my refusal of your pity, my refusal of your fear. That's what matters.
I am capable.
I can't give up.
We all judge what we see, hear, read, or touch, according to our own perceptions and beliefs. That is why it is so hard to find the right words, the right tone, to communicate my thoughts. The very title of this post will elicit a good chunk of your own agenda, and you will try to color me accordingly. I hope your mind is open enough so you can really see me.
You see... I can't give you a list of my afflictions. Because surgeries don't matter. Whether I have one, two, or no breasts, doesn't matter. Whether I limp, whether or not my spine is perfectly straight, whether or not I'm in pain, none of that matters. I'm not trying to gain your sympathy. I just want you to look beyond my imperfections, beyond my ugliness, because what really matters is what's above my neck.
My thoughts, my strength, my refusal to give up, my refusal of your pity, my refusal of your fear. That's what matters.
I am capable.
I can't give up.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Jobless in Deltona
They say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results. I wonder if that applies to trying to get a job...
How do you try to get a job? You apply for jobs you think match your qualifications, right? That's what I did... and nothing. After a while you finally get that something is not right, so you try to adjust your course. That's what I did.
Nothing.
Okay, maybe I should lower my expectations... Which is fine. I don't think I'm above any kind of job. I just think my brain can accomplish a lot more than the rest of my body. I don't want to go into details about that on this post, but I have what I consider a mild physical disability, and a good brain that I believe more than makes up for that.
Long story short... in 2006 I accepted a job as a grocery store cashier. Part time, because it seems nobody hires full time employees anymore. My legs almost killed me on the first months. I had to practically crawl to my car at the end of each shift, but I eventually got stronger and used to the physical demands of my job, which really wasn't that bad. I had fun doing my job, and I had great coworkers. But...
In 2009 my husband passed away after a long battle against kidney cancer. I was still a part time associate at my place of employment. And reality hit me. That's not going to cut it. So I went back to school.
Graduated with a 3.99 GPA. Passed my boards. Got registered and licensed. Problem solved!
Not really...
It's been almost a year. I applied to hundreds of positions within a 2-hour-drive radius from my home. Scored a few interviews, and no job.
So here we go again... Well, maybe I should lower my expectations. So I applied for a bilingual job (I speak Portuguese) that had nothing to do with my field of study, but, WTH, a job is a job.
So, here's my dilemma. I understand that if I keep doing the same thing, I'll keep getting the same results, although the advice I hear from everybody is "Keep applying, keep applying!"
I have to do something different, but I have no idea what, and finding a rich husband is out of the question.
So... what now?
By the way, I am 53 years old.
How do you try to get a job? You apply for jobs you think match your qualifications, right? That's what I did... and nothing. After a while you finally get that something is not right, so you try to adjust your course. That's what I did.
Nothing.
Okay, maybe I should lower my expectations... Which is fine. I don't think I'm above any kind of job. I just think my brain can accomplish a lot more than the rest of my body. I don't want to go into details about that on this post, but I have what I consider a mild physical disability, and a good brain that I believe more than makes up for that.
Long story short... in 2006 I accepted a job as a grocery store cashier. Part time, because it seems nobody hires full time employees anymore. My legs almost killed me on the first months. I had to practically crawl to my car at the end of each shift, but I eventually got stronger and used to the physical demands of my job, which really wasn't that bad. I had fun doing my job, and I had great coworkers. But...
In 2009 my husband passed away after a long battle against kidney cancer. I was still a part time associate at my place of employment. And reality hit me. That's not going to cut it. So I went back to school.
Graduated with a 3.99 GPA. Passed my boards. Got registered and licensed. Problem solved!
Not really...
It's been almost a year. I applied to hundreds of positions within a 2-hour-drive radius from my home. Scored a few interviews, and no job.
So here we go again... Well, maybe I should lower my expectations. So I applied for a bilingual job (I speak Portuguese) that had nothing to do with my field of study, but, WTH, a job is a job.
So, here's my dilemma. I understand that if I keep doing the same thing, I'll keep getting the same results, although the advice I hear from everybody is "Keep applying, keep applying!"
I have to do something different, but I have no idea what, and finding a rich husband is out of the question.
So... what now?
By the way, I am 53 years old.
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