Showing posts with label live authentic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label live authentic. Show all posts

weeding through the clutter

10/08/2015
In my old age (ha!) I find myself constantly searching out authenticity. It's practically my life's goal now, to surround myself as often as possible with the people and the things that make life feel genuinely authentic. It's always on my mind, like I'm having a sacred moment each and every time I encounter something that feels real.

It's also so obvious to me lately that my awareness of authenticity in this world is directly linked to my desire for simplicity. That simple and authentic go hand in hand like milk and cookies.

(And if you feel like you're having a daja vu moment, well it's because I talk about simplicity and authenticity often on this blog, should I apologize? It's just so much apart of my life lately, this search.)

Myself, I don't often find that staunch authenticity in places like church or facebook. I don't feel it in places where generally people toe the line, where they wear the same things and believe the same things and stay huddled together in their groups of like minded fellows. Those places, to me, feel more like a bubble of seclusion than a real human experience. And that's not to say that these places are bad mind you! Sometimes I find peace and love while sitting on a church bench. Sometimes I find an inspiring message or a cute picture of my friend's baby while scrolling through facebook.

But finding bona fide rawness is something else entirely. I find the search for this to be similar to my cupboard filled with coffee cups. My favorite coffee cups aren't brand new and they don't conform to an entire set purchased off the shelf at a department store. My favorite coffee cups are the ones with a story to tell. The clay mud-colored cup with patches of orange that Dan purchased secondhand years before I met him, where the top of the handle is worn thin from the weight of being held so many times. The dust colored ceramic cup with swirls of deep brown that we bought from a booth at a local summer art show, surrounded by like-minded and carefully crafted ceramic designs such as honey pots and giant cooking bowls and mugs of all shapes and sizes. The rusted tin cup that Dan's sister brought back from Russia. The mug with the autumn leaf designs that was given as a Christmas gift, so perfectly large and wide that it reminds me of a bread bowl while I cup it in my hands.

Like all of these mugs, I find intangible authenticity in places that have stories to tell. In places that are beautifully real and sometimes completely outside of my comfort zone. Like the tattoo parlor I stepped in, where the floor was checkered red and white and the walls lined in odd sized honest art, the air thick with some combination of notebook paper and faint cigarette smoke, and the skinny tattoo artist from new orleans tells stories about the landscape of his home city and the art of cooking real food. In solidarity at the top of a mountain, while watching the wind dance with the branches of the trees and listening to the river babbling at my feet, watching the world in slow motion from my perch. While sitting across the table from an elderly woman who I hardly know, whose dementia is turning her into someone she is not, but who cheerfully tells me all about her late husband and her children and her favorite grocery stores in town. While reading a book written so passionately and beautifully that it all but reaches in and touches my spirit while I read.

Lately, while discovering these moments of authenticity, I have been weeding through some clutter in my own life to create a more authentic space in my soul.

Such as.

I have been spending considerably less time wasted on my phone. I deleted my facebook app to rid myself of mindlessly scrolling through the newsfeed twenty times a day. I've pushed myself to choose to call people over texting them. I stopped checking my email and instagram first thing every morning.

I have been shopping at the thrift store. Oh the authenticity to be found at a thrift store! Since I discovered a quaint little thrift store downtown my life has changed for the better. I have collected some of the most lovely authentic things: worn-in chunky oversized sweaters, stacks of award winning books for thirty cents a piece, an old bread board, barely worn vintage adidas sneakers, a tin pot to hold coffee beans, rain boots for the boys, a pair of brown lace-up riding boots that make me look like katniss everdeen.When you buy something from a thrift store you get to carry on someone's story. You even get to make it up, if you'd like. I always wonder whose magical memories and mundane moments and massive life milestones were passed through with this in their possession.

Hands down the very best thing I have been working on to increase authenticity in my life is the art of listening. I'm naturally quite terrible at this, as I often find myself listening to respond. Thinking about the stories I can add to the story, or my thoughts on the matter at hand, instead of listening to just listen. Really focusing on what is being said and taking it all in. When I can remember to listen instead of talk, I am floored at the rawness that finds me. When I focus and listen to what is being said, I feel all of the feelings. It's one of the most wonderful traits and I'm truly so sad that it doesn't come naturally to me, like all of those perfect people who are born to listen. Aren't they lucky? I wish I were born to listen instead of talk. But if wishes were fishes, you know. I have instead this amazing ability to change and mold into who I desire to be, and so that's what I'm doing. I am trying to change my ways so that I can become the person who listens.

Anyhow, these little changes in my life have made worlds of difference. I am feeling so...free. It's lovely. This constant search of mine is always reminding me of how beautiful a thing life can really be.



xoxo

life lately + easter

4/01/2015
Happy hump day! For the record, I think April Fool’s Day is one of the very stupidest things that has ever been made up in this world, right next to subaru truck cars and deep fried twinkies. But I do love Wednesdays! I start every Wednesday with piyo class which is most definitely my favorite of all the things I do to keep my booty in shape. This morning when I arrived at the gym for class I unzipped my yoga mat bag to find a large handful of hot wheels cars stuffed inside. It made me smile inside and out because, how awesome is having a kid really? It’s awesome.

Last week I completely slacked on any sort of productive anything, largely thanks to Netflix. If the hubs kept a journal, I’m quite certain that his latest entry would read: Dear Journal, I’m just really hoping that Meg finishes the vampire diaries soon, so that I can have my wife back. And if I kept a journal it would read: Dear Journal, I don’t understand how I can be so addicted to a show that is so ridiculous. The CW does it again!

This week it’s spring break and up until today it has felt like the epitome of summertime. Sun block smeared faces that still shine red, dirt and grass stained feet, playing outside with the neighbor kids from sun up until sun down. Sometimes spring gives us small sneak peeks into what life will be like in a short few months before it goes back to its cool winds and scattered rain showers. I love that about springtime, how nonchalant it tiptoes about. I love the inconsistency from warm and sunny to cool and blustery. It gives me the best of both worlds all wrapped into a tulip and cherry blossom covered package. Case in point: just last night around dinnertime, after a long day in the heat of the sun, the clouds rolled over and a windstorm picked up so abruptly that within seconds we were being pelted with tiny gravel rocks while we chased all of our patio furniture and children’s toys about the neighborhood, running against the wind in slow motion and calling out curses while the kids screamed in terror. It was rather hilarious, actually.

I know it’s only Wedneseday and I’m getting ahead of myself, but I’m so looking forward to Easter weekend! We will kick it off tomorrow with a s’mores roast, which is one of my favorite things in this life, a good s’more. And even more so with good company. But you know that already, I’m just sure of it. Over the weekend I might get a new easter dress and my boys will most definitely get snazzy new easter outfits, but probably not matching because I’ve never been a matching kids kind of girl. And the hubs will probably get a new easter t-shirt because t-shirts are who the man is. No long sleeves, avoid collars when possible, black and grey at all costs! I’m running a 5k and we’ve got a few easter egg hunts up our sleeves. Do you remember last easter? The hunger games of easter egg hunts? I’m so looking forward to that craziness again! Also, we found teenage mutant ninja turtle easter eggs at the marketplace along with a race car filled easter basket and I assured Jace the easter bunny would most likely get him those, so. I’d like to start into a “why, when I was a kid…” speech regarding easter merriment as a whole, but I’ll spare you.

Then of course there will be Easter dinner with our family, and that’s really what it’s all about to me. When I say “it” I don’t actually mean exclusively Easter, what I mean is our existence. I love traditional Sunday night dinners switching off with grandparents and cousins, the time we have together with these people that we are so connected to. In the large realm of it all I’m just sure that family is the answer to everything.

Listen, I know that I’m one of those barfy people who thinks that life is so very beautiful. But don’t let that fool you into thinking that I’m not afraid. I am utterly aware that at any given moment I could lose it as fast as I can blink, and that knowledge all but scares it right out of me. But I choose not to dwell on my fears while I’m trying to live life to the fullest, as I suppose dwelling on fears really is counterproductive. Life is short, and sometimes it’s dreadfully hard, but I believe that shouldn’t take away from the loveliness in it.

I’m not always perfect at this living life to the fullest stuff, mind you, but I do try. It’s largely to my benefit that I find such small and insignificant events so very dreamy. Sunday brunch, long evening walks by the river, a cup of coffee on the patio, listening to the radio while the sun streams in the windows, home popped popcorn, a good book, meaningful conversations, a trip to the market for eggs and cheese. These are all such small undertakings that to me are quite meaningful. While to some they the mundane of life, to me these are in fact the very moments that make up my life at all, like little puzzle pieces that are adding depth to this spectacular picture that I have been creating. It has always been about the small things to me. The small things make my life so majestic.

I would recommend that to everyone, finding splendor in the small things while still dreaming of the big things. It’s an especially helpful talent to have when life gets extra drab.

Speaking of life, here are some pictures of our life lately! Pictures of the small things. You know.


Happy Wednesday lovelies. And hey, if I don’t see you before then, have the best Easter will you??

iphone photo dump + thoughts on dinner

10/14/2014
It has recently come to my attention that there are actually people out there who eat dinner every single night. I mean, not just eat dinner, but COOK it! Isn’t that absurd?! And also, I get the feeling that it’s normal. Do you ever do that? You discover something new and you think, well my goodness that’s ridiculous! and then you look into it some more and you find out that in fact it’s not ridiculous, it’s what they call “normal” and everyone is actually doing it except for you. 

Anyway. It seems that if I were to ask my search engine about this, I might find many studies suggesting how important it is to COOK and EAT dinner every night. So I don’t ask my search engine because, well isn’t it kind of obvious? I don’t want to hear about what a failure I am. I believe that google is likened unto calories, in that: if you don’t look at the amount of calories you are eating, then they don’t count. If you don’t google something, then every article out there doesn’t actually exist.
Moving on.

It has recently come to my attention that some people EAT and COOK dinner every night. Isn’t that absurd?! 

I always make breakfast. Almost always a bowl of oatmeal, sometimes eggs with cheese and tomatoes. Jace always has toast, and Dan is never hungry that early in the day. Sometimes I cook a special breakfast on special occasions. It’s always pancakes, because I always forget that Dan in fact does not like pancakes. Jace, on the other hand, would live off of them and so I suppose that’s why I keep making them. No one eats them except for Jace. It really shows who rules the roost around our house.
Am I losing you yet? This is all very relevant to my point, stay with me.
On occasion I find myself feeling particularly concerned with my lack of domestic ability. But wait, I’m not all that un-domestic. (Is that a word?) I can whip up a mean chocolate chip cookie. And I bake bread from scratch, did you know that? I start in the morning so that once we pass through all of the rising windows and the up to my elbows in kneading dough, by the early afternoon my home will smell like heaven and we will have warm fresh-baked bread on the cooling racks. Sometimes it turns out slightly dry and crumbly, which is always such a shame, but most of the time it’s very edible and that’s domestic, is it not? I also make pico de gallo by the bucket loads all summer long while the tomatoes are ripe in the garden. And I have this specialty dish of bbq skillet pork that really packs a punch and we always go back for seconds. I mean, the list goes on but what I’m basically saying is that I’m not terribly un-domestic. (I’m making it a word.)

So why do I find it so begrudging to put dinner on the table every night? I suppose it's one of those mysteries in life that might never be solved. (also to be noted, some of my favorite easily-accessible dinners: bagels, cereal, leftover chinese food, frozen burritos and little ceasers pizza.)

And sometimes I wonder, do you get to the end of my rants and think that there will be a point to them? If so, I am truly sorry to disappoint. 

But how about an iphone photodump, would that do? Here is another week or so in pictures, only the good stuff, straight from my phone to my blog. As you can see we have been really working hard to soak up this beautifully perfect fall that we have been blessed with. I hope it continues because, like every other sane person I know, I'm sure not ready for winter yet.