Lost/Free

I’m stuck in this
side hustle
make content
meal prep
romanticize your life
hamster wheel,
and I wonder
why I keep getting
tension headaches.

I try to drown it out
with NPR and
podcasts and
nonfiction audiobooks,
but sometimes
the truth
is too heavy.

What is it like?
To not be
in fight or flight?
To be able to rest
in the quiet of your mind?
To feel safe,
safe enough to digest.
I wonder,
have I ever
really slept?

I was so close
to finding myself,
to meeting the version
of me
who would exist
in an alternate universe 
where capitalism did not,
where humanity
was truly free.
The glimpse alone
is enough to make me know,
I can’t let that version of me
go.

I’m trying to interpret
the angel numbers,
trying to read
the universe’s signs,
but I’ve forgotten how
to look for them
without too much
screen time.

So what do I do?
Do I say
fuck it all,
leave the city,
quit my job?
Live like a monk
so I can be
what I want?

Or do I girl boss,
get a raise,
buy some stock,
start a business,
and hope that
by the end of it all
I still have it in me
to be
what I want?

//

I hope one day
these years
are remembered
as a dark time
where we lost ourselves.
I hope one day
we relearn to live
in the light,
to cherish the earth.
I hope one day
our children
might be free –
free enough
to be.

On doing everything “right”

Several years ago I read an article titled Escaping Poverty Requires Almost 20 Years With Nearly Nothing Going Wrongby Gillian White. This article was the inspiration for my blog post on “escaping” poverty, a feat which I have now been dedicating myself to for twenty years.

This summer, twenty years ago, was the moment when I decided that I had to dedicate myself to my education in order to get a well-paying job, and provide a comfortable, stable life for myself and my potential future children. Since then I can’t say that nearly nothing has gone wrong, but I had an incredible amount of support from my extended family and community, and I know that I have done my best effort to do things the “right” way on my climb up the steep cliff face of socioeconomic status in the land currently known as the United States.

It’s ironic that I find myself here, experiencing unemployment for the first time since 2015, this time not entirely at my will. A couple of months ago my former employer decided to eliminate my position and offered me severance. And instead of panicking and rushing to find any other option for a job, as I might have a few years ago, I have decided to just pause.

At this point, I would say that I’ve achieved a status to be proud of. I am a college graduate, a homeowner, I have no debt aside from that pesky student loan the government hasn’t forgiven yet, higher-than-average savings, a diversified stock portfolio, a retirement account. I live in a two-income household, have access to reliable transportation and fresh food & water, and can afford to buy new clothes and shoes and home decor when I want to. I can even go on vacation to cities where I don’t know anyone and stay in hotels, occasionally. And yet here I am, with no job and few prospects.

After twenty years of tireless effort, at school, then at school and work, then at work, after so much support and so much “going right,” so much doing “right,” I’ve realized that I sacrificed so much of what I want for the sake of what society has told me is “right.” I wanted a good job, so in 3rd grade I dedicated my life to doing well in school so I could go to college. In 8th grade some project came up in English class that asked me to pick a career. I liked to write, so I figured I should be a journalist and I dedicated my life to that. At 20 I graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in journalism, convinced by then that I did not want to be a journalist. Soon after I recognized the issue of educational inequity and I dedicated my life to that. At 25 I bought a condo, qualifying with the comfortable-living-wage salary I had obtained in my comfortable nonprofit job. I found myself farther along on my journey, higher up on the cliff face than I had imagined myself getting to at such a young age. And I learned that, the farther up you get, the easier the journey seems to become. Still, I found myself feeling like something was missing, like I had forgotten part of myself somehow. I struggled to find a way to continue my journey, reach even greater heights, while still dedicating myself to saving the world.

It wasn’t until a few months ago that I realized it is not my responsibility to save the world. That realization opened my mind up to a truth that I have long been ignoring: my only responsibility is to be true to myself. To find my light and live in it. Twenty years of doing everything “right” led me to achieve upward socioeconomic mobility, but it also had me miserable in a dead-end job, consistently underpaid and, eventually, laid off.

I can’t help but wonder what might have happened had, instead of doing what was “right,” I had been brave enough to pursue my dreams. What if I had gone to my 8th grade English teacher and said I wanted to write novels and poetry and movies and TV shows? What if I had dedicated myself to learning how to do that? Instead I have toiled away in the nonprofit industrial complex, convincing myself that I was doing the “right” thing, while I hide my poetry in my notebooks and only jokingly refer to writing books and movies and TV shows. I never allowed myself to believe that I could have both. That I could do what I want, not just what others tell me is “right,” and still achieve upward socioeconomic mobility.

Have I outrun the shadow of poverty enough to pause and take a breath? Am I in a comfortable enough position to allow myself to dream? I can’t be sure, and I would be lying if I said that the thought of not working, not having a consistent direct deposit hitting my bank account, doesn’t scare the crap out of me. I am grateful to have a partner to lean on, to have all of the comforts and conveniences that I worked so hard to access. And I am grateful for the ways in which I have been coming back to myself. Grateful for the hours of therapy that have enabled me to shed the layer of fear that pushed me to bury my dreams. Grateful for the birth chart reading that confirmed the truth in the dream that I had buried. Grateful for the community college course that enabled me to see the reality of creative writing as a profession.

I picture myself now on a ledge upon this cliff face that is wide enough so that it has plenty of room to rest, and even sustains some edible plants. There is shade and a spring. Instead of moving along with my climb, I am choosing now to pause. I recognize that after 20 years of working tirelessly to achieve this stability and security, I need rest. I need time and mental and emotional space to ponder what I want to work toward next.

Last summer I had an idea for a novel that I’d like to write, and over the last year I have written several thousand words, fleshed out more characters, plot points, and timelines, than I ever thought I could. I am hoping to finish this novel in the next six months, and will be seeking an agent and publisher within the year. I plan to start compiling my first book of poetry in the next few months. I also have several ideas for movies and television shows that I’d like to write. Children’s movies inspired by my dog and family stories, dramatic TV shows that cover millennia of human history, maybe even a stand-up special one day. From this ledge I can see so many more possibilities, so many more pathways onward, than I ever knew existed.

I am pitching a tent, hanging a hammock, and creating space for myself to just lay back and dream. To let my shoulders ease back and away from my ears, to release some of the tension in my neck that has built up over my years spent climbing, pushing myself to achieve ever more. I know that I will have to continue eventually, and I am open to considering all of the options and possibilities out there, to finally releasing the idea that I must do everything “right.”

Sometimes, we forget

Sometimes we forget
what it means to be human –
that others are human.
Sometimes we forget
that our mother is a person
with hopes, dreams, fears.
Sometimes we forget
that our father is a person
with plans, feelings, insecurities.
Sometimes we forget
that our siblings, friends, peers
are people
with expectations, preferences, assumptions.
Sometimes we forget
that our partners are people
with needs, desires, secrets.
Sometimes we forget
that we are people
with all of those things and more.

These systems have us so occupied
with survival
that we forget what it means to live.
So occupied with doing
that we forget what it means to be.
We pass the time day after day
completing routines,
doing what we have been told
we have to.
And sometimes, we forget
what we have.

A wide rainbow over clusters of trees and the roofs of buildings

My neighborhood

I like to imagine my neighborhood,
without all the buildings…
no humming A/C units,
no roaring engines, no concrete,
no planes passing overhead…

Just the trees,
the cacti, the soil,
hard and sandy, baking under the sun.
When I look around
I see lots of shady spots
offered by old, friendly tees,
and there’s a river, not far –
you can tell by the way,
as you look to the north,
the trees grow taller,
closer together.

The trees, the cacti,
offer a place to rest for birds,
and the bushes that surround their trunks,
provide cover for many critters.
The bees feast on cactus and
palo verde blossoms,
while lizards scitter across rocks,
and rabbits tear through the
hard earth, seeking refuge from
the birds, and the sun.

I imagine the wind blowing, warm,
shaking the leaves of the
eucalyptus tree,
starting a symphony of
whispering branches,
birds calling for their lovers,
the far off hoot of an owl…

I imagine, after it rains,
when the heavy sheets of water pass,
the scents of steaming creosote
and freshly disturbed earth
fill every inch of air,
and the sky rings with
the chirps of crickets.

I imagine the Earth
restored.
Humanity existing in harmony,
with the trees, the soil, the rivers,
the critters, the sun,
the wind and rain…

I like to imagine my neighborhood.
It is a beautiful place to call home.

A message from the sun

Look to me, my children.
I am your light, your source of life,
I am your truest friend.

To you it appears as though
I rise and set,
but I am always here,
always watching,
always shining my light.

For brief moments,
many of you become lost to me,
as your mother turns away on her axis.
Yet even then my companion, the moon,
reflects my light back to you.

Look to me, my children,
as your ancestors did before you.
You carry their wisdom in your veins,
and you know.
You know what I am here to tell you.

My children may call me sun,
but never forget that I am a star –
born to burn my brightest and fullest,
until I simply cannot burn anymore.

As were you.

You were never meant
to spend the day
hidden away,
laboring.
You were born to shine,
to burn and be your brightest and fullest.
You were born to love,
to grow, to feel joy,
to feel my light on your skin,
as you care for your mother,
as you build your home.

You were born to be
a light.
You each carry a piece of me inside of you,
and it comes to life when you feel
love, joy, elation.
You must listen to that feeling,
for it is me speaking to you.
It is me telling you,
Yes, child. This is why you are here.’
You must absorb my energy,
and pour it back out
into the world,
into your communities,
into your mother.

I am your truest friend,
I see you for all that you are,
and only that.
You, you, my child, are only here briefly,
yet your light – my light inside of you –
shines on.
So spend your time burning as
bright and full
as you possibly can.
Until you simply cannot burn anymore.

Waiting/Great Expectations

Sometimes I feel like I’m waiting
for the magnetic field
to flip,
and throw the world into chaos.
I’ll live out my life
off the land.
I’ll survive as long as I can.
Then I won’t have to meet
anyone’s great expectations,
and especially not my own.

My mom wants me
to get my doctorate,
but I have a quite a long
way to go.
My dad wants me
to be a sports journalist,
but I learned too much about the media
to want any part in it.
My grandpa wanted me
to be a lawyer,
but I believe more in the laws of nature
than the laws of man.
My teacher wanted me
to be president,
but I believe you can find no justice
in an unjust system.

I want me to change the world,
to rid it of all injustice, of manufactured poverty,
of racism, colonialism, capitalism.
As if there’s some switch out there,
that I could flip.
As if it’s only a matter of finding it.
But I am afraid.
I am afraid that speaking truth to power in this world,
tends to shorten your lifespan.
And I am tired.
In my bones, I carry the weariness of generations
fighting just to survive.

It would be nice to just live.
To have a home, a family,
comfort and abundance.

Sometimes it feels impossible
to do both –
and so I wait.