Cancer This Week – True Love

Happy Valentine Daze, Cancerian! After meditating about what advice would be most valuable for your love life in the coming months, I decided on this challenge from poet William Butler Yeats: “True love is a discipline in which each divines the secret self of the other and refuses to believe in the mere daily self.” In other words, create in your imagination a detailed picture of your loved ones at their best. Each day, make it a point to feel joy and gratitude for their most excellent beauty and power — as well as the beauty and power that are still ripening and will one day appear in full bloom.

I think this is what I always do this in the beginning. I think most of us do. It’s keeping it alive when the daily gets overwhelming that is the trick.

It’s not the first thing on my mind these days. Spring, getting a new job, my camera is breaking up and acting weird. Still stalling on projects, watching Foyle’s War a lot as the netflix come in and go out, other Brit mysteries on streaming when they aren’t here.

What I really want to do is rip out the 30 year old carpet in my bedroom (what a dust/mite/dirt magnet, yeuck) and paint the walls a lovely spring green and put up my yellow and green striped curtains from my cottage in the woods. *sigh*

What I really want to do is skip down the street singing songs (oy my knees)

What I really want to do is be Forest Grove full time… 😉

Ah well, they are the things of dreams, except perhaps the skipping down the street part. I can get there, I need to get my creaky self outside and start walking those hills again. Spring is here and it’s light until 5:30, no good excuse.

Tra la tra la.

Cancer This Week – Healing

I wonder if you can you handle this much healing intensity, Cancerian. The possibilities for transforming difficult parts of your life are substantial. I’ll name a few ways this could play out: 1. A confusing riddle may be partially solved through a semi-divine intervention. 2. A sore spot could be soothed thanks to the power of your curiosity. 3. An ignorance that has caused you pain may be illuminated, allowing you to suffer less. 4. If you can summon the capacity to generously tolerate uncertainty, you may find and rehabilitate an orphaned part of your life. I’m not saying for sure that any of this stuff will happen, but the odds are favorable that at least one will.

Healing!  Well well well.  Although it’s obvious he’s talking about inner emotional healing, I’m thinking healing in general is a good thing right now.

I’ll be keeping my eyes open…  Especially on #3.  As for #4 since I’m used to uncertainty and at least tolerate it but certainly know it’s healing potential, I’m watching…  I’ll take any of them.

Happy Childhood

“I never meet anyone who admits to having had a happy childhood,” said writer Jessamyn West. “Everyone appears to think happiness betokens a lack of sensitivity.” I agree, and go further. Many creative people I know actually brag about how messed up their early life was, as if that was a crucial ingredient in turning them into the geniuses they are today. Well, excuse me for breaking the taboo, but I, Rob Brezsny, had a happy childhood, and it did not prevent me from becoming a sensitive artist. In fact, it helped. Now I ask you, my fellow Cancerian, whether you’re brave enough to go against the grain and confess that your early years had some wonderful moments? You’re in a phase of your cycle when recalling the beauty and joy of the past could be profoundly invigorating.

This is seriously a little uncanny.  I don’t know if it’s because Rob Brezsny has the same sun sign as I do or what it is but his horoscopes really rock.   The stuff is always just a bit behind the work that it describes for me, I’m always just a little ahead of the planets but it’s spot on every time.

I realized not too long ago that while I had a pesky brother and a father who had anger management issues, a mother who wasn’t in touch with her feelings, I had a pretty normal childhood.  I was talking with my sponsor and she said that we should just face it, we were born with anger issues , born resentful alcoholics, etc…

And I said, hey, you know, I don’t think that’s true for me at all.  I remember being a very happy child.  Sure, I liked it when Dad was in a good mood and when he wasn’t if he had a meeting that night.  Sure my little brother took great pleasure in messing with me until I blew up.  But on the whole, my personality was pretty chipper, fairly happy.  I spent a lot of time with friends but even more time alone.  I was perfectly happy sitting in my room or outside, drawing in a sketch book, reading, sewing, playing with toys.  I had no problem being alone, I liked myself and I liked the things I did.  I didn’t feel ugly or stupid most of the time, I remember feeling pretty darned good.

I remember vying for Dad to carry me first on the stool to go get our teeth brushed.  I remember an awesome trip to Hawaii, to Alaska, playing in Volunteer Park in the trees (I had favorites then as I do now).  I remember going to the museum all by myself just to look at the art.  I remember hot summers at the beach, riding the bus, riding bikes, my first motorcycle ride, my portable record player, the dolls I dressed, the clothes I learned to make, the books I read, and the round houses I designed. The boys we tried to tempt, discovering my new more rounded body, my first period. Yes, I had life frustrations, things that upset me. I got into trouble like any kid. I got a few spankings. But I wasn’t born resentful.  I wasn’t born unhappy.  I distinctly remember being a pretty happy kid. I remember adults being kind to me, telling me nice things about myself. I remember being told that I don’t accept criticism gracefully every year on my report card and I still don’t do it all that gracefully. I’m working on that. Mostly I rebel when the criticism is based on some stupid rule about being normal or when it is only that other person’s opinion, not the truth about me.  You bet I rebel.  I had lovely friends, young and old who nurtured me and my interests.

I think this photo says a lot.

I did get braces…  and isn’t that mod dress just the coolest? Thanks Mom for always nurturing my love of clothes and textiles.  Not so much for the goofy home perms… *laugh*

I have some really happy memories from my childhood. Friends, things I did, places we went, stuff I made.  I have been making things, drawing, since I was at least this age.  I have my first embroidery from 2-3 years earlier than this photo.

It really helped me to realize and re-experience my childhood because for years I heard in AA how messed up folks were before they started drinking. For a long time in sobriety I thought that was true for me too.  And it isn’t true at all.  Hey, I started drinking when I was 13, but it was to do what my friends were doing. I already belonged to their group mostly, but the drinking brought the boys and hey I wanted boys too.  I liked the cool kids because they were cool.  I became cool too.  I found it very fun, partying with my friends, getting snockered.  That switch got flipped when I first got a buzz on.  But I didn’t start drinking because my life sucked and I wanted to blot it out or forget things, not at all.  That crap happened much later.

In the end it wasn’t about fun and friends and silliness.  It was about forgetting and killing the pain.  But the pain that I wanted to forget wasn’t something I was born with.  It wasn’t there before the drinking.  The drinking created it, pure and simple.  No doubt about it.  And it changed the way my brain works forever.

That little girl that I was?  The creative artist, actress, reader and writer I was?  Is still here.  Yes, there is some baggage for certain but little by little it’s being dealt with. The happy returns, the free spirit that I was is still there and little by little I uncover her.

Remembering her. That happy, little, sweet, girl with the clear, grey eyes and the crooked teeth, always smiled, always shone.  I’m so glad I found this photo and started thinking about what it really meant about me as a person.

That underneath the drama of life, I am, at my core, a very happy, shiney, free spirit.

Horoscope for 2010

You will need to learn a lot in 2010, Cancerian. You’ll be in a phase of your long-term cycle when it will be wise to enhance your problem-solving skills and increase the knowledge you have at your disposal. So let me ask you: What can you do to gently shock yourself into prying open your mind? What is it that you don’t know but need to know? By the way, the coming year will also be a good time for you to offer yourself up as a teacher. In fact, sharing your knowledge and problem-solving skills will make you more receptive to what you need to learn.

Aw piss off.  Had enough of the opening my mind and my heart and of the learning.  The shock? Wasn’t GENTLE.  Enough already.  I plan on staying in stubborn denial the entire year.  So there.  Pffft.

The Week in Cancer

I’m hoping that you will get out more in 2010. And I mean way out. Far out. Not just out to the unexplored hotspots on the other side of town (although that would be good), but also out to marvelous sanctuaries on the other side of paradise. Not just out to the parts of the human zoo where you feel right at home, but also out to places in the urban wilderness where you’ll encounter human types previously unknown to you. In conclusion, traveler, let me ask you this: What was the most kaleidoscopic trip you’ve ever taken? Consider the possibility of surpassing it in the next 12 months.

Well, since it was kaleidoscopic in the sense of drug induced, won’t be going THERE. But I’m all for the rest of it. Oh yes oh yes.

So Mote It Be