Archive for August, 2008

It rained yesterday

Yesterday I expressed to one of my supervisors that I wasn’t entirely sure whether it was worth it for me to be doing the job that I’m doing. It’s a job that is embedded in my personal history because of loved ones, and a job that is now embedded in my professional history because I’ve invested blood, sweat, and tears in it (as they say). And yesterday I questioned it to my very core.

I had reports due for court and it happened to be the first time I was using a new computer program to do them. This week we have upgraded our computer program at work that has all the information that I need to complete those reports and it just so happens that a ton of the information I needed was erased in the upgrade. It was only halfway through the day and it was already a day that I wished and hoped would be over soon. Then I got an email from one of our nurses with a client number attached to it…and a message that said they passed away the day before. It probably took only 20 seconds or so to look up that client’s name but it felt as if a whole lot more time had passed while all I thought was, is it someone I’ve worked with for a long time…is it someone I have a close working relationship with?

Once those thoughts had passed in a millisecond, the next thing that struck me was how insignificant my complaints about a computer system and reports were.

As difficult as it might be to grasp, it was so much worse when I realized it was someone that I had met with only once, very recently, and that it was someone who hadn’t even had a chance to be in treatment for very long.

I work with some of the greatest clinicians/supervisors ever because of how supportive they are. They get it…they get how hard it is, they know how important it is that we continue to do it, and most importantly they know when it’s time to remind each other of why we do it. I needed to hear what I heard yesterday…reminders of those that treatment is successful for, stories of clients who have made it. The reasons why we do what we do. It’s easy to forget sometimes.

I took the bus home yesterday as usual however, it was raining and there I was with no umbrella. I stood and waited for the bus in the rain and was then relieved when it finally got there (after three whole buses passed going the opposite direction). When I got to my neighborhood, and it started pouring down even more, I walked home in that pouring rain. I didn’t even care.

Sometimes it doesn’t make a bit of sense, and maybe it’s not supposed to. I can’t help but want an answer though. Today while perusing blogs that I peruse I learned something I didn’t know before about a coworker that I’m becoming friends with; they lost a family member to addiction. Why them? Why my client? Why are some people able to mess around and come out unscathed, before it gets serious? Why was I able to? Thing is, there is no stellar all ecompassing answer as to why. At the end of the day it becomes worth if for those that make it…it’s worth it for one of my old clients that stopped by today to get a copy of his discharge paperwork, who’s been clean for almost a year…it’s worth it for all the clients that graduate from drug court…and it’s worth it everytime someone walks out of my office saying, thanks for listening.

But the casualties remain difficult to handle.

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Where did it go awry?

I can’t help it; I just keep reading this book and I can not stop (Promiscuities Naomi Wolf). If I could stay home the rest of the week to finish it I would…but of course, I can’t.

In Western culture’s debate, images of female sexualized nakedness are assumed, by progressives and conservatives and apolitical concerned mothers alike, to be innately degrading to women. The trouble with this is that it locates the degradation of the women within the sex or the nakedness itself, rather than in the distorted value assigned to that sex and that nakedness.

In our culture, women’s nudity is typically seen as exposing women-in the sense of making them vulnerable-for the sake of more powerful, less vulnerable men. But, as Havelock Ellis argued in his Studies in the Psychology of Sex, other cultures have organized female nakedness very differently.

This is true; I have often become caught up in it myself to be quite frank. When I say ‘it’ I mean specifically, the idea that the purpose of the nakedness of women can not equate to anything other than an unequal intent. I’ve gotten caught up in that idea and it’s made me angry many times. Somewhere in my intellect, I know better than that though. My profession has taught me that one of the most important skills I can have is that of being able to reframe something…an idea, a situation, etc. Many of us have learned to see sexuality in this light through no fault of our own; we’ve learned to see it in a space and time that is two dimensional, when in true reality it can be better described as four dimensional. Our culture is not our fault however, once we’re aware of what our culture has ingrained our choice thereafter is our responsibility.

In other cultures there are defined rites of passage intended to allow a person a more firm grasp on what is happening to them physically. Per Navajo tradition:

When a Navajo girl reaches puberty (the time of her first menstruation), she undergoes a four day ceremony called Kinaalda which signifies her transformation from childhood into womanhood. The ceremony is centered around the Navajo myth of Changing woman, the first woman on Earth who was able to bear children. The myth says that Changing Woman performed the first Kinaalda and that the ceremony gave her the ability to have children. Because of this, all Navajo girls must also undergo the ceremony so that they will grow into strong women who can also have children…

Throughout the ceremony, the young woman will perform tasks on others that she is having performed on herself. This is because the Navajo believe that during a sacred ceremony, the participant gains the power to help others in the same way they are being helped. During the Kinaalda, this means that the young girl will be ‘molded’ by her mother and then she will also ‘mold’ others in the tribe and so on.

The key word for me there is help. The general way that girls become women in Western culture pales in comparison to an example like this one. Unfortunately the norm is not a ceremony marking a significant change as well as teaching in a proud way about all that comes with it; it is usually masked in embarassment and uncomfortable conversations, if one is lucky. Not to mention the images, ideas, and inferences from culture at large that a girl has already been taking in since a much younger age.

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Dreaming about lightning

I’ve had the same skin for 30 years now; one might assume that I would know it intimately…specifically that I would know how to avoid charring it. Apparently my 30 years has nothing on the globally warming sun. About an hour into the boat fun I ventured to on Saturday I realized that I had forgotten to lather with spf 45 a very important piece of my body…my entire back. I did my best to control damage by belatedly finishing the sun block job I had started, all the while knowing deep down that it was too late. That’s all it takes especially in what felt like 100 degree weather, one hour. Of course the rest of the day I conveniently lost myself in swimming and boating so as to put off the dread that awaited me. It wasn’t actually until the next morning that I fully realized the scope of my folly. My entire back was, and still is really, lobster red. And it hurt. It still hurts, although now it’s moving to the itchy phase, the worst part. Every time my skin ends up feeling flammable after a grave mistake like this I promise myself to be cognizant enough next time to avoid it. Nope. It’s sort of like how every time I move I tell myself that I’m going to hire movers this time, only to find myself grunting and cursing again over box after box. At any rate…

I’m now reading Promiscuities courtesy of Naomi Wolf.  What can I say? I’m a sucker for feminist fodder, especially when it provides me a welcome escape from the reality of public transportation. The entire book is meant to explore how many girls in America discover their sexuality under a tightly woven blanket that even they can’t see under which causes some to end up disconnected from themselves. What I read today that I found fabulously interesting:

Because of the new dangers that awaited us in the form of “bad men” of all kinds, we were at once obsessed by physical freedom and fearful of it. Soon we understood that boys were, in effect, our body guards. A girl learns that the ecstasy of physical exploration is something she can now enjoy safely only in the presence of a boy. She intuits that the very same developing body that can carry her farther than her dependent childhood body ever could has suddenly made her a target as well. Why is it a cliche’ that a powerful car gets a teenage boy dates with the most desirable girls? Because the boy and his car have become the stand-in for the girl’s relationship to the vistas now forbidden to her. She learns to project onto love relationships all the drama, discovery, and meaning that she would otherwise find on the open road.

Awareness that sexual pleasure meant sexual danger and that our own guilt would be held to be a causative factor in whatever harm might come to us was a constant drain on our energy. The shock was still fresh. Over the course of the following years, we would swing from outrage to denial to despair. By adulthood, we would have become numb to it and learned how to live with this everyday emergency. Perhaps acculturation to the unthinkable is one of the definitions of what it means to become a woman.

We needed space so badly. When we discovered that, if we went with boys, space would be open for us, we found, to our surprise, that we needed boys. And yet boys were part of the danger. Thus, our balance of power with boys was thrown off. This inequity regarding moving fast into the world was the first real lesson I had about the inequities between men and women. We needed boys more than they needed us. We were more scared of them physically than they were of us. We did not know this, but we probably even desired them as much or even more than they desired us. If we chose not to go with them, we couldn’t go at all. But they were always free to choose to go with us

I got this. Completely and totally. Keep in mind that directly before this passage she details an experience she had as a ten year-old where some adult man lured her into bushes. Using wisdom beyond her years she managed to exit the situation prior to any physical harm and get to the summer camp that she was headed to that day. Unfortunately the counselors who spoke to her about the incident lacked enough compassion to give a ten year-old the impression that she had done something wrong to cause it. So, of course her comments above are colored by that situation as well as, I’m sure, many others to be fair. And even though I’ve never experienced anything similar to that particular scenario, I got what she was saying. When I was a freshmen in high school I got to go out late on weekends, do things that I normally wouldn’t have been allowed to do, likely because I was with a male. That might not be 100% accurate and is likely tinted a great deal with my own perception, but it sort of makes sense. One thing I can almost guarantee however, is how different it might have been moving to downtown Seattle with a male, than as how I did so which was without one. My lovely Mom worries about me as Moms tend to do. When I moved down here she was really concerned about me being in this area alone. I can almost pledge that if I was moving to this same apartment with a man the worry would have been dramatically reduced; I don’t think it’s a sign of how my Mom is necessarily (that is, it’s not about her specifically), as I lean towards how our culture is. I’m sort of with Wolf on this one.

All that said, I dreamt about lightning last night and it was nice to wake up to. It was stretching across the sky in electric purple tentacles and it was beautiful; like the lightning storm I watched the other night from the roof. It’s interesting to ruminate a bit about the precise reasons that we meet the people we meet at the time we meet them. Sometimes I think that it might have something to do with finding freedom.

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Thursday Thirteen #10

Thirteen Guilty Pleasure Shows That I Enjoy

1. 90210: I grew up with it…I can’t help it. I cried on the phone with my friends in junior high when it was over. It will always have a special place in my heart. And I will admit it, I wanted to be Brenda Walsh because she had the cute boyfriend…and I was sick with jealousy when Peanut’s mom let her out of school to go see Luke Perry and mine didn’t.

2. The O.C.: I discovered it when I was an adult. I have no excuses whatsoever.

3. One Tree Hill: Again…I was an adult, officially…no excuse.

4. Bad Girls Club: Yes, it’s a full on reality show, the worst kind that capitalizes off of “female drama”. But I love it, and I can’t help it.

5. My So-Called Life: I sort of grew up with this one too. “Angela Chase” was awkward and unsure, just like we all were. We related.

6. Party of Five: Also, from childhood. I heart-ed the7. Salingers.

7. Gilmore Girls: This was from adulthood. The t.v. relationship that the two had was terribly attractive to someone who is a daughter; but in reality I truly love the relationship that I do have with my mom which is, well, real.

8. Dawson’s Creek: It was just cute, that’s all.

9. Friends: I’m quite unsure as to whether this counts as a “guilty pleasure” show…probably not, because I’ve met other adults who absolutely adore it even though it’s sadly over.

10. Buffy The Vampire Slayer: They portrayed her as tough…what can I say?

11. The Real World: I still love it. I think I always will.

12. America’s Next Top Model: Out of anyone, I should really not be a fan of this show. But I still am.

13. Tori & Dean Home Sweet Hollywood: The only explanation that I have is that at least on television, it’s that he just seems to love her so much. It’s probably why I watch it.

View more Thursday Thirteen participants here.

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I think that I throw in the towel

I think that I’m done having relationships for an indefinite period of time. And I think that’s good.

That’s it.

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