Friday, September 30, 2016

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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Tales from Rural Maine: Cyclists' Eyes

I like to listen to audiobooks when I'm driving. This morning, I was listening to "The Girl on a Train" on my Kindle when the narrator described the windows of a home as being like "cyclists' eyes."
Her voice is perfect for narration. British and appropriately evocative, she performs the writer's story with a grace that allows my mind to flow along with it effortlessly, like I'm floating gently on an inner tube down a river in the sun. But when she said the windows were "like cyclists' eyes," I fetched up. My tube got snagged on a rock. She kept going, the river of words flowing along, but my mind wasn't listening any more; it was caught up on that simile. Cyclists' eyes? What was I meant to understand about cyclists' eyes?
I could tell by the way she dropped her voice and slowed down as she said it that it was meant to convey some level of seriousness. There was a sense implied in her tone that cyclists' eyes might portend a certain element of doom; the tone of "like cyclists' eyes" contained forboding.
As the story carried on without me, I spun around in an eddy, trying to detach myself from the rock of confusion that had prevented me from carrying on, but I was unable to proceed until I grasped the meaning of "cyclists' eyes."
The writer used this simile so plainly--without any further explanation--and she is a good writer, so I knew that collectively, as readers, we were meant to understand automatically what this simile meant. I felt the insecurity of incomprehension in the face of a clear assumption of easy understanding, but I was unwilling to give up and move on. I was certain I could puzzle it out, if only I focused hard enough.
Cyclists' eyes. What do I know about cyclists' eyes?
I pictured a middle-aged man, sinewy and tan, wearing an absurdly bright lycra outfit meant to convey, I think, confidence and conviction about his status as a member of a certain athletic club (cyclists' are a breed of their own), but which also, unwittingly, I think inherently conveyed a certain vulnerability and fear; those bright colors, it has always seemed to me, are meant to announce the presence of the rider, in the hope that he won't be struck down by passing automobiles. They are a plea for mercy and an announcement of strength all in one. Cyclists possess the grit of an endurance athlete--strength, stamina, courage--paired with, to American eyes, the patently silly flash of skin-clinging bike shorts and an absurd shirt in a blinding array of neon colors; both masculine and anti-masculine all in one. But what about their eyes...?
Then, I remembered! The writer is British. And in Britain, cycling is more mainstream, less of a quirky alterna-sport and perhaps more understood by the population? Perhaps the collective mind of the British readership understands that cyclists eyes are...?
My mind struggled to find the right gear. A ten-speed clicking through it's range, unable to engage as it faced a steepening hill. I pictured a cyclists' eyes, glazed, grimly determined, fixed on the road in front of him, facing the hills and the valleys--the deadly traffic and heat and wind and effort--with a firm resolve. Surely, this is what is meant by that house's windows looking like cyclists' eyes? Glazed and possessed of a grim determination?
That must be it.
I heard the clicking and spinning in my mind, as my thoughts continued to shift through gears, trying on this notion--windows glazed and possessed of a grim determination. Did that fit the scene she was describing? Was this gear the right one to get me up this hill of incomprehension?
Meanwhile, the story carried on. Having at least partly solved the puzzle, my mind tuned back into the narrator and I became aware that I had been missing important plot points as my gears spun around. I was also aware that my answer to the question, "What on earth are cyclists' eyes?" was both right and not quite right at all. I felt frustration in my belly as I realized how lost I was in the current plot points of the story, all for want of the ability to understand immediately what she meant about those windows and their eyes!
Because I was driving and listening on my Kindle, I would have to stop altogether and pull over, if I wanted to rewind until I found the point where I'd lost my traction. I didn't want to do that. If my thoughts could've articulated themselves, they would've said, "Grrrr." Their emoticon was a frowny face.
And then...it clicked.
"Sightless eyes."
The upstairs windows were like *sightless* eyes! (!!!) I hadn't misunderstood, I'd misheard.
I sighed, returning to my inner tube in the river of the story, now freed up to carry on; feeling somewhat hopelessly behind, but in my current circumstance unable to do anything about it.
I sighed again, and fixed my gaze on the miles ahead...with cyclists' eyes.


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Fire Fighting Tales from Rural Maine: This Matters

This Matters
Among the mantras that most of the adults in my family drove into my emotional body as I was maturing was this humdinger: "You're too competitive."
My mother, especially, shamed me for my desire to excel, to be the best, to discover excellence, to win! (She is, by the way, the second most ruthlessly competitive person I have ever known, with the exception of some professional/Division I collegiate/Olympic athlete friends.)
It's important to note that as much as I hungered to win, I was (generally) never a sore loser, a cheater, or a mean winner. And I was capable of feeling genuinely happy if I'd done my absolute level best, but still lost. And I truly (truly!) loved working as a team. That part's important, because misdirected and imbalanced, competitiveness, I suppose, can be an ugly and damaging character trait in anyone. But that wasn't the case with me.
The thing about being a child--perhaps especially, a girl child--is that you believe what your parents tell you, especially if they teach it to you over and over, in words and in practice, and if society seems to reinforce it. If your parents tell you that you're stupid or lazy or fat or too sensitive, you'll spend the whole rest of your life working to overcome and correct those negative self-beliefs--or just believing them and living from them!
I don't know why parents do this. I expect it's because parents are human beings, and human beings make mistakes, have flaws, and fight against their own demons, even if they are parents (especially if they are parents?).
The thing about Truth is that you can feel it in your body. Truth has a feeling and children know it. Truth always feels good, even if it's a painful truth. It feels clean. It lines up. And my body always knew--always!--that what I was being taught about myself being "too competitive" was wrong; it hurt in a really messy way. It created inner conflict. It felt like a lie. It went against the Truth of me. But without any outlet for that pain and conflict; without a way to dialog or frame the experience of receiving a painful message and feeling the feeling "This isn't true," I was left in a state of tumultuous self-loathing. A cycle of achievement and shame that just spun and spun and spun. I developed a fear of success--and an equal fear of failure. So much so that, in my early twenties, when the editor of Life magazine sent me a personal email, praising an essay I had written, I didn't write back, didn't tell anyone, and immediately lost it. Starting from adolescence, I spent more than twenty years in an almost constant battle against severe depression and anxiety as a direct result of this false mantra (and other damaging and traumatic things from childhood).
Dr. Christiane Northrup writes in the "Motherhood: Bonding with your Baby" chapter of "Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom" (which I highly recommend you buy and then *actually* read, not just use as a door stop), that "It makes sense...that girls would get moody around the age of twelve or so. They can see what's coming." She cites Naomi Woolf who makes a case in her book "Fire with Fire" that all girls are born with a strong will to power that eventually gets turned inward by what she calls, "the dragons of niceness."
"Thwarting their innate desire to excel and win can make girls very unhappy at this age," writes Northrop, "and can cause them to turn on each other, too. If girls are socialized to be passive and self-sacrificing, their powerful spirits don't like it."
One of the very best things I ever did was get myself into Smith College. As stressful as it was to constantly be trying to figure out how to pay for it, I relaxed into the experience of being free to be *excellent.* Not everyone who attends Smith is competitive, but they are, without a doubt, the smartest, most excellent, hard-working, clever, fierce, academically devoted women on the planet. And in many ways, I thrived among them. But at the same time, even in an environment full of female strivers, I still struggled with the fear of failure/fear of success and the damaging mantra, "You're too competitive."
My body was always rankled by this so-called "truth" from my family. My girl self endured so very much painful shaming! I lived in constant conflict with my desire to be excellent--and my ability to be so--as it pressed up against the sharp judgement of the adults in my life. I was the only freshman to make a varsity sport in high school. I was All Conference as a sophomore, all Eastern Maine as a Junior, All-State as a senior. I was recruited by colleges. And I never attended a single sports banquet, because I was too frightened, ashamed, and uncomfortable to go.
But now, in middle age, through yoga practice and long years of attention to personal growth, I can say that I am more at peace with my competitive side. I still try to hide it, hold it back, shame it, apologize for it, but I am more able to recognize it's value, too. Without the gift of my competitiveness, I never would have gotten into Smith--or gotten through. I wouldn't have graduated with latin honors or been published in the New York Times when I was only 21. And most recently, I wouldn't have uncovered the joys of fire service--or gotten through Fire Academy and passed my Fire Fighter I/I exams--without being competitive. I honestly think that without my inherent competitive drive, I wouldn't have survived. It's that essential.
Now, one of the things I do is work with people who have experienced trauma. I teach the children at Acadia Hospital and also a women's trauma group there. I teach people who have undergone cancer treatment and diagnosis or other serious physical traumas. Yoga is one of the ways we can teach children (and adults) how to trust what their bodies are telling them. It's one of the ways we can recognize Truth. It's one of the ways we can heal.
If you are raising a girl--or have influence over one or more in your life--I implore you to watch what you say and how you live around them. As Dr. Northrup says, "Young women need to be cherished, honored, encouraged, and praised for their gifts."
And I echo that. Even if their gift is a competitive drive to win--honor it, cherish it, teach them to expand it with grace.
I was born into a world before Roe v. Wade, before Title IX; I was in middle school before women were allowed to run marathons! So many barriers to happiness, excellence, and joy have come down just in my little lifetime because somewhere some woman (or little girl) stuck to her guns and allowed herself to get in the ring, to compete, to fight for what she wanted.
As you make your choices this election season, I hope you will consider delivering to this nation its first woman president. Do it for me. Do it for your daughter. Do it for your great grandmother and your niece and your best friend. Do it for you!
And as you make your choices about how to treat the children in your life, I hope you will tell them to do everything in their power to be happy and fulfilled; I hope that you will take them to their sports banquets and give them a safe place to share when they receive praise or experience victories. How you live and love yourself--how you live and love the women and girls in your life? It really matters. It matters to them; it matters to me; it matters to every generation. You have the power to change our collective mantras about women. You can shift from shaming them for fierceness, competitiveness, size, or desire; you can change their mantra and yours to let them know they matter; their Truth matters; being exactly who they are, fully: this matters. It matters on the smallest and the grandest of scales. Don't ask them to be less than they are; encourage them to be all that they can be. And if that means fighting to win? Then so be it.

Wielding a sledgehammer like a champ at Fire Academy. Photo courtesy of Fire Chicks photography.

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The extraordinary triumph of excellence in sport in an atmosphere of peace between nations

My passionate Olympic viewer tip for today (and every Olympiad day) is to watch coverage from other countries, if you have access. The Canadians, in particular, offer the sweetest, most good-natured, enthusiastic, authentic, thorough, sincere, fair, compassionate informed well-rounded coverage you can find on TV. It's a beautiful balance to the American coverage, which leans toward controversy, judgement, jingoism, and dunderheaded anchors who became jaded two decades ago and who enjoy stirring up a controversy more than they enjoy the extraordinary triumph of excellence in sport in an atmosphere of peace between nations.
There's also a lot to love about the American coverage, of course--I mean, Tara Lapinski and Johnny Weir are a joy; it's like Queer Olympics for the Straight Guy. And Tom Brokaw? Come on. That's good stuff, always. And you wanna hear a smarty pants kick ass athlete? Listen to any woman cyclist discuss her race strategy before the race; if you like smart, kick-ass women athletes (and who doesn't, you ape??), you'll be utterly smitten before she's even half-way through. For example, "Wow! That was...comprehensive...!" said the cycling commentator to American cyclist Kristin Armstrong after she answered a question about what she learned by watching the men's peloton the day before. And the rowing commentators are all business. So, the American coverage isn't all bad. Sometimes its entertaining; and sometimes it's smart; and sometimes they even let the athletes be smart. I'm just saying that if you watch the coverage from other nations, you get this lovely balance and perspective on the whole affair.
One fine example is the controversy surrounding Russia's apparently systematic approach to doping many of its Olympic athletes. Some were barred from competing in Rio; some were not. The American swimming coverage features Michelle Tafoya trying to goad American swimmer Katie Meili into trashing her Russian opponent (Yulia Efimova) after Katie *just* won a bronze medal and was feeling super excited and positive about her performance. Tafoya kept trying to get her to say she was "making a statement" to the Russian that the Gold and Bronze went to the US, who have not tested positive for performance enhancing drugs, whereas Efimova has tested positive but was still allowed to compete. Katie, bless her, wouldn't take the bait, but it was not for lack of trying on Tafoya's part.
Compare this to the Canadian swimming coverage where, in the wrap up, they showed a clip of the live swim coverage from earlier that day, when a Russian men's swim relay team was booed when they entered the arena, and then the Canadian expert commentator said the following in answer to the anchor's question, "What do you make of that?"
He said this in the most compassionate, thoughtful, sincere tone of voice you've ever heard: "It's a really difficult situation. You know, I've never seen swimmers get booed in my entire career or in my history covering the Olympic Games. I hate to say it, but sport, the International Olympic Committee with their decision has put the swimmers in this situation...And just as a sidebar, today the IOC released an edict to ask the athletes to please stop accusing each other of taking drugs. It's being led by the athletes. I think they have a right to stand up for clean sport, but it's certainly not making it easy for anybody here at the Rio Olympics."
There was just so much *kindness* in his remarks. So much compassion and perspective. It was *Olympic* in its spirit. It was sort of the opposite of what the Americans were getting up to at the same time.
You have to have a sincere amount of dedication, I know, to watch as much of the Olympics as I do; it often takes me a few weeks after the games have finished to finish watching everything. :-) But that's okay. By then the Patriots will be playing and all will be well. Well, except that I'll have to put up with more of Michelle Tafoya's sideline interviews...perhaps someone could put out an edict asking her to be nicer? Or...hey! I wonder if the Canadians cover the Patriots?! :-)
Follow this (YouTube) link and you'll find my favorite Canadian Olympics ad. It's from Sport Chek, Canada's largest retailer of sports equipment, sporting goods, sports apparel, shoes and more.

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Monday, April 07, 2014

Yoga Tales from Rural Maine: Bridge the gap

Yesterday, I faced two big fears: bridges and running. This was a big deal on both fronts. There is one bridge, in particular, that scares the bejeezus out of me; the Penobscot Narrows Bridge, which spans the Penobscot River between Prospect and Verona Island in the bay of my home town. I don’t even like to drive across this bridge. I avoid it like…well, like a bridge. I refer to it as “The Bridge of Death,” and not because so many people have jumped off it. It—and its predecessor, the Waldo-Hancock Bridge—have always filled me with a deep sense of deadly, deadly foreboding. I would no sooner walk (or run) across that bridge than I would volunteer to be buried alive.

Image courtesy of Bangor Daily News


And the running…why fear running? Especially someone like me, who was a multi-season All-State athlete, who loves to train, to compete, to run and to play—why fear a run? There are two reasons. The first is a fear based on past injuries. It’s a sort of nameless, generalized fear. I’m not sure I specifically fear another injury, or fear that I’ll aggravate an old one; although maybe that’s it. It’s hard to say, exactly, but the thought of road races—something I used to enjoy—triggers a feeling of panic and dread. My psyche does not want to experience the things I’ve gone through, with injuries, again.

I have injured my right knee severely, twice. The first time in 1999 while training for the San Francisco marathon. I tore something in the tenth mile of a twelve-mile training run just two weeks before the race. I finished all twelve miles of the run, limping through the last two, and I wound up having surgery instead of running the marathon. The rehab was long and painful and I never fully recovered the strength or muscle-mass in that leg.

The second injury, to the same knee, was even more severe. In 2007, I was in the best shape I’d been in since the marathon training injury in 1999, and then one horrible afternoon in June, I slipped on wet paint during a backyard volleyball game—the last point of the day!—and severed my ACL. In one horrible twist, that ligament was ripped fully off my femur, and I hit the ground with so much impact, I bruised the bone.

For eight months I was in terrible pain, and all alone in that pain. No comfort, no assistance, no support. The first few weeks were a struggle to survive, as I couldn’t drive, my knee was swollen like a grapefruit, I was in terrible pain, and there was no one to help me do simple things, like get food or do dishes or get the laundry up and down two flights of stairs. I remember asking an old friend if she could spare half an hour to help me one day and she said, “No.” She had to study for her bar exam. Everyone I asked was usually too busy and I sank into a deep and desperate despair and gave up asking. While I know that things are different now—I have Peter, friends and family, who would help me--the experience of being utterly destitute, living in a constant level 8-to-9 pain, and being so very hungry, are scars on my psyche that may never heal. To run a race, I have to face all of that deeply ingrained life-threatening terror.

I didn’t have reconstructive surgery after the ACL tear because I have a non-ACL-dependent knee, it turns out. The orthopedic surgeon said my right knee was as stable as it could be, under the circumstances, and surgery would not improve it. I did a lot of painful, grueling rehab, but since that day almost seven years ago, when my ACL snapped, I have been afraid to run or play any sports. I lost a huge part of myself that year.

I have always been a person who enjoyed sports and running very much. Tennis? Volleyball? Football? Count me in! I am an athlete. In the same way I am a woman, a Smithie, an American—“athlete” is inextricable from who I am. I’ve never been the greatest at endurance, but when I injured my knee the first time, I was doing well; a six-mile run was an easy day. I was never the fastest distance runner; a ten-minute-mile training pace for anything over 5K was about the best I could do. But I loved it.

All through my twenties, I was still playing in recreational volleyball, basketball and elite soccer leagues in Northampton or San Francisco. But since 2007, I have felt afraid. My knee often hurts and feels unstable. It makes bad noises and it just doesn’t feel safe to do anything with quick stops, starts, or pivots—or anything that requires pounding the pavement.

And, worse than that, there is a second aspect to my fear of running. This fear is dark, specific, and rational. Ever since 2007, I have been unable to recover from exertion.

You may think that’s an overstatement; or perhaps it’s a statement that just confuses you. How can a person not recover from exertion? If you think either of these things, it’s because your body does it for you without you having to think about it. My body no longer does.

I injured my knee in June of 2007. That same month my truck (to which I had a deep emotional attachment) died, my beloved cat Calvin died at the age of 12, and I turned 35. I was suffering terrible physical and emotional pain, and was completely alone, as well as financially strapped. I worked very hard to keep myself alive, to heal, but I wasn’t doing well. In August, I saw a psychiatrist about my depression and he put me on a very small dose of Prozac. Over the next three weeks, I gained 30 pounds without changing diet or exercise. The depression did not lift, but I gained 16 inches on my waist and three cup sizes in my bra. And I became unable to recover from exertion.

I went back to the psychiatrist who took me off the Prozac, but none of my symptoms improved. I have spent the last seven years seeing doctor after doctor, specialist after specialist looking for answers. Most of them told me to exercise more and eat less. When I told them I was already on a low-calorie diet and that I couldn’t exercise because it made me sick, they didn’t believe me.

“You are constitutionally flawed,” said the prestigious endocrinologist I’d waited months to see. “There is nothing western medicine can do for you.” He didn’t do a single blood test. No lab work. Just looked at me, listened to my heart and my lungs, asked me about my medical history (starting from the day I was born) and then rendered his verdict.

I once told a friend that I was frustrated because exercising made me sick. “It’s like I’m allergic to exercise,” I confided to her.

She laughed. “I know, right? Nobody likes exercise.”

“No,” I said. “My body actually does get sick. It’s like I have the flu.”

She winked. “Exercise makes me sick, too.” No one seemed to understand.

I got a similar reaction from almost all of the doctors and nurses I saw. I couldn’t make them understand.

“Listen,” I would say. “If I go run—at this point, if I even go for a gentle 20-minute walk—I can do it. I can rally and find the energy and I can do that. Sometimes I can even do it for two or three days in a row. But then, I will get flu-like symptoms that are unbearable. I will have body aches, headaches, runny nose, sore throat, sneezing, coughing, and the most incredible weakness and fatigue you can imagine. I can barely move.”

I told this, over and over, to doctors and nurses and nearly every one of them told me to exercise more and eat less, or that I was just getting older. Some of them put me on birth control pills, which only made me sicker.

By 2009, I was so sick that during the end of my monthly cycle each month, I was too weak to walk or stand. I relied on a wheelchair if I had to do anything more than just a few minutes of walking. I was miserable, weak, clinically obese (having not yet been able to lose those 30 pounds), and every single time I tried to return to my loves—hiking, walking, running, biking, working out—my body would collapse. If I hiked for an hour one day, I would feel like I had the flu for the next three weeks. One hour of hiking would cost me three weeks of my life. It was a high price to pay. For those three weeks, I would barely be able to cope with daily tasks; eating, sleeping, brushing teeth were almost all I could manage.

So when I decided to run across that bridge yesterday, as part of the Bridge the Gap race, I was not only facing my fear of that (terrible) bridge and the nearly uncontrollable urge I have to fling myself off it every time I’m on it (not from suicidality, just because that’s what happens to me with heights), I was also facing my fear of losing the next three weeks of my life. I was facing my fear of collapse and embarrassment. I was facing my fear that I am old, constitutionally flawed, and will never be able to run again.



I set the goal to run that race—just the Fun Run, the first mile across the bridge, not the 5K or the 10-mile—the year before. I began training in October, running diligently every single day on my elliptical machine. I started gently, very gently, running five minutes each day, slow and easy. And I was overjoyed that I was okay! No flu! No symptoms. I could do five minutes a day—about 6/10 of a mile—and be fine. I was overjoyed.

This small bit of daily running was possible because in 2013, I finally found a nurse practitioner who believed me. She not only believed me, she immediately recognized my symptoms and knew what to do. While it has been expensive and hard work, and while I still have a long way to go, for me, in this particular body, at this time in my life, the ability to run five gentle minutes a day, every day--it was like summiting Everest. I loved it. I gave exuberant reports to my nurse practitioner and to Peter. It was exciting.

In November, I moved up to six minutes a day—7/10 of a mile. In December, seven minutes a day, 8/10 of a mile. January, eight minutes a day, 9/10 of a mile. I was doing great, and I was on target to be able to run the mile-long race over the bridge in April. This was happening!

One of the things I have done with my improved health and wellness is to join a volunteer fire department. It is remarkable that since 2011, I have gone from wheel-chair-dependent to yoga teacher and firefighter—and I had set my sights on being a runner again, an athlete who could do things.



Every now and then, I would look at my situation and feel embarrassed and demoralized. Who has to train with this much devotion and dedication to run one mile? But the key to my recovery has been, in part, a compassionate approach to understanding the biomechanics of my system. An essential part of my healing has to be compassion; anything else only stresses my system and actually makes the problem worse. Being ashamed of my size, my limitations—this only increases my size and my limitations. Shame does not serve me.

What I understand now, thanks to the insights of my wise young nurse practitioner and the very helpful book Are You Tired and Wired? (Marcelle Pick), is that I am not “constitutionally flawed.” My body had a very natural, very understandable, very treatable reaction to prolonged, unremitting stress. I have endured so much stress and trauma in my life, right from the very beginning, that by 2007, I was poised for collapse. It’s really a miracle that I made it that far. With all of the intense physical and emotional stressors that exploded that summer, and the addition of the Prozac, my system “flatlined,” as Pick would say. I demonstrated all of the classic symptoms.

In August of 2013, I took a diagnostic quiz (Are You Tired and Wired? pp 57-58). A score of 26 or more would have indicated that I was suffering from severe adrenal dysfunction. My score was 83. Why had no other doctors put this together before?

I decided I couldn’t think about that question.

“Aren’t you angry?” my sister-in-law asked one day, as I shared with her what I’d learned and how much it was helping me. And I realized, I wasn’t. I was too grateful for what was happening now to think about all the ways in which those other practitioners failed—and even harmed—me.

This run across the bridge was going to mean something big. It was going to mean that I could be well. It was going to mean that if I am slow and steady and faithful, I will, perhaps, one day be a person who can go jogging, bike-riding, hiking again. It represented my commitment to rise up out of helplessness, fatigue, and despair, and cross that bridge to wellness.

My future felt bright and I felt elated each month when I added another minute to my daily run and remained without side effects. But then, on January 6th, I had an accident during firefighter training. I suffered a concussion and a severe neck sprain with repercussions for not only my cervical spine, but my thoracic spine and shoulders. The blow was so hard and at such an angle that the damage was extensive.

The next three months were a nightmare of pain, sadness, brain fog, and isolation. There were many aspects of the injury and the worker’s comp bureaucracy attached to it, which were unbearable. Not only did I no longer have access to firefighting, I also did not have access to yoga, to my students. I couldn’t teach or practice. And I couldn’t do my daily run.

The Bridge the Gap race I had set my sights on was going to come, and it looked like I was not going to be able to do it. And yet…a few weeks prior to the race, I was finally cleared by my doctor to return to full-duty with the fire department on a trial basis. My physical therapist encouraged me to resume normal activity and see how it felt. I was afraid to climb back onto my elliptical machine. Afraid to face the inevitable losses; afraid to experience how winded, and weak and tired I’d be; afraid of the potential return of the flu-like side affects; I was afraid to begin losing days again.



During the worst days of my injury, in January, my concussion combined with my migraine disorder, made it impossible for me to think. Literally, if I formed thoughts or if I used my eyes to watch TV or read or even look out the window, it would trigger cascading migraines, blinding, searing, indescribable migraines. The only thing I could do was to lie in restorative yoga postures, close my eyes, and listen. Listening would keep my mind from forming thoughts. Music made me too emotional, so I listened to stories. Story after story after story. Whatever I could get my hands on. I even listened to James Earl Jones read the bible. (There sure is a lot of “begetting” in that book.)

My brain injury, combined with the loss of income, the loss of almost everything I held dear, the heartless and crazy-making bureaucracy of worker’s compensation, and the pain--good God, the pain…it was too much. I was struggling, all day, every day. And then one day, I had a thought. It was like a key clicking into a lock. “Kill myself.” I felt a wave of relief. The world felt so simple, so clear. I can’t accurately describe the rightness of this thought. Nothing in my whole life had ever felt so purely correct, so absolutely, perfectly right as that thought. If we had had a handgun in the house, I’m certain I would no longer be here. For some reason, it had to be a gun, in this thought. It was so simple, like opening a door if you wanted to go outside. Why wouldn’t you?

Because my gun is a .22 rifle, it wouldn’t do the job. My mind then went to the bridge, as a second thought. Without a brain injury, and without the exacerbating forces of the nightmarish experience of trying to work through a worker’s comp claim—a process my occupational medicine doctor describes as “uniquely adversarial,” and which, according to him, drives everyone (100% of his patients who have to deal with it for more than three weeks) into a deep, unrelenting depression, so much so that he asks everyone to take a sanity questionnaire when they visit and he keeps referral cards for suicide hotlines in his office—without those things, I would not have had that thought. I’m certain of it. It wasn’t like me.

I know for certain that were I to have had a suicidal thought, without the influence of the brain injury or the inhumanity of the worker’s comp maze, I would have thought of gas or pills or something really gentle. I am not a girl who would shoot anyone—or anything—especially myself; and I am not a girl who would willingly step foot on a bridge if there were any other alternative. The fact that guns and bridges felt right to me shows, even more than the suicidality, that something in my brain was absolutely not functioning normally. Without a properly functioning brain, we are at the mercy of thoughts we have no way to control.

So it was the lack of a pistol in my home, more than anything else, that saved me from dying that day; and it was my experience as a first-responder, looking for the body of a man who had jumped from that bridge, that kept me from jumping that day myself. My misfiring brain was, thank goodness, able to at least put these thoughts together. First, that my gun couldn’t get the job done, so don’t try; and second, I could remember the experience of being out on the water looking for a body; I knew what that was like, and because of that and only that—the thought that I couldn’t possibly ask Bobby or Julia or John or Casey or Dave to go out into the bay to recover my body—I lived. My malfunctioning brain was able to find those two logical thoughts within its buggy programming, and it saved me: “The gun won’t work" and, "You can’t hurt your first-responders; you love them.”


Once I’d made it past that thought, which took about 18 hours, it was like putting on a new skin. I shed my injured, crazy skin, the one that had been created on the day my skull rammed into that fire truck, and I stepped forward, lighter, more peaceful, and aware that I needed to meditate—and pray—if I were going to hold myself together. I would stop fighting for anything from worker's comp. I would pay my own way. None of this was worth dying for. It became a life-and-death battle and I wanted to make certain that my brain knew to choose "life."

Eventually, I developed a new daily practice, of meditation, mantra, and prayer, and I have done this without fail. In the same way that I ran every day before I was injured, I have come to my meditation, mantra and prayer each day with devotion.

And it was this—more than anything—that got me to the bridge yesterday. I was afraid to face the place where my friend’s sister had jumped, just a few days after I decided not to; I was afraid to face the place where I almost jumped. I was afraid of hurting my knee. I was very afraid of collapsing half-way across and suffering the humiliation of publicly demonstrating that I could not run a mile. And I was afraid of losing weeks of my life to the recovery process, even if I did make it across.

But here’s something else I’ve learned from yoga and volunteering as a firefighter: I can do it. It doesn't matter what it is; if I decide to do it, I can do it. I can do 108 Sun Salutations, if I set my mind to it. I can stand on my feet for hours at a training or a fire scene, knowing it will take days or weeks to recover, that my knee will swell and my body will ache, and I can do it. I can even smile while I’m doing it. And I can go out, in the cold and the rain in a tiny little boat and look for a body under the bridge, even though every single one of those things terrifies me. I know this about myself. I know it so deeply that even when I was lost in the confusion of a battered brain, I accessed that knowledge.



When I meditate, I meet myself in the place inside myself where I know I’m okay. I know how to get to that place because I have worn a steady path to it, day by day by day. I know how to be confident in my ability to get things done, difficult things, and I know how to breathe. Thanks to my meditation and yoga practice, when I decided to run yesterday, all the buzzing fear stayed out around the edges, and the only thing that existed was the here and the now, this breath, this footstep, this moment, this me.

And that’s how I ran the race, the same way I meditate. Inhale, count to four, exhale, count to four. I just did that, over and over and over. I kept my eyes straight ahead, I put one foot in front of the other--and I let myself be loved. My friends, my students, had come to be with me in this. They ran with me, on either side and behind, and one was waiting at the finish line. And so, I was transported, across the Bridge of Death, one footstep, one breath, (one silently uttered curse), at a time, until I was on the other side.

I often tell my students, we can get through anything—get over or under or beyond anything—if we do it one breath at a time. We can bridge any gap this way, if we are kind to ourselves, if we are devoted, and if we have the courage to try.

Post Script: I was among the last to cross the bridge yesterday, having been outrun by at least a dozen small children, but it didn’t matter at all that I was nearly last. I have never been the sort of athlete who needs to win. I love winning, don’t get me wrong, but what I love most of all, is excellence; I love doing my best, and that is what I did yesterday. My best is measured only against myself.

It was important to me to prove to myself that I had the heart to do this without stopping. No matter how much my body screamed in protest, I wanted my willpower to keep me going. And it did. My body was not in good enough shape for that run, but I made it do it anyway, and for an athlete, that is a victory.

For a person recovering from severe adrenal fatigue, unfortunately, it is not a victory; it’s a setback. Within ten minutes of finishing the race, my body’s immune response was bull-blown. My nose was running like someone had turned on the tap. I was sneezing incessantly. I drove myself home, drank water, took homeopathic remedies. My eyes and throat itched, my sinuses tingled non-stop, as though I’d just sniffed pepper. I had lots of energy and enthusiasm for about an hour, but then the collapse took hold. By the time Peter came home from work three hours later, I was in bed, too weak to move. Face raw, already, from hundreds of nose-blows. My head was stuffy, my chest was burning, my voice was nasal and scratchy, and I was so weak I could barely lift my head.

I had taken a Claritin the night before. I took two Benadryl when the allergy-like symptoms began to peak. It didn't really help. Peter fed me. And I kept drinking water and taking homeopathics. I was glad I had triumphed over the bridge, but so incredibly sad that my body was collapsing. I lost all of Sunday. I took more Benadryl at bedtime, along with a Flexoril, and I turned off my emergency dispatch pager. I would be no good to anyone at a scene, and I needed my rest.

I woke up this morning and my eyes were almost swollen shut. They were not infected, just reacting as if they had encountered an allergen. They remained dry, itchy and slightly swollen most of the day. My throat hurts. My nose runs. I’m tired and sneezy and my lungs burn. I am weak. Too weak, I think, to go to my firefighter training tonight, and this makes me incredibly sad. I want to put on my turnout gear and learn about fire extinguishers. But...I can't. It is the sadness I feel, even more than the physical symptoms, that makes the experience of being in this body hard. Whenever I do one thing—like run a race—and then I have to pay a heavy price, like losing every other activity for days, I feel the loss keenly. It is one of the things I was afraid of when I thought of running across that bridge. And...it happened.

It was neither kind nor gentle of me to run that race when I knew my body couldn’t take it. I was sad and humiliated as my friends rejoiced on Facebook about our run, and asked if I wanted to run a 5K next month. They, of course, have no idea what that race cost me, and how ill-equipped I am to run a 5K right now--or how badly I want to be able to. Feeling ashamed about this is counterproductive; and yet, I do. There is a level of self-acceptance that I have still not reached. I still see myself as able-bodied and athletic, and every single time I realize I am not, I grieve all over again.

My work today—and every day, even after I am finally well—is to practice self-acceptance. To practice lovingkindness, to my Self. To allow myself that grief, for what is lost when I feel it, but also to connect with the joy of what is. To let that grief be water under the bridge, and to be with the joy of acknowledging that I was brave, I was well-supported by loving friends, and ultimately, the joy of being able to run across that frigging bridge—because I did make it! I did run that mile without stopping. I could not have done that at any other point in the last seven years. Flawed as it still is, this is progress.

My “Bridge the Gap” race my have been slow, and it may have been a little too much for my physical body right now, but the fact that I did it proves that this combination of yoga, meditation, prayer, the care of a good nurse practitioner, and volunteering as a firefighter have given me the tools I need to bridge the gap between illness and wellness. It also proves I have a long way to go. I intend to get there, one little breath, one giant bridge, at a time.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2012

For the love of the Games


I don't think Peter will mind my telling you this...

I love the Olympics. Like, I out-of-my-mind-more-than-almost-anything-in-the-world love the Olympics. I wait the 700+ days between Olympics and think, almost every day, about what the next Olympics opening ceremony will be like. I plan my whole life around recording and watching the Olympics. I block out all other news coverage. I avoid talking to people. I focus only on the Olympics for two weeks every two years. Maybe my greatest lifetime dream is to be part of the ceremony or part of the Games in some way. If I ever were asked to carry the torch, I think I would pass out and then weep through the entire thing. (I was so upset by the first half of Danny Boyle's Slumdog opening ceremony that I actually turned to Pete and said, through tears, "He's ruining it!! The opening ceremony is supposed to be about light and hope and athleticism; it's supposed to be about joy and freedom and friendship. It's supposed to be full of LOVE. I don't want to think about trench warfare and child labor laws and sick children! It's not supposed to be about nightmares. There is no scent of sulphur in the Olympics!!") I was broken-hearted until the athletes walked in and the light-up bicycle-driven doves appeared. The parade of nations always cheers me up (even if the announcers are being dimwits).

Pete, for his part, could really give two turds about the Olympics. But, because he loves me and because, I think, he experienced a little inertia each night after work, I'm guessing he watched probably 30-40 hours of Olympic coverage over the course of the Games. (We're still watching, PS, because I haven't caught up to everything I DVR'd; for me, the Olympic cauldron is still burning!)

And here's the point of this story and the thing I love about Pete: of all the sports I made him watch (white water kayaking, hammer throw, pole vault, gymnastics, marathons--"But, honey! They didn't even LET women RUN until 1984!! And then a woman from MAINE won! We have to WATCH! We WATCH because it MATTERS!"--and swimming coverage he referred to as "endless," etc.) the sport Peter actually fell in love with was...rhythmic gymnastics.

That's right--after watching the decathlon, the women's open water swim, the cycling races, so much volleyball his eyes were crossing, soccer (he fell asleep during that amazing women's gold medal game!), wrestling, diving, synchronized swimming, sprinting, hurdling, steeplechase, badminton, table tennis ("Are these guys for real?"), flatwater canoeing (who knew?), BMX and on and on and on, the one sport that made him say, "You know? That was so good it made me look forward to the next Olympics!" was a sport made up of teams of little (mostly Eastern European) young women and teens in pretty outfits with pointy toes fooling around with ribbons and hula hoops and balls and little clubs. I love my Peter. (And I also love rhythmic gymnastics!)

For the record, my favorite moment of the Olympics (so far) remains the finish of the men's 10,000 meters. It was full of light and hope and athleticism; it spilled over with joy and freedom and friendship. Ditto Kirani James swapping bibs with Oscar Pistorius after their 400 meter heat.

Kirani James andOscar Pistorius. Photo courtesy of  USPresswire.


If there were medals for TV coverage of the Games, most of NBC wouldn't even make the semi-finals. Matt Lauer and Meredith Viera covered the opening ceremonies so poorly they left me feeling embarrassed to be American. (Who the hell doesn't know who Tim Berners-Lee is?? And for the love of gawd, what network newscaster doesn't who he is??) Bob Costas and Dan Patrick are too cynical to do the Olympics. Bump up Tom Hammond. His sweet enthusiasm is so winning. 

And Ryan Seacrest? Really NBC? You insult us with that phoney baloney "lifestyle" coverage. It's like calling ketchup a vegetable. Not to mention that by using the host of a singing contest instead of a sports reporter, you really missed an opportunity. Actually, your failure to tap knowledgeable commentators in almost every sport was a shame. If you were an athlete, they'd kick you out of the Games for not trying hard enough. 

The cycling road race commentators (Steve Schlanger and Paul Sherwen?), they get a gold medal, and I'd give Candy Costie-Burke a silver for synchronized swimming coverage. She really handled it well when her less expert-at-synchro commentating partner would start going on about something like the height difference between the swimmers or the frigging camera technology. (I think he loved the new cameras more than the swimming, honestly.) (To get the gold she deserves, Candy just needs to lighten up a bit and accept that we, the ignorant public, really are fascinated by the nose clips, the hair gel and the mascara.) 

I also enjoyed the athlete profiles, as always, and the Mary Carillo and Jimmy Roberts pieces were good-natured; his were more watchable than hers. Tom Brokaw's contributions were classy, informative and sincere. (Bring back Brokaw!)

The Olga Korbut and Dream Team features were extraordinary--the kind of coverage I hope for during my two year wait for the Games. Thank you for those, NBC. I will be praying to the gods of Olympus that in 2014, we will see more of that sort of coverage and less "news" about Facebook Likes and Twitter trends--nothing could matter less to the Olympic Games than a hashtag or an athlete's comparative popularity on Facebook.


As a post-script, I will say that I am bracing myself for the closing ceremony. My wish is that the remote controlled Mini Coopers would be featured prominently, and also trampolines and dancing and light shows and music--bagpipes!--but I expect it will look more like the Spanish flu, the Blitz, the storming of the beaches of Normandy, and the death of Princess Diana, than it does rhythmic gymnastics.

Oh, well. Not everything in life can be as perfect as Kim Rhode's skeet shooting. See you in Sochi!!!!!

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Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Love. And Basketball.

Chapter 19, The Long-Awaited Time of Joy (unpublished)


Your friends will know you better in the first
minute you meet than your acquaintances will
know you in a thousand years.—Richard Bach


Twenty months and one week ago, I turned up at my friend Steven’s annual Bastille Day party. He had forgotten to invite me until just one hour before it began. Perhaps I should have recognized it as an “unvitation,” or perhaps it was an honest mistake. Whatever it was, I felt the sting of it—so I decided to go. I don’t know if it was denial or determination, but two hours later, I arrived fashionably late to celebrate the storming of the Bastille.

I knew no one there, except the host. The mood was quiet, little pockets of people standing in the grass or on the deck drinking Canadian beer and eating off blue, white, and red paper plates. A foursome played boules in the shade. It was one of those stale inbred parties where everyone has known everyone else forever, and the challenge of striking up a conversation with someone new requires way too much initiative to be bothered with.

Steven kissed my cheek when I arrived. His beard scratched my cheek and I remembered how much I hated that feeling. His new girlfriend wrapped her free arm around his waist and thanked me for coming. Steven offered to get me a drink and they walked away.

I took a deep breath, smiled like a maniac, and searched the crowd for someone I knew. As I stood there, lamely, waiting for Steven to return with my drink, a deep chill crawled up my legs, turning my flesh into goosebumps and my feet to stone. I blushed and stiffened. I tried to appear calm as my shoulders rose slowly toward my ears. After a while, I felt the rush of heat in my cheeks seep down into my neck, and I felt the cold climbing up from my ankles to my knees. Finally, hot and cold had collided in my stomach, waking butterflies, birds, and giant bats. It became clear that Steven was not coming back.

There were bodies all around me, with talking heads attached, heads which now and again would turn to smile at me, standing there, alone. But the expression in their eyes never matched the one across their lips. And no one ever spoke to me. My urge to flee, to run crying from the scene, was almost too much to fight. I was a kid being picked last for teams. I was an uninvited guest. But then a cooler in the corner caught my eye, and I stopped waiting for Steven. I slithered through the small crowd and grabbed the slippery brown neck of a Molson.

My beer kept me company. It was my escort, holding my hand, kissing my mouth, reassuring me when I felt I’d be consumed by social terror. It gave me a small sense of purpose, enough to anchor me at the party until it was gone. I moved about the lawn, sipping, smiling, trying to be social. But each pocket of people I tried to join left me feeling that same mix of icy hot discomfort I’d felt when I was abandoned on the deck.

In the end, I gave up trying to join a group. I felt dizzy from the battle, so I decided to sit down until it was time for me to go. I opted for a cheap, white plastic lawn chair next to a surly-looking man who was sitting alone, squinting against the sun. He looked to be in his mid-30s, with very long hair, a pair of retro, mutton chop sideburns, some sort of disheveled t-shirt combination, and no visible interest in me, which I liked. There was no faux friendly smile with him, and when I spoke to him, he spoke back.

I can’t tell you much else about that day that would be honest. I know that we talked about art and writing, about the stagnation that’s so inherent in the town where we live. I know that he took an interest in my work, that he offered to share some of his expertise, and that he gave me his card. I remember that I stayed later than I meant to, that I arrived home just in time to change and be picked up for another party. That’s all I can tell you because everything else is colored now by my tremendous love for this man. I have to be fierce with myself¾vigilant¾to get even these few details about our first meeting right. Because it is almost impossible for me to remember how I saw him before I knew how beautiful he was. My appreciation of him grows with every day, and also flows backward, like sunrise-colored dyes dropped into the waters of my memory, tinting everything that came before.

***

I am a strange and skittish creature. I am full of contradictions and complications. A social butterfly frightened of people. An isolationist with open arms. A confident speaker who apologizes for speaking. A radical lover with traditional desires. I’m difficult to manage, even if you know how. It takes a dedication and comprehension that even I don’t often possess. And when I met Jon, I was an especially tangled-up mess, like knots drowned in buckets and dumped out at sea.

I plunked myself down next to him that day. I took his card home and I wrote him an e-mail. But then I lost my nerve. I got frightened and squeamish. I was afraid of who I was. I didn’t want to see him again. But Jon was not dissuaded. He saw in me a greatness and he was not disturbed. He hung in with me for months, gently reading my anxious ways for what they were. He knew somehow, the struggle I endured. And patiently, bravely, he taught me I could trust his giving heart, and learn to trust my own. He shared with me, by degrees, the exact amount of grace that would not frighten me away or burn me up too fast. He is like a horse whisperer for raw and brilliant girls, and we became good friends.

***

Just about a year after our first Bastille Day meeting, Jon and I discovered that we both liked basketball. Neither of us had played in years, but we decided to play one day last summer, on a steamy August afternoon, on the hoop in my back yard. Now, when people ask if I am any good, Jon tells them that I am the first and only girl to ever beat him in basketball. We take an equal pleasure in this fact.

Our casual games quickly evolved into a ritual. Every Wednesday and Sunday, from 6 to 8 p.m., Jon and I play basketball. We are virtually unstoppable in our pursuit. Blizzards, illnesses, injuries, work, or social commitments¾all of these things get second billing to basketball on Wednesday and Sunday nights. We have been known to play in darkness and in sweltering heat; we have played after rain storms, dodging puddles like defenders; we have played on days when together we have achieved a combined total of only eight hours of sleep. We have each risen, delirious from naps, which followed all-night work sessions, and laced up our sneakers, ready to go to the gym.

Neither Jon nor I practice an organized, widely recognized form of spiritual faith. Jon’s mother is a Christian minister, but he rejects that practice in a fairly wholesale fashion and has devised his own personal method of finding and expressing truth, faith, and guidance. My mother is a Spiritualist, and I accept, honor, and practice daily the metaphysics on which I was raised. I have added to it my own witchy ways of seeking enlightenment, joy, direction, and connection with the power of the Universe.

For Jon and I, basketball is more than a pastime; for us, it is a sacred mission. It is a way to test our bodies and our minds, to engage in battle without launching missiles at foreign civilians, or punching out strangers—or ex-lovers¾in bars. It’s a test of willpower, stamina, intellect, skill, and most of all, devotion. By honoring our commitment to these four hours together each week¾no matter how tired, no matter how busy¾we honor our friendship, we honor ourselves, and we honor our love for the game. Basketball has become our temple, a place where we find our best and truest selves, and put them to the test. It is a place of struggle, and of triumph; a place of ugly exhaustion and beautiful perseverance; a place where, when you fail, you pick yourself up and move on¾and a place where your fiercest opponent is also your strongest supporter.

I’ve had a hard time with my body these last six or seven years. I gained a lot of weight, injured my knee and never fully rehabbed from the surgery. I struggled with depression, a hard New England climate, and with insomnia that left me drained and never well-rested. So over these last eight and a half months of playing basketball with Jon, I have struggled to find my strength and my wind. Jon can play twice as hard for twice as long as me. And on almost every occasion, I find that I am seeing spots, struggling to stand just minutes into our games.

Jon is always patient. He shoots around while I catch my breath. He never harasses or criticizes me. And no matter how weak or how tired I seem, he brings his full strength to our game. He respects me by giving his all every time he faces me on the court. I both love him and hate him for this. I want him to ease off, to cut me some slack sometimes, but he won’t. If I step onto that court and say “let’s play,” I have to be ready to face everything he brings.

Through the process of reconnecting with my athlete-self, my warrior self, I have found what I call, The Love. In those moments when the world is sprinkled with exploding black dots, when my heart is pounding and my chest is heaving, when my muscles have been worked into jelly, I reach down inside myself, way, way, down, and I find in there The Love. It is a power that stands me upright, clears my vision, and marches me back toward him where I will say again, “let’s play.”

He watched me do this once, obviously exhausted, unwilling to cave.

“You have the heart of a champion,” he said.

And he is right. Through our Wednesday and Sunday ritual, I have come to understand how it is that I can fight. When I am tired in the world and in my work, when I am overmatched in my relationships, when fatigue and weakness have drained me, when my vision is no longer clear, I am able now, off the court, to reach inside myself, way, way down, and find The Love that sustains me, The Love that keeps me here.

Jon and I play basketball in the same gymnasium where women’s basketball was invented. The legacy of that gift lives on in me, not just in my persistent jump shot or in my tenacious D, but also in the thrust and lust and willpower that I bring to everything I do. In the contest that wages on that court every Wednesday and Sunday night, Jon and I carry on a tradition of excellence and desire, and it makes us indomitable, both on the court and off.

When Dorothy Ainsworth hung up peach baskets and became the first to put balls into the hands of young women in that gym, she gave them not only a new opportunity for sport, she gave them a way to find Love. When I plunked myself down next to Jon Reed at that Bastille Day party, I opened the way for the arrival of something I had been longing for all my life. I opened the way for true love. And basketball.

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