Friday, September 30, 2016

Just a Tiny Beautiful Blog

Last night I felt really organized. I had made a list of everything I needed to get done this weekend, assigned different tasks and assignments to each day of the weekend, and made a plan to get out of the house and actually work. I even cooked and prepared food ahead of time so I could take my lunch and dinner with me downtown. I felt like hot stuff with my backpack of everything I needed for the day as I got on the bus to come to the library.

Then I got here. I realized that it’s the Grant application due today, not the Scholarship, so instead of writing an essay, I’m supposed to be making a video of myself, and I haven’t showered since yesterday morning. I realized that I planned to blog about the books I read in September, but my book log is at home. I realized that the research article I planned to read and write about was actually a literature review masquerading as research. The best laid plans, I tell you…

So I was frustrated. Could I still get work done with the materials I have? Absolutely. Could I find another article? Of course (and I did – it took about ten minutes). But something in my head was really mad; rather than accepting that everyone makes mistakes and confuses deadlines, it built on my two other forgotten deadlines in the past week and raged against me. This is a hot mess, it said, you’re better than this.

Which, in a certain sense, is true. I think people should always be working to better themselves, and that not missing deadlines is kind of important for succeeding at adulting.

But mostly, I think it’s not. Who am I to think I’m above making mistakes? Who am I to think that I’m better than someone else just because I keep a calendar?

This month I worked my last two weeks as a nanny. I can’t tell you how many times I faced this same issue in the past year with those kids. When I was vacuuming sequins out of the dryer, or sorting out six different sets of puzzle pieces from each other, or taping together yet another box, or especially the time I was on my hands and knees under the kitchen table trying to clean up the bowl of rice krispies that had spilled, with their milk, onto the carpet, and since dried. So as I am, in these situations and many more, on the floor, I would sigh and think, I am better than this. Somehow, in my white, privileged, middle-class, home, private, and post-bac educated mind, I got the idea that I’m too good to ever be on my knees on the floor. Then I would get to my wonderful, liturgical, church where we kneel together in confession every Sunday and I would remember the last time I was so close to the ground and try to repent of all those entitled thoughts and feelings.

This month, I listened to Cheryl Strayed’s book Tiny Beautiful Things, in which she has compiled a number of her “Dear Sugar” advice columns from The Rumpus. One response to an admittedly well-educated, woman writer who struggles with jealousy:

A large part of your jealousy probably rises out of your outsized sense of entitlement. Privilege has a way of fucking with our heads the same way a lack of it does. There are a lot of people who’d never dream they could be a writer, let alone land, at the age of 31, a six figure book deal. You are not one of them. And you are not one of them because you’ve been given a tremendous amount of things that you did not earn or deserve, but rather that you received for the sole reason that you happen to be born into a family who had the money and wherewithal to fund your education at two colleges to which you feel compelled to attach the word “prestigious.”
Y’all, I have an outsized sense of entitlement. I have been given a tremendous amount of things I did not earn or deserve, including a nearly-free education at one of the Top Ten Regional Colleges of the South, and a free one at one of the Top Ten Universities in my field of graduate study.
These things have led me to believe that I am strong, smart, capable and full of potential.
But they have also led me to believe that I am above forgetfulness, or not showering, or peeling glue-like rice cereal out of the carpet.
This month I also read Wearing God, by Lauren F. Winner. Her meditations on different images for God also challenged me – particularly the idea of God as a woman in labor:
If our picture of strength is a laboring woman, then strength is not about refusing to cry or denying pain. Strength is not about being in charge, or being independent, or being dignified. If our picture of strength is a laboring woman, then strength entails enduring, receiving help and support, being open to pain and risk. If our picture of strength is a laboring woman, strength entails entrusting yourself (to medicine, or to the wisdom of your own body, or to the guidance of someone who is there in the room with you). Strength entails giving yourself over to the possibility of death.
This is just one example. God demonstrates the strength of vulnerability over and over and over again. His very death, so often sterilized and cloaked in euphemism for our comfort, is the greatest, most powerful picture of humility, vulnerability and love. Christ, the one actually entitled to glory, laud and honor, suffered for the sake of my sorry, entitled self. And this is the image that sticks with me – Christ showed his strength in giving himself over to death, and I can’t give myself over to making some scheduling mistakes?
And while I certainly don’t plan on birthing a child anytime soon, can’t I give up my idea of being strong and dignified, above pain, weakness, struggle, or error? Can’t I give myself up to the small opportunities to die to pride and entitlement? Can’t I sit still for just a moment and appreciate the things I have, that I did not earn and most certainly do not deserve? The big things are hard: my family, community and education. So I’m starting small – with the everyday, the ordinary, the simple, wonderful pieces that piece together my ordinary, extraordinary life. I’m starting with the Tiny Beautiful Things. 

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