Author Archives: Sherri

Best of 2022

A tiny me under the Corona Arch

It’s that time of year.  Now that we’ve navigated Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hannukah, and by the time this posts, New Years Eve, looking back at The Year That Was seems all the rage.  I’m going to jump on that bandwagon and regale you with a random list of my favorite things from 2022.

Favorite Thing I’ve Read I promise I get no fee from this recommendation.  My favorite thing I’ve read over this past year is a substack newsletter from Matt Labash called Slack Tide.  I get a lot of newsletters, mostly on current events.  This one is far and away my favorite mostly because while his essays are inspired by current events, they are not really about current events.  They are about the human condition.  On the surface, you would be forgiven for thinking that my favorite newsletter would NOT come from a politically conservative Evangelical Christian.  I love everything he writes, enough to plunk down the $50 for an annual subscription so I can read each essay, not just the free ones.  He makes me want to be a better writer, which is the highest compliment I can give someone.

Favorite Thing the Cats Have Done Beau has this toy that his foster Mom gave him.  It’s a plastic stick, about a foot long, with a short elastic string tied to the stick on one end and a catnip-filled fish on the other.  Beau loves to carry it around with the fish in his mouth and the stick dragging behind.  The other night, we were watching TV and heard the strangest sound.  Being in a different house, we weren’t sure what major appliance could be breaking.  Just as I was about to get up and go investigate, Beau came around the corner with Stick, fish in mouth.  The sound we heard was the stick being dragged down the wooden steps from upstairs and across the wooden floor.  I love him!

Favorite Kitchen Hack Being a relatively new cook, I am constantly on the look out for kitchen hacks to make my life easier.  Last year’s favorite was the onion slicer Trish got me.  I chop a lot of onions.  This year, my sister-in-law introduced me to the joy that is parchment paper.  I have only used parchment paper in the past to wrap up breakfast burritos that go in the freezer.  Meg showed me the trick (that most of you probably already know) of using parchment paper to line a sheet pan.  I know that bakers do this when they bake cookies.  It somehow never occurred to me to use parchment paper when I roast vegetables.  And I roast a LOT of vegetables.  I hated tossing used aluminum foil in the trash and I also didn’t like the silicone baking sheets.  This use of parchment paper has changed my life.

Favorite Weekend Getaway This one is a tie, but both involve the Poconos.  The first was when Trish and I went up to spend a weekend at Lake Minisink, the small lake she grew up on.  We were staying at the cabin our step-daughter’s family had bought last fall and got there early on a spring Friday.  We got out kayaks and spent the afternoon silently paddling the lake and just breathing in the peace.  Then we got to spend the rest of the weekend with Sarah and her family.  The other was a weekend late fall at our friends’ house at Lake Wallenpaupack.  The air was crisp but not cold.  The trees were just starting to turn.  Most boat owners had already pulled their boats in for the winter, but our friends like to enjoy the lake as much as they can.  We took their pontoon boat out on a sunny afternoon and just about had the lake to ourselves.  Lynn took us in and out of countless little coves for hours.  It was the most peaceful I’d felt since that weekend at Minisink in the spring.   It’s a good recipe: people you love + a beautiful, quiet lake = peace.

Favorite Day Trip In late February, on a surprisingly warmish day, Beth and I took the train into DC for the day and visited the African American History Museum.  The museum is really impressive but that’s not what made this a favorite day trip.  It was about spending a day with my bestie and creating shared memories: the drive to 30th Street Station and going around the block several times until we figured out how to get into the parking garage; the Amtrak ride; Ubering around DC; finding somewhere to eat; a selfie with the Washington Monument; totally missing the pick-up point with our Uber back to Union Station.  It doesn’t matter what we do.  It just matters that we do it together.

Favorite Moment on a Big Trip We took a trip out to southern Utah in March.  There were a ton of what could be favorite moments.  We visited Canyonlands, Arches, Capitol Reef, Grand Escalante, Bryce Canyon, and Zion National Parks (or Monuments) and a number of state parks.  But my favorite moment was when Lynn and I hiked out to the Corona Arch outside of Moab.  The trek was about a mile and a half and that last half mile was a real challenge.  Well, it was a real challenge for me.  The five-year-olds bounding about, fearless, on steep inclines and perilous cliffs seemed to struggle less.  When Lynn and I finally got to the Arch, though, we were alone.  We were blown away by the grandeur of structures, the remoteness of the vistas (couldn’t see anything related to humans), and the silence.  We were breathless from the climb and effort to get there, which made the moment that much more special.  I felt small and insignificant and at the mercy of the power and beauty of nature.  Those are always important moments.  We would all benefit from having a few of those each year.  Humility is a good thing.

Favorite New TV Show Let me say right up front that I am not a binge watcher.  “Binging” for me is watching two episodes.  As such, not many shows hook me.  But I fell in love with the sitcom Ghosts.  I don’t know why I love this show so much.  Maybe it’s the premise of being able to connect with those who are no longer with us.  Maybe it’s because I love the idea of having a bunch of friends from very different time periods throughout history.  I know it’s because the characters have depth and interesting stories and they just keep adding more facets.  And it’s because I love the character of Isaac, the gay Revolutionary War soldier who absolutely hates Alexander Hamilton.  Best line: “If you don’t gasp at that, you’re just not a gasper!”  Try it.

Favorite Activity The week before Thanksgiving, during our first real cold snap of the year (of course), Trish and I went on an Owl Prowl at a local Nature Center.  I have a thing for owls, just as Trish has a thing for eagles.  As usual, it was us and a bunch of five-year-olds with their parents.  We started with a half hour presentation about “owls of the area” which included recordings of the different owl calls.  This is THE time of year to go looking for owls since they look for mates around now and then nest through the winter.  We went outside into the year’s first snow fall, all bundled up.  We walked a little way into the woods in the pitch dark.  The leader played a saw whet owl call a few times, hoping one would answer.  And then.  Out of NOWHERE a very large barred owl buzzed us, thinking there was a saw whet that would make a nice meal.  It all happened in just seconds.  There was no sound.  None.  Just suddenly a shadow and a large raptor coasting just above our heads.  The only noise was the quick intake of everyone’s breath.  In the dark.  In the snowfall.  I will never forget that moment.

A bit of a theme, then, to this essay.  Time in nature.  Time with animals.  Time with people I love.  Time in the kitchen.  Yeah, it was a good year.

Setting Boundaries

I mentioned in my last essay that Trish’s sister and husband have been kind enough to turn their home over to us while they winter in Florida and our home is renovated.  We shared the house for the first month and because they have a cat also, we kept our two in their large, finished, very comfortable basement.  It was not a hardship.  They had plenty of room.  We had a cable box.  However, I felt compelled to get up at the crack of dawn (well, pre-dawn this time of year) and go down to feed them and hang with them since we sleep upstairs.  Once Megan and Tom headed off to sunnier climes with Junior, we let our cats out of the basement.  It took a little while for them to venture forth, but once they did, the boundary setting had to begin.

The reason for this is, as anyone who has cats knows, they are the world’s potential energy police.  Any item resting above floor level—say, a bottle of vitamins on a counter—has potential energy since being at floor level is a lower energy state.  One need only convert the potential energy to kinetic energy by, say, knocking the bottle off the counter.  Once the bottle reaches the floor, it is now in a lower energy state and the universe is happy.  Cats are known to patrol the world, particularly in the middle of night, making sure all potential energy is converted to kinetic energy, bringing the universe to that more stable lower energy state.  If the item is breakable, all the better!  Breaking a glass into a thousand pieces increases entropy, also a thermodynamically favorable process.  You’re welcome.

We spent the better part of the last couple of days re-training the cats about where they could go and where they couldn’t.  No to the counter.  No to the table.  No to the Christmas tree.  No to the mantle over the fireplace.  Setting these boundaries requires consistency and immediacy.  It’s exhausting.  In case you’re wondering, we are well aware that they will go where ever they really want when we are not around.  That’s why we go around removing breakable items from high places and packing away narrow cords that seem to just scream, “Chew me!”  And by “the cats” I really mean Bridget.  Beau is a curious but generally non-destructive Very Good Boy.  Bridget is like a two-year-old with a four-foot vertical jump.

I’ve been thinking a lot over these last couple of days about how important boundaries are between all living things, how important it is to set boundaries in almost any relationship, and how hard it is to define them and then be consistent enforcing them.  So, let’s discuss that a little.

For the purposes of this essay, I’m going to define “boundaries” as “expectations of acceptable behavior.”  The boundaries we are probably most familiar with are those a parent sets for a child.  I cannot speak from personal experience from the “parent” side, but I was indeed a kid, so I can speak from the “child” side.  My parents did not have difficulty setting boundaries for me.  I am a rule-follower to the core and that, coupled with my strong need for acceptance and approval, meant that if I so much as slightly disappointed my parents, I would dissolve into tears and self-flagellate for days.  While that made for an easier time of it for my parents, it also meant that when I went off to college the lack of imposed boundaries was a problem.  It is true that you don’t know your own limits until you push past them and my college friends will readily attest to my efforts to find my limits.  I was clearly not alone in this journey.  What saved me was holding over my parental boundaries until I learned to set my own.  While I still believe I could have gotten more out of my college education (scholastically), I still managed to never earn below a B+ (although during one particularly challenging semester I did choose to take a difficult elective as pass/fail and I do believe I dropped another early on).  These were all good lessons as I learned to set boundaries with others in my life.

It is easiest to understand boundaries when there is a power imbalance, like the parent/child relationship.  Another prime example is boss/employee.  Most people understand boundary setting between a boss and their employees.  The boss sets standard expectations of behavior:  “You will show up on time and do what we have agreed you will do.  If you do this, you will get paid and the company will invest at some level in your growth.”  Bosses sometimes set other boundaries, like “you won’t come whining to me about every problem you encounter” or “you won’t talk to my boss without talking to me first.”  Boundaries are important from employee to boss, as well.  Bosses will indeed keep piling on responsibilities and deliverables until employees push back.  With the perceived power imbalance, this push back can seem like a tall order.  Employees may fear they will lose their job or be “black marked” if they push back.  I’ve got a little secret for you:  bosses most often pile work on their most valuable employees because they can depend on them.  We are just as afraid you will leave as you are that you’ll be fired.  Push back!

Setting boundaries in personal relationships is toughest of all.  In the early aughts, when I came back from my assignment in Mexico to lead the organization of which I used to be a member, I found myself in the unenviable position of becoming the boss to most of my friends.  I had to very quickly establish boundaries on our friendships and it was not fun.  I could not let my friendships influence my business decisions and most of those friendships changed permanently because of this decision.  I could not be their confidante around workplace issues; I could not favor them in decisions around assignments or promotions; I could not be infinitely accessible to people with whom I had more of a history.  I was so sensitive to not letting my personal knowledge of some people influence my thinking that I probably ended up disadvantaging them on several occasions.

Boundary setting in my most critical relationship, fortunately, has been fairly smooth.  Maybe it’s because Trish and I met later in life, when we already had been able to succinctly define our boundaries to ourselves, so we could more easily express them to someone else.  I’ve learned what she needs from me in certain situations (she likes to be left alone when she’s sick; she needs space when she’s flustered or angry; she needs to talk out disagreements quickly).  And she has learned what I need from her (get me won ton soup when I don’t feel well; give me similar space when I am flustered or angry; process and process and process any disagreement).  I have also learned the most critical boundary:  never, EVER eat the last cookie.

A while ago, I wrote an essay on toxic people.  This sense of toxicity often comes from people not respecting your boundaries.  We all have those acquaintances who want to be closer to you (or more important to you) than you feel.  It is really uncomfortable to enforce those boundaries and I admit to having been meaner than I would have liked in some situations.  Even those within your inner circle have to respect boundaries—there is a line between going along with something that wouldn’t be your choice because your friends want to do it and being miserable because you crossed an important boundary.  I often lose sight of that line, although many might say that I am just passive aggressive and need to suck it up better.  Working on that.

As with Bridget and jumping up on counters, consistency in enforcing boundaries is always key.  This is often the rub with most of us.  Sometimes you are just weary and give in.  Sometimes you are feeling more magnanimous or compassionate and don’t hold an important line.  Do the best you can.  Just as important as it is for you to set and enforce your boundaries with others, be aware of boundaries that others are setting with you.  You may rarely get the direct feedback you need but the hints and body language are always there.  Have that explicit discussion if you can.  Boundaries can become more flexible if there is a spoken understanding.  But never eat the last cookie.

Rolling with the Punches

In my last essay, I hinted at a need to discuss this topic.  As many of you know (and can’t escape), Trish and I are undertaking a major renovation of our house.  I promised (threatened? warned?) that this renovation was going to rule my life for several months and, thus, influence my writing.  Anyone who has taken on a project like this one knows that there are going to be unexpected twists and turns.  Trish and I, even though we’ve never been through this before, gave ourselves a little talking to about being flexible and patient before this all got going.  Well, we’re two Virgos who like things the way we like them.  So let me tell you how all this is going so far.

We were supposed to start construction around the first of October, with a duration of 8-12 weeks.  Since we are getting our kitchen expanded and remodeled as well as adding a new main bedroom suite above the garage and family room, it made sense for us to move out and let the builders just have the run of the place.  Trish’s sister and brother-in-law, who live less than a mile from our house, graciously offered us their home while they wintered at their condo in Florida.  Sounds like a great plan, no?

The first unexpected change was Tom and Meg deciding to delay their departure to Florida because they had a number of commitments here in Philly through October, November, and December.  Cohabitating was not the original idea, particularly since we have two cats, they have a cat, and any cat owner staff will tell you cats don’t mix well without a lot of patience, treats, and the occasional vet visit.  Then, the start date of the construction kept slipping.  First to the middle of October.  Then to the following week.  Then the week after that.  The plan was to start by yanking the roof off the garage and family room and framing the addition, giving us an additional week to transition to Meg and Tom’s and get the kitchen cleaned out.  The Thursday before the Monday start date we were told, “Yeah, no.  Gonna rain Monday.  We’ll start by demo’ing the kitchen.”  It was a busy weekend.

Once the kitchen demo got underway, the project manager rightly raised concerns about the plan to put only one support beam below the addition.  By the time the architect got around to looking at things and pronounce the one support beam sufficient, the framers had already moved to another job and wouldn’t be available until after Thanksgiving, three weeks hence.  Work slowed to a snail’s pace.  Finally, we had the electrical walkthrough for the kitchen, deciding to not wait for the addition to be framed out first!  Yea!  And the electrical estimate came back four times the estimate in the contract.  So, we are now at Thanksgiving—almost two months after we thought we’d be well into the project—and we still hadn’t demo’d the roof over the garage, while the kitchen was down to studs and swinging light bulbs and we were wondering if the whole project might come in at 4x the estimate.  Punch, punch, punch.

I’ve written before about needing to push yourself outside of your comfort zone to keep your coping skills sharp.  However, that is a conscious choice: choosing to do something to keep yourself from overly fearing to do that type of thing in the future.  When I was younger, that meant moving to Mexico alone for 3+ years, speaking about sixteen words of Spanish before I left.  Now, it’s making myself drive to the airport.  On a weekday.  I’ve also written multiple times on the concept of coping energy (here, here, and here).  Those essays discussed, respectively, the importance of developing reserves of coping energy, building those reserves by focusing on what you can control as well as the actions you can take, and what happens when all the wheels come off at once.  This time we’re taking another sideways look at coping:  what happens when you get a string of unexpected issues that gnaw away at you little by little and what it takes to yank yourself back to an even-ish keel.

Now, one of the really good things about the relationship between Trish and me is that we rarely melt down at the same time.  In fact, I don’t think I can remember a simultaneous meltdown.  If it has happened, I’ve blocked out the trauma.  So, we just take turns.  She’d melt down and I’d calm her.  Then I’d melt down and she’d calm me.  Fortunately, we’ve continued to follow that pattern these last couple of months.  Something would happen; one of us would freak out; the other would calm them down; repeat, switching roles.  It has taken its toll, as I wrote a few essays ago.  Once again, we have shown ourselves that either it’s not as bad as we thought or simply that we’ll get past it even if something in our plan needs to change.

Where are we today?  First, sharing a home with Megan and Tom has been an unexpected joy!  We had to work out a few things, as expected, and we’ve had a lot of fun.  They left for Florida today and I’m really going to miss them (and their cat, Junior).  I’m already meal planning for when they come back for Christmas!  Next, there was indeed a misunderstanding on that electrical estimate that was cleared up two days later.  The roof is now off the garage and family room and the addition is going up.  Electrical in the kitchen looks about done.  Are we done with the punches?  Surely not.  So far, though, it’s all working out.  Sure, it’s supposed to pour rain and gust heavy winds tomorrow and the guys assured us they would tarp the heck out of the addition.  Will there be water damage?  I hope not, but if there is, we’ll deal with it.  It will get addressed.  There will be additional meltdowns and unexpected issues.  We’re in a calm enough spot right now for me to write with some confidence.  I promise I’ll find some other aspects of this project to write about going forward.  I think you’ve read enough about my coping issues!  Until then, it’s back to reestablishing routine and building up some reserves for those next punches.

There Are Two Types of People in the World

One of my college chemistry professors had a bumper sticker pasted to his office door.  It said, “It takes alkynes to make the world.” This is a chemical play on words that my science friends are rolling their eyes at and my non-science friends are impatiently thinking, “Get to the point, Sherri.”  Alkynes are organic molecules that have a carbon-carbon triple bond.  There are several alkyne molecules that are critical to life forms of various types (including us) so, yes, it takes alkynes to make the world.  Additionally, the word is pronounced “Al”—like the man’s name—“kines”—with a long “I”.  This sort of sounds like “all kinds,” as in “it takes all kinds to make the world.”  This saying is another valuable truism.

We all know this intuitively yet it is often hard to remember in practice.  When I was younger, the issue was the struggle to understand and accept myself which led me to judge those different from me as being inferior.   Of course, this was also balanced by a paranoia that they were indeed better than me.  When you get older, the issue around putting that saying into daily practice often revolves around fear and regret:  Fear that someone different from you is dangerous and/or regret that you didn’t choose that path yourself.  So, the best thing to do to uplift yourself is to diss them.

We’ve all heard the jokes that begin, “There are two kinds of people in this world.”  In my exhaustive research for this essay, I went down a bit of an Internet rabbit hole on examples of this joke.  The funniest ones, by the way, are visual:  pictures of a neat desk, for example, along side a wasteland of paper and tchotchkes with a table underneath.  I know that these dichotomies of extremes are oversimplifications, but they do often make a point.  Here are a couple that have resonated with me:

There are two kinds of people in the world: entrepreneurs and corporate types.  I could never be an entrepreneur, even though it looks really glamorous and can make you really rich.  To be a successful entrepreneur, you need to be passionate and persistent to a degree I just can’t muster.  I was, however, a really good “corporate type.”  I worked well within that structure.  Entrepreneurs and corporate types often get really judgy with each other.  One is not better than the other, though!  We need both.  Without entrepreneurs, we’d never get new businesses.  Without corporate types, we’d never be able to grow those businesses to the level that they need to be to serve the community.

There are two kinds of people in the world: creative types and execution types.  Look, we all know we need both types and rarely do you find both characteristics in one person.  Creatives tend to value ideation more than execution, though, and vice versa.  It’s natural to value what you like and what you do more so than those characteristics that don’t reflect you.  And herein lies the problem.

For those of you still waiting for me to make a point, these dichotomies got me thinking about this challenge of embracing things that are new or different and finding common ground.

My regular, very patient readers know that Trish and I are starting a major renovation of our house.  When we last left our story about a month ago, I was really unsettled getting prepped for this and waiting for it to start.  While I’ll tackle stories about rolling with punches during construction later, today I wanted to talk about our living situation.  Since our whole house is basically impacted with this construction and we have two cats that are neurotic enough already, thank you, we decided to move out.  We are amazingly fortunate that Trish’s sister and brother-in-law live half a mile away and offered us their home while they winter in Florida.  I can’t even begin to describe how generous this is and my gratitude to them!  We are cohabitating this first month, since they leave after Thanksgiving, and this had led to an unexpected pleasure—getting to know my in-laws more fully than I’ve been able to during various family gatherings.

I was pretty nervous about sharing the house, particularly over an extended time period.  It’s their home and I really wanted to respect their “life flow” but know that no matter how hard we try, our presence will be disruptive.  My relationship with my in-laws is way more important than having a temporary place to live.  What I’ve found over these past few weeks, though, is that we are finding common ground even as we navigate our differences.  Here a couple of examples:

There are two kinds of people in the world: those who pack a dishwasher as efficiently as possible and those who randomly toss items in.  I’ve plumbed this territory before.  I actually brought this up during one of our preparatory discussions, wanting to understand little habits like how they loaded the dishwasher.  Tom and Trish both said, “Who cares? They all get washed.”  Megan and I both started twitching a bit and said, “But we need to be able to get as many dishes in there as possible!”  I looked at Meg with new-found appreciation and respect.

There are two kinds of people in the world: Sleeping Beauties and Price Charmings.  The Lawlor women have a special skill.  Trish, for example, can drink six expressos at bedtime and the warmth of the liquid will put her right to sleep.  Megan apparently has similar sleeping skills.  Tom and I, awake at 6:00 am to feed the cats, have bonded over their ability to fall asleep so quickly, and sleep long and loud. Clearly, our level of tolerance is beyond gallant.

There are many other examples, mostly small things, that I’ve found over the last couple of weeks that I (or we) have in common with Megan and Tom that I never knew before.  And finding those little commonalities makes me feel even closer to them.  What could have been a “family tragedy” has really been a lot of fun! (Here’s hoping Tom and Meg are also laughing…)

Finally, I have also been thinking about “there are two kinds of people in the world” in the context of how divided our nation has become as we emerge from the midterm elections.  We can blame 24 hour news channels and social media, which have certainly exacerbated our divides, but it’s more than that.  It seems like we’ve stopped seeing each other as whole human beings and just define the “other” by a single characteristic:  political ideology, race, class, whatever.  I firmly believe, though, that we all have far more in common than we realize and if we’d just take a little time to get to know each other better, maybe we’d find a way to bridge some of these divides.  I’ve written before about the dangers of making assumptions about the whole person based on some (probably irrelevant) defining characteristic.  I’ve also written about the key workplace advice I got early in my career to always look for something you like about, and can learn from, each person you meet.  That advice works just as well in our broader lives as in the workplace.  Don’t get stuck on “there are two kinds of people in the world.”  There really aren’t.  We are all just humans.

Every Ending is a Beginning

The origins of this essay come from a recent trip home to Atlanta to see my family. We were in a Shabbat service, the Saturday after Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. The Rabbi at my Mom’s retirement community was talking about how lopsided the Torah was at this time of year, meaning almost the whole scroll was rolled up on one of the ends.  We read a section of the Torah each week during Shabbat services and the sections are determined such that in one year’s time, we read the whole thing. A couple of weeks after Yom Kippur, we complete the annual cycle and, during the holiday of Simchat Torah, reroll the Torah and start again. The rabbi was talking about the importance and symbolism of this process of reading and re-reading the Torah every year. “We celebrate the end of the cycle,” she said, “in part because we are excited to begin a new cycle. We don’t mourn the ending because we realize that every ending is also a beginning.”

That comment struck me, in part, because the primary reason I was there was to recognize my Dad’s yahrzeit—the anniversary of his passing. We lost Dad twelve years ago, one week and one day after Yom Kippur. Recently, a good friend lost her mother and during that service, the priest talked not about death, but about transition. That resonated with me as well. Her soul was transitioning to its next phase. Her earthly life had ended; her heavenly life was beginning. Many of us continue to feel the presence of a loved one long after they have died. I feel that way about my Dad and my maternal grandmother. I always feel their presence. I don’t think of their deaths as an ending, but as a transition to whatever is next; a beginning.

As I continued to ruminate on this topic, I began to understand how broadly that thinking could be applied. Throughout our entire lives, we are experiencing endings and beginnings but we don’t necessarily see the connections. We don’t see how those endings are really beginnings and that the beginnings can’t happen without the endings. A prime example that comes to my mind was a forced work transition I went through in the mid-2000’s. I had a career path in my mind that I was trying to make happen. It just wasn’t working but that didn’t keep me from continuing to beat my head against a wall. Finally, I was moved into a different position (which was a whole lot better than just being fired). I was devastated. I thought my career was over, that I’d never realize my dreams, that I was an utter failure. But that ending was actually the most awesome beginning I ever could have imagined! The job I was moved into turned out to be one of the most enjoyable and rewarding roles in my whole career. I loved the work; I loved the people; I loved what I was learning. And that role led to my next career change which took me in a direction I never could have achieved had I stayed the course in that previous role. This was a realization in hindsight, mind you. Don’t think that I was Ms. Maturity in how I approached that transition! I ended up super happy in spite of myself, not because of any healthy attitude. But it taught me that important lesson of looking forward and not mourning what could have been.

There are so many examples each of us have on how we’ve handled endings. School transitions are a good one. Grammar school to middle school to high school to (maybe) college to (maybe) grad school to your first job. In each case, you leave something that is familiar and known and head into the Great Unknown. Some people focus on the ending—leaving friends, a routine, even just a place that feels comfortable—and struggle to embrace the beginning. Others wave goodbye to what is ending and run headlong into that beginning. I’ve written before on the fact that there is no one path to success or happiness, that what is most important is what actions you take once a decision is made or a path chosen. This recognition that every ending is a beginning is a big part of that mindset.

Personal relationships of all types follow this thought pattern as well. It has been said that people come into our lives “for a reason, a season, or for life.” This means that relationships, even very close ones, can last for a short period of time around a particular need, for a longer period of time, or throughout your whole life. It is not a failure if you part ways once a relationship has run its course. That ending will only lead to a new beginning—for each of you. Some friendships need to end, just as some romantic relationships need to end, to allow each of you to grow. No doubt it’s often very hard to see that during the time period a separation is occurring. What’s dangerous is getting stuck in the ending and focusing on the loss instead of learning to treasure the value brought by the relationship. As a wise friend once reminded me, that hole in your heart is not loss—it’s an opening. Everyone who has crossed my path over these six decades has taught me something and helped create the person that I am today. Without all those experiences, all those endings and beginnings, I wouldn’t be the “me” that met Trish. Every one of those endings lead to a beginning that kept me moving forward.

I’m remembering that now, as we asymptotically approach the start date for our home renovation. (A little math humor for my STEM friends.) The house is all packed up. I’m sitting in a folding chair in an empty living room with no art on the walls. It feels like my first apartment in my 20’s! I feel uprooted; unsettled. It feels very much like an “ending.” I know, though, that this discomfort is really about a “beginning.” Remembering that helps me find my way forward, just like it did every time I changed schools or jobs or even relationships. It’s scary when something ends and something new begins. Let the possibilities of the beginning excite you.

Unsettled

The first rule of writing is “write what you know.”  When I first started this blog almost four years ago (yes, it’s been almost four years), I had a lot of pent-up writing energy around the kinds of topics that kept coming up when I coached younger employees.  Now that I’ve mostly exhausted that list, my writing is inspired by whatever is going on in my life at the time I sit down to type.  Not surprisingly, observations about life always seem to tie back to those coaching lessons.  Human beings in life and human beings at work are still human beings.  The same rules tend to apply.

As I mentioned several essays back, Trish and I are embarking on a major renovation of our house and I anticipated that stuff surrounding said renovation was going to dominate my writing for a while.  There was a flurry of activity in the spring and early summer as we went through the selection process around design and then a lull as we awaited our construction date.  Well, that date is nigh upon us and for the last many weeks, Trish and I have been getting ready to move out of our house so the guys can have the run of the place.  The process has been, shall we say, unsettling.  And being unsettled is just no fun.

I’ve touched on this topic before from some different angles.  I talked about pushing yourself outside of your comfort zone and the needed coping energy.  Today, as I was “leaving it all on the bike” at spin class, I was ruminating on this whole unsettled thing and, despite all my learning and growing and stuff, it still can throw me for a loop.  I’m trying to get back to a more even keel, so I’m going to write about it and you’re coming with me.

I have to begin by admitting that I clearly lead a very cushy life.  While the pandemic stressed a lot of people to the max, little Ms. Retired Introvert here settled into a very comfortable existence.  I’ve always been a homebody and the pandemic reinforced that tendency.  Adding to that the weight loss journey Trish and I went on during lockdown and finding out that I actually like to cook, I got really REALLY comfortable staying in my cozy little home bubble.  I am enjoying getting out more again, for sure.  But I always look forward to walking in that front door.  However, “walking in that front door” is different now as we live amid boxes and empty walls.  I know the valley is beautiful but all I see right now is the huge mountain in front of me that I first need to climb.

This feeling of being unsettled is manifesting in a number of ways.  First and foremost is disruption of routine.  I can’t seem to write.  My journal has sat untouched for weeks and writing these essays has been sporadic and a bit painful (particularly for my editor who has been using a lot of red ink these last months).  I don’t seem to be able to focus to read, which is another self-soothing activity.  That means magazines and email digests are piling up alongside books and that makes me anxious.  Some days, I just don’t know what to do with myself.  I’m nudgey.  And, I’m sure, annoying.  Here’s a fun example:  Trish was on the land line when the builder called on her cell phone.  Since we have been waiting anxiously for him to give us a start date, she implored me to pick up the phone and deal with the call.  Brian wanted to stop by Monday at 10:00 and I said, “Great!”  When Trish got off her call and I relayed the message, she asked why I didn’t push for a later time so it wouldn’t mess with her/our exercise schedule.  (We are, at least, desperately clinging to our exercise routine!)  I, then, burst into tears since that is how I deal with any stress or extreme emotion.  (Bassners have an extra tear duct.  We’re known for being a bit weepy.)  She tried to back track but is unsettled herself so it resulted in me stamping my foot and saying, “I’m going upstairs!”  It’s been a little rough around here.

Once I got upstairs, I tried to write.  That didn’t work.  I tried to read.  That also didn’t work.  So I slammed down the top of my laptop and went back downstairs.  “We need a list,” I said, being a good Virgo.  Since Trish is also a good Virgo, we made a list of everything that has to get done before the construction starts inside the house.  It’s still a disappointingly long list, but writing it down at least got it out of our heads.  It also gave us discreet tasks we could do, which is also a good thing for Virgos.

I’ve identified two things to get me through this unsettledness.  The first is to be present, which is a pretty good tool to get through most difficulties in life.  Know what one of the best things is to force me to be present?  When our 25 pound Maine Coon-mix cat, Beau, decides it’s snuggle time.  He will announce his presence with a forceful meow, jump up on your lap, settle his bottom on your lap and, forcing you to slouch, spread the rest of himself up your chest and under your chin.  There will be a little kneading of tummy and then he will settle in.  Your job is to hold him so he feels secure and kiss the top of his head between his ears.  That is all you are able to do with that much cat on you.  So, while that warming, vibrating (purring), heated blanket is on me, I am just present.  I think about what I want to write.  I think about what I want to do.  I kiss the top of his head again.  There is nothing better to calm you down.

The second thing I do is choose just one thing to get done today.  “Begin by giving yourself a little grace,” I say to myself.  “And choose just one thing to get done.”  Today it is getting this draft done.  I’m pretty sure I’ll get more than just this one thing done, but if that turns out to be it then that’s ok.  I think back to the stressful time periods in my life.  Some of them were time bound and fairly short, like preparing for this construction.  Some of them were open ended and exhausting.  One nice thing about being older is that I’ve known shown myself I can get through these things, big or small.  As I wrote recently, it gets better.  There’s nothing wrong with being unsettled.  It’s part of life.  It makes for good stories when you get out the other side.  Take a deep breath.  Do one thing.  Yeah, I do believe that was a coaching lesson!

Picking at Scabs

I am not talking literally, of course.  Sometimes picking at a physical scab is necessary and it’s always gross, but I don’t need to write an essay about it.  I’m talking about metaphorically picking at scabs—when you just can’t let something go.  This is a huge issue for me (see: Righteous streak, mile long) and has put a strain on my marriage here and there, not to mention other relationships.  You, too?  Well, then!  Join me in a little written therapy session as I try to gain some insight into this behavior.

Here’s a typical situation:  You are having a conversation with someone that has become something of a debate.  It could be a discussion of current events, or defending a project proposal, or answering questions at meeting, or even just discussing the reasons behind someone’s behavior.  You walk away from that discussion feeling unsatisfied, that you just haven’t gotten your point across.  Often, you’ll wake up at 3:00 am and say to yourself, “THAT is what I should have said!” 

I, personally, don’t like to be misunderstood, so I get rankled when I don’t think I’ve been heard or when I can’t think of a response quickly enough to persuade my debate partner.  I will noodle over the conversation for days, replaying the dynamics and imagining my more eloquent responses.  Sometimes I will talk it over (and over and over) with someone, trying to get my words right.  Most of the time, I just turn it over (and over and over) in my head.  I spend a lot of time reworking conversations.  It’s exhausting.  But at some point, I am going to want to correct the record.

There are a number of reasons that I might pick at a scab with you.  They are all interconnected but by far the primary reason is because you matter to me.  I care what you think and how you feel about me because you are important to me.  Take that as some measure of solace when I keep nagging you about something that you’ve either forgotten about or don’t want to talk about or consider so minor that you can’t believe I am STILL picking at it.  If I feel that I have been misunderstood by someone who matters to me, I can be relentless and endlessly annoying in trying to make my points heard.  If you are not important to me, then after maybe a brief period of feeling annoyed or wronged, I will (mostly) let it go. 

This issue is trickier at work.  You want to correct the record, but in the workplace, there is often a power imbalance that makes picking at scabs inappropriate or even detrimental to your future success.  As referenced in earlier essays, I lost a big power struggle at work just before a new senior leader joined the company.  I wanted him to know The Truth (or at least my truth) but he was totally uninterested in the past.  I knew he was forming an opinion of me based on other discussions but my attempts to provide my perspective was just picking at a scab he was uninterested in discussing.  Sometimes you just have to the swallow the injustice and hope that an ally will support you at the right time.  This is why I am glad I am now retired.

I will admit that while I return to issues mostly because the other person involved is important to me, I also will continue to argue because I truly believe I am right.  If you matter to me and yet you disagree with me, I will often do whatever I can to make sure that you see the light.  It’s not about me being right.  It’s about not wanting YOU to be wrong.  This, of course, is a tricky rationalization that happens to be tightly wrapped up in the third reason I will pick at scabs with you:  my long-standing fear of being blindsided, of being rejected, and my self-doubt.  What if I’m actually wrong?  After first resisting that possibility with all my might, I will listen carefully (and usually research on the web) to see if I really AM wrong.  I like to think that after years of years of keeping those errors to myself, I will now readily admit when I remembered something wrong or just didn’t have the facts straight.  Just because I believed something to be true doesn’t mean it really was true.  I go back to my favorite Brené Brown mantra:  I’m here to get it right, not be right.

I’ve been thinking about all this because we are in the Hebrew month of Elul, the run-up to the Jewish New Year (Rosh Hashanah) and Yom Kippur (The Day of Atonement).  It’s a time of significant introspection; a time to take stock.  As such, I tend to think about people I have wronged over the past year, knowingly or unknowingly, as well as those with whom I’m laboring under some misunderstanding.  It’s a time to make amends.  But sometimes it’s just not that easy.  Maybe I don’t even know that I should be apologizing.  Maybe the recipient doesn’t want to hear it.  Maybe they think they were wronged by me, but I was misunderstood.  Maybe all of the above.

Where this takes us, then, is to some thoughts on being the recipient of scab picking.  When someone is nitpicking with me, I try to remember all the dynamics running through my head when I’m the one nagging.  First is to give that person the benefit of the doubt.  Maybe you HAVE misunderstood them.  Maybe there are facts you’ve missed.  Then, truly listen to what they have to say.  From personal experience, I’ve learned it is really important to repeat back to them whatever they are saying to you.  If you don’t recite their argument to show you’ve heard them, they will just keep on picking at you until you confirm they have been heard.  If you still disagree, that’s the time to argue back.  I am well aware that there are people out there who argue for the sake of arguing or who only want YOU to hear THEM and not vice-versa.  That’s not who I’m talking about in this essay.  I’m talking about regular human beings who just want to be heard and understood and hopefully validated.  I promise you that if you can do that for others, they will do it for you.  And then maybe we can all learn a little something, turn down the temperature on all the division, and stop waking up at 3:00 am with the perfect comeback!

It Gets Better

The day this essay publishes will be my 60th birthday.  As I’ve been thinking of what I wanted to write about as I hit this milestone, I keep going back to memories of my 50th birthday.  I was, to put it mildly, not in a good place.  I was adrift in so many ways!  Personally, I had been unattached for a little over a year and at that time found myself “sort of involved” in a very unhealthy non-relationship.  I was 25 pounds heavier than I am today and trending upward.  Professionally, I was in a great job that I found really gratifying and paid really well, yet also was more frustrating than any role I’d ever held.  The stress I was under felt unrelenting.  As I approached that milestone birthday, I fell into a real funk because my life was just not where I thought it would be (or where I wanted it to be) when I pictured “life at 50”.  Worse, I didn’t really see a pathway to making things better.

I marvel, then, at my life today as I approach 60.  I can honestly say I’ve never been happier.  While my life is not perfect, it’s pretty darn good.  First and foremost, I’m five years into a marriage that I honestly never thought would happen.  I cannot believe my good fortune in finding Trish and all that has come with this relationship.  My worst professional fears came true when my job was eliminated in the midst of an epic corporate power struggle which I lost, yet I was relieved when it happened!  I weigh the same as I did in grad school 35+ years ago (although, admittedly, distributed a bit differently).  I am incredibly fortunate to be financially comfortable and reasonably healthy.  I have an amazing best friend who stuck by me during those bad years and continues to share these good ones.  I am surrounded by family and friends.  I am living in the present, enjoying every moment, and feel that gratitude every day.  How on earth did this happen?

The picture that accompanies this essay is of a U-shaped curve representing “happiness,” or satisfaction with life, as a function of age.  Not surprisingly, we tend to be happy as children and then start a long downward slide through puberty and early adulthood.  There is often a little uptick in your 30’s, when most of us start to hit our stride personally and professionally, but as I learned, happiness tends to bottom out right around age 50 before starting a rise that continues through the rest of your life.  There are a range of hypotheses offered to explain this dip, often referred to as a mid-life crisis (although few of us will live to 100, which just adds to the angst).  For me it was that realization of “I’m not where I want to be and I feel like I’m running out of time.”  For many it is also a time of being caught between the demands of growing children and aging parents or when money troubles really hit hard.  There are lots of reasons for this bottoming out, but why does it begin to rise again, as well as continue to get better the older you get?

Since I’m too lazy to do a comprehensive review of the available literature on this topic, I’m going to take my usual approach of just sharing my thoughts on this matter.  I believe I’m getting happier and happier not (just) because I have a fairly cushy life now, but because I’ve finally realized that if you keep pushing forward, if you keep doing what you believe are the right things to do, then things can get better.  In short, I’ve become more resilient.  I’ve written on resilience before and I did find it instructive to reread that essay before writing this one.  However, while I looked at resilience from a more tactical perspective in that essay, I’m leaning on a more emotional perspective today.  To explain what I mean by an “emotional” perspective, let’s look at the title of this essay.  It is a loose reference to the tag line of The Trevor Project, an organization that provides counseling and support for LGBTQ youth.  The signature outreach effort of The Trevor Project is a series of videos made by famous and non-famous LGBTQ adults with this simple message:  “I know it seems really bad right now.  But it WILL get better.”  There are no tactical lessons on HOW to get to “better,” just the emotional assurance that it WILL get better.  Sometimes, that’s exactly what you need to hear.  Lord knows, I could have used The Trevor Project (or just the dang internet!) when I was a teenager.  And let me tell you:  teenage Sherri would look upon 60-year-old Sherri with awe.  OK, maybe not “awe” but at least thinking, “Could that really be ME?”  Yes, Sherri, it gets better.

Resilience, I believe, is a learned skill and one that you choose to develop, whether consciously or not.  I also assume there is some truth to the Nietzsche saying, “That which does not kill you makes you stronger.”  We all have stories of trials and tribulations and I don’t need to recount mine here.  Suffice it to say that there were times throughout my life when I really could have benefited from someone saying to me, “It gets better.”  Maybe they did.  Maybe it was in a kind word that someone said to me after a particularly difficult day at work.  Maybe it was within advice that Mom or Dad gave me when I probably didn’t want to hear it (but needed to anyway).  Maybe it was one of the many, many times Beth forced me to get out of my own head by going to run errands together or on one of our many trips to Vegas.  Maybe it was a bit a grace that came along with a deep breath as I tried to settle myself down to sleep at night.  All I know is that I kept putting one foot in front of the other and kept moving forward.  Life has a funny way of sending you what you need if you just stay open to whatever that might be. 

Fittingly, I was tested over the days between the first draft of this essay and these final edits.  In rapid succession, I was hit with two emotional “body blows”.  The first fed right into my lifelong fear of rejection and being blind-sided.  The second brought up my career long feelings of Imposter Syndrome.  I struggled that first night, complete with anxiety dreams.  The morning brought a little distance and perspective that allowed me to think things through (and talk them through with Trish).  By the following morning, I was back to myself. Somehow, I seem to have become a fairly resilient person.  And I truly believe that I will continue to follow that “happiness” curve upward, regardless of what the future brings.  That doesn’t mean it will be all sunshine and rainbows, but it does mean the trend line will continue to move upward.  Remember this when you are having a tough day, or a string of tough days.  Keep taking steps forward.  Stay true to yourself.  It gets better.

Training the House Chippy

It’s around 8:00 in the morning and Trish and I are sitting down by the lake.  The sun is up.  We hear the birds and squirrels chirping and calling, as well as the occasional fish snapping up the bugs that buzz just above the lily pads on the lake surface.  Nature is very peaceful, but not quiet. You have to sit very still to pick out all the little sounds around you.  One of those sounds is the rustle of a chipmunk working its way towards us. It never takes a direct route, protecting itself by skittering this way and that.  Trish is sitting on the dock, at the ready with her phone camera.  I’m sitting on a bench just off the dock, under the shade of a tree, with a peanut in my hand.  A bag of them sits next to me on the bench.  We need a plentiful supply.  We are training the chipmunks down by the lake to take peanuts from our hands.  It’s a slow process that requires a lot of stillness and patience.  Perfect activity for a few days at the lake.  And a perfect place and time for a writer to tease her next essay out of her brain.

I’ve been writing about the concept of Community in my last couple of essays and this one continues on that theme.  First, I wrote about how generally insular we’ve become, how the pandemic has just made that worse, and about how giving things away using our local Buy Nothing group has given me some connection to our local community.  (For those who read the Buy Nothing essay, you’ll be happy to know that I had a nice chat last week with Steve, the guy who took all of my Great Courses DVDs, when he stopped by to claim a few items from our garage purge “curb alert”.)  Then, last time, I wrote about how important rituals are in binding a community together and how we’ve lost so much of that in these last decades.  This past week, spending time at this magical lake that has played such an important part in Trish’s life, I’m finding myself reflecting on the importance of shared history and how that binds people together into a community that can span generations.

We’ve been down here about an hour or so this morning.  The chippy is getting a bit more comfortable or at least less nervous.  I started by scattering some peanuts on the ground when we got here yesterday.  They were gone this morning, so I scattered a few more in an arc around six feet from me.  One by one, those peanuts were stealthily snatched up as the chippy worked its way in using its random stop and go pattern, stuffing a peanut into its cheek pouch and then skittering back off to the den to store the peanuts for winter.  The next test was a big one—I put a peanut on the toe of my sneaker.  While we waited for the chippy’s next approach, Trish and I watched a grey heron land on the lily pads at the end of the lake and start fishing.  And we talked about our conversation from the day before.

I had been expecting to have the small lake to ourselves during our weekday visit.  The lake, about a mile long by half a mile wide, is ringed by rustic cabins (read: outhouses) that rest on state game lands.  It is indeed quiet this week, just not empty.  We stopped in on her uncle, ultimately hosting a small happy hour to visit with his wife and him.  We went for a walk after dinner, stopping in on another couple whom she’s known for decades.  We then chatted until dark, on a dock by the lake, with their daughter, now married to the son of another “lake family”.  We are staying at the cabin owned by our stepdaughter and her family.  She grew up at this lake with Trish, playing with the girl who is now the woman with whom we were talking.  Connections run deep here.

All of these conversations were about shared history of the lake.  Trish’s father helped build several of these cabins when he was a boy scout.  She spent summers in the cabin her family owned and eventually owned a different cabin on this lake herself.  Cabins were passed on to children in Trish’s generation and now their kids are taking ownership and raising their own kids here on summer weekends and vacations.  As the sun set on our conversation that night, this woman was talking with Trish about sitting down together and capturing Trish’s oral history of the lake community.  She wants her generation and the generations that follow to understand their deep connection to this place and the people they see here. 

Back in “the day,” most people didn’t move very far from their families and where they grew up.  Even if their own household wasn’t multi-generational, relatives lived close by and neighbors were involved in each other’s lives.  Families were raised together and shared history was passed down, generation to generation.  Whether you realized it or not, you felt a part of something bigger than yourself.  Maybe it was just your extended family.  Maybe it was the neighborhood you lived in.  Certainly, we’ve become more mobile over the decades.  In addition to being distant from our extended families, we seem to have gotten into the habit of not really engaging much in our local communities.  Our stories don’t go back generations.  Our sense of ownership stops at what we physically own ourselves because we have little connection to anything else.  For this little lake community, understanding the history and their connection to it is what engenders a sense of responsibility to not just their cabin and what they own, but to the community as a whole.  And feeling responsible for the well-being of your community is critical to that community’s health.  I think that’s what we’ve been missing these days.  We don’t feel responsible for each other.  We’ve either lost our shared history or never took the time to learn the local history and become part of it. 

By the end of our few days at the lake, I’ve gotten the House Chippy to take a peanut directly from my hand.  It’s important to sit very, very still as the chippy approaches.  It can take five minutes or more for him to work his way up to you.  I only seem to have patience like this at the lake.  He would have climbed up into my lap, but I was wearing shorts and he kept sliding back down my shin.  Next time, sweat pants.  I’m training this chippy not just for my own enjoyment but also so that others can sit here and have the little thrill of this wild animal (admittedly adorable) feeling safe enough to approach me and interact with me.  It’s something people who have lived on this lake have done since the cabins were built in the 1930’s.  Surely the great-great-(great times x)-grandparent of this chippy had done exactly this with the first owners of this cabin.  If we do things right, the (great times x) grandchild of this chippy will be taking peanuts from hands long after I’m gone.  And whoever is handling those peanuts will be telling their children stories about Trish and me and the importance of preserving this lake community for their own kids.  Hopefully, this sense of community responsibility can extend beyond this magical place.

Ritual

My last essay was about Community.  I wrote about how hard it is to feel truly connected these days, a little way I’ve found to better connect with my local community, and how important community engagement is to a healthy society.  I’ve had a series of interactions over the last three weeks that have inspired me to talk about a related topic:  the importance of ritual in building community.  It’s been an interesting journey.

The Friday after I last wrote, our neighbors had a little gathering to celebrate the return of their Tiki Hut.  I could write a whole essay on this Tiki Hut and the oasis they’ve built in their backyard.  It’s been a community gathering place since long before I arrived on the scene.  When we had a tornado come through last September, a falling tree took out the Tiki Hut.  We all mourned and dedicated ourselves to a rebuild.  We had something of an old-fashioned Amish barn raising earlier in the summer when we all came together to get the tin roof back up on poles.  The rechristening of the Tiki Hut happened on that recent Friday night.  Trish and I honestly weren’t planning on staying long.  The mother of a dear friend had passed earlier in the week and, while not unexpected, was still emotionally difficult.  We didn’t even bring over beer or wine for us to drink—just a bottle of water and a plan to pay our respects.  But there was something about being all together again and back in that Tiki Hut.  First, we went home and brought over a couple of beers.  Then we went out to get a pizza to add to the mix of food.  When the big speaker came out to start the sing-along, Trish left but I just needed to stay!  For the next couple of hours (and a few more beers), I sat crunched together in that little hut, shoulder to shoulder with my neighbors, singing classic rock tunes at the top of our lungs.  It just felt good to let loose, feel safe, and enjoy the company of my neighbors.  This was a ritual that these neighbors had shared regularly over the years, through the raising of children and all manner of daily life issues.  While in many ways we have similar backgrounds, we are far from a homogeneous group.  But we truly enjoy each other’s company and choose to focus on the things that make it fun and not the differences that might cause friction.  It was a dose of community that I sorely needed—even if I was singing loudly off key and probably a beat or two off.

The following week brought the funeral of our friend’s mother.  It was a Catholic Mass and, as a Jew, I found myself in the role of observer.  The wealth of ritual was overwhelming.  I felt how all that ritual was critical to establishing the connection to community upon which all places of worship depend.  The music and singing reverberated throughout the church in a way that only seems to happen in religious services.  The Catholics fell comfortably into the call-and-response of the service in the same way that I fall into the rhythms of the service in a synagogue.  It connects you to those around you.  You share in the familiarity of the process as well as the words and prayers.  I reflected upon how a funeral service, while meant to honor the person who has passed, is really for those who are still alive.  This ritual of honoring the dead, of burial and prayer, of respect for the human being who is no longer among us—it’s all about cementing community.  Juxtaposed with the solemnity of the day was, honestly, the joy of reconnection of people who hadn’t seen each other in a while.  While we all knew why we were there, we were also happy to be together.  There were hugs and smiles and whispered conversations as people caught up with each other.  As we moved through the luncheon after the burial and then the “after party”, the tone continued to lighten.  I’ve seen this many times before.  We tell funny stories about the person we lost, reminisce generally about time together, remember why we are connected, and usually promise to not let so much time pass again.  The ritual of a funeral builds and reinforces community.

I’d also happened to have read an article during the week by an author who was lamenting the loss of what he defined as Traditional Conservatism.  He quoted liberally from Edmund Burke, often described as the founder of American Conservatism, who talked about the importance of local action vs. federal action (I’m way oversimplifying).  What struck me was the theme about how the local community can better tailor “solutions” to the needs of the local population.  I don’t disagree.  Problems manifest differently in different communities and most cannot be effectively addressed with a large, national, “one size fits all” approach.  This, of course, is the basis for a State’s Rights approach to governance.  For this to work well, though, we need a strongly connected community that feels the obligation to look out for all of its members.  The difficult part, of course, is the “all its members” piece.  Ritual drives behavioral expectations in a community and I don’t think we generally have community rituals that sufficiently value outreach and inclusion to everyone. This is not meant to be a knock on Conservatism—that thinking around local action and personal accountability really resonates with me.  It’s simply my observation that our communities don’t seem to be strongly connected enough that everyone’s needs are getting reasonably addressed.  We can’t fix it all with ritual sing-alongs in Tiki Huts, but maybe the creation of new rituals that bring disparate people together is a part of the solution.

Regardless of the deep societal implications, let me just say that I really like ritual.  I find it very comforting.  Maybe this is a part of getting older, although I have never liked constant change.  I like my morning rituals.  I like our rituals as a couple.  I like the rituals we are building with friends.  Rituals do indeed change, which can be good and bad.  When we were helping our friend clear out her Mom’s house last week, we were discussing how no one wants sets of china anymore.  For most people, the rituals around family gatherings have really changed.  They used to be very formal—hence the sets of china and silver (real, tarnishing silver) and formal dining rooms.  My family used to do that for Thanksgiving and the key Jewish Holidays.  Those rituals cemented our family structure.  I miss that.  But Trish and I are building new rituals as well—time together at friends’ lake houses, Christmas morning with our step-grandkids.  There will be more, I’m sure.  Treasure those rituals in your life and the community connection they bring.  And if you don’t have any?  Create some.  We don’t get to sustain healthy communities without them.