I was having a conversation with a friend of mine this morning about therapy. 

They LOVE it. Every time they go, it's like a mental spring cleaning. Doors and windows thrown WIDE OPEN.  All sorts of thinky exploration and investigation.  

Their partner on the other hand, doesn't feel the same way. They see a different therapist, for different issues.   They loathe it. Each week, going to the session is an effort fraught with misery. 

My friend feels some guilt over this. I told them, "It's not bad that you enjoy something which your partner dreads.  Your positive experience does not negate or diminish the difficulty which they experience."

I finished by adding, "Comparison is nobody's friend."

That got me thinking. What do we gain when we resolve NOT to compare ourselves to others? 

What is the inherent experience of comparing ourselves only to ourselves like?

For me, it means I can embrace gradual change. It's never too late to get a new skill, get in better shape, write a new book, make some sweeping life changes.  

My life is a race, but only with myself.  It's not the finish line that matters.  

One day my race will be run. I'll do what countless multitudes have done before me, and will do after me: 

I'll die.  

But that doesn't matter. It's not the end of the story that matters to me. It's all the chapters before it.  

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
CategoriesDaily Think
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So I've got this friend, S., also known as @ChickGoneBad on the Twitter.

We've been friends for years, having first met through mutual kink friends, and both being goers to Camp Crucible. (Although the last time I saw her face to face was literally years ago.) 

Our friendship has really blossomed over Twitter. She's snarky, funny, occasionally spectacularly dirty, witty, and very, very clever.  

She's also a few degrees off from everyone else on earth. What I mean is, she's the perennial outsider, or oddball. She is almost the detached observer of our social and societal foolishness.  

Every once in a while she posts something, or links to something which is gob-smacking profound.  

She did just that today. It's why she's my gratitude today.  

The thing  she posted is this:

http://www.renegademothering.com/2014/12/09/discovered-white/

It's an essay, written by a white woman, about how she realized she was white, and what that really meant.  It's about how racism is alive and well today, and a subtle, pervasive part of society.

It's NOT a prescriptive entreaty to a shallow solution.  

It's NOT just bitching and moaning, a complaint.  

What it is, is a brilliant observation on the depth and complexity of the problem, and why so many people don't see it, don't get it. 

I'm moved, profoundly moved by this essay. 

If it wasn't for my friendship with Chickgonebad, if we weren't constantly trading snark, flirting, and kink humor, I wouldn't ever have known about it.  

I'm grateful for it, and for her. 

 

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

This morning I'm running really late.  I got out of the house, and booked it to my train station, then actually ran (in dress shoes, fun!) to try to make the platform before the train left.

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No dice.  It literally pulled away as I got up to it, slapping the doors helplessly to try to get them to let me in. 

So, I waited in the cold, freezing rain.  Did I mention I also forgot my gloves today?  Yay! 

After the next train came, I boarded quickly, heading for an upstairs seat, and got warm. 

When we got to my stop, I disembarked, and tried to move out of the station, which is an outdoor one, as quickly as possible.  A really large guy with a very awkward bag was moving slowly, and obliviously, and blocking the narrow pathway I was anxiously trying to sprint down.  

I ducked around him on the far side, and walked quickly to the station entrance, and out from under the covered roof into the rain itself.  Ahead of me, on the sidewalk, was another really big guy, with an even larger rolling suitcase in one hand, and an umbrella in the other.   

Now I'm 6'2", which means I'm at eye-height to the pointy end-caps of most umbrella spokes.  So I was super careful to work my way around this guy and not get an ocular stabbing.  At first, I was really annoyed.  After all, I'm already late.   

Then I had this moment of satori, that experience of awareness that there's no seperate me from anyone else, and we all together, are one.  And I also saw that these two guys moved slowly because that's what they physically had in the tank.  For whatever reason, whether it be age, infirmity, ill health, lack of fitness, whatever, that rate of speed was all they had to give.  They weren't intentionally blocking my way.  They were just doing their own level best to get on their way in a cold, wet, gray, kind of disgusting morning, just like me.   I felt like a heel for being selfish about their being in my way.  What hubris!  

I'm in reasonably good shape.  I could certainly be thinner.  It's actually something I'm actively working on again.  But I've got excellent mobility.  I sprinted to the platform earlier this morning.  I can move fast when I need to.  I'm fairly limber.  My mobility is a fantastic gift.   I'm grateful I've got it, and grateful I can appreciate it.

 

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude
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Yesterday was a day that tested me, in many ways.

First, I had this technically challenging thing to do at work.  I was a bit nervous as the day started, and by lunchtime had worked myself up into a chest-pounding, headache-having ball of stress.  At lunch, I realized that I was psyching myself out, needlessly, and resolved to just plug through what I needed to do.  By the end of the day, I was feeling pretty confident that I was on top of the thing.

Then there was this email we received from a podcast listener.  Sometimes we get mails that are, well, challenging.  He started out by complimenting us, then admitted he only listened to the beginnings of shows, never listening all the way through, asked me several questions he would have had the answer to if he had listened to the aforementioned shows, and then went off, declaiming on topics related to the relationship between ageplay and actual children, as well as caregivers and the elderly, in a way that made my skin crawl.  

I took a deep breath, counted to a large number, and then responded back to him with compassion, trying to be helpful where I could, and shutting down the parts of the conversation I found inappropriate.  Later in the day, he wrote me back, and much of what I had to say seemed to go in one ear and out the other.

Then later that evening, just before bed, I got the heads up on a similarly challenging thread in the podcast's fetlife group.  

Every so often we see threads around this subject, which, in brief, goes something like this: "I think the way I ageplay isn't sexual, and not a fetish, and I'm tired of being lumped in with all you perverts.  If only you/the community/the world/foreign dignitaries/my sixth grade social studies teacher could act differetly, then I could be happy, and the world would be perfect."

Okay, to be fair, that's a pretty snarky thing I just said.  I think I can be a tad snarky in my own blog, if nowhere else.

I read the thread all the way through, and after more deep breaths, thoughtful introspection, and a little bit of counting to ten, I responded to it politely, and then shut it down.   An interestingly gratifying thing about the thread is that many of the responses to the original post were really thoughtul, balanced, and compassionate.  There's a maxim that Spacey and I have about the show, and a message we broadcast loudly, which is that if you want acceptance from others, you must first give it.  

Anyhow, that all sounds like an exhausting mess, why would I possibly be grateful for it?  Because these moments are among those which most help me to know myself.  

I'm an intelligent, reasonable, compassionate man.  I need challenges and testing to experience these things, and to hone myself.  I can't recall who said it, but I once heard someone say "It's easy to love and have compassion for people who like you, or are easy to get along with.  Difficult people are a blessing."

Sometimes I'm the difficult person, even to myself.  I spent a good couple of hours torturing myself because I felt stupid earlier in the day.  

I don't need challenging people to be less challenging.   Unwittingly, they become a sort of workout for my compassion muscles.  I'm grateful for them.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

We were in New York, and I couldn't help myself, since I had the financier in my mouth. 

Before you think I have some sort of Wall Street Banker fetish, you should know something: a financier, as it turns out is a small sort of french cake.  

I didn't know either! 

Missy and I tried them when my aunt took us out for brunch yesterday at the Brasserie, a lovely and fairly snooty french restaurant in Manhattan.  

When I saw them on the menu they struck me so funny, I had to order them. 

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They were delicious. I'll maybe have to lick a realtor next. ​

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Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude