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Posts Tagged ‘Eckhart Tolle’

Monday, August 4

I was asked by an editor of a local food and wine publication to write an article on the gluten free, Celiac experience, highlighting which restaurants are best prepared to accommodate the gluten free diet, to include the safe beverages to imbibe, by way of wine and spirits.  I am excited to get to work on the story.

While at work, I got a message in my Facebook inbox from a guy I hardly know who I met when I first moved back to Oregon in October.  He was actually responding to a random message I had sent him the night before…

There are those flickering moments of slight inebriation that just happen to happen to some of us every now and again.  I really don’t drink that much.  I limit myself when it comes to alcohol consumption.  Mostly, to be easy on my stomach.  But, I had people over for dinner last night and drank a few glasses of wine in the safety and comforts of my home.

And sometimes, in those flickering moments, the firecracker in me comes out.  She can be at times a little confrontational, part revolutionary leader, part underdog and part feminist Queen.  She’s  a trip.  She’s stoic but with a sense of humor. 

Yeah, she came out on Sunday night after the dinner party dwindled down, after a few bottles of wine had been shared.  Some people drink and dial.  She drank and Facebooked.  A discussion came up about who was that random guy who’s face emerged in the “Friends” section set amongst the faces of a few of my female friends – all who were actually, well, friends.  I laughed and said I hardly knew.  Truth be told, I know all 198 people who make up my friends, except for this guy.  Which is no biggie, but it is pretty random.  And last night I wrote him to let him know I thought it was weird that he was in my group of Facebook friends.  Which, today, seemed pretty funny to me.  I really don’t care one way or another about his status in my friendship list, but, well, he just so happened to be the guy who’s photo showed up in a mix of my friends, so he got the roulette message.

What can I say?  We’re all fallible.  We’re all a mess, really.  That’s human nature.  Not the neat perfection we’d all like to be packaged in.  We’re complicated, layered and unpredictable.  And, often, it’s in our stumbling moments of our most painful or embarrassing and obvious imperfections that we get to really know ourselves better, more intimately and most authentically.

 

Am I mixed up woman who drank and Facebooked, or was there something else going on?

Well, for one, I can laugh at myself.  I don’t usually make such an ass of myself.  I mean, I didn’t exactly Amy Winehouse myself.  This minor goof was funny, not pathetic as one might find it to be – though the smug, judgmental person out there might think otherwise.  But I’m really not concerned about that person.  No, I prefer to not be so uptight or mortified.  And, thus, I have learned that I have a sense of humor about myself.  An ability to laugh at and forgive myself.  If there was a pattern of bad behavior, well, I might consider therapy.  But this was random and for that, even more hilarious to me.  It really was my very own Sex & the City moment – the funny, humiliating ones like when Carrie Bradshaw does something over-the-top ridiculous in the name of love.  It’s endearing.  It’s human.  And we have all been there.

This also forced me to look at what was going on in my head, aside from the wine.  In my conscious world, I am not lonely.  But, maybe in my subconscious I really am.  That’s a hard thing to admit or to discover, and it rocks the boat a little.  I confess that this unsettled me a little.  I could get past the silly behavior.  I wasn’t so sure about the abstract self analysis.

I left work at 6:40, a long day, and changed into my workout clothes when I got home.  I headed over to the gym for a good 30 minute run.  I stopped over-processing the latter thoughts about my drink and Facebook action last night.  I allowed myself to get pulled into the latest news of Brangelina’s new baby names.  Good God.

Back at home, I made the left-over foccaccia pizza for dinner, with a lovely mixed greens salad topped with more gorgeous heirloom grape tomatoes.  I finished with a nice cup of Yogi chamomile tea with local honey and 3 Glutino mini chocolate cookies.

While preparing my dinner, I kept looking at my flowers – which I loved!  The purple and orange tulips looked so pretty, fully open as if commanding look at me!  I never buy myself flowers and was delighted to have them in my kitchen.  I want to give myself more delight.  Less disappointment, judgment, criticism, the stuff that is made up of a chorus of negative voices that can bruise and damage.  Instead, I think of Randy Paush’s widow’s wise words – not helping.   What does help – bringing yourself flowers.  Bringing delight into your life, delight or the light.

Before going to bed, I had picked up my copy of Eckhart Tolle’s A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose and I found myself re-reading the parts about the ego.  There’s the section about Identification with Things (p. 35-38), highlighting our attachment to material things, to consuming. 

Tolle writes, “when you live in a world deadened by mental abstraction, you don’t sense the aliveness of the universe anymore.” 

He also writes about our obsessive preoccupation with things, attachments created by the ego.  He goes on to write, “Being must be felt”.  He explains that “[most people] were looking throughout their lives for a more complete sense of self, what they were really looking for, their Being, had actually always already been there, but had been obscured by their identification with things,  which ultimately means identification with their mind (p. 43).  And that “Life will give you whatever experience is most helpful for the evolution of your consciousness.  How do you know this is the experience you need?  Because this is the experience you are having at this moment” (p.41).

I continued reading the sub-sections about Wanting: The Need for More, Identification with the Body and Feeling the Inner Body.  What’s great about this book is that it makes me slow down and really think about my ego, my obsession with material things and consumerism, and my trials with finding my Being, and, ultimately, how this behavior prevents me from getting and having what it is I really want and need in life – whether it’s regarding financial security, success in my career, success with my writing, and my relationships or lack thereof.

Heavy stuff.  I should probably meditate on it.  Instead, I’ll bring my flowers into my writing room and enjoy them for the moment.  In the moment.

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Friday, February 29
11:47 p.m.

Another productive day at work.  I am in the process of updating portions of our website, including the staff section.  There were 4 new staff who needed their photos taken, mine needed to be updated, along with our winemaker and assistant winemaker and president/co-owner.  So, I hired my friend Carolyn, the assistant winemaker’s wife, to take the headshots in our barrel room.  When I went down for my photo shoot, well, she made me straddle a barrel.  Seriously.  I couldn’t stop laughing.  Once I was balanced, and stopped goofing around, she took a number of photos.  It was really cool to see Carolyn in her element, being creative, taking serious photos – although, with me as her subject, I’m not sure how serious that could be.  It was fun.  Her shots turned out to be quite lovely.  Here’s a sample:

Portrait by Carolyn Wells-Kramer

Carolyn will specialize in children’s photography, but all of her shots are impressive.  As far as I’m concerned, with a camera, you either have “it” or you don’t – an eye for the shot, for the right lighting, a sense for the perfect shot.  Here’s more info on her work:  http://carolynwells-kramer.vox.com/

After work I looked up times to see the newly released film The Other Boleyn Girl.  I went over to Pacific Breeze for my Catholic Lenten non-meat dinner of seafood rice noodle soup.  Yum.  I brought along the book Unpredictable by Eileen Cook.  It’s a charming story, so far.  After dinner for one, I drove back home and got in touch with my friend Susan, who was at the Bridgeport Village cinema holding our tickets for the movie, which was about to sell out!  I met her and I have to say, we end up seeing the best movies together.  The last film we saw together was Atonement, and we sat still as statues during the ending credits while people stumbled over us to get out.  We were just mesmerized.  This movie didn’t pack quite the same punch as Atonement, but we remained in our seats well after the theater cleared.  It was really good.  Perhaps I’m just a sucker for period pieces, but both of these films were about tender and fragile relationships between sisters that go so woefully wrong.  Both Susan and I have a sister, and our sisters are so different from us.  Our relationships with our sisters are quite different, but the impact of both stories was pretty indelible.

After the movie we went over to Tutto Bene for gelato.  I had a small scoop of pistachio and a small scoop of ciocolatto.  Yum.  We chatted about the movie and complicated relationships.  I drove home feeling a little congested.  By the time I got in my pajamas I was getting a runny nose with some congestion.  Here we go again.  I didn’t feel stressed.  But there’s another strain of the cold going around, along with this crazy flu.  I haven’t heard about anyone around here with this particular flu – it was huge on the east coast.  In any case, I was feeling like a cold was coming on.  So, I took a Claritan before going to bed and administered my ever so helpful Breathe Right Nose Strip.  I could do a serious ad campaign for both products!

I read a portion of Eckhart Tolle’s latest book A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose.  This book, selected by Oprah for her book club, is actually the best selling book in her popular series.  It really compliments the Tibetan Buddhist books I have been reading, actually.  I read through the first chapter.  I am currently reading 5 books at the same time, so this one was on hold for awhile.  In any case, I took away an understanding, more or less, that it is no coincidence that I have been relating to Tibetan Buddhism to help me in my spiritual exploration.  According to Tolle, we are onto a new era, a new chapter in consciousness of the human experience.  He basically suggests humans have been operating in an insane, mad entrapment of Ego for the past millennia or so, which explains the cause for wars, mass murders (more people have been killed on this earth by the hands of humans than natural causes or disasters).  We are on to a new consciousness.  I hope he is right.  I am eager to read on.

So, as I am writing this, I’m listening to a special recording of Prayer of Saint Francis by Sarah McLachlan.  It’s so beautiful.  I am a huge fan of the writings of Saint Francis.  He’s the Catholic’s poet, in my opinion.  St. Cecelia is my patron saint, the saint of music and poetry, but, I think Saint Francis is another sacred being in my life.  I reference him so much in my novel.  He is a very important symbol in the story.  I think about how I might use this recording in the promotion of my book…

It is time to go to sleep.

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