So, Christmas is often tough for me, and lots of other folks too.  

One of the big reasons for this is dealing with family and friends, many of whom you don't see very often, but are more than happy just to let you know what they think about you, your life, and your choices.  This same thing works in reverse, too.

Even though I know better, I often find myself gritting my teeth at something someone says or does, an attitude they hold, a way they treat me or others, or best yet a disagreement in politics.

The other day my brother Spacey sent me an article that offers another option: being Mindfully Free of Wanting People to Be a Certain Way.

I love this article.  I love my brother.  Many of the truths in this thing are things I already knew, had already sussed out for myself.

But I forgot.

What a gift to remember them again, and learn yet more reasons why that sort of wanting is an attachment I neither need nor want.

 

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

Here's a first.  I don't think I've ever put a piece of code I've written into my blog.  This little gem below is for a side-project of mine.  It's a Grails custom tag.  You call it on a GSP, a groovy server page, similar to the way you call an HTML tag.

  def formattedPhone = {attrs, body ->
    def rawNumber = attrs.phoneNumber
    out << "("+rawNumber.take(3)+") "+rawNumber.drop(3).take(3)+"-"+rawNumber.drop(6)
}

That looks kind of like this:

<g:formattedPhone phoneNumber="${user.mobileNumber}"/>

(On an amusing side note, when you make a string with a ${} set in it on a GSP, the code inside the handlebars is treated like an expression, and evaluated prior to the page load.  That's not the funny part.  The funny part is that those are called gStrings.  Aren't programmers a riot?)

Why is this my gratitude today?  Several reasons.  

First, I've been working with Grails for several years now, and since I'm working on a side project of my own, I get to build it the way I want, not the way that's been dictated to me.  I've known about custom tags for a while, but never had the chance to really use them before.

Second, I taught myself how to do this.  I had a vague idea of how tags worked in general, and why they were a good idea.  So I hopped on the net, did a little googling, and after reading a few interesting tidbits, banged out a bunch of tags.

A friend of mine taught me the word for this sort of behavioral ability before - it's called auto didacticism.  It's being a student, and one's own teacher too.  I'm glad to have it.  It serves me well.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude
IMG_2388.JPG

I keep bumping into examples today where advice I give other people is also good for me, and vice versa.  

First, this morning, on Unnamed Social Media Site, a friend of mine lamented about how she struggles to do everything she has to do in life, and can't seem to find time to even rest. 

I told her she was being way too hard on herself , and suggested that if she makes her own well-being a priority, maybe she would feel less overwhelmed. 

Cue irony in 3, 2, 1...  

I was telling my girlfriend Squee all about this, as I was driving to work this morning.  This was after the very good, very long day I had yesterday, when I got up around 4:30 in the morning, spent several hours coding at my side project, went to work, fought rain and traffic in a torturous commute, wolfed down way too much dinner, then proceeded to work until late on the side project again, then tossed and turned all night, still thinking of said side project.  This resulted in me: having trouble getting up, missing out on work on the project, missing out on going to the gym. 

By trying to do everything, I wound up not able to do much anything, beyond the minimums my day required of me today. 

But, giving my friend advice to be gentle to herself, combined with Squee's careful eye upon me, helps me see that what's good for others is also vital for me, too.  I need sleep.  I need to eat right.  I need to work out, and take care of myself, physically.  Bouncing back and forth between awesome supercapable day and terrible burnout day is no way to live. 

So, it's getting on towards the end of my work day, when I get an email from a podcast listener, as follows: 

Subject: Mindfulness

Hey!

I am working on practicing mindfulness as a way of decreasing anxiety. What's the phrase that you say on many of the podcast episodes? Something like "Where am I? What am I doing?"

Thanks,

**redacted listener**

 

So, here's what I told them.

Hiya!

You're talking about The Two Most Important Questions in the Universe™. They are:
"Where are you?"
And
"What time is it?"

The answers being that:
You are here.
It is now.

Which are actually the only time and place you can be, although we frequently lie to ourselves and pretend otherwise.

Thanks!
--mako

That's some damn good advice.   It's funny how as I give it to someone else, I'm kind of re-giving it to myself, all over again.  Sometimes I lament, for comic effect, what a pain in the ass the universe is, my ever-present, always-giving, provider-of-lessons.  And while sometimes the way these things jump out at me really is annoying, mostly it's a blessing that I'm grateful for every single time it happens.

So, I'm going to go home now, and take back roads, drive slowly, and listen to an audiobook I am enjoying.  Then I'm going to relax, and go to bed on-time for a healthy bed time.

 

You know that old saying about how a picture's worth a thousand words?  Yesterday a friend of mine showed me an amazing cartoon that proves that out.

This one.

IMG_2382.jpg

There's so much going on here, so many hard-to-convey ideas in play. 

First, when you're a trapezoid (or an age player, or a kink person, or anyone on the margins of social acceptance) it's so tempting to want squares, triangles, and circles (regular people) to approve of you.  And it's not entirely a misplaced idea either. After all, you're still a shape (a person).

But there be dragons there, so maybe you just work from within, do self-acceptance, that sort of thing.  It feels really good when you embrace your inherent trapezoidal nature, hang out with other trapezoids, buy the latest trapezoid accessories too

It's awesome to say, put trapezoid art up in your house, go to the trapezoid munch.
But that's also, not the whole story.

Take a closer look at the cartoon.  It's super telling that in that whole cartoon the trapezoid gets one line and two facial expressions.

The whole narrative comes from everyone else.  So the trapezoid runs away.

This thing speaks to fears I've held, ways I've been treated. worst-case-scenarios that I've held onto that have kept me from new experiences and joy.  

It's the reason why it feels so good to get diapers in the mail, and put them away in a drawer by the bedside, like they're no big deal and just a part of my life.  It's why I bend over backwards to teach people to love themselves.  It's why I'm adamant about being a polite member of society, but not requiring the tacit approval of its majority.

It's not that I think that the square, the circle, and the triangle here are inherently intolerant assholes (although they're certainly acting that way), it's that they and the trapezoid have bought into a paradigm where you're only worthy of love and belonging if the majority says so.

And that's utter nonsense.  

I'm really grateful for this comic because it shows the problem so very clearly.

We've got an out though, maybe even an adaptive strategy around it.  We can recognize that unity and difference aren't opposites, they're complements.  One exists to help define the other.  It's not that the trapezoid isn't a shape.  It clearly is.  The square, the circle, and the triangle have demonstrated that they're just not willing to see it, which forces the trapezoid to seek validation elsewhere.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

I've had my awesome, wonderful car, Appa, for five years now.  Appa's a 2010 Toyota Prius.  I first got him back when I was in a terrible car accident, that totaled my last car.  I had wanted a Prius for a long while.  My friend Frankie has one, and uses it to drive all over, these crazy long distance drives, hundreds, if not thousands of miles, one way.  

So, when misfortune struck, I used it to my advantage.  I got a really good insurance payout from the accident, and used it to buy my Appa, used.

Today was a big milestone in my life with Appa.  I own him.  I had a five year note, and thought I was done paying it last month.

As it turned out, I was off by nine dollars and ninety-seven cents, which I went and paid today, in cash.

Beyond the fun of putting a $20 down on the counter and telling the teller I wanted to buy a car, the whole thing is kind of a big deal to me.  I bought the car as a kind of polyamorous investment.  I wanted a car I could drive long distances, on the cheap, to see the people I love.  

And that's an investment that's worked out.  I have regularly driven Appa from Virginia to North Carolina, to western Maryland, and to New York, and Florida even.  He's an amazing car.

Part of why I wanted the car is because I know they last for a long time if you take good care of them.  I'm at this crossroads in my life, where I'm starting a new business, one that might make me do a heck of a lot of local travel as the business grows.

I'm looking forward to outright owning Appa for a very long time.  Every other car I've bought in the past twenty years, I wound up trading in to get something else.  Appa's been different.  I have taken very careful care of him for as long as I've had him, knowing that I intended to hang on to him for a long time.  I made a mature, sensible plan, and stuck with it.  

And now that plan's at its fulfillment.  In the best way possible, I feel like a total grown-up.

 

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude