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is this anything

~ a compendium, by Nancy Coughlin

is this anything

Tag Archives: comfort

Pep Talks and Promises (a found poem)

19 Friday May 2017

Posted by is this anything in found poem, poem

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chocolate, comfort, cough drops, found poem, play, poem, work, zen

yin yang mandala

Pep Talks and Promises:
(an alphabetized conversation between Hall’s cough drop wrappers and Dove chocolate wrappers)

Be unstoppable.                                  Be fearless.
Buckle down and push forth.       Believe in love at first sight, just in case!
Conquer today.           Break the mold, be extraordinary!
Don’t try harder. Do harder!        Close your eyes and relax.
Don’t waste a precious minute.             Decorate your life.
Dust off and get up.                   Do all things with love.
Elicit a few “wows” today.           Even small celebrations deserve a dance.
Fire up those engines!                      Feel the sun on your face.
Flex your “can do” muscle.          Forget the rules and play by your heart.
Get back in the game.                 Get a good night’s sleep.
Get back in there, champ!                    Indulge your sense of amusement.
Go for it.              It’s definitely a bubble bath day.
Inspire envy.                                It’s OK to not do it all.
It’s yours for the taking.              Laugh, laugh, and laugh some more.
Let’s hear your battle cry.            Listen to your heart and dance.
March forward!               Live in the present, forgive your past.
Nothing you can’t handle.                Live your dreams.
Power through!                        Lose yourself in a moment.
Push on!                      Love like there is no tomorrow.
Put a little strut in it.                          Send your best friend flowers.
Put your game face on.                 Simply be, rather than do, for a moment.
Seize the day.              Sing along with the elevator music.
Take charge and mean it.            Someone is thinking of you right now.
Tough is your middle name.              Take time out for a catnap.
Turn “can do” into “can did!”           Think of every day as a Sunday.
You can do it and you know it.           Think without boundaries.
You’ve survived tougher.                                 You make everything lovely.

not difficult (Sengcan quote, Roz Chast cartoon)

10 Wednesday May 2017

Posted by is this anything in quotation

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choice, comfort, grace, marriage, roz chast, sengcan, serenity, surrender, zen

“The Great Way is not difficult for those who have no preferences.” –Sengcan

27 years

A simple, impossible thing (a poem)

29 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by is this anything in poem, revision

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absolution, comfort, friendship, grace, home, longing, loss, love, memory, poem, revision, surrender, writing, zen

A simple, impossible thing

1
A memory that breaks my fall: the winter night we climbed
the mountain tower, and Maggie, in her scarf that matched
her lipstick, in her nimblest sneakers, hoisted her blithe
body onto a parapet, so naturally I thought why-not, began
my own uppity fumble–yes, but you agreed with gravity. You
held my shoulders, laughed and said oh no you don’t.

2
You who cage such raucous grace beneath your ribs that even
its muted, chastened flutter flies me back to the once-upon
world of my babies. Rolling together in the bay-window room,
one saggy end of baggy bed to other, goofy giggly, basking
in the sun’s noblesse oblige approval of our basking
in the sun. You make me ache (but sweetly—how??) for my two
girls. As they did, once (those days cut short by random
knife), you invite me, for a visit, back to Eden.

3
A sentence from the book they’ll write of us someday:
“From opposite sides of the crowded room, they sent each
other smiles of warm encouragement.” Note the cool
authority, dear one: third-person, omniscient. I too will bear
mere witness then. I’ll delegate our story to the crone
I’ve only glimpsed so far: the all-aware third-
woman solving crosswords near the mirror-hall exit. If only
I could catch her now, could pilfer her quintessence
prematurely… It’s a maze, you (don’t) know: this
fissure lit only by cavewoman’s torch. This life
of the unreliable narrator. (Long-standing English-major
wish: I’m Huckleberry Finn, and wise beyond my knowing.)

4
You might, moreover, note (or not) how I grow tired—or, no,
how I long to grow tired—of picking at the threads
of vagaries–my half-concocted memories and clues. Not just
the strands that lead toward you, my love (though you’ve
reason to think they all lead there), but others too,
spreading like jellyfish tendrils (let’s say) across
mandalic seas. How deep-down, how finally I want to have
already said all I’m still so dumbly bent on saying.
Then, afterward, to fall into that haven uncannily
coincident with the hollow between your chest
and collarbone, that nest we built from twigs and wine
one summer night, and have never yet flown far from. Forever
I rest there in times of near-asleep and near-awake. Forever
you’re my respite from that double-edged hope: to lose
all need to talk or write, or to trip across the miracle
of telling all, just once, and plainly, and then to let it
let me let it go, absolved at last of everything but love.

Image

creativity (a quote from Albert Einstein

30 Monday May 2016

Posted by is this anything in quotation

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Tags

apophenia, comfort, creativity, grace, happiness, meditation, memory, serendipity, serenity, surrender, thinking out loud, writing, zen

Take-time-to-smell-the-flower-resizecrop--

Creativity is the residue of wasted time. –Albert Einstein

(PS: if this is true, I’m golden.)

knowing (a tweet)

14 Thursday Apr 2016

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

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acceptance, apophenia, balance, comfort, freedom, grace, grief, paradox, suffering, thinking out loud, transience, tweet, zen

ants stick

The knowing is beautiful. Thus, the struggle that brought you the knowing–mustn’t that also be beautiful?

Plenary (a poem)

07 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by is this anything in poem

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comfort, love, poem, surrender

couple-dancing botero

Plenary

We meet next week. First time. Your mountain nest.
A hard or happy time–we can’t know yet.
(Both, I bet.) No worry, though: I know you
either way. And you know me (the one
who’s grinned so long her face could crack).
So when, with you, the tears come, full and free—
what luxury! Let’s cry together, love, clinging
tighter as the fireplace cools, between
the flannel sheets I’ll bring you as my present.
Let’s take a day or days to soothe and witness,
cling and cry… As if we’ve never cried before? No,
hardly that. We’ve cried forever. But as if
we could believe the crazy truth of us: that
with each other we can cry, and feel known,
feel safe, feel loved–at the very same time.

tweet (a quote from Lao Tzu)

10 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in Uncategorized

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agoraphobia, balance, both, comfort, compassion, lao tzu, love, paradox, quotation, surrender, zen

Lao Tzu: “Without opening your door, you can open your heart to the world.” #zen #agoraphobia

mailbox agoraphobe

soothing (a tweet)

09 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

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apophenia, balance, comfort, happiness, illusion, love, randomness, serenity, yin yang, zen

cars road

I like, tonight, just hearing the cars go up and down the hill. I’ve always been a huge fan of the Doppler Effect.

realization (a tweet)

27 Monday Oct 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

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autism, comfort, helplessness, loss, randomness, surrender, thinking out loud, zen

I let go of “why” not in a moment’s choice, but slowly, via years of listening, lonesome, to its unrequited echo.
ice cave

just (a quote from Ram Dass)

08 Wednesday Oct 2014

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comfort, compassion, friendship, grace, love, quotation, ram dass, serenity, surrender, transience, zen

“We’re all just walking each other home.” ―Ram Dass

two-kids-under-a-banana-leaf-in-the-rain-indonesia

 

grok* (journal entry)

22 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in journal entry

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acceptance, apophenia, autism, choice, comfort, family, grief, grokking, Hannah, illusion, journal, loss, love, memory, metaphor, motherhood, quote, robert heinlein, serendipity, slice of life, thinking out loud, zen

 

vintage-packaging-flower-seed-packets-from-thes_icnfe_4

(http://thepackaginginsider.com/vintage-packaging-flower-seed-packets-from-the-1800s/) (lovely!)

Journal entry, August 28, 2014

Cleaning house yesterday, on a forgotten shelf I found a shirt of Hannah’s. A stretchy Goodwill t-shirt, powder blue, with folksy flower-seed-packet art on the front. Minor stains, of course, plus a hole in the back collar where someone (I?) had clumsily lopped off the tag. [Shirt tags made Hannah itch.] I held the shirt to my face and breathed it in like an idiot seeking the flowers. But no, it was just that the shirtfront–and then the shirt’s inside–was the only part that hadn’t been exposed to nine years of dust.

And I believed the shirt still smelled like Hannah, believed that I could know–could grok*–her presence, her self, merely through these greedy inhalations of not-quite-random air. I sat on my bedroom floor and pulled the shirt onto my head (think of a blind bank-robber), and then, to a point far past absurdity and fast approaching asphyxia, I breathed in and out its ineffably Hannah smell. (Must, dust, detergent, every mundane staleness, but something of her there too–something.) I chose to feel myself awash in her essence. As in the many dreams I’d dreamed, hope-caught, throughout her life, I felt free once more to slip beneath the surface of Hannah’s embryonic, oceanic world, and to breathe, however feebly, underwater.

I chose to feel–and to believe–all this on such a primal level that the mind had no clue of the choice till it was made. But with a shrug, quite used by now to the heart’s vagaries, the mind humored us both. I nuzzled for one last deep second against the thread-worn seams that defined the shirt’s armpits. Then I pulled the shirt off and held it awhile. I dusted it, refolded it, and–ah, my darling girl, now what to do? Replace it on the forgotten shelf? Cleave it into rags? Throw it away? I couldn’t, can’t, decide this yet.

Ah yes, but still, how well I know: let go, let go, let go, let go.

——

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grok:

*Grok /ˈɡrɒk/ is a word coined by Robert A. Heinlein for his 1961 science-fiction novel, Stranger in a Strange Land, where it is defined as follows:

Grok means to understand so thoroughly that the observer becomes a part of the observed—to merge, blend, intermarry, lose identity in group experience. It means almost everything that we mean by religion, philosophy, and science—and it means as little to us (because of our Earthling assumptions) as color means to a blind man.

breathe (a quotation from Virgil) (a tweet)

17 Wednesday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation, twitter tweets

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acceptance, autism, comfort, grace, helplessness, metaphor, quotation, surrender, transience, tweet

On a day like this I breathe a weary mantra:
“Hug the shore; let others try the deep.” –Virgil
baby elephant

apophenia in writing (random thoughts)

06 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in Evolving ideas, random thought

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apophenia, both, coincidence, comfort, creativity, freedom, helplessness, illusion, memoir, memory, pareidolia, pattern, randomness, surrender, synchronicity, thinking out loud, writing, zen

fish constellation

The art of accident, the accident of art. Serendipity. Synchronicity. Coincidence. Luck. A world in which “success” and “failure” coexist. Where what feels like choice, also feels like surrender. Finding patterns in wallpaper, a piece of toast, the relative positions of stars–how different is this from configuring a unified plot from my life’s for-all-I-know random moments? Writing a memoir (writing anything) is an exercise in what I want to call “the management of apophenia.” Apophenia: the innate human tendency to find patterns in randomness. Michael Shermer, who wrote The Believing Brain, calls it “patternicity.” (Note to self: maybe I should too?)

So, “managing apophenia.” As far as I can gather, it’s the same practice as what I’ve heard other people call “harnessing serendipity.” At any rate, as I write this book I watch myself collate, from what may well have been a haphazard life, only those moments that my apophenic mind has singled out as vital to my “story”–and meanwhile viewing a million other moments as extraneous, as ignorable white noise. And how many events have I forgotten entirely, or never truly experienced as they happened, because they didn’t fit my evolving, concocted self-narrative? What details have I left out of focus, in the blurry background of the photo? (And don’t get me started on all the things that might have happened to me but happened not to happen.)

Without knowing it, I’ve spent my life culling memories, leaving only those that befit my apophenic self-vision. It’s what we all do, I imagine. It’s how we remember and distinguish ourselves as selves instead of hapless, nameless waves in an indifferent ocean. This is how we make “sense” of it all. When we view the night sky we have two basic choices: to be dumbstruck by chaotic infinity, or to superimpose a mythology.

The trick of it all, it seems to me, is to recognize and manage our innate search for patterns. The first step must be to comprehend that the patterns are indeed self-created, and not (necessarily) objectively “real.” But reality, of course, is a bit overrated. Sometimes a useful fiction gets you farther than a useless truth. We were born to invent a world out of random flecks of residue. The trick, now, is to waken to the whole of it, to understand that background and foreground, importance and trivia, failure and success, are objectively meaningless, so you might as well train your eyes to locate patterns that might help you best explain your myth, metaphorize your story.

@zerosumr (a tweet)

27 Sunday Jul 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

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acceptance, apophenia, both, comfort, death, friendship, grace, imkertje, metaphor, miracle, paradox, randomness, surrender, transience, tweet, zen

u know how i know yer Here, mijn schatje? Coz w/ yr death u finally taught me yr ineffable truth: that Here is an infinite place.

laughing buddha

 

 

chagrin (a tweet)

27 Tuesday May 2014

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absurdity, acceptance, arrogance, comfort, god, grace, grief, imbalance, surrender, tweet, zen

In hard times especially, I find myself confronted by my trademark absurdity: that I’m far more desirous that god should know me than that I should know god.

Image

my first haiku since 5th grade (poem)

08 Saturday Mar 2014

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balance, comfort, haiku, happiness, metaphor, peace, play, transience, warmth, writing, yin yang, zen

The heat, a soothing
roar, clicks off again, creates
a soothing silence.

Image

ephemera (letter excerpt)

07 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by is this anything in letter

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apophenia, balance, coincidence, comfort, ephemera, love, memory, mystery, randomness, transience, writing

Part of a letter I wrote to my friend Will today:

I love ephemera–as much as you do, I think, and for the same kinds of reasons. It’s as if we walk our lives through a heavy, debris-laden wind that leans us forward, bows our heads against its force, so that we can hardly tell where it is we’re finally going. Even so, we keep our eyes squinted open, our fingers poised, ready to grab at whatever fragment of life we might notice flying by, anything viable, readable, anything with a heartbeat, anything that isn’t merely dust. We grab at each little shard of paper or thread or somebody’s tossed-away keepsake. Clutching to contain it, we study it from every angle, view it through each lens, put it through x-ray machines, decoders, translators, machines that test for DNA and carbon-dating. We compare and combine it with our other fragments–our modest collection of worn-out, tattered, wind-stolen things. Finally we catalog and curate our new find, then tuck it away like a kitten beneath our coats to keep it, and us, alive and warm.

We could have been archaeologists, I think. Well, except for the part with the kitten. That doesn’t quite go, I guess… Okay, then: We could have been collectors of lost souls.

Image

ghost (tweet)

27 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets, Uncategorized

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Tags

acceptance, comfort, grief, loss, memory, surrender, zen

As I get older, I find that the past doesn’t haunt me the way it used to. But sometimes, now, I haunt it.

Image

apophenia (a tweet)

13 Friday Dec 2013

Posted by is this anything in Evolving ideas, twitter tweets, Uncategorized

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babies, comfort, patterns, randomness, surrender, tweet

Eyes, nose, mouth: this simple pattern becomes our first lullaby, our primal surrender to the comfort of randomness.

Image

One Thing I Know For Sure (a vignette)

18 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by is this anything in essay, vignette

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autism, comfort, Hannah, miracle, slice of life, surrender

One Thing I Know For Sure

This happened on what, by our standards, was an ordinary night. It was maybe a year after the diagnosis; Hannah was four years old. We were in the living room, and I was holding her, rocking her, in the La-Z-Boy. In those days she still liked being held, at least by me—I’d kept her used to it, I guess, by all the nursing, which was something she still loved so much that I’d given up the habit of bathing very often, because I knew how much she enjoyed breathing in my sour, mammalian smell. But right now I wasn’t nursing her. We were just rocking slowly, and watching TV, probably one of her Sesame Street videos, I don’t know. We were alone—I don’t know where my husband was.

I was talking to her endlessly, just absently commenting on the action of the video, or singing along with the songs. It’s what they tell you to do, of course—you’re supposed to keep talking and talking to an autistic kid, trying to make some little connection, elicit some tiny response. It came to remind me of how, if your ship is sinking in the middle of a dark empty ocean, you keep sending up flares anyway, just in case someone else might be out there, invisible to you.

We felt cozy that night: we both liked the Sesame Street videos, and we both liked rocking, and I think it might have been winter outside, because being inside felt more than usually luxurious. I leaned in close to Hannah’s ear, and I whispered, “I love you, Hannah.” And as we kept rocking I added, “Now you say, ‘I love you, Mommy.’” And it was just one of my rituals—I had so many in those days. I didn’t expect a response. I didn’t expect anything. It was just another of those things people told you to do, like waving goodbye when she boarded the pre-school bus, or trying to coax her into blowing out the candles on her birthday cake.

But on this particular night, just like that, as if it were the most everyday thing in the world, Hannah actually turned her face toward mine and said, very plainly, ‘I love you, Mommy.’”

Or maybe she didn’t turn her face. Maybe she just stared into space as she said it. It happened so fast, and it was almost twenty years ago. I’m not sure I can trust my vision of it. I can’t remember the tone of her voice anymore, whether it seemed heartfelt or just mechanical, parrot-like. (‘Echolalic’—that was the term they all used.) Just seconds after it happened, in fact, the whole thing fell apart, started to feel completely unreal, like a scene from one of the thousands of dreams I used to have in which Hannah talked.

So by now, some five years after her death, the only way I know the thing happened at all is that I made a point of remembering it. I said to myself—right then, as I held Hannah in the chair, and we watched Sesame Street, or whatever it was—I told myself that I’d have to hold on to this moment. It might be the only time I’d ever hear these words, I thought, so I’ve got to carry them with me forever, and they have to be enough.

Link

After the Hour of Lead (a link)

16 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by is this anything in essay

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Tags

autism, comfort, essay, grief, Hannah, surrender

After the Hour of Lead (a link) (to an essay about what happened next)

emily dickinson

Image

my saving grace (a photograph)

16 Saturday Nov 2013

Tags

comfort, love

my saving grace

Posted by is this anything | Filed under photograph

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Image

My laughing buddha (a photograph)

11 Monday Nov 2013

Tags

comfort, grief, surrender

My laughing buddha

Posted by is this anything | Filed under photograph

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