I've been cleaning up my desk area and office this week, feeling slightly overwhelmed and agitated with the amount of clutter, which for me includes the flotsam and jetsam of paper - small notes and post-its with pithy sayings, reminders, various To-Do lists and stacks of scratch paper. It's a new year!
Since the pandemic, I've kept little journals where I make notes during online meetings - it helps me to focus, and is a record of things I want to remember. And... we're now five years post quarantine. In looking over the oldest records, I very quickly saw that most of what I'd jotted down were repeats. Like an online post recently noted, you can look up 5,000 different inspirational quotes, but that doesn't mean 5,000 different bits of advice. What is true is true. Different people use different turns of a phrase, but the core of the message is the same. Don't take this world personally. Beware of trying to clean up the wreckage of the future. Accept people just as they are (i.e. I am powerless).
I do like these two pieces: When I'm having a bad day I need a meeting. When I'm having a good day, the meeting needs me. And, When my guts are in a knot, it usually means I'm trying to control something (i.e. remember, I am powerless!). And here's one that always makes me pause: If you know the answer, ask a bigger question.
What does that mean? What part of my comfort zone might need expanding? A friend recently suggested an adventure next autumn, with my first thought being, "Too expensive - don't do it." Is that being realistic, or fear? I slept on it and thought, "Wait a minute. I'm 70 years old. If I don't go see this natural wonder (Monument Valley in Arizona) I probably never will." I am reasonable with money, and... as I've long asked myself, at the end, will I be happy about extra $ in the bank, or that I got to experience X, Y or Z? I tend to err on the side of experience (as long as my needs are taken care of, and yes, I'm aware that is a luxury). So, while my first reaction is sometimes a "no!" born of being afraid, I can slow down the process to discern what is really true.
Another saying I like says "nothing grows in my comfort zone." I am not a physical risk taker. You won't find me on the end of a bungee cord or riding a steep gondola (though some of my antics while under the influence were definitely dangerous). There were many, many emotional risks as I've grown into myself - that first college class, applying for jobs that felt just slightly out of reach, getting married for the second time, doing my best as a stepmom, showing up for my mother and my first husband as they were dying - so many things that initially felt like too much. One day at a time, my fellow travelers show me how to walk through what feels impossible. As I've been told, "You can do hard things," which is a reminder of the hard things I have done.
It goes back to the importance, for me, of repetition and reinforcement. On my own, that scared little voice can take hold. Some folks go to church. I go to meetings (and some do both, or neither). Meetings are where I can take a deep breath, where I hear you walking through the joys and challenges of this life, where a turn of a phrase prompts my own reflection. I go to meetings and I talk with like-minded others. I go to meetings and I read books that inspire. I go to meetings and I have a routine, a practice that works for me.
A friend speaks to the danger of meeting-based sobriety, so yes it isn't merely sitting in the chair, but rather taking the principles into the world, even if that world is my own home. I was never a Scout of any kind, but I do adhere to the "be prepared" motto. As I've often said, I love to travel though get a tad nervous when preparing to leave. I have a big trip planned later in Spring, so am practicing the principles by getting my affairs in order, as it were, as in documents organized and all the things someone would need to access were I to die. I know a woman who died while in Bali on vacation, and it was incredibly expensive and complicated to return her remains home. To that end, when I pre-paid my arrangements after my mother died, following her very helpful example, I added a policy that would bring me back to Portland if I meet my end elsewhere. We all likely have a different idea of what being prepared for the end means - this felt important to me.
And my perspective on what is important doesn't change all that much over time. Sobriety, health, service, friends, family, self-care... the way I've approached them may vary, but what is true is true. I love something from an Alanon reader: What is important is rarely urgent. What is urgent is rarely important. I can use that as a measuring stick when I feel the need to act now! knowing that what is mine to do will make itself clear.
I will say that what is true can feel complicated these days. As I catch glimpses of the news on TV at the gym, or what people send me, I feel myself in a mental spin. On my walk this morning, I used a Cognitive Behavioral Therapy tool of naming 5 things I see, 5 things I hear, 5 things I feel in an effort to get back into my body and out of my head. No amount of fretting will change anything. Being centered and clear-headed just might clear the path to hear and implement good, orderly direction.
Whether you welcome or mourn changes in the world these days, how do you stay aware of your powerlessness while having the courage to know the difference between what you can change and what you can't? What are some healthy risks you've taken, in early recovery or more recently? Do you have a daily routine that helps you find your strength?
* * *
Is it time for an inventory as we enter 2025?
The NOW WHAT workbook is 78 pages of topics and processing questions, great for solo exploration or in a small group. Go to the WEB VERSION of this blog page for the link on ordering (PDF for those outside the U.S., or hard copy mailed to you). Contact me at SoberLongTime@soberlongtime.com or shadowsandveins@gmail.com with questions. And a reminder that the workbook, is available at the Portland Area Intergroup at 825 NE 20th. for local folks.