51 Steps

IMAG0135I have been watching several of my friends struggle with the ending of long term relationships (LTR) and who are at the beginning of the recovery period when they are single, alone, and miserable.  I watch them as they are climbing out of their skin in the silence of their apartments after years of having partners and/or children around.  My heart goes out to them and I understand how they feel.  It wasn’t that long ago that I was exactly where they are. I didn’t think it would ever end short of jumping into another relationship. However, I find that in watching them, I realize I am truly at a different place and can see how far I have actually come. I am at a place that doesn’t require a relationship, a place where I can stand on my own, and I am happy alone or with other people.

Almost everyone I have known that has ended a LTR has gone through the same steps or stages.  Those steps or stages are probably categorized in some self-help book somewhere or in the DSM-V. Since I have already passed through the “self-help book” stage personally, I won’t go into categorizing each one of them, but it seems like there are a lot.  So I am just going to throw a number out there and say… 51.

Fifty-one is significant because it is how many steps I climb each day to get to my house (actually it is technically Matt’s house, but for the moment it is mine too). It is a metaphor for moving from a relatively unsafe place to a place of safety.  Each day, I go from the lack of safety of the street to the relatively safe place of a home in 51 steps.  The same is true after ending a relationship that you thought would last a lifetime.  At first, you are in the relatively unsafe, unknown place of being alone. And from there, you start climbing through each one of the steps or stages until finally, you are safe at home. You have found a place of belonging. Maybe that is with another person or maybe, like me, you have accepted and embrace being alone.

Emotionally, I am pretty sure I am somewhere between step 40-45. I have my personal life pretty well straightened out, I am still trying to piece together the last of the professional one. That is right, when your personal life falls apart through the ending of a relationship, it affects your professional life too. For me, that has manifested itself in an inability to write academically.  As a college professor whose career is dependent on academic publications, this is problematic.  So I am going through the step right now where I am, just a little a time, learning how to write academically again.  I just passed through the step where I had to relearn how to read. I have been amazed at how many of my friends who have let go of relationships have lost their ability to read for pleasure.  I am honestly just getting that back.  The next step is reading academic literature.  And then finally, getting back to some semblance of a publication schedule.

So for my friends who are on step 4-10, try to realize that soon, you will feel much better.  The climb is tough but worth it.  There are some things you can do to make it easier.  Everyone has to find his/her own coping strategies but here are my favorites:  learn to play, keep a journal, reward yourself for little things, dance even if it is alone in your living room, learn something new, push yourself physically, dress in colors (not black), if you live in an urban area take a bus ride, volunteer, join meetup.com and meet some cool people, find your spirituality (yoga, meditation, prayer, being out in nature), change your environment (I did this by rearranging my furniture).  There are a lot of others.  The important thing is don’t stay stuck too long. It is just like when your car is stuck, the longer you are in a rut and the deeper you bury yourself by spinning your wheels doing the same thing over and over, the harder it is to get out.

Start climbing.  51 steps to go…

42 in base 12

I started this blog to document sabbatical and the creation of a new identity as a I move into the final chapter of my life.  I am going through the process of detangling myself from the identity which has served my the first 50 years of my life.  It is an identity wrapped up in the service of others: wife, mother of dependent children, and teacher.  It is an identity couched in the victimization of trauma, trauma that is healed and over and a part of the past.  It is time to let that all go. Now it is time to find my place in the world as a strong, confident, independent woman.  Yet as I read through many of the posts of this blog, I realized I spend a lot of time writing about the people I love and not as much time writing about myself.

pottyIn case you didn’t catch the math from the title of this post, today is my 50th birthday. I have been sad in anticipation of this day, but as usual, the anticipation is the hard part.  Now that the day is here, I find I can’t help but be happy.  The 50’s are going to be the best decade yet.

Milestone birthdays always make you reflect on the previous decade.  My 40’s have been tumultuous to say the least. Up until 43, my life was pretty normal and relatively boring.  After 43, it has been one crisis after another. Yet here I sit on the cusp of 50, feeling like I have been through the fires of hell and realizing that the pain I have gone through has produced a well of strength and independence that I will draw on for the next decade.  I am a better woman because of everything that has happened to me. I am ready to be the woman I have become.  I am ready to embrace a life of abundance.  I have abundant resources, energy, health, and love of the most amazing people on the planet.  There is nothing holding me back other than myself. It is time for me to get out of my own way.

Who am I?  I am an academic, a college professor, a teacher of teachers. I am intelligent and articulate. I am an adventurer, a wanderer, a philosopher. I am compassionate, loving, and warm.  I am blunt, outspoken, and opinionated.  I am passionate, loyal, and I love deeply. I have an inner beauty that is apparent to anyone who takes the time to know me.  I use all my senses and emotions and I look at the world with a sense wonder and magic.  I am a woman who is trying to respect her boundaries, to honor herself and her needs while at the same time caring for the needs of others.  I love the mountains and nature and I believe in taking care of the planet I ride on.  I love to ski, climb, ride, jump off stuff, and to raise my face up to the sky giving thanks for the world around me every day.  I am a woman with a sense of life. That is who I am.

robinSo my birthday plans are to be on my bike by 8 am.  I want to ride 50 miles, but I will be thankful for as many as I get in.  I have been off the bike for quite awhile and I won’t beat myself up if I don’t make 50, I am happy just to be riding along. It is going to rain and I forgot my fender at Matt’s so I will have a brown mud streak up my back, but that is what they make washing machines for.  After my ride, a nice hot shower, lunch, and then doing some work this afternoon followed by a quiet dinner with Tony, Ken, and Marisa.  It is going to be a lovely day.

Cheers to the next decade.  ~Robin

Addendum…

I realized that last post made it a little too much about Matt. Healing, love, acceptance comes from many sources.  I don’t want to give the impression that Matt is the only friend who adds value to my life or that has helped me out because that is absolutely not true.  I have many friends that, without which, I could not be the person I am.  I believe we all need to take the time to be authentic with the people in our lives, to share ourselves and the let others know how much we value them. My friends are exactly those kinds of people.

I can’t thank all of the people in my life enough.  Pat & Heather, Jessica & Ethan Shurick (just to clarify for those that know the former therapist Ethan, different person), Tony & Ken, Maurea, Matt & Amanda, Len & Ella, Marvin, Matt L., John, Greg, Mike, Eric, Melinda, Deloa, Sue, Larry, Shaun & Rachelle, Pat, Peggy, Michelle, Jason, Jeff, and all the wonderful people in the Lounge that I haven’t mentioned by name, …the list is just goes on and on.  If I didn’t mention you, it isn’t because I don’t love you. You are all very important to me.

I am the woman I am today, embracing 50 with gusto because each of you adds so much joy to my life. Each of you has a special gift and I value each one of you tremendously. Thank you.  You are the greatest gift I ever have received or will receive.

The Gift

On Monday, I will be 50 years old. It is one of those milestone birthdays that, until yesterday, was bothering me a bit. Yesterday, I got it all sorted out in my mind. Everyone keeps asking me lots of questions like where am I staying, what am I going to do now, what I want for a present for my birthday, and what I want to do on my birthday. I hope this post will answer those questions.

Sometimes, life is pretty incredible. When I got home from Whistler, I sent a message to my friend Matt‘s girlfriend Amanda about needing my car. I didn’t know what I was going to do, I just knew that the car is all I have left. I was going to get in it and just start driving. That isn’t what I wanted to do, I just didn’t know anything else to do. Since Matt was in South America indefinitely, I didn’t expect to see him. Then Amanda said the most amazing thing. She said, “I am picking Matt up a the airport at 10 pm tonight, I know he has been thinking about you and wants to see you”. I lost it and just started crying. I hadn’t realized until that moment that what I needed more than anything else in the world was the support of my friend. It just happened that I was back at the same time that he came home for a week before he leaves again for Asia.

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Sunrise from the deck

Here is the amazing part. He picked me up when I got off my bus and we went and talked. He should have been spending time with his family, but instead he is letting me cry all over him. He had already checked with his roommates and they offered me a place to stay in this gorgeous house, with a fabulous gourmet kitchen and a great view of Seattle. They offered me comfort, compassion, and safety. They are certainly some of the most chill people I have met in Seattle. They made me feel immediately welcomed and at home. How did I get so fortunate? I have to be the most blessed person on the planet. Seriously.  I spent Wednesday reconnecting with my friends Maurea, Melinda, Deloa and Larry. They took time out of their schedules to make me feel valued and loved.

Yesterday, Matt and I went hiking up Tiger Mountain. He was going to paraglide down, I just hiked down. After a lovely hike up with time to talk to my friend, on the way down I got some solo time to think about everything. I decided to take sabbatical in very small steps. I want to finish a paper and a grant I am working on so I need two weeks in one place to work. So I am staying in Seattle until October 1 (thanks Jeff and Elle for letting me crash at your house). Then I just need a short adventure. So I am going back to the original plan and taking off for a month in Spain, cycling Mallorca getting back in time for Thanksgiving with my children. I am not planning on any other activities, just getting up every day and cycling and then enjoying the Spanish culture in the evenings. I need some time on my bike. After that, I don’t know yet and I am not going to plan anything.

On the way home from the mountain, Matt (who is still just 25 years old) was being his usual silly self. I was laughing, the sun was shining, we were just being goofy, I felt like I was kid. At that moment it hit me what a true healing gift his friendship has been to me. I have had a lot of trauma in my life. From the time I was 10 years old, I didn’t have a normal childhood. I grew up very fast and took on lots of responsibility. There was never any of that carefree playtime. Steadfastly, over the last 6 years of our friendship, through the trauma of divorce, the exploitation of my former therapist, the betrayal of a false friend, through a mountain of debt, tenure & promotion, deaths, births, marriages…all of it, Matt has loved me unconditionally. I am 25 years his senior, a female, not that athletic, and still he has dragged me on more adventures, taken the time to get to know and understand me on a level that no one else ever did. He doesn’t judge or belittle, but just truly accepts me as I am and encourages me to be my best. He teaches me how to be spontaneous, to take risks, and to just play knowing that I have the security of his love and caring as a safety net. For the first time in my whole life since I was 10 years old, yesterday, I felt healed and whole. So for my birthday, I have already received my gift.

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Sunset overlooking the Olympic Mountains and Queen Anne

I don’t need physical gifts, I don’t even have a house. The gift I get from all the people in my life is the gift of their love and acceptance. What more do I need? I have so many amazing friends that I am rich beyond measure and that can never be measured in physical things. Life is short and sweet. I am entering the sunset of my life, the last 30 years. I believe our lives and the legacy we leave behind will be known by the love we have shared during our time on this planet.

I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel. ~Maya Angelou

P.S. This seems like a good post for a Stevie Nicks song.  

For today…

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Back in Seattle and dealing with the complex emotions of feeling like a failure but knowing with absolute certainty that I made the right choice in leaving Ethiopia in order to take care of myself.  Sometimes putting yourself and your own needs first is the hardest thing you will ever have to do.

I have spent a lot of time thinking about my next step. I debated cycling across America but I think I want to go somewhere that I can stay for a couple of months, in one place, that will allow me to have time to myself and a place of my own to write and catch up on my reading. Somewhere that I can rent a temporary apartment and just hang out.

In my heart, I just want to stay here. I want to go find an apartment and have a home. But I know that would be the worst thing for me. It would be akin to wrapping a chain around my neck and keeping me stuck. I have an opportunity to strip away all the layers of comfort and security that I hide behind, to let go of all the friends and support that I cherish, to stand alone. To not accomplish that would be a real failure.

When I contemplated sabbatical last year, my friend Len asked me to picture myself at the end of it. He said to think of what I would regret not doing. My reaction then and still today is two things. Professionally I want to work on my research on KinectMath and write. Personally, I want to cycle, learn to climb better, and take paragliding lessons (thanks for another addiction Matt) and I would love to ski and cycle in Europe.

In my life, I have always wanted to be a badass with adventure sports. I am not however, a natural athlete. I am uncoordinated and I am an old woman. I will be 50 years old on Monday. If I am going to do this, I have to do it now. So let the badass lessons begin.

I bandied about three places in the world that would also be conducive to having time to work, cycling daily, and learning at least one of my other activities. Moab, UT; Mallorca, Spain; and Queenstown, New Zealand. Moab is easy and I am fascinated with the desert, NZ is a little harder because although the language is English, it is further away and isolated. Mallorca is cheaper, was on my original plan, but the language is Spanish. And it is a climbing and cycling mecca.

Any additional suggestions or advice would be welcome. That’s where I am today.

O Canada!

I have been back in the states for 48 hours, staying in my old neighborhood. It is funny, I have been stuck for so long and I had blamed it on my living situation, the debt, my job, my ex, and the exploitative therapist. It took going to the other side of the world to make me realize the “stuckness” was all me and the way I perceive all those things. It is quite a revelation. I came back totally appreciative of the gray, gloomy Seattle sky, clean water, access to services, and the care and compassion of my incredible friends.

So now I am heading to Canada for a couple of days of reflection, contemplation, hiking, and friendship. I need to process all that happened in the last month. The mountains of British Columbia are the perfect setting for doing that and for helping me to decide what to do with the next year of my life. I have the beginnings of a new sabbatical plan in my head (thanks Tony!!). My goal for my weekend is to sketch out a rough idea of the next 12 months.

Pictures and reassessment on Tuesday when I return. For now…O Canada!

Last Post from Africa

Technically, I am still in Africa. I am somewhere over the Sahara desert.  I can see it from the window of my plane.  It is a vast expanse of uninhabitable land.  From the air, it looks as barren as my soul feels.  By the time I post this however, I will be either in Europe or the United States.

On my last day in Africa, all the difficulties that I had there in the past couple of weeks seemed to converge and I went through the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back.  One of the horses had died in the middle of road, it was New Year’s Eve, my internet didn’t work and I was missing my family dreadfully so I went to the internet café, ready to talk to my family and friends, ready to leave Ethiopia.  There was a lot of revelry on the street because of the New Year’s holiday. There were men in traditional African dress with sticks, jumping and singing and dancing…the soul of Africa.  It was wonderful and at that moment, I thought my doubts and misconceptions were unfounded.  I thought that the celebration was enough to sustain me through the pain of the dead horse and the lack of access to my family, but it wasn’t.

On the way home as I walking by myself down a deserted section of sidewalk between the café and my apartment, I heard a sound from behind me that didn’t register and at the same time a man swerved near me.  At first I thought the man was just drunk, imbibing too much on the holiday, but he wasn’t.  He was completely naked even to the point of being minus any shoes. I thought it might be someone playing a joke on The Ferengi woman.  After he went past me, I realized that it wasn’t just that he was naked but also his hands were tied behind his back at his forearms.  It looked extremely painful.  My heart leapt to my throat as I tried to figure out what to do. I kept thinking it was a joke or maybe even an attempt to get me to stop to rob me.  I couldn’t quite get my head around why his arms were tied behind his back. He kept swerving near me.  I heard the sound again as someone yelled and it finally registered to me what the sound I kept hearing was…the sound of a whip. That was why the man kept swerving toward me, not to poke fun at me but because, near me, the naked man was safe. No one was going to whip someone with a ferengi nearby who would possibly get whipped too.  I didn’t know what to do. I was a white woman, unfamiliar with the customs, not speaking the language, and not understanding if this was something that was cultural that I shouldn’t interfere in or if it was staged to catch me off guard or maybe if a crime was taking place. I didn’t know.  All I knew was that if I stopped and turned, I would be faced with a man with a whip.

Because I was so upset by it, I did what seemed right to me in that moment and crossed to the other side of the road. The naked man ran that way too and stayed with me, loping along as well he could with his hands tied behind his back.  The man with the whip started yelling louder.  His yelling combined with my obvious upset caught the attention of three men standing on the corner where I needed to turn to go to my apartment. One of them started yelling.  When he did, the naked man, who had never uttered a sound, went back toward the middle of the road where the median was. He did seem to be limping on his bare feet and couldn’t go very fast with his arms pinned behind his back. He was a young man, probably early twenties.  He seemed to be scared but that might be my own fears projected onto him. His silence was deafening and it condemned me.

My shame in the whole experience was that I did nothing … and it makes me sick.  I don’t speak the language so I could not tell what they were yelling to him, I was the only female around and the only ferengi  (foreigner).  I was scared. So I did nothing…I just crossed the road to where other people were.  A man was being driven down the street naked by a man with a whip and I DID NOTHING.  And the truth is, in my life with all its hardship, I have never been so close to total insanity where I just wanted to start yelling at the top of my lungs to get them to STOP.  It was a surreal moment of madness. At that moment, I was broken.  

I am sad to say I wasn’t strong enough to do the job that Ethiopia needed me to do.  I lied awake most of the night and have cried most of the way to Europe. I had wanted to make a difference in the lives of Ethiopian children with my understanding of math education and technology.  I wanted to learn and grow as a human being from the wonderful people I met like Dawit and Baruk.  I had hoped I could give back to all the people who have given so much to me and helped me on the journey of my life.  I wanted to pay it forward.  Instead, I am on a plane back to the US.  I failed. I will have the images of that dead horse, of the beggars with unspeakable deformities that medical science could easily treat if they had access, and of a naked man with bound arms being driven down the road with a whip…I will have those images with me for the rest of my life. They are seared on my soul.  And all the while…I could do nothing.

I was hoping that Africa would heal the wounds in my soul. Instead, Africa opened the wounds of my youth, my marriage, and the subsequent exploitation of my marriage therapist.  Now those wounds feel open and raw, like festering, weeping sores.  Africa ripped the bandage off them and exposed the infected remnants my soul.  So I am going home, to heal, to try to find peace, and to figure out what to do with the last third of my life.

I will leave the work in Ethiopia to those who are stronger.  I leave it to Jen, Ellen, Panos, Dawit, and all the other teachers who keep the idea going.  I am sorry I wasn’t stronger or ready for the experience I was thrust into.  I just wasn’t strong enough or the woman you needed me to be.  It wasn’t the right time of my life.  I am sorry for failing you.

A country with a soul

Today was one of those perfect Northern African days.  It has been the rainy season here so it has rained every day. Not just Seattle drizzle rain, but a true soaking deluge kind of rain.  Every…single…day.  It makes the poorly built and incomplete roads into quagmires of mud, potholes, and huge puddles.  The rainy season is coming to an end and the weather should begin to be perfect like it was today, mid 70 F and sunny with no humidity.IMG_1529

IMG_1527I was going to post earlier, but each time got my post finished, the power went out so I gave up and went for a walk in the village near my apartment with my friend Jen.  What I love most about this place are the Ethiopian people.  They show amazing resiliency, courage, and an absolute undefeatable spirit.  This spirit is what helped them rout every attempt by Europeans to colonize them.  They are a proud people and they love their country.

IMG_1583Every morning, I go running.  Ethiopian runners are a source of national pride.   The route I run takes me on a road where many people run each morning.  Today I actually saw a group exercising in the median of the road.  While I am running, the Ethiopians will cheer me on. They call out “good job”, like I am doing something great, when all I am doing is jogging for exercise.  There is one part of my run that takes me parallel to a government housing project.  Each day a little boy, maybe 10 years old, comes out and jogs with me down the road, grinning from ear to ear. He is adorable.  He says good morning to me and then says “sport”.  When he leaves me he said Ciao and I know I will see him tomorrow.  You can tell he is proud of Ethiopia’s tradition of running.

IMG_1555Even on our walk to the village, the people smile and say hello or salam.  The kids gather and walk with us, wanting us to take their picture.  Women invite us for coffee. What I have realized from spending time with Ethiopians of all ages is that it is their culture to care about human beings. They take their time, they listen to you. They FEEL, they truly feel compassion with their hearts, and it isn’t just superficial bull.  Ethiopia is a country with a soul.

PS.  Between writing and posting, Ethiopia just won a soccer match against Central African Republic and for the first time, qualified for the World Cup.  It is partying and chaos on the street.  What a wonderful celebration of national pride.

These aren’t filtered yet, I haven’t had time to go through them, but they are the ones I took today http://sdrv.ms/19u2kms

The Mundane

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Part of the field that they cut

I keep getting lots of questions about day to day life and I want to take a post to tell you what my life is like now.  To give you an idea, while I was working on lesson plans in my apartment while the deluge of rain, thunder, and lightening was happening, I watched three Ethiopian men cut an entire field of grass around one of the buildings on campus with a sickle. It took several days.  It is a big enough area that I would have wanted a riding lawn mower or tractor and it could have been done in an hour.  The concept of time is just a different thing here than it is in the U.S.

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Dryer controls

I live in a two bedroom apartment (see pictures below) that I share with an Ethiopian teacher, Dawit.  It is pretty minimal by U.S. standards, but it is comparable to an apartment I had when I was in college.  There are challenges here in construction standards.  There are no OSHA regulations.  You will see workers hundreds of feet up in the air on construction projects with scaffolding made from eucalyptus branches.  They aren’t wearing harnesses or taking any safety measures. It is very dangerous.  The building standards are also nonexistent.  I have open wiring in my bathroom near the shower. And I had to laugh in the kitchen when, although there is space for the refrigerator, they neglected to put a power source so the refrigerator is in the living room where there is a plug.  The kitchen has a cooktop and I have a convection microwave for baking but the directions for it are in Dutch so I stick with microwaving when I need to heat something up.  The communal washer/dryer for the complex is also in Dutch so I just randomly push some buttons until it works and hope for the best.

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Breakfast foods

When I get up in the morning, Dawit and I might go for a run or I might do some yoga.  Running three miles at 8300 ft altitude is definitely good for my body and my lungs.   After my workout, I stretch and then have some breakfast which usually consists of a hunk of bread with honey or peanut butter and a piece of fruit.  When I need a pick-me-up, I switch to the Ethiopian version of Nutella in place of the honey or peanut butter.  Lunch is noodles or rice with some vegetables.  Dinner is whatever someone cooks which may be Ethiopian food or western food or we might go out to eat.  We eat a lot of pasta.  My favorite thing so far has been the shiro.  The local beer and wine isn’t too bad either.

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Abandoned horses

I have pretty much become a vegetarian.  When you see the meat hanging in the shops, just out in the air with no refrigeration or sanitation, it is really hard to think about eating it.  I see goat herders corralling goats for slaughter and I saw a group of pigs today rooting through the trash when I was out on my run.   I think one of the things I am having the most difficulty with is the way animals are treated.  When a farm animal has served its usefulness, they are abandoned on a street to starve.  I have watched these horses that were left on a street just obediently stay there day after day and get skinnier each day.  I know that one day, I will go by and one will be laying there dead. The worst part is that there are hundreds of abandoned animals such as that.  I have seen them kill a rat at the produce stand where I was shopping and that same day, we walked by a dead human body on the side of the road.  Ethiopia is 173rd out of 187 countries on the Human Development Index.  There are lots of challenges here.

Dawit’s way of looking at life and his understanding of Ethiopian culture is helping me adjust.  He reminds me a lot of Matt.  Dawit is the chemistry and biology teacher and we work on lesson plans together.  He was born in Ethiopia, then migrated to Ghana before being educated in the states but has now come back to Ethiopia to work.  School starts next week.  Dawit gave me the best compliment I have received in Ethiopia.  When I offered him a rain jacket to wear, he told me I was very open with sharing my resources.  I told him that it was just “stuff” and wasn’t important and that he was welcome to use anything of mine he needed.  He told me I had an “African soul”.   I thought that was pretty cool and I am getting a pulse on what that really means to be able to write a blog post about it someday.

I typed this out on my computer in my apartment so that I could go to the internet café and post it because our internet line was cut in one of the construction projects and the government hasn’t fixed it yet (it has been several weeks).  Of course, I had to wait for the deluge of rain to stop before making the dash down the road.  They keep telling me that the rainy season will end in 3 weeks… I don’t believe them.

Cheers to everyone and know that I am well.   Following are my apartment pictures.

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Apartment from outside. I live in a unit on the bottom floor

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