Emotional Dictates

We’ve reached a societal point where we look at a situation, wrap a strong emotion around it, and label it “good” or “bad”.

Murder, bad.  Right?

What if the person who was killed had committed a crime deemed punishable by death?  Would that change the judgement?  Is the guilty party still deemed guilty for murdering when the dead was going to receive a death sentence?

That’s the thought that kicked off my recent pondering.  I applied this concept more locally and liberally, and realized how easily the public is manipulated by emotion:  ”If it feels good, do it”.

I focused on the subject of Gardening/Crops.

Almighty created all living things; herbs of the field, trees for food, animals, fish, birds and mankind.  Creation was labeled “Good”.

Rules were established to maintain a system supported by Almighty and optimal for mankind.

Included in those rules were those specific to foods:

Certain animals and creatures were not meant for consumption

Mixed seeds and mixed breeding are not allowed

The soil must be allowed to rest and replenish every seven years

Seems pretty easy to follow, right?  The great thing is that when the Rules were followed, Almighty would respond by giving good rains to keep the cycle running smoothly.

Enter the illusion of intelligence called public thinking.

If an animal or creature tastes good, then it’s meant to be eaten

When plants or animals don’t produce as profitably as hoped for, create a hybrid or GMO product to outdo the original

Use up the soil, wear it out, then toss in some chemicals to make it more productive

These emotional based choices don’t look toward the long-term effects; they’re the product of  a spoiled child’s litany:  ”I want more, I want better and I want it now.”  Forget about what’s right, what’s good and what’s been proven to endure thousands of generations.  We can do it better.

Similarly, emotions are used to ploy people with items they simply “must have” to feel valuable, or to meet societal expectations, or to follow societal “norms”.  This tactic has proven quite useful in separating people from their hard earned wages.  Without drawing on those emotions, we’d simply be left to make purchases that were necessary.  Oh, the horrors!

Emotions hold so much importance in society, but truly they change more often than the wind direction.    How can a firm stand be made on a shifting base?

A favorite quote states that permanent decisions should not be made based on temporary emotions.  How appropriate.  How many times have a group of pained people pressed for policies to protect others from pain?  Isn’t pain a fact of life?  You have joy and you have pain.

Often, state and national laws follow similar logic.  Look at seat belt laws.  Emotions run amok from grieving family members create rules and dictates that penalize a person for not buckling a strap on their body each time they sit in a vehicle.

It’s akin to the declaration my Hubby made when my son could have killed himself during a fall from a very high tree branch he had climbed.  Hubby firmly stated “you cannot climb any more trees!”  While I was similarly shaken with emotions from the near fatal incident, I was quick to alter the edict (one of very, very few times that we disagreed on issues related to the kids).  Kids climb trees, kids get hurt.

We cannot eradicate boo-boos and pain by employing more emotion-based rules, but we can apply common sense to keep ourselves out of the most dangerous situations.

My personal choice is to look at life through the lens of Torah, where sound judgement rules – rather than emotions.

‘Nuff said.

Dreamin’ Girl

 

A Daughter Remembers

Not long ago, I had myself a good whine about the life skills that I didn’t learn from the females in my life.

After I published that piece, I chastised myself for wallowing in that self-pity and not acknowledging those very important things that I was taught.

I saved those important things for today.

A day called Father’s Day.

When I think of lessons learned during my youth, my first thoughts are of my Dad.

My Dad’s best talent was to teach.

If the weather was nice, Dad would be often be found tinkering on a vehicle.  It only took one step out of that front door to catch his attention.  ”Come over here and give me a hand, ” he’d call out.

Dad would point to his tools laid on the ground and tell me to hand him the socket wrench.

Socket wrench?

He’d describe the tool and what it was used for, as my sulking brain ignited and absorbed.

Soon, Dad would have me sitting on the car frame, with the hood open, as he pointed out the various parts and what they did.

I soon learned that it took fire, fuel and air for an engine to turn over.  Check the spark, check the fuel, check the air intake.

This knowledge set the basis for my learning through the remainder of my life.

Fresh  out on my own, I could reason through mechanical problems and fix toilets and faucets.  I could change tires and prime carburators and repair radiator hoses.  I could recognize a household repair issue and see what it would take to prevent it.

I could think through the symptoms and run through a checklist of potential fixes.  I was not afraid to get my hands dirty.

These skills set me apart from other females.

Give me a roll of duct tape, a standard screwdriver and a pair of pliers and I felt that I could always accomplish quick fixes.  It was empowering for a young single woman, and critical for a new single mom.

Dad also taught me to push through my introverted tendencies.

At a young age, Dad would hand me the money at the gas pump and prompt me “Go pay for the gas.”

I was horrified!

Dad would give my shoulders a light squeeze and gently push me forward.  ”Go pay for the gas.”

With heavy steps I would approach that glass door.  Each step gave me more strength and filled me with more dread.  It was intimidating to face a strange adult, but it was also empowering.  It did not cure my introvert tendencies, but it taught me that I wouldn’t die if I pushed past my fear.

Soon after, Dad also taught me to fill the gas tank.  I would have been around twelve at the time, and it became a new goal for my younger siblings.  They couldn’t wait until they could fill up the gas too!

One of the most memorable lessons was when Dad taught me to drive.

Dad had taken me on a few driving lessons, to learn the basics, before he added the younger siblings to the vehicle.  Dirt roads were the driving range, and an old Jeep truck was the tool.

As we approached a corner, my siblings all seated in the bed of the truck, Dad told me to turn right.  So I did.  Right then and there – still 50 feet from the corner!  I turned right into the ditch, kids bouncing and bobbing like popcorn in the back, as Dad exclaimed “what are you doing?!”

We quickly added communication and listening skills to the list that day.

It’s funny now, but I’ll bet those kids in the back were in fear for their lives!

The most important lessons of my life were taught by my Dad.

Dad taught me to appreciate the outdoors, and to camp and to fish.

He also taught me to clean a fish, although it’s not a skill I’ve practiced since.

He taught me to think for myself and not bow to public opinion, a critical skill I’ll never forget.

Dad taught me that pressures from others should not cause me to react or overreact.

He also taught me to be strong, to suck up the tears and get through the tough spots without breaking.

I am so thankful for Dad.

The firm but gentle teacher, always encouraging us with “you can do it – I believe in you”.

Yes.

Thank you!

I love you Dad!

This daughter remembers.

On Loss and Regret

When do you stop missing someone?

Really.

Not missing you.  Not missing you.  Not.

Missing.

Missing you.

I just realized that some of my recent angst may have more to do with the death of most of my peeps.  Peeps like my mom, my grandmas, my mother in law – people who would have been part of a mutual basic support system, particularly at this time of our lives.

I read articles and posts about ‘gardening like grandma’ or ‘cooking like mom’ or ‘sewing like aunt insert-name-here’, and feel the soul-deep lack of knowledge that I carry around like a sack of potatoes.  I’ve been beating myself with that damn sack a lot lately.

Feeling like a miserable excuse of a woman because I don’t have the natural cooking or gardening or sewing instincts – with the residual effect: a lack of motivation to work on learning those skills mid-life.

I accept that I was a stubborn child.  As soon as I hit high school, I was off and running:  working a part-time job, going to daily cheer practice and every football game, sitting in on wrestling practice and attending every match, off and about and always on the go.  I was not home long enough to learn the basics, let alone to learn more advanced items.

Once I graduated, off I went to make my own rules.  Out the door a week or so after graduation to live a life of fast food, fast living and barely getting by.

Stubborn.  Oh I was stubborn!

Too darn smart to ask for help.  I would buy processed foods and make them how I thought they should be made.  I’d worked all day and was ready to play – cooking up a meal was a necessary nuisance and I did it with the only intent being to get something into my belly, tasty or not.

Years later, Mom once told me she was sad that she had not taken the time to teach me to cook.  Give me credit for my honesty please, because I responded  ”when did I give you a chance?  I was never home.”  I truly hope that helped her to feel better…

Now.  Here I am.  Forty-six years old.  No Mom to call and ask “how?”  No Grandmas to call and ask “how?”  No Mom-in-law to call and ask “how?”

I’m not without motivation or ability.  It’s just that I have no fricking idea where to start!

I can read, of course.  I’ve done a LOT of reading.  I just cannot trust everything that I read, particularly when there are varying rules and instructions.  My head spins, trying to do everything right.

And I don’t learn as well by reading – I can learn whatever I need to, it’s just that I do so much better by watching once and then digging in and doing it with gentle guidance.

So.  I’m feeling a bit lost, a bit weary, a bit teary.

The losses, the deaths that came too soon – Mom, eleven years ago; Grandma D, seven years ago; Grandma M – thirty-three years ago;  and Mom-in-law M, twenty-two years ago.  Deaths that caused great grief in me at their time, albeit not the same thing I feel now.

Now I know  what those deaths meant, and how they have affected my life and the lives of my family.

I have been depressed.

Deep, dark, seething.

Bone weary, eye-stinging, foot-dragging.

I’m not really certain for how long.  But it’s been a sneaky ol’ thing, this down.

So, the first step is – repeat after me – admit the problem.  Right?

I wish.

I wish I had spent more time asking my Granny how to make her homemade noodles.  I’d like to have followed her around in her garden, gleaning information about how she prepped it and what she planted each year.  I’d want to sit alongside her at the kitchen table to prep the produce for canning and storage.  I’d love to hear the stories of how she survived the depression, the dust bowl, the wars, the tragedies, the joys.  I’d like to hear her thoughts on progression, through the simplicity of outhouses and hand washing and ice boxes to seeing automobiles and airplanes and rockets.  I should have been around more to visit as she aged, especially once she entered the nursing home.

I wish I had been more attentive to the needs of my Mom, and spent more time home to help her with the drudgery of keeping up with four kids and a full time job.  I should have been alert to the tasks she completed and how they were done.  I definitely should have taken notes on how she made that killer pot roast on Sundays.  I should have been more available as she lost her mobility.

I wish I had asked Grandma D how to sew, and how to be a good hostess and housewife.  I’d like her advice on making it through the health issues of a spouse.  I’d like to hear stories about how life was tough with one parent and a missing father who loved alcohol more than his first family.  I’d like to have helped more as she slowly lost ground to alzheimers.

I’d like to have grown up to know Grandma M better.  I think she’d have kicked my butt into shape on occasions, as she was schooled in the fast life.

I’d like to have had more time to get to know Mom-in-law M.  I would have enjoyed sitting over coffee to hear family tales.  It would have been nice to share in the family to-do meal making, and learn how she made the favorite foods.  I would like to have had more time to feel that I could call her “Mom”.

So, there’s that potato sack again, layed out and renamed Regrets.  It’s a big ol’ sack that’s been beating me up something fierce.

Regrets.

Lay them down and let them go.  ’Nuff said.

Dreamin’ Girl