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books, just for fun

5 Wonderful Books

November 26, 2019

books i love

Friends.

If you’re reading here, my guess is that you love books. I bet you grew up with your head in a book and that you’d rather read than do most anything, even as an adult. I know I’m constantly looking for a book that is going to speak to me on a soul level, leaving me better having read it. It doesn’t always happen, does it? But, when that book magic hits and it teaches you an important life lesson in the gentle way that books have… wow, I love that feeling so much.

These books below spoke to me in so many ways, so I wanted to share them here for you. Please take what resonates with you and let me know if you want to chat about it. I love bonding over reading.

The Alchemist (amazon)

This book reconnected me to what I believe is my purpose on this planet – to express myself via writing. I saw myself in the hero’s journey in pursuing his Personal Legend. It is an engrossing, beautiful read. If you haven’t read it, I highly, highly recommend.

The Untethered Soul (amazon)

This book taught me so much about spirituality. I reread it multiple times. It helped me understand how to transcend the incessant voice in my head and get in touch with my true soul. It was a truly impactful read for me and I highly recommend it to any spiritual seeker.

The Surrender Experiment (amazon)

This book is the perfect companion to The Untethered Soul. It tells the story of the author, Michael Singer, who applied the concepts he teaches in The Untethered Soul to his own life journey. It’s a real-life example of what it means to surrender. Beautiful.

You are a Badass  (amazon)

This book kick-started my whole spiritual journey, so I have such a big soft spot for it. It’s a great read for learning how to get out of your own way and trust the flow of the universe, to level up into the person you want to be. It is informal and easy to read, but the concepts pack a punch. It’s a great read if you’re like, ‘spiritual what? who?’ It’s a great place to start.

The Artist’s Way (amazon)

This one is still new to me, but it again validated how important the creative pursuit is to the artist. It argues that making time and space for creativity is vital for people who consider themselves creative or who have creative yearnings. I didn’t realize how much stifling my creativity was hurting me until I read this book. I haven’t had time to do all of the processes and workshops, but I do try to do the artist’s pages every morning and I have found it super helpful.

Those are some books close to my heart. I hope you enjoy them, friends. Now, more importantly: what are you reading right now? Please let me know the books that speak to your heart so I can add them to my library.

adventure, books, california, just for fun

Well, here’s a fun career

February 1, 2019

ATELIER_DORE_LIFESTYLE_POETRY_JACQUELINE_1

There are so, so many ways to build a life. That’s what I thought when I read the profile of Jacqueline Suskin on Atelier Dore last week. She built her career as a writer by writing poems for people at the Hollywood Farmers’ Market. People tell her what’s on their heart and she writes a poem for them within two minutes. How cool is that??

Definitely click through to read the full article, but I just have to share this quote:

“I didn’t want to take that standard route of academic poetry, so I finished my BA and traveled around the Americas for about four years making money as a gardener and tutor. Most poets get their PhD and go on to teach at a university, but that world didn’t interest me. During my travels, I met artist Zach Houston in Oakland, CA. At the time, he was writing poetry with his typewriter at farmers’ markets and street fairs, having customers name a subject and pay whatever they wanted to in exchange for a poem. We became fast friends and he asked me if I wanted to try my hand at Poem Store. It seemed like a fun writing experiment to me–I had no clue that it would end up being my career. I’d just purchased a typewriter at the Rose Bowl flea market the week before. I ended up moving to Arcata, CA and started bringing Poem Store to the weekly farmers’ market on the plaza. After a few months, I became the resident town poet and after a few years of this work it was clear that I needed to bring the project to more people. That’s when I decided to move to Los Angeles. The Hollywood farmers’ market ushered me in and I’ve been writing poetry on-demand for nearly ten years now. It’s been an incredible experiment, my only source of income.”

I marvel at the fact that she knew she wanted to be a poet, but she found her own winding way down that road. She doesn’t detail what it was like for her in those four years where she wandered and gardened and tutored. Did she feel lost and that her dream to be a poet was ridiculous? Or, did she have a gentle knowing of her purpose, finding satisfaction in her life’s journey? Could she ever fathom that she’d sustain her writing dreams by going to the Farmers’ Market and writing spontaneous poems?

Sometimes I feel like I’m going nowhere if I’m not DOING THE THING professionally or with great renown. More and more these days, I am realizing that the actual fun of it all is the journey. Will I ever be as happy in my writing career as I am this night, sitting here at my computer clacking away about a lady who writes poems at the Farmers’ Market? It’s hard to imagine something better. I now realize that I am a writer because I write and that I can find the deepest, most gratifying happiness in this process by just showing up.

I missed this space while I was deep in my day job this past week or so. I love nothing more than sharing the things I love with you all. From the deepest part of me, I want to thank those of you who take the time to read along. When I log in and see that a few of you visited me here, it warms my heart. Thank you for showing up for me as I show up for you and for myself as a writer.

 

So, how are things going with you? Feeling like you want to rent a booth at the Farmers’ Market in your town? No? Just me?

Image via.

beauty, books, deep thoughts, intuitive eating, Uncategorized, weight

Revisiting my review of Becoming by Michelle Obama

January 14, 2019

small meeshyd final

A couple of weeks ago, I enthusiastically recommended that you read Becoming by Michelle Obama. I stand by my thoughts on this book and I still have an unwavering love of Michelle and the way she approached the office of First Lady with poise, confidence and kindness.

Except.

Of course there has to be an ‘except’ after a paragraph like that, right?

There was one part of the book that didn’t sit right with me and I keep coming back to it again and again, circling the wagons in my brain because my review read as ‘enthusiastic without reservations’ and I do have one big reservation about Michelle’s perspective on childhood obesity that I need to comment upon. I’m not much of a critic, preferring to amplify the positive in this world with my voice, but in this situation I feel a bit irresponsible if I don’t share my perspective. So, here goes:

One of the causes that Michelle championed as First Lady was her ‘Let’s Move!’ program. This is how she described the initiative in the book: ‘It centered on one goal – ending the childhood obesity epidemic within a generation’. The impetus for this initiative came from an experience that Michelle had with Malia’s pediatrician during a well-child visit during the Presidential campaign where he expressed concern for Malia’s Body Mass Index ‘a measure of health that factors together height, weight, and age’ saying: ‘it was beginning to creep up. It wasn’t a crisis, he said, but it was a trend to take seriously. If we didn’t begin changing some habits, it could become a real problem over time, increasing her risk for high blood pressure or type 2 diabetes.’

The focus on obesity and B.M.I is what made me feel uncomfortable about the initiative. Ostensibly, I support the tactics of her campaign for kids: encouraging play and joyful movement and increasing the nutritional density of the foods kids eat by increasing access to less processed foods for those who can’t afford them, but I bristle at the fact that her daughter’s B.M.I. was the catalyst for this program. I also bristle against the fact that Barack Obama signed a memorandum to create a federal task force on childhood obesity.

What’s the problem here? Well, first B.M.I. has been largely and widely debunked as flawed measure or marker of health on its own. Read this article to better understand why, but here’s the takeaway: “so to be using BMI as a health proxy — particularly for everyone within that category — is simply incorrect. Our study should be the final nail in the coffin for BMI.” Guys, this isn’t some quack study. It was by UCSB and UCLA.  If you really want to learn more, here’s how BMI came to be via NPR. It was basically flawed from the outset.

Now, let’s move onto obesity. Lord, I have so many issues with the word obese. I hate it. Is there a more shameful way to describe someone in our society than obese? Why is that? It’s because we are afraid of being fat. We have such a focus on beauty and such a narrow definition of beauty that people dread being fat. Fat or obese people are seen as slothful, not taking care of themselves, unconcerned with their health.

Want to hear something a bit crazy? Being fat or even ‘obese’ doesn’t automatically mean that you are unhealthy. Read Health at Every Size and this study to understand more. Even if obesity were an actual bad thing, having a federal task force on childhood obesity encourages us to look at people on the outside to judge how they feel and how healthy they are on the inside. It allows us to discriminate and hate on people on the basis for how they look under a guise of caring about their health. By targeting obesity in children, Michelle Obama basically encouraged our kids to be judged on their size and to be made to feel ashamed of how they look. It’s not right and I know from my own personal experience just how damaging it is.

I’m technically obese. I eat a predominantly vegan diet and workout at least four times a week. My health markers at recent blood tests were all positive, but according to my B.M.I., I am obese. My obesity has roots into my childhood. In fact, I can draw a straight line from my childhood obesity to my current body size. Let me tell you the story.

My mom raised me and my two older sisters as a single mother. Struggle is probably how she would describe most of her life, especially into my childhood. She struggled to pay the bills, to find a healthy and supportive relationship and to raise three daughters by herself. One summer when I was about 7 or 8 I think, she needed a break and asked her twin sister in Arkansas to take me for the bulk of the season so she could catch her breath. The weeks I spent with my Aunt Sue-Sue that summer are my most treasured. I loved her so, so much. We spent the summer going to church camp, working in her garden, cooking, taking naps, riding four wheelers and just feeling more carefree than I could ever remember feeling in my childhood. Gosh, I was so happy.

When I came home at the end of the summer, I had gained weight. My mom said that I was so fat when I got off the plane that she barely recognized me. I hadn’t realized it when I was with Aunt Sue-Sue, but I knew as soon as I got home that my body was a problem. I remember the feeling so acutely that it’s hard for me to think about it without crying. Almost instantly, my body became a something that I needed to fix and I started what would become about a twenty year yo-yo diet. Looking back now, I wonder if my weight was just a normal fluctuation. Maybe I was a bit bigger, but perhaps a growth spurt was coming? Until that moment, I hadn’t lived in a ‘big’ body. My mom’s and my sister’s bodies were actually on the smaller side, so it’s totally conceivable that I might not have ended up obese if I wasn’t made to feel shameful about the way I looked. But I felt so, so much shame. I felt at 7 years old that I had done something wrong to cause the extra fat on my body. I started dieting then, which led to me binging and feeling unsafe around food. It led to me feeling my fatness before anything else about myself. It led to food obsession and calorie restricting and counting and lack of self-confidence. It led to all sorts of unhealthy behaviors and shame that I know without a doubt were far more damaging than being overweight. I know it.

This was before the ‘wars on obesity’ started, so I can only imagine how I would’ve felt about myself in the current climate. This is why I had to revisit my review, because I couldn’t bear someone thinking that I tacitly approved of Michelle’s ‘Let’s Move’ campaign. I think targeting obesity is harmful and I’m not afraid to say it. I want to say that I believe that we can try to do all of the things she encouraged like moving and playing and eating more nutritiously without having to target the way a person looks on the outside. I also want to say that I still love the First Lady and I truly believe she had no intent of harming kids and their body image with her program, but the way she presented the initiative in her book was harmful and something that I absolutely do not condone. I think kids should be taught to eat intuitively, to accept all sorts of bodies as beautiful, to learn how to move in ways that are joyful to them and to understand that health embodies so much more than a number on the scale – it is found in true wellness in all sorts of realms, like emotional, physical, intellectual and even spiritual practice.