Jane

Mar 032012
 
This is What Is © 2012 Jane Waterman

This is What Is © 2012 Jane Waterman

This is a post I’ve been meaning to write for a long time. Having been through a somewhat hectic week, and feeling rather strung out by recent pain levels, I thought I’d try to jot down some of my thoughts in a more experiential post, and at a later time, explore the topic with some research.

First, I have to apologize for abandoning my attempt at daily blogging, or rather, offer an explanation as to why it didn’t work for me, and likely wouldn’t work for most people in chronic pain, especially those who are still able to work in some capacity to make a living. The quick answer is, there isn’t quite enough room in the chronic illness time-space continuum for such a commitment. My part-time work had kept me entirely engaged until mid-February, and despite carving out the time for my blog, I eventually crashed into the hard limits of Sjogren’s and the whole work-sleep-repeat cycle wasn’t terribly sustainable, nor conducive for accessing the energy required to pursue creative endeavours. That, and the pain flare up that had me visit the ER for the usual scrabbling in the dark, and the experience of a pain med that rather than offer relief, cast me into a deeper depression for a few days.

In the middle of one of those sleepless and dark nights, I stumbled upon the spark of an ebook that I wanted to write, about sensitivity and its relationship to depression and chronic pain. As I began to exercise research skills long neglected from my abandoned grad school days, I found myself getting excited about the topic and began writing the early review chapters of the book. I use the word ‘chapters’ advisedly, as it’s a long time since I’ve granted myself real time to dedicate to a writing project, and I knew it would be better to commit to something shorter upon which I could elaborate later (much like this post). Even since that early success and enthusiasm, I’ve had a difficult stretch meeting life’s commitments, much less spend time writing, which only confirms my wisdom in taking a graduated approach to what I feel is embarking on my true life’s work.

Last month, I reached the one-year anniversary of the nagging chronic pain in my kidney region. I also use this vague phrase advisedly, and will elaborate later in this post. I celebrated this milestone with a trip to the ER in response to the urging of my concerned wife and naturopath. Both were keen to see a scan done and perhaps more testing, to try to figure out what this pain was about.

I am no stranger to pain. Around my 17th year, I developed crippling pelvic cramps with my period: the kind that left me doubled over for a good hour or two at a time. Back then, I wasn’t able to easily swallow pills, so I dealt with all those episodes without pain medication. Some 5 years later I started on the contraceptive pill, and I suspect this only aggravated my body’s natural disposition to forming cysts. Within a couple of years, the acute food poisoning/giardia episode that triggered my autoimmune disease had me scrambling to different specialists to scan my body and map the source of the terrible abdominal pain that plagued me for 8 months. During one such scan, the first large (7cm) ovarian cyst was discovered.

As part of my journey, that cyst was drained (I discovered later, a rather useless procedure) in 1996. Around that time, the crippling pelvic pains took on a life of their own. I discovered quickly that heat helped, and I often spent a lot of time curled on the floor of my bedroom or the shower, applying heat for the hour or two it took for each ‘burster’ to pass.

Over the years, I began to develop terrible joint pain in addition to the muscle pain I already endured (which I think is part of the body’s natural reaction of ‘tensing’ in response to pain). This pain was attributed by my rheumatologist at the time to the drying effects of Sjogren’s, which had manifested in all sorts of ways: dental decay, chronic sinus and throat infections, bronchitis and pneumonia.

All along, I had the not-so-subtle sense that the medical industry thought I was somehow making this pain up. I became used to being discounted and disbelieved, often suffering in silence, especially in those years I lived alone with no way of taking myself to a hospital, even if I’d wanted to. When you’re on the floor, it’s hard to even think about dialling 000 (the Australian equivalent of 911).

In 2003, a benign mass was removed with my right ovary. Five years later, as my other ovary shattered, I experienced the true depths of pain. Later that day in the hospital, as the surgeon removed what was left in an emergency hysterectomy, she discovered what my intuition had always known: I was bleeding internally, and had been for some years: every time one of those cysts burst. The surgeon cleaned up the mess in my pelvic cavity, and later told my wife that I was a brave woman to have lived with the pain I’d obviously been experiencing.

Brave. That’s a nice word to hear after so many unacknowledged years of suffering.

However, now I’m back to square one with this past year of ‘kidney’ pain. Over the years, I became quite used to bladder infections that sometimes had kidney involvement, and with the help of a former naturopath, had some effective ways of treating it. I think these infections lay squarely within the realms of Sjogren’s syndrome and, after so many years, didn’t particularly worry me. So when my kidney started having episodes of pain last February, I didn’t think a lot about it and used the usual herbal, ‘Yellow Dock’, to remedy it.

However, the episodes kept coming. There were periods of acute, stabbing and then dull pain, and sometimes nausea. The doctor looked for infection, but didn’t find any, and that was that. There was a tiny bit of blood in the urine, but she wasn’t particularly worried about this. By June, the pain had settled into a dull, chronic pain, and didn’t go away. Again, the blood and urine tests didn’t show a lot to worry about, but I asked to see my internist. He sent me to another internist, who reportedly had greater knowledge of the kidney. By about September, I got to see the internist. I told him my history, he asked about my eating, drinking, smoking and exercise habits. He was concerned I think about my lack of exercise. I know it concerned me. I have generally been able to keep a basic yoga practice going, and some walking, but by the time I saw him, most of that had dwindled due to pain issues.

Exercise is difficult with even mild to moderate chronic pain. I don’t know that doctors make that connection. I remember in my early twenties, dealing with yet another gum infection, the dentist prescribed me a stronger painkiller (likely a Panadol Forte – like a Tylenol 1 with codeine), saying that I couldn’t hope to garner the resources to work on feeling better until the pain (which included severe headaches) receded sufficiently. I could have hugged her. It’s a lesson that a lot of doctors could learn.

Yes, there are a lot of people seeking the escape of a drug-mediated release. It seems increasingly common in our society, and I think it says more about the psychic burden of living in our times than it does necessarily about the perceived weakness or moral decreptitude of those seekers.

However, for some of us, pain medication is just the promise of a brief easing of, or respite from, the never-ending, mind/body/soul-destroying crush of constant, unrelenting pain. This ‘kidney’ pain wasn’t too bad on the scale of things, hovering around a 4-6 out of 10, with the occasional excursion to 8 or 9. I knew what a ’10′ was, thanks to my emergency back in 2008. Yes, the pain wasn’t too bad. Yes, others have it much worse. But on the top of all the other little (and not so little) chronic pains, in my experience of the world, it felt like the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back. I wanted to do something about it.

The new internist advised me that I needed to drink LOTS of water. I needed to pee 2 or 3 litres a day to have a healthy kidney. I needed to avoid chocolate and green leafy vegetables. He didn’t even tell me why. I learned later that he must have been thinking of a kidney stone undetectable by ultrasound, X-ray, or CT scan, all of which I’d had by then. He told me that the CT scan looked okay – never quantifying what okay was – perhaps sure that I was a hypochondriac seeking more attention (I’m not sure who enjoys negative attention, but it’s not me), drugs, or something else. He told me that I didn’t have a tumour or an aneurysm, so I should be relieved. Somehow, I wasn’t. He told me that after a month, if the pain persisted, I should return. I drank the water (I don’t know if I was peeing 2 or 3 litres, but it was a lot by my regular standards). I drank bottle after bottle of pure blueberry juice.

The pain persisted, but I didn’t return. Why? Mostly, because I knew that the specialist, like my GP, thought I was making a big deal about nothing. Blood in your urine? If you can’t see it, then it’s no big deal. Evidence in blood or urine tests? Flagged abnormal, but not in the range that shows kidney damage occurring, then it’s no big deal.

What have I learned about the medical industry’s response to chronic pain? It’s a pain, literally. When I saw my doctor last week for the results of the latest unremarkable ultrasound, I could see it in her face: a kind of ‘what do you expect me to do?’ expression of incredulity. She even said (in medicine’s defence) that some people expect to go to specialists and find an answer to their problems (This, even as she set up other referrals for me, that I’m not sure I should take). Not me, doctor. This isn’t my first rodeo.

I’ve been living with pain since 1990. That’s nearly 22 years, which kind of shocks me to put that number out there. You see, I’ve gotten used to minimizing my own experiences, dismissing them, following medicine’s party line that I should not be feeling what I feel.

In 2008, a surgeon cut me open, and even with her vast experience, my body surprised her. Brave: she said I was brave.

Yet here I am again in 2012, thinking that I’m making too much of this. My naturopath tells me there should be more to life than this. I’d like to believe her, but medicine has told me that I’m expecting too much. Everything I experience and feel is not significant, and I’m causing them trouble, trying to find an explanation for it. I’m sure my GP would be happy if I didn’t bother her anymore. Same goes for those specialists. I’m not denying the heavy workloads under which they operate – weighed down by the proliferation of chronic pain sydnromes out there, which are surely symptomatic of the stresses of our times.

However, to tell all those people that their pain is only significant if it’s acute, if one day, an organ or body part shatters, then what we are saying is we can only deal with catastrophes. With diagnostic medicine at its most advanced, we can scan almost anything in the body in great detail, and if we can’t see it, our healers are telling us that we can’t believe it.

The doctor presses the spot near my right kidney on my body and I jump. Due to my pain syndromes, she could get that response anywhere. She now rethinks her diagnosis. Perhaps a torn muscle, a fractured bone? I ask if those cause blood in the urine. No. She reconsiders, that the blood, insignificant as it is, must be a coincidence, a presentation of some other problem. The pain is in the muscle layers above the kidney, she tells me, and is most likely not in the kidney. She thinks I should take Lyrica, now quite well-known as a fibromyalgia drug.

I should digress briefly to say that I know what body-mind stress-induced muscle pain is like. I experienced a chronic painful one in 2010 that likewise sent me to the ER, but resolved only with the intervention of a gifted counsellor. This pain is not like that, but the doctor has introduced doubt in my mind. Have I fussed too much? Made too big a deal of something that really isn’t anything? Even if a part of my mind tells me that a torn muscle or even a bone fracture would heal in a year, I defer logic to her training.

So, I’ll wait, hoping that with the help of the naturopath I can resolve this chronic pain, without the need for the catastrophic medicine I required in those small morning hours in 2008.

Blessings,
Jane

Feb 122012
 

This is today’s sentence. I hope to build on it tomorrow.

Blessings,
Jane

Day 38-41 of … Shame

 Posted by at 2:54 am  No Responses »
Feb 112012
 
Shame © 2012 Jane Waterman

Shame © 2012 Jane Waterman

I come to writing today wrung out, hollowed, disappointed, ashamed. I can forgive myself the days that lapsed since my last entry. I sank into the recesses of a cave, and there I went through the motions of life in the grip of a depression so strange I can not easily shrug it off as chemical or worn neural pathways or… Is it just as I feared – the moral weakness of my soul stripped bare leaves me to such suffering?

I avoided self-hate, while hating everything that I did and created. I still created, but it felt too much like a mechanical scrabbling in the dark. I observed my brain, the object of my disease, and with that objectivity lost any sense of compassion I could feel for it. This was the past, but for a while, this was my present.

It began with the evening of the hospital. Pain, dehumanizing enough, perhaps was the catalyst. Seeking some kind of new answer to the stale problem of my kidney pain, I ventured there. The doctors and nurses were kind enough in their way. I felt heard, validated, even as I realized they could do nothing for an unknown problem. Even now I wait for the results of a scan that I fear will be too much like past ones. I wonder how it is medicine can only deal with pain when bodies are exploding. When it is a quiescent form of flesh and bone, it seems the body will never reveal its secrets.

Perhaps it was the Toradol they fed to me intraveneously, offering to help ease the pain. The doctor was extending compassion as he knew how. It didn’t reach me, perhaps because I was already beyond my body, in the realm of the mind. Slowly, the dark cavern of depression spread around me, and all I could do was be a remote observer, seeing how it sucked the joy out of the moment. Each moment that came in its wake was equally grey and lifeless.

Somehow, I blamed myself for being weak, for going to the hospital, when perhaps I wasn’t really ill. My body wasn’t exploding, and the pain, though real, was contained.

Now, I pause.

I see this is how it was, for so many of my adult years. And I feel a faint tint of orange compassion spilling over the chasm of my blue prison. I never asked to be ill. I never wanted this. God knows, I never got any advantage from it. It just was.

It just was. It just is. It’s not my fault.

God knows, it is not my fault.

Blessings,
Jane

 
Heart of Compassion #1 © 2012 Jane Waterman

Heart of Compassion #1 © 2012 Jane Waterman

These are not the colours of my sadness and pain. The colours of the emotions I feel for the younger self I wrote about yesterday. Her sorrows are deep purples and blues, stretching into long twilights, the one searching the stars for one that might assuage her loneliness. Her longings are mauves and violets, the brief, barely felt surge when someone noticed her, when she thought she was important enough to connect to. I don’t know why I never liked her, why I never loved her.

She had this way of looking at the world that was expansive, seeing the multi-dimensions of the moment: feelings as colours, touch as pain, loneliness as a weight on her soul. She saw things in a way that I could never understand, me with my world reduced to equations of motion – she was the quantum mechanics to my solid indivisible atoms. She was the relativity theory to my Newtonian frame.

I see her with pale blue eyes, large, that shift in a moment to take on the colours of her surroundings. She noticed the small living things that noone had time for, and the feelings that people couldn’t feel. Her heart broke over so many things, and yet she put it back together and kept loving others as she could never love herself.

I see her now through the lens of compassion. Time is no barrier to stepping back to be beside her. Even for a middle child, spanned by five years either side, I can march up to her and whirl her around. I wonder if she would like that? I could dance with her, carry her on a merry jig, and enfold her in my love.

These are the colours of compassion, the unfolding flower that I give to her.

I think I can see her smiling.

Love,
Jane

Day 36 of … I Remember

 Posted by at 11:55 pm  No Responses »
Feb 052012
 
Sunset over Cowichan River © 2012 Jane Waterman

Sunset over Cowichan River © 2012 Jane Waterman

As much as I want to write, I can’t find a starting place, so I’m going to use one of Natalie Goldberg’s ideas from ‘Writing Down the Bones’.

I remember…

I remember the year I was ten or eleven years old. We lived in a huge rented house, with dark stained and varnished banisters, stained glass with red and green above the door, wrought iron fancy work on the verandahs, and the frangipanni tree that grew under the bathroom window. I loved climbing in the summer and putting the blossoms in my hair. It wasn’t a strong tree though. The outer branches were like fat little fingers that broke off if you applied too much pressure. You had to stay close to the trunk.

I remember the tree in the back I liked to climb. I had a branch where I perched and watched people come and go. Sometimes it seemed they’d forget this was my place, and I felt peaceful and invincible up there. In summer I’d pull up a cup and a bottle of cordial, so I could feel like the Famous Five, and have an adventure.

I remember going to Girl Scouts because my friend did. I didn’t really like it. I was always afraid I’d have to go to camp and then people would see I couldn’t eat normal food and that they’d laugh.

I remember walking to school. It seemed a long way. I’d have a big black samsonite case, and it always felt so heavy. That year a boy often caught up and offered to carry it a little way. I remember he always looked startled by heavy it was. I don’t remember what I kept in the case.

I remember waiting for my sister after school. She was in kindergarten, I in grade six. We’d walk home together. I remember when I went to high school, I’d catch the bus over to her school, and walk home with her. I only remember walking home with my older sister once.

I remember getting home and feeling so tired. I remember waking up in the shower and realizing that I hadn’t changed out of my uniform, down to the shoes. I remember being afraid what my mother would say. I don’t really remember what she did say. I don’t remember why I lost time and woke up in the shower.

I remember my good friend, Mary. Her dad, George, ran the fish and chip shop on the corner. He would always give me a chocolate paddle pop (ice cream).

I remember walking up the back lane and finding a sick sparrow. I remember picking it up and taking it to my mother. I remember her telling me I’d get mites from the sparrow. Maybe I did. I can’t remember if I got itchy. I think she told me to put it back.

I remember weekends when I’d remember Dad. He would sometimes let us girls take turns riding in the wheelbarrow. I remember he’d run us around on the pebbled path. I never even realized he would get tired.

I remember the sixth grade teacher who stressed me out and psychologically tormented me. I remember crying and Mum coming to school and the teacher discussing why I wasn’t doing the work. I think I had shut down. I remember thinking that if I did the work, he wouldn’t notice me so much anymore. I don’t know if that helped.

I remember learning to dance on the asphalt quadrangle with my class. Bush dancing like ‘Strip the Willow’, and the Zorba, and the Mexican Hat Dance. I remember going to a bush dance with a friend’s family once. I loved it. I remember wishing my family would go, but it wasn’t the kind of thing they were interested in.

I remember playing ‘Red Light, Green Light’ on the asphalt, and having a basketball thrown full into my stomach. I remember younger kids at school laughing at me and I remember wanting to feel invisible.

I remember when the circus came to school, to teach us juggling and acrobatics. I remember not being any good at it.

I remember being invited to my first birthday party. I remember being surprised, as I didn’t think anyone wanted me as a friend. Later that year, a classmate wrote to me from Scotland. I remember being surprised that she thought of me as a friend.

I remember the day our dog left. I don’t remember if she got another home, or if it was a family euphemism for put down. I remember the day my older brother left home, and feeling sad.

I remember looking at the stars at night, on the pebble path, with my other brother, and feeling special that he wanted to spend time with me. I remember deciding I wanted to be an astronomer when I grew up.

Now I am grown, I still love to look at the stars.

Blessings,
Jane

 

Feb 042012
 
The Fall of Winter © 2012 Jane Waterman

The Fall of Winter © 2012 Jane Waterman

I seem to have my sleep cycles back to front at the moment, but to be honest, I’m just trying to get through the days.

Today was a startling spring day in the Cowichan Valley. I say startling because when I came into the office in mid-morning, the light was blaring through the window. Most of my pictures were overexposed.

I used to be in touch with the ocean climate and the various atmosphere-ocean oscillations that governed freaks of nature like today. I lost touch with that world because it hurt too much to recall my self-perceived failure in the academic arena. Over time, I notice that attitude softening in myself, and the desire to look again into a world that once fascinated me returning.

Desires aside, it is not yet possible to bargain with the days to find enough energy to do so. Once again, it’s time to rest.

Blessings,

Jane

Feb 042012
 
The Experience of Pain © 2012 Jane Waterman

The Experience of Pain © 2012 Jane Waterman

During a discussion of pain and pain management with a good online friend (you can see his remarkable photography here), my friend Michael made the remark that the efforts of those who cope with chronic pain are heroic. It’s certainly not a typical way to view ourselves. My frequent experience in person and in online circles is that most people would rather you not talk about it. Indeed, if you do,  you’re perceived as a whiner or complainer at best, or that you deserve what you’re experiencing at worst. The following are some of my thoughts from that discussion.

It’s actually nice to think of oneself as heroic for a change. We get so used to people minimizing the experience, which is why I think many people tend to be humble and say that we do what we have to do. Myself, sometimes I wonder if it’s like the frog in the proverbial pot brought slowly to the boil. Because the evolution of pain over time is gradual, we almost become inured to the pain (or at least experts at disconnecting from the body and living in our own heads to escape it), whereas if we were dropped into a boiling pot we’d jump out in no time.

Before my emergency hysterectomy in 2008, I’d suffered 12 years of the most debilitating pelvic pain every time an ovarian cyst burst. No doctor took it very seriously, and I remember a telling situation where we were driving to the hospital, and the pain finally relinquished minutes from the door. I didn’t want to go in for another scan and be told nothing was wrong, so my wife turned the car around and we went home. During that emergency episode in 2008, I was throwing up from the pain. The ambulance came and got me and the surgeon told me about this big mass she saw on the scan. I could read cancer all over her face. Well she was surprised to cut me open and find over 2 pints of old and new blood pooled in the pelvic cavity. While I was still under, she told my wife that I was a very brave woman to have dealt with the pain I had obviously been going through. But I literally didn’t have a choice. The other scans hadn’t shown much of concern, past surgeries identified endometriosis and removed a benign tumour, but the doctors remained unconcerned despite my pain. It literally took an emergency to finally get relief. I still occasionally get episodes of that pain, and I don’t know whether to think it’s a phantom or something real.

Hence with my new experience of kidney pain, I’m not really trusting the doctors telling me it’s nothing. I don’t think it’s normal to have a dull pain in your kidney for a year.

I also think it’s destructive to ourselves to compare our pain – whether it’s constant or goes up or down – it’s pain, and we all deserve to improve our quality of life regardless. I know at the moment I have trouble sleeping with it, and it’s making me spacy. My body is wound tighter than a drum, which of course exacerbates the pain but it’s truly difficult to relax, even through meditation and yoga, when it’s so unremitting. So yes, you’re right, we are heroic, even if others don’t see the struggles we go through.

Blessings,

Jane

Feb 022012
 
Storm on Jupiter © 2012 Jane Waterman

Storm on Jupiter © 2012 Jane Waterman

I’m far away from my first career as a physicist, but not so far that I didn’t learn a few things. In particular, when preoccupied with the search for a theory of everything and being foiled yet again, physicists discover there’s always another level of complexity that they hadn’t considered. So when someone presents a theory of depression in absolute terms, I have to take a pause, consider my fellow physicists, and realize that medical doctors are as prone to the search for an elegant theory as anyone.

The problem I have with theories is this. If you search long and hard enough,  you’ll find exceptions to the rules. Sometimes, you don’t have to search that hard.

I’m told that we have to remove the idea of “chemical imbalance” from a theory of depression. It makes me wonder why then, that the side effects of some drugs – not necessarily psychoactive ones – have such dramatic effects on the brain. Something tells me there is a complex chain of cause and effect, a cascade that trickles all the way up to the brain.

When I went on Prednisone for a vicious case of  pneumonia associated with my Sjogren’s, in a few days I descended rapidly into a suicidal depression. Likewise, when taking Plaquenil for the same syndrome, I experienced a significant mood disturbance that likewise resulted in deep depression, and as a result I could only take half of the recommended therapeutic dose. I eventually realized that any benefit from the drug was outweighed by the mood disorder. So it disturbs me that if we are to throw out a chemical theory of the brain, why do these drugs have such significant effects on mood? And if there are drugs that have harmful effects, why can’t there be drugs that have beneficial effects?

I know there are. I have experienced them, and been saved by them. If we dismiss these effects as a placebo effect, we do a great disservice to the many individuals these medicines help. To reduce depression to a purely cognitive exercise might seem elegant, but it doesn’t work. In this model, the brain is treated like a train set: we need only lay in new cognitive pathways and switch off the old ones, and the sufferer is cured. Depending on how long the person has been suffering, surely these “dysfunctional” pathways become more like superhighways?

It’s always been a source of shame that I suffered from depression, and on those rare occasions I dared to speak out, reactions from other people gave me more reason to feel ashamed. I’ve worked so hard over the years to eradicate depression*, and yet the assertion that I could resolve this in a matter of weeks with cognitive written exercises makes me stumble, and think: have I tried hard enough? Did I rely on the meds too much? Did I fail because I was morally, spiritually, physically or mentally weak?

After 23 years of dealing with it, I conclude that the answer is emphatically no! I’ve been to the doorways of hell with this illness and yet I’ve travelled so far, and maintained a deep core of love and compassion for humanity, no matter that for so many years I was a virtual leper. I’ve learned that there is no grand theory of everything, especially depression. It’s a complex disease, and it responds best to a range of therapeutic options, which includes in some cases, antidepressants. In my experience, there are so many tools for dealing with depression, and pharmaceuticals are just one item in our toolbox.

I would be the first to agree that if we don’t explore the historical roots of our disease, we only prolong the work that each person must eventually do on themselves. Sometimes, however, antidepressants are a lifeline that help us swim to shore and take stock of how we ended up in the deep water in the first place. Without this, much less, without the support of medical professionals, family and friends, we may find ourselves so many years later as I have, still struggling to shut down those superhighways.

It is vital for people with depression to regard themselves with love and compassion – the tools that I have discovered over the last two years to promise a more permanent recovery and a fuller life. While people living with depression must take responsibility for their healing, let’s not throw away a valuable tool for the sake of a theory. Let’s consider instead that the more tools we have in our possession, the better, and that a treatment modality that doesn’t work for one, may save the life of another.

Blessings,
Jane

*Things I’ve tried for depression over the years, some with greater or lesser success: pharmaceuticals, talk therapy, group therapy, cognitive behavioural therapy, self-help books, Vitamin B6, St John’s Wort, 5-HTTP, nutrition, circuit training, bike riding, yoga, meditation, aromatherapy, massage, accupuncture, homeopathy, and more.

Day 32 of … The Dreaming

 Posted by at 11:23 pm  No Responses »
Feb 012012
 
The Dreaming © 2012 Jane Waterman

The Dreaming © 2012 Jane Waterman

Today, every word, every brush stroke, met with judgement. While I enjoyed the colours meshing and colliding, there was nothing in those moments of pure creation that I wanted to keep. Nothing I judged worthwhile enough to commit to posterity. I suppose that’s okay too. I remember a time when I wandered quite happily in my head, and no acts of imagination seemed too wild – all could be pondered and explored, embraced and then let go.

When you have lost large pieces of your life and put them back together, I suppose a sense of disconnect is not unexpected. Attachment to thoughts is different too. You seek moments of brilliance, and your inner perfectionist has to settle for mediocrity.

I will not settle, however, for less than a return to that dreaming state.

This afternoon I felt exhausted and light-headed. I rested on the bed for a moment, and it was as if I stepped back in time to some other half-sunny place. Outside was an expansive sense of spring, and it seemed at odds with the midwinter, but then not. I had to go to an appointment and listened to tales of holidays in Hawaii and Mexico. My first thought was – I couldn’t go there – not with all that sun.

Given a choice, would I? If the sun had not become an enemy, where would I go? I do miss the beautiful beaches of my childhood and early adult life. I would “go bush”, walk to a mysterious billabong, bowed down to by eucalypts and sandstone cliffs. I would cross rivers infested with crocodiles, trap tadpoles, and weave grasses into bracelets. I would wonder about my brothers catching yabbies, and what a yabbie was. I never did get to see one.

Where would you go if you didn’t automatically say, “I can’t” or “I couldn’t”? What places in memory would open up? Would you be, as I was for a moment, ten years old, and “gone bush”? Would you come back?

Blessings,
Jane

Day 31 of … 4am

 Posted by at 11:16 pm  No Responses »
Jan 312012
 
Soul Clouds #2 © 2012 Jane Waterman

Soul Clouds #2 © 2012 Jane Waterman

The first month of my personal 365 day blogging project has passed. In some ways, it’s become a deeper creative exploration. I am enjoying painting with the computer immensely. Last night I’d barely drifted off to sleep when pain woke me up again. At 4am I started painting some pictures.

I still have gifts that I intended to send at Christmas, but it looks like these will now be Valentine’s gifts, and I know that is okay.

I am still learning the art of balancing. Like this soul cloud, I reach out in all directions as emotions swirl around me.

I continue to learn, and hope that over time, I can begin to teach. I feel the stirrings of different projects inside me, and feel the sparks of possibility ignite.

Blessings,
Jane

© 2011 Jane Waterman, all rights reserved. Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha