Friday, September 30, 2016

Yoga Tales from Rural Maine: Gratitude

Recently, in one of my children's yoga classes at Acadia Hospital, our theme for the class was gratitude. I taught the children that when we focus on feelings of thankfulness, we tend to feel more relaxed, more happy, more present, more well. Gratitude raises our vibration. We sat in a circle on our mats and when it was his or her turn, each child held Share Bear and shared something for which they were grateful.
All of the children in this class were between the ages of 7-10. The girls were all thankful for their homes, their families, or their pets. The boys were all thankful for members of their families who are serving their country as soldiers. Except for one little boy who was deeply and vibrantly grateful that he had recently been taught how to sing "Jimmy Crack Corn." :-)
If you want to support this work we are doing at Acadia Hospital, watch the Children's Miracle Network telethon on WABI on Saturday morning April 2nd. (Or you can also ask me how to donate more privately or more directly.)
Namaste! (And may you learn a new song today, for which you feel deeply and vibrantly grateful.) :-)

[NOTE: None of the children in this photo are patients at Acadia. For privacy reasons, of course I can't share any images of them with you. But the sweetness and light in this private yoga birthday party for Little Naomi (which is shared by permission) captures what goes on for us on our mats at Acadia, although in a less sunshiney environment.]

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Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: "When do we do anything alone?"

During our most recent training weekend at Fire Academy, we arrived before 7 a.m. and spent a long time standing in the cold as the cars were prepared for our extrication lesson. I was sick and I kept having to take off my gloves to blow my nose, exposing them to the well-below-freezing air. I was standing with a group of my classmates, fellow firefighters, and I was actually growing concerned about the intensity of the pain in my fingers and toes. I shifted and stamped and scrunched my fingers and toes trying to get them warm.
One of the firefighters noticed, and the next thing I knew, he was taking off his gloves and telling me to put my hands inside them. They were warm with moist heat and toasty! (Like the inside of a Ton Ton?!) And then another firefighter told me to give him my gloves and he put his warm fingers inside of them, so that when I gave back the first firefighter's gloves, my newly warmed fingers could go inside warm gloves. My hands stayed warm for the rest of the day. Neither of these men are in my company.
On the day when I got most beat up, the second day of our most grueling weekend, when my knees were bruised to the bone and the rest of me was smashed to bits and I was reeling from the trauma of having gotten trapped in a confined space (wedged between wall studs and tangled up so badly my helmet and mask slipped off while people screamed at me to go faster--twice!), and it wasn't even lunch time yet, I stumbled out of the building looking for all the world like what I was--a woman in shock and about to pass out--a firefighter spotted me and immediately asked if it would be okay if he helped me. He himself has two bum knees, but with respectful kindness he slipped an arm around me and helped steady my gait. We made it to the staging area and as I focused on keeping all the black spots in my vision from swarming together and dragging me down, he went for help. While he was gone and I swayed stubbornly on my hands and knees, refusing to pass out, but unable to do more than that, another firefighter noticed me and brought me water. And two minutes later, after I had been checked out and was back on my feet again, another firefighter offered to change my bottle for me. Again, none of those men were in my company, which means that they had no necessary obligation to notice or to care how I was--and yet they did; they noticed, they cared, they took swift and effective action on my behalf.
On Thursday night, Orland Fire responded in mutual aid to a fatal motor vehicle accident. So far two firefighters from my class have checked in on me, because we have been taught that is important to ask someone if they are okay after a night like that.
I had to do the confined spaces maze two times in one day on our second weekend at Academy. When it was time for the second trip through, I was so exhausted and overwhelmed and borderline hysterical with fear just at the thought of going blindfolded back into that terrible, relentlessly small space that I (embarrassingly) started crying--and not just a little. I was crumpled faced and sobbing. I could't stop; my defenses were broken and I was leaking fear. I didn't want to go back in. But my lead instructor told me, firmly, that if I didn't get back in there (NOW) then I wouldn't graduate. And I want to graduate...so I gathered what was left of my inner resolve, I climbed back into that dark maze and my lead instructor came behind me, barking at my heels.
The second time through was harder. I was more tired. More scared. My vision and breathing were more obstructed. I was carrying a heavy axe and had to sound the floor constantly as I crawled and felt my way through the tunnels and turns. They threw more unexpected and terrifying obstacles at me--snagged my bottle and held me down--and I completely lost my shit twice. Once I even begged to be let out.
But they didn't let me out. Eventually I stopped screaming and I overcame all the obstacles and I got myself out. But it was not pretty. And I assumed that I had failed. I was devastated.
That night I barely slept. I had night terrors about the maze all night, and shame and grief about my failure. At the end of the next day, I asked my lead instructor when I would have to try the maze again. Tears sprang to my eyes and my chest constricted in panic just to think of it. But I swallowed that fear, determined to graduate.
"You don't have to do it again," he said.
"But...I didn't do it...?" I said. I was very confused.
"You did do it," he said.
"But...but I cried? And I panicked," I said.
"You overcame some big fears yesterday," he said. "You're too hard on yourself."
"But...you mean I passed? I don't have to do it again?"
"That's right," he said. "You demonstrated adequate proficiency."
I was still very confused. "But...I didn't do it alone...?"
He looked me in my eyes and he asked, "When do we ever do anything alone?"
My eyes teared up again and I swallowed a little sob. "Never," I said. "We never do anything alone."
Beyond any of the hundreds of important skills we are learning--like how to tie a life safety knot or bail out of a burning building on a charged hose line or throw a ladder--it is these other moments that will stay with me forever. As much as I love knowing how to rescue someone down a ladder or how to tie a clove hitch or how to put water on a fire, of all the things I am learning about myself and being a firefighter, these lessons about what it really means to be a firefighter are the most profound.
As a volunteer firefighter in a very small, rural town, I will most likely never use most of what I am learning. I will probably never rescue an unconscious firefighter from a burning basement or be the one to deploy the roof ladder. And I expect after my end test I will promptly forget the names of all the different sprinkler heads.
On its face, of course, firefighting is about putting out fires. But at its heart, firefighting is about so much more than that. Our biggest promise is not that we will put out a fire, it is that Everyone Goes Home. And the only way we can accomplish that is to understand that we are, in each and every moment, from fatal car crashes to training exercises to explosive conflagrations...never doing anything alone.


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Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: Why

April 18, 2016

I've had some demons to face at Fire Academy, not the least of which were my own low opinion of my self and my overwhelming fear of confined spaces.
We returned to our Class A burn site on Saturday for what was one of the most physically grueling experiences of my entire life. I spent a lot of the day wondering why (why-in-God's-name, why?!) was I doing this. I didn't think I could possibly climb or carry one more ladder, swing one more axe, do one more evolution. I just couldn't. And it wasn't even lunch time yet.
But in each moment when I felt like I couldn't, this girl showed up--this girl who is me!--and she waited until I'd finished thinking, "I can't..." and then she stepped into the quiet, tired space inside me and she said, "Yes. Yes, you can. I *know* you can."
And so I did.
I swung a sledgehammer at a concrete wall in full gear wearing a pack in 65 degree direct sun; I used a chainsaw; I climbed and hammered and swung and carried and crawled and I *worked*. And when it came time for my exhausted body to smash through walls with urgency and climb through spaces that were too small for me, I took off my pack (the right way, left side so you can keep breathing) and I passed it through, and I took off my helmet and I passed it through, and I smooshed my firefighter body through each and every hole. They held us down. They set off alarms. They hollered and threw debris and bodies on top of us.
And I got through. My whole company got through.
When my panic swept up like a tsunami, I took a deep breath and dove under it. I got through and I did not cry.
I got through!
And at the end of that day, stinking, bedraggled, bruised, and exhausted, you could not have wiped the shit-eating grin (as my Chief calls it) off my face.
And this is why I do Fire Academy. :-)
In a feat of mighty, mighty fortitude the cadets (and some instructors) of Hancock County Fire Academy spent alllllll day taking turns smashing a concrete wall (10" thick? reinforced with rebar). And you know what? We did it! By the end of the day, that hole was big enough for Marcus Tweedie and a whole company of fire fighters to climb through. This is me during my turn.

I posted this (above) on Facebook, and here's what my Chief said, in response: "I've been having a little difficulty putting this into words, but here goes. Many times speaking with women in particular about volunteering for the fire department, most have some of the same doubts that Naomi did. Few take the first step to see what it's about and what they might have to offer. We don't use force, shame or push them into becoming more than they are capable of. We may offer some encouragement to do more than they think they are capable of. We try to find a job they are comfortable with and give them the support to do it well. All of our jobs are important, some may seem a little more glamorous than others. Sometimes a member will get an interest to do just a little more or want to learn new skills outside of their comfort zone for too many reasons to list. You just never know how much more you want to be involved until you are part of a volunteer department. You watch and learn, and find that "I think I would like to do that". Here is a firefighter who started her journey as a somewhat shy, timid and tentative new member who had many reservations but wanted to drive a fire truck. She found herself in situations beyond her comfort zone and didn't back away. Now she's on the tail end of a mentally and physically exhausting training academy to face the very thing she said she was frightened of, fire. Three years ago I wouldn't have imagined this is where she'd be. Quite the opposite actually. Now we look forward to having yet another qualified interior firefighter in our ranks. Take a chance, see what you can be capable of finding inside yourself by volunteering with your local fire department. Your story might not be as glamorous but your community will benefit none the less."

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Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: Why

April 18, 2016

I've had some demons to face at Fire Academy, not the least of which were my own low opinion of my self and my overwhelming fear of confined spaces.
We returned to our Class A burn site on Saturday for what was one of the most physically grueling experiences of my entire life. I spent a lot of the day wondering why (why-in-God's-name, why?!) was I doing this. I didn't think I could possibly climb or carry one more ladder, swing one more axe, do one more evolution. I just couldn't. And it wasn't even lunch time yet.
But in each moment when I felt like I couldn't, this girl showed up--this girl who is me!--and she waited until I'd finished thinking, "I can't..." and then she stepped into the quiet, tired space inside me and she said, "Yes. Yes, you can. I *know* you can."
And so I did.
I swung a sledgehammer at a concrete wall in full gear wearing a pack in 65 degree direct sun; I used a chainsaw; I climbed and hammered and swung and carried and crawled and I *worked*. And when it came time for my exhausted body to smash through walls with urgency and climb through spaces that were too small for me, I took off my pack (the right way, left side so you can keep breathing) and I passed it through, and I took off my helmet and I passed it through, and I smooshed my firefighter body through each and every hole. They held us down. They set off alarms. They hollered and threw debris and bodies on top of us.
And I got through. My whole company got through.
When my panic swept up like a tsunami, I took a deep breath and dove under it. I got through and I did not cry.
I got through!
And at the end of that day, stinking, bedraggled, bruised, and exhausted, you could not have wiped the shit-eating grin (as my Chief calls it) off my face.
And this is why I do Fire Academy. :-)

I posted this (above) on Facebook, and here's what my Chief said, in response: "I've been having a little difficulty putting this into words, but here goes. Many times speaking with women in particular about volunteering for the fire department, most have some of the same doubts that Naomi did. Few take the first step to see what it's about and what they might have to offer. We don't use force, shame or push them into becoming more than they are capable of. We may offer some encouragement to do more than they think they are capable of. We try to find a job they are comfortable with and give them the support to do it well. All of our jobs are important, some may seem a little more glamorous than others. Sometimes a member will get an interest to do just a little more or want to learn new skills outside of their comfort zone for too many reasons to list. You just never know how much more you want to be involved until you are part of a volunteer department. You watch and learn, and find that "I think I would like to do that". Here is a firefighter who started her journey as a somewhat shy, timid and tentative new member who had many reservations but wanted to drive a fire truck. She found herself in situations beyond her comfort zone and didn't back away. Now she's on the tail end of a mentally and physically exhausting training academy to face the very thing she said she was frightened of, fire. Three years ago I wouldn't have imagined this is where she'd be. Quite the opposite actually. Now we look forward to having yet another qualified interior firefighter in our ranks. Take a chance, see what you can be capable of finding inside yourself by volunteering with your local fire department. Your story might not be as glamorous but your community will benefit none the less."

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Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: I believe you can

May 13, 2016
<<Best. Training. EVER!!!! Sadly, no photos this time, but: first time in structure fire turnout gear, first time running pump truck (yay, physics--thank you Mr. Bradford!), first time riding in tanker truck, first time at pump house, and the crowning glory...first time at the end of a hose!! Screw bungie jumping. You want a thrill? Latch onto the end of a fire hose and lean into a friend. My arms feel like jelly, but I am happy as a clam--a clam that fights fires!>>
Facebook just reminded me that three years ago today, I donned my turnout gear for the first time, went for a ride in our tanker, felt what it's like to send water out of a hose...and apparently, I liked it. (A lot!) :- I suspect this was one of the first appearances of the "shit-eating grin" my chief has come to know me for.
I keep thinking that becoming an interior firefighter came out of left field, but apparently I've been loving it since the very first second.
I keep thinking that that girl--the three-years-ago-living-in-trauma girl--who joined the Orland Fire Department would never believe that I am actually standing here today, a bona fide interior fire fighter with Orland, about to complete Fire Academy and potentially about to become a state certified Fire Fighter I and II.
But...I also know that you don't get what you hope for, you get what you *believe.*
So, at some level, there *must* have been a part of me, even when I was broken and afraid (of everything!), that *believed* this was possible. Isn't that amazing? That underneath all of that life-or-death fear of the daily basics, underneath all of my physical illness, injury, and weakness; underneath all of the trauma; there was a part of me who believed she could rise up and accomplish something that at that moment seemed (to everyone, I'm sure) impossible. (I bet that's the same part of me that got into and through Smith College, when going to college was among the most deeply unlikely things for a girl born into my circumstances to do.)
I was also lucky enough to have a few friendly fire fighters around me, who believed it even better than me. Lt. Dave Sukeforth, chief among them. He was the first to suggest that I should go to the Academy this winter, and the fiercest advocate for getting me in. I have never understood why Dave (or anyone else) thought I could do the Academy...but if Dave hadn't insisted, I'm not sure I ever would have tried. When my own belief was thin on the ground, the belief of others filled in the gaps. If you have a dream my friends, finding and trusting as many pairs of believing eyes as you can manifest is essential. **It's the belief that makes wishes powerful.**
Marcus joined the OFD and sixty days later, he was at the Academy. It took me 2 1/2 years to get to that same starting point, but we did it together. And I think if he hadn't joined the department when he did, I might never have gone. Knowing he would be there made it possible to begin. The timing of his decision to join was a tremendous gift to me. (And when I felt like I might have to quit the Academy because I just couldn't take the abuse any more, he told me that if I had to quit, he would sign up and do the whole thing over again with me, because he knew I could get through.)
But, I didn't quit. I did the opposite of quitting. When faced with a choice between quitting and standing up for myself, I made the radical (for me) choice to stand up for myself and ask for change. Fear + courage = progress.
And now...it's almost over. Tomorrow, the roller coaster reaches its peak and we start zooming down toward the end of fire academy. Two classroom days of haz mat. Followed by two days of OFD obligations (and studying). Then two more days to study as much as possible. Then Friday, another live interior burn, Saturday forestry work (lots of digging in the sun), and Sunday, our grand finale...our Open Day, when we'll run through the practical end test (where we try to remember every single thing we've learned to do)...and then my classmates and teachers will roast some meat for eating...and the next day, Monday, I'll teach at Acadia and then sit for my State FF I & II exam...
...three years and ten days after I (very enthusiastically) first donned my turnout gear. :-)
If you have a dream, listen not to the constant radio chatter of voices broadcasting reasons you can't; especially don't listen to the ones inside your own head. Listen instead to that one faithful voice inside you that says, "Yes. I believe you can."


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Tales from Rural Maine: Au revoir, Luna

June 7, 2016

Oof. Migraine. And my blood pressure was down to 105/46 and 92/62 today. I told my doctor I was light-headed, weak and tired, but he insisted it's a sign of good conditioning. Also? My poor little cell phone (Luna!) got smashed. She hung in their for a while, sending texts that were shaped like haikus and worded like riddles, but tonight, she became disoriented flipped her screen upside down and now refuses to give me access to anything but the Interweb, which is the only thing I don't want from her. A new phone arrives tomorrow, but if you try to text or call my cell phone before the new phone is set up, Luna will likely take your secrets to the grave. Au revoir, Luna! It was a real pleasure teaching your dictionary words like "shitbag" and "polyamory" and "Namaste." I never understood your constant refusal to let me type the word "totally" or why you always changed "Thanks," to "Tanks," or "you're" to "yore" or "this" to "thus." No one says "yore" or "thus" or "tanks" in conversation, Luna. But it's okay. I liked that you never surrendered your mysteries to me. It's important to be who you are, especially when it goes against the masses. Tanks for all the good times. Let "yore" freak flag fly! I'll (totally!) see you on the other side!

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Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: Fire truck you, BMI believers!

I just want to pause here and send out a big "fuck you" (or "fire truck you!" in cleaner parlance) to anyone who is attached to the idea that having a high BMI (body mass index) means that you are in a "physically unhealthy condition."
Even though I lost a little fat and gained a lot of muscle and my scale at home says I lost 12 pounds training to earn my black helmet (and my doctor's scale says I lost four pounds), the body you see here is a body that is still considered clinically obese. It is also a body with a blood pressure that is generally around 92/62; it has healthy blood sugars; and a heart so healthy its cardiologist says it will live a long and healthy life. This body with all its curves and contours, is a body that can carry a 200-pound man down a ladder. It can run and jump and climb and do yoga. It can endure!
If you are thinking (or being told) that because you have a round body or a high BMI, regardless of your gender, picture this body and know that if it can swing a sledgehammer at a concrete wall with success, so can you!
Know that *joyfulness* is more powerful and less measurable than any number you can see on a scale. Know that finding joy and moving your body in ways that give you satisfaction and pleasure are your inalienable rights. And that you are *desirable* and powerful and sexy and alive, just as you are!
Instead of focusing on labels (like "obese") and instead of focusing on numbers, let that shit go, and focus on *joy*. Joy will boost your immune system. Joy will inspire and strengthen you. Joy will make your heart healthier. Find your thing--do your thing! Move your body and *enjoy* living in it! Right now. Not five or ten or twenty pounds from now. Right the-fire-truck now!
<Individuals with a BMI of 30-34.99 are in a physically unhealthy condition, which puts them at risk for serious ilnesses such as heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, gall bladder disease, and some cancers. This holds especially true if you have a larger than recommended Waist Size. These people would benefit greatly by modifying their lifestyle. Ideally, see your doctor and consider reducing your weight by 5-10 percent. Such a weight reduction will result in considerable health improvements.>>


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Yoga Tales from Rural Maine: Bedtime

On Thursday night, I taught my first Yoga with Naomi bedtime yoga class to the inpatient kids at Acadia Hospital in Bangor. Acadia Hospital serves children and adults with mental health needs, and these children all live in the hospital. One of them had been there for three months.
None of the children were forced to come. They each chose on their own. There were six children, four girls and two boys. The youngest was four years old; the oldest were sixteen. Two of them were dressed in scrubs. One had an arm striped with cuts from wrist to elbow. One of them, the littlest, didn't want to take off his Batman flip-flops. I said that was okay. I said everything was okay.
For 45 minutes, these children had peace and kindness. They were brave and curious. Some were silent and big-eyed. Others tested the boundaries. Everything they did or said or asked for or felt during our time together was okay with me. Everything.
There was no other staff in the room. Just me and these kids. I met each challenge with softness, with sincerity. "I am here to help you keep yourself safe on your mat," I said. "You don't have to do anything you don't want to do. And I will do my best to notice if something doesn't seem right for you, but you are the only one who can really know if a movement or a moment is okay. Notice how you feel. And stop or change or ask for help if something doesn't feel right. That's your practice."
The most oppositional child, a nine-year-old girl, tall for her age, pushed back a lot. She complained about the brand of crayons; she expressed resistance, vocally and with her body throughout the first half of the class. And everything she did was okay. Everything. I met all of her resistance with warmth and kindness.
About half-way through, she began to soften. She interrupted my instruction to ask, "Do you know pretzel pose?"
"I don't think I know that one," I said. "Would you like to teach me?"
And she and another girl jumped up and taught me and the rest of the class "pretzel pose," which is a kids' version of Eagle Pose.
"Wonderful!" I said. "I love that one. Do you know any more?"
And they taught us two different kinds of pranayama (breathwork), which they know by other names.
"That's so good!," I said. "You know some beautiful yoga. Do you have another yoga teacher?"
"No," she said. "We learned in Coping Skills."
Yoga is being woven into the lives of these children at the hospital, not just by me, but by other practitioners; even when it is not called "yoga," yoga skills help kids (and all of us) to cope, to heal, to be.
Outside the room, other children were suffering. There was screeching, screaming, an interminable cry of anguish that went on and on and on and on.
But inside our room, it was more quiet and safe. It was peaceful and creative and fun.
"I'm here to help you feel peaceful at bedtime," I said.
"Bedtime is hard," said a nine-year-old boy. "Because that's when the bad things happened..."
My heart clenched. Bedtime is when the bad things happened. To this sweet, brave, bright, outgoing child. With painted fingernails and an endearing smile. The bad things happened at bedtime. And now he is here.
I took a deep breath. Breathing helps. But I never let my gaze leave his eyes. There are no words for a moment like that. So I made an instinctive, warm noise, a sort of compassionate hum. And I nodded. "I am here," I said. "I am here with you...would you like to make a bedtime wish?"
And he said, yes, he would. Everyone said yes, they would like to make a bedtime wish. I gave everyone a stuffed animal, a Beanie Baby, to hold--this little boy chose a ram because he enjoyed it's articulated legs. Each child also had two butterfly scarves to use during practice, and he wrapped his ram safely in one scarf, swaddling and snuggling it.
The kids got comfortable and safe on their mats. Gentle music played. I talked to them. And I moved around the room, inviting each child to close their eyes, to breath, and to focus on their wish. Then I spritzed "magic bedtime spray," (lavender water) around them (first asking permission each time) and then they opened their eyes and blew "pixie dust" out of my palm, to seal the wish, and then I sprinkled pixie dust on their resting bodies.
Every single child made a wish. Even the teenagers.
Before she left, the little girl who had been so oppositional in the beginning asked me, "Did I disrupt this group?"
"No, darling," I said, with full sincerity. "You were just right."
She smiled a big smile and glittering slightly from the pixie dust, she took away all the gifts I had given her: a picture to color, a brand new box of crayons, even the name tag she made for herself out of construction paper...and, I hope, the gift of a little more peace and safety at bedtime.

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Sunday, May 29, 2016

Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: The Fire Swamp

I had a hard day today. It was the last day of Fire Academy, and in some ways, it was the worst one, which is really saying something. It was the fifth of the last six weekends in a row that we had training, and the third of an unprecedented three-day training weekend. To say I was running on empty is to say that the Titanic hit an ice cube.

What is the word to describe indescribable fatigue of body and mind? Also? My blisters have blisters. Oh, wait. Not any more. They all ripped off today. But my bruises definitely have bruises. And my exhausted self was taken by surprise by a confined spaces challenge first thing this morning, which did not go well for me, and I never really recovered. As a result, my day involved several rather severe crying jags, which always leaves me feeling raw, embarrassed, and pathetic. But several very kind and generous firefighters said and did some things that lifted my tired spirit enough that I was able to arrive at a moment just now where I realized that I can think of today--and perhaps Fire Academy, in general--as being like a journey through the Fire Swamp. As in, after falling into the Lightning Sand and almost dying, Princess Buttercup says to Westley, "We'll never succeed, we may as well die here!"
But Westley says to Princess Buttercup, "No, no! We have already succeeded. I mean, what are the Three Terrors of the Fire Swamp? One? The Flame Spurt. No problem. There's a popping sound preceding each, we can avoid that. Two, the Lightning Sand, and you were clever enough to discover that, so in the future, we can avoid that too..."
See, after this weekend, I know that a career in wildland fires is not for me. That's handy knowledge. (Hanging around with forestry guys/gals is like going to the zoo, by the way--they are a totally different breed from us structural guys/gals! It's fascinating to watch them, with their lean bodies and their beards and their green pants. Well, not a zoo, more like...a forest. A mythic forest full of animals who genuinely like to dig fire lines for ten hours at a stretch for days at a time in the middle of nowhere in intense heat, and often deadly conditions. Weirdly, they think it's odd that *we* want to go into burning buildings.)
Second, I think it's clear that I don't have a future in search and rescue...and rather than feel bad about that, I can be pleased that I was clever enough to discover it, so that I can avoid that in the future.
That really just leaves Rodents of Unusual Size. And I'm pretty sure they don't exist.

You can watch this film clip on YouTube here.



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Tales from Rural Maine: Success

On May 22nd, 1994, my Smith College classmates and I stood in the hot sun in our black robes and we graduated. Then our lives diverged. We forged ahead. We gained, we lost, we suffered, we prevailed, we learned, we grew. We got older.
On May 22nd, 2016, (barring unforeseen disasters) I will complete my training as a (potentially) state-certified interior firefighter. Nothing in the whole wide world could have seemed more improbable to me on May 22nd, 1994. Nothing. I know for certain that the young "me" who stood in the sun that day twenty-two years ago, never, ever dreamed of moving back to her tiny home town in Maine and becoming a volunteer firefighter (or a yoga teacher, for that matter). If time travel were possible, I would put on my turnout gear, hop in my DeLorean and step out under the Emerson Arch in front of her just to see her face.
I have imagined doing this--traveling back to see her. And at first, I thought she (the young me) would *never* believe it. She would never in a million years be able to comprehend that she could or would ever do such a thing. I imagined that she would look at this 43-year-old fire fighting-yoga teaching me and just feel bewildered and frightened.
But then...I remembered. That girl? That young woman? As frightened and alone and overwhelmed as she was? As certain as she was that her path lay somewhere along the lines of motherhood and writing or something academic...despite all that, what I see in my mind's eye when I imagine traveling back in time to show her this fire-fighting-yoga-me...? I see her taking it in, processing it, and then...I see her smile! I see a look of shock and then a radiant smile that spreads across her face, dawning, as she realizes the awesomeness of the potential inside her. That girl I was, she didn't really know how big she was *inside*--and I love to imagine that if I could go back and show her, that she would *believe* it. And she would smile.
That girl--that young woman--I was, she is 43 years old now. And a PTSD sufferer. I have a genetic disorder that leaves me bruised, exhausted, and heavy. It makes my joints ache terribly. The doctors told me it was untreatable and incurable. And yet here I am. I'm teaching yoga. And I'm training to be a firefighter alongside young men who could bench press me if they wanted to. Half of them are young enough to be my children. And I go toe-to-toe. I hold my own. (I cry sometimes when I'm stuck in confined spaces, but I hold my own!)
(I think I may qualify for a spot on Marissa Walsh's next panel on "Not Quite What I Was Expecting.") smile emoticon
We're talking a lot--our alumnae community--these days about the definition of success. I think that mine comes down to this: Success is, more than anything, about creativity. If you have created solutions, opportunities, healing, growth, art, relationships, families, solitude, peace, progress, forgiveness, gratitude, laughter, or conversations--if you have *created* something, anything that matters to you (or to others), then I think you have succeeded. And you are succeeding if you are seeking and savoring joy. And perhaps, more than anything, you have succeeded if the "you" that is living now would make the "you" from May 22, 1994 smile as she realizes how very, very powerful, how very, very *big* you really and truly are.
Namaste, my fellow Smithies! (And remember to check your smoke detectors.) 


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Yoga and Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: Freedom

For the last seven months, I have not gone anywhere without my Fire Fighter Skills textbook and workbook and my practice rope. And then more recently, I also brought along 200+ flash cards. I've studied in doctor's offices, my car, waiting rooms, guest rooms, other people's kitchens, at three separate fire departments...And almost every morning, I set my kitchen timer for an hour and studied before I did anything else in my day.
We took our pro-board exams on Monday night, so until I learn whether I passed them, I no longer need to carry these things around and bend my days around the need to learn more about fire suppression systems or hazardous materials or forestry or chemistry or ventilation or any other fire-service-related thing.
It feels incredible--but also really, really weird--to be walking and driving and being in the world without my red backpack full of fire fighter study materials. It's like getting a cast off. Or losing 20 pounds. I feel lighter...but it's also funny-feeling, disorienting. Like, I know things are alright, but at the same time, I keep feeling like something's missing.
I'm so excited to have that elusive creature called "free time" return to my life! At least temporarily...I still need to prep for the practical skills test, but first? I'm mowing my gosh-darned lawn!

My big friend, the Jones & Bartlett Fire Fighter Skills workbook, third edition.

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Yoga and Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: Curious

Yesterday was my first really free Saturday since I signed up for the Hancock County Fire Academy in *November.* There was no specific need to train or to study hanging over my head; no serious bruises or exhaustion to recover from. (The remaining Academy bruises are small and not really sore unless you press on them. They've slowly gone from purple and blue to green and brown and now they are fading away.) For the first time in seven months I had no nagging sense that I was way behind (hopelessly behind) at something important. I just had a *day*. A sunny, beautiful DAY all to myself! And gosh, it was grand.
I had coffee in the sun with friends.
I picked lilacs.
I read a whole issue of Organic Gardening magazine while lying in my hammock.
I decided that my largest ornamental garden will be entirely made of circles this year! And I went to work creating it.
I planted allllll of my potato starters (thanks to FF Rabs' rototilling work on Friday!) And I noticed that I have *a lot* more stamina and a greater tolerance for bending over and digging in the hot sun after Fire Academy. Heck, I could've planted that whole garden wearing full PPE and SCBA. So, that's awesome!
I watched *two* movies!
I did my physical therapy and my daily practice.
I put on a sundress and ate a fruit juice popsicle in the sun.
I went for a walk.
I watched a lovely sunset over a field and not a single bug bothered me.
I folded laundry.
I talked on the phone to my friend Alice for *seven hours*!!! (There's just so much catching up to do!)
I drank a nice, cold boozy orange soda.
And I stayed up laaaaaate snuggling with Jasper on my new couch watching a terrible disaster movie (my favorite!) without any concern for what it would cost me the next day. It was heaven.
YUM. I *loved* my free Saturday.
But also? I kind of wanted to read more about aqueous film-forming foam (and the other fire fighting foams) because that's one area that I really still don't feel solid on. And also Class B fires. Some of the exam questions confused me and it's stuff I'd really like to know. I wanted to learn more; and not because I *have* to. I've completed my requirements for graduation; I've taken my exams, and there's even a decent chance I passed...and it wasn't just because studying became such a huge part of my daily routine. I wanted to study because I wanted to learn...
I often teach my students that curiosity is among our greatest gifts; I teach them that curiosity is the remedy to fear (and also shame and other low-vibration emotions). If you can get curious about your own life, you can break open, break free; if you get curious about flying, you can fly. But first, you have to get curious.
When the work clears out and the day is your own, where your mind and your heart and your body want to go tells you a lot about your self. Your choices are your priorities.
On my free day, I chose friends and fresh air and gardening and relaxation and comfort and conversation and coffee and happiness and exercise and a sunset and stories and lilacs and popsicles and snuggling. And I resisted the urge to pick up my textbook again...because it felt important to just *rest* for heaven's sakes! But I'm glad to know that even though this was an important time for resting--and a beautiful day to give myself a break--I am *curious* about the work of fire fighting (and other things). And this curiosity, for me, equals love.


(This photo by the way is what happened when I got curious in Costa Rica about whether my yoga friends and I could make "love" on the beach with our bodies. The answer is yes, we can. )

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Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Tales from Rural Maine: The definition of progress

When I started with the Orland Fire Department, I was afraid of everything. Quite literally. One year before I joined, I had been attacked by five idiots at a church before yoga one day, and for the next six weeks, I didn't leave the house unaccompanied. The church was so concerned for my safety, they provided an escort at my next week's class, and then they changed the locks and strongly suggested I never let myself be alone on the premises.

I slept with all the lights on inside and out for almost a month. My neighbors organized a 24-hour watch because there was a realistic fear that my anonymous attackers would come back to do more harm. I quit teaching yoga. I quit doing everything. I huddled inside my house all spring. All summer. I was afraid even to go in the yard. I was covered in stress-induced hives for almost a year. My joints ached. I didn't socialize. I barely spoke. I didn't sleep--and if I did, I had night terrors for the first eight months. I nearly committed suicide three times.

The police would not give me or my attorney the names of my attackers, who got off with a disorderly conduct charge because I was too frightened to press assault charges. I had no idea who most of them were. They were nameless. And they were terrifying. I saw the face of the woman who led that attack in my nightmares every night and I lived in abject fear that she or her friends would turn up again, somewhere, when I was alone. So if I was alone, I was behind a locked door--or two. If the doorbell rang, I hid.

I worked really hard to heal, to recover from the trauma, to get some semblance of self-esteem back, but as anyone with PTSD knows...the work is hard and long and sometimes it seems, we will never get well.

Even when I started going out in the world again, I lacked a sense of safety. And then one day, one of my most dedicated students, who also happened to be the assistant fire chief at the all-volunteer Orland Fire Department, suggested I use the training room at the OFD to teach a yoga class. It felt overwhelming to go out into the world again and teach. It felt unlikely that a fire department could be a comfortable home for yoga. But something inside me said, "Yes. Go. See."

So I went. I saw. I met Bobby Conary and Mary Lou Conary. And that space? It spoke to me. It spoke of kindness and belonging and of the possibility that maybe I could be okay again one day. I took a gigantic leap of faith, and I started teaching yoga at the Orland Fire Department.

Slowly, over the course of a year, the kindness and selfless service, the generosity and togetherness, the sweet, amazing courage that infuse that space calmed and settled my nerves. The nightmares stopped. The pain eased. I began to feel more brave and settled and strong. I developed a crush on the fire trucks. And then one day, the Chief, who had also become my student, said, "Why don't you join?"

I laughed. Me?? I'm afraid of everything. I thought he was kidding. But he was serious.

I told him I was too afraid.

"What are you afraid of?" he asked.

And I told him, "Two things really, fire and having to pee! What on earth will I do if I'm stranded for hours in turnout gear and I have to pee?!"

He laughed. And he explained that there were lots of things to do at the fire department that didn't involve being near fire. And as for the second thing, he said, "We have special equipment for that." And he took me to the back of one of the fire trucks and rummaged around in a metal compartment, moving big heavy tools with names I didn't know, until finally he pulled something out.

"This is what we use for that," he said, grinning, and he held out a roll of toilet paper. I laughed. 

It would've made all the sense in the world to say, "No," to joining a fire department, but something inside me said, "Yes. Go. See."

"Okay," I said. "I'm in."

When you apply for membership at the Orland Fire Department, someone nominates you at a monthly meeting. Then for the next month, you can attend weekly trainings as an observer to get a sense for the work and so that people can get to know you. After a month, they vote.

At the very first training following my nomination, I was about to get in a fire truck (my very first time!); I was feeling so brave and special and happy about this new chapter. And then I remembered that I had left my gloves in my car. I went out to get them...and almost ran smack dab into the two people I feared most in the world, the two people I had not seen in person since the day they attacked me almost exactly one year to the day before. I had seen them only in my nightmares. And it was them. They were there. The woman and one of the men (her husband, it turns out) who, along with their three friends, had attacked me.

She had joined the department just a few months prior to me.

Because I was never told her name, my students did not know her name, either, which meant that no one in the department could connect that human being with what had been done to me. I like to think that if they knew, the members of the OFD wouldn't have voted her in...

I'll skip all the stuff that happened next. How impossible, how terrifying, how rotten it was to serve with her for two years. How I refused to quit, even when all of my PTSD symptoms came back. I'll skip all that for now and I will tell you this: I have faced every single one of my absolute worst fears since I joined this department. I have done them one at a time. I began with learning how to step into the woods and pee without soiling my turnout gear at a structure fire. And I moved on to walking on roofs and holding a hose directed at a burning building and responding to an accident where a young man's broken legs were pinned under his car.

Every time, as I am about to do something terrifying--maybe it's going out in a little rubber boat to look for a man's body in the world's scariest bay; maybe it's going out in the middle of the night and driving a fire truck to the spot on the highway where a woman laid down in traffic; maybe it's getting behind the wheel of a fire truck in the first place; maybe it's putting on an ice rescue suit and walking out on the ice toward open water, knowing you are going to fall through; maybe it's just simply being there, with the person who triggers my trauma (over and over and over and over again). Whatever it is, I ask myself each time, "Is this okay?" and each time, something inside me has said, even when my body trembled and my head ached and my stomach churned, "Yes. Go. See."

So I continue to go. I continue to see. I continue to learn and make mistakes and get scared and come back to try again. My crush on the fire trucks has become a full blown love affair.

Which is how it has come to pass that, as of today, I am now officially enrolled in the Hancock County Fire Academy. If I graduate and pass my end test, I will be a real and true bonafide interior firefighter. If you stand outside your burning house screaming, "Save my baby!" I might actually be able to go inside and help.

I begin in a few weeks. It will take six months. It will be the hardest, most grueling, most insanely difficult thing I have ever done. Godwilling, I will not washout (although half the candidates do). Godwilling, my middle-aged body will not fail me. Godwilling, when I am scared, I will do what my first captain has taught me, "Stop. Breathe. Think." Godwilling, I will continue to do what I consider my "yoga-firefighting practice." It consist of three parts: "Show up. Stay calm. Be strong." If you do those three things consistently and in order, I have found, you can respond to anything (with anyone).

It's been two and a half years since I joined the Orland Fire Department. When I began, I was in the worst stages of PTSD. But what I've discovered is that Post Traumatic Stress Disorder does not have to be the end of the line. There is also something called Post Traumatic Growth. It is "positive change experienced as a result of the struggle with a major life crisis or a traumatic event." It is based on the idea that human beings can be changed by their encounters with life challenges, sometimes in radically positive ways. If it hadn't been for that traumatic attack, would I ever have found my way to the extraordinary gifts of volunteer fire service? I'm not thankful for the attack. But to imagine my life without the Orland Fire Department is like imagining my life without joy, companionship, or purpose. I am thankful for the tremendous growth that has blossomed out of that trauma.

Right now, as I prepare to face the Academy, the thing I am most afraid of is being in confined spaces on an airpack. My old fear of my attackers (or of fire or of an uncomfortably full bladder!) seem almost silly in comparison to the knee-buckling horror this situation elicits in me. And...it's mandatory. One really cannot be much of an interior firefighter if one cannot keep one's composure when pinned in turnout gear in a small, dark space breathing on air. So. What does a firefighting yogi do in this situation?

She asks for help...and she practices.

Last night, my first captain was kind enough to take me and Marcus Tweedie who will be joining me at the Academy, through some of the tougher drills we'll face. I did okay with everything. I learned to swing a sledgehammer. I climbed a ladder up to a roof while breathing on air. I'd never done either of these things before. And I was scared of both of them. But, when it came to the confined spaces...for the first time in the history of my experience in first response...I almost cried. I was *that* afraid.

But here is the definition of progress: When I couldn't do the hardest, scariest, smallest space, we tried another one, less scary. And I did okay, but I was still really anxious. So my captain, who is a professional firefighter, as well as a volunteer with us (and a really, really good teacher), took another tack. He had me lie down in a smallish space, but one I could stand up in, if I had to, and he turned out the lights. It was total darkness. "Now just breathe," he shouted through his mask, "and imagine you are in an ice rescue suit, floating on the Narramissic River."

Do you see?

I have come *so* far that the thing we can use to *soothe* me is the day I put on an ice rescue suit for the first (and only) time, and walked out on the ice toward open water. I walked until the ice cracked. And I made a mistake, and fell through all of a sudden, face first. Ice water went up my nose. Ice water went down my suit. And I was stuck for an instant, wrong side up under water in a mostly frozen river. It's hard to right yourself quickly when your bottom half is boosted by a rescue suit's buoyancy!

But I came up. I came up shocked and spluttering. I came up *smiling.* I felt calm. I *loved* ice water rescue! I loved it. You get to swim! In a river! In winter! Before we began, I was so scared I thought I might pass out...but I asked myself, and my Self answered, "Yes. Go. See." And now?

Now, ice rescue is the thing we use to *soothe* me when I am trying to learn how to stay calm doing the scariest thing yet. If that isn't Post Traumatic Growth, I don't know what is.

My friend Kirse Granat May says that there should be a movie about my yoga/firefighting. (I like to imagine Julia Roberts gets to play me.) But perhaps I'll start by writing a book about it. And if I do, I expect I'll want to dedicate it to Julia Gray, who first suggested I teach at the Orland Fire Department; and to Bobby Conary, who, as Chief, welcomed Yoga with Naomi into his station, and then stepped onto a mat himself, and then welcomed me into his company; and to John Gray, who taught me how to drive a firetruck with so much confidence that I passed my EVOC practical on the first try (while three of the people who attacked me that day at the church looked on); and to David Sukeforth Jr., who had the somewhat insane idea that I could do the Academy and become a Firefighter I and II, and then went to extraordinary lengths to get me into this next session. He has never wavered in his belief that I can do this, which I find remarkable (and confusing...me? Really??).

But as another writer/yogi who actually *did* get to have Julia Roberts play her in a movie about her life wrote, "You don't get what you wish for, you get what you believe." So...I'm gonna go ahead and believe that Dave and John and Bobby (and the other members of the OFD who have said so) are right when they say they believe I *can* do this.

And when I ask my Self? Even after the scary confined-spaces-almost-crying practice run?

God bless her. She still says, "Yes. Go. See."

Photo courtesy of the Ellsworth American.



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