http://www.threechickstheatre.org/
Saturday, September 19, 2009
PR piece- theatre
http://www.threechickstheatre.org/
Friday, September 18, 2009
Marketing piece- retail
Conveniently located on Atlantic Avenue in the Boerum Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, NY, our Brooklyn showroom offers a hand-picked collection of eco-friendly, high-style options in furniture, tableware, bedding and bath, and home accessories.
GreenHouse supports eco-friendly practices by strictly purchasing from companies that use a combination of sustainable, organic, renewable, recycled, or non-toxic materials. In some cases, we work directly with the companies that make our products. The result is a Brooklyn showroom presenting only products which meet a precise aesthetic and were created through ethically and environmentally responsible manufacturing. In addition, whenever possible, we feature products that are produced locally in Brooklyn or greater New York.
At GreenHouse, we propose sustainable living that is attainable. We believe that major lifestyle changes happen the way things change in nature, through a series of very small adjustments. By offering products that are both aesthetically pleasing and eco-friendly, we make it easy for the green-minded shopper to create a comfortable and inviting home environment while treading lightly on the earth.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Beauty piece- skin care
I knew it.
You're also thinking how tedious it is sifting through a whole cosmos of cosmetic alleviations to find the exact combinations of unctions, the perfect potions to do the time-stopping trick...aren't you?
Yep. I knew it!
And if you're also wondering why you:
a) neglected to shun enough sun
b) failed to appreciate the importance of twice-daily moisturizer
c) are now on the brink of pre-mature aging
d) all of the blasted above!
Never fear, I am here to help.
#1 ALWAYS moisturize your skin! My current fave is Philosophy’s Hope In a Jar- its super light and smells refreshingly tart! It will leave your skin feeling juicy. http://www.philosophy.com/web/store/dept_skincare____23503
#2 NEVER leave the house without applying damage-defraying SPF. To save time and money, use one that's built into a moisturizer, like Philosophy’s Pigment of Your Imagination.
#3 Find an eye cream you like. My current obsession is Derma Doctor's Wrinkle Revenge. I just got it and it feels REALLY nice and silky on the delicate skin around the eye area and smells like butterscotch- yum! Use it ever morning and night.
http://www.drugstore.com/qxp139550_333181_sespider/dermadoctor_wrinkle_revenge/rescue_and_protect_eye_balm.htm
#4 Exfoliate a few times a week with a gentle exfoliating wash or cream. I like the one by Dr. Brandt- it leaves your skin cool and tingly and, over time can do wonders for re-texturizing your skin. This is especially good for anyone who wants to speed along the disappearance of post-breakout red marks. (who doesn't?) http://www.drbrandtskincare.com/
#5 Switch from salicylic to glycolic acid. For maintaining clear skin that's fresh and glowy, glycolic acid is gentler and works deeper than the harsher, drying salicylic. At Sephora there are a couple of nice buffing washes with glycolic 5%-15%. Ask a saleslady- they are so helpful there! http://www.sephora.com/browse/section.jhtml?categoryId=B15
#6 Pay attention to changes in how your skin feels. And get used to switching up your products from time to time. Especially with the seasons, the needs of your skin will change and you must stay fluid to meet those needs.
#7 Be patient when trying new things. If you do change your routine, you may find that you break out more or get flaky for the first few days or so as your skin PH re-balances itself. But if you give it time, balance will often be restored to renewed results.
#8 Try not to get too close to the mirror! Go outside. Contemplate the open sky.
-Don't tell me- you're feeling better now...I'm so glad!
Monday, August 3, 2009
Do You take This Man? - published May/ June 2009, Angels on Earth
HELP!!!!!
This is a mistake. This guy was never supposed to be more than just a fling. Yeah, we’ve been together for year and a half, so what? Maybe it’s just a really long fling! I never expected it to amount to anything serious, certainly not “rest-of-my-life” serious, not “till-death-do-you-part” serious, not “I do”, “I do too”, “I-now-pronounce-you-husband-and-wife” serious!! This man is all wrong for me!
Yet here I am, lying awake, full of rehearsal dinner. No one knows I’m also full of jitters. I said all the right things tonight, played well the part of the blushing bride to be…
I am an actress and a freelance writer. My life is ordered and compartmentalized and I take comfort in the refuge of routine. I enjoy going to bed early with a book about connecting to your divine nature or turning your fears into allies. I have a totally white Chihuahua with pink ears and a pink nose. I carry her in a bag designed just for the purpose of transporting small animals in style. I drink tea and listen to NPR. I practice meditation. I post self-affirming notes on the walls of the charming Manhattan studio apartment where I have lived, happily alone, for the past 10 years. Some people might say I have a controlling or a perfectionist nature, but I like to think of it more as being master of my own destiny and/or domain.
I do not feel like master of my own destiny or domain tonight. I am lying awake in a lovely room, in a lovely bed and breakfast in the Catskills of New York. In the closet, there is hanging a lovely wedding dress in which I am planning to vow to spend the rest of my life with a man who can not possibly make me happy.
The man I am on the brink of marrying is in all ways the polar opposite of everything I would look for in a potential partner. I started dating him because he was fun to be around, (and, really tall and good looking. I’m only human!) A go-with-the-flow, devil-may-care, cavalier man-child, I thought him, in fact, far too fun to be considered ‘serious-relationship material’. After all, he was a freewheeling, beer-swilling, football- loving dude who listened to Bryan Adams with little discernable irony. He walked with a swagger and was prone at times to grow and wear (again, with little to no irony) a handle-bar moustache. He worked as a video editor for a television channel dedicated to producing material for 13 year old boys. He wore tight tee- shirts, large sunglasses and belts with studs. He had two earrings in each ear and said things like, “hey mamma.” His favorite pastimes included grilling large quantities of meat, singing heavy metal karaoke, and spinning classic rock albums in the highly collegiate bachelor pad he shared with his kid brother. He had a Big Lebowski poster on his bedroom wall and played guitar in a rock band. Not the qualities of a man meant to be anything more than a fling.
So how did I get here, one might wonder. Why would I be on the cusp of eternal togetherness with someone I felt was so obviously not suited to such an arrangement with me?
Well, the answer to that question is so humiliating for someone at the level of mindfulness and self-possession which I like to think I have achieved, that I almost want to lie and claim female mid-thirties marriage panic. But that is not the case. (I never cared about getting married, was never one of those girls who fantasized about the ‘big day’, and was rather, quite proud of the fact that I had resisted settling for such convention.) No, the sad and pathetic truth was that, despite all of my better intentions, in spite of knowing better and resisting it with all of my might, I just, stupidly, fell head-over-heels, old-fashioned, kiss-my-heart goodbye in love with this dude.
Over the course of our eighteen month courtship, against all odds and my own inner- protestations, he began to prove my initial assessment of him, as a terrifically un-serious person, not entirely accurate.
Underneath the slick swagger, a quiet conscientiousness slowly revealed itself. Despite his cool-guy veneer, he was beloved by his big, tight-knit group of friends, many of whom he’d known since grade- school. Among these friends, to the last, he was regarded as someone to be relied upon, trusted and true.
I began to see that the fun-loving nature, which I had initially viewed as cavalier, was really just genuine joyfulness, a love of life. He didn’t take himself too seriously; he was goofy and not afraid to look stupid (the moustache was only the beginning). I began to enjoy laughing with him.
He had an extremely committed work ethic and a great job which he loved. He was dependable and cared about the things I cared about: family, friends, good food, music, film, travel, animals, nature, exercise…
In addition to all of these winning qualities, (and perhaps most winningly), he was head over heels in love with me. He told me I was pretty all the time. He spoiled me with presents and flowers and fancy dinners. He seemed to immediately see, understand and cherish the ‘real me’. He intuitively knew how to handle me, when to nurture and when to be tough. He was a rare mixture of very affectionate and also self-possessed, independent and vulnerable. He wanted to be with me and didn’t try to hide it or play games.
After about six months of dating, I heard him whispering about getting married.
When he pulled the ring out of his pocket and held it out before him, I continued to try to act like I had no idea it existed. It was a surreal moment. He didn’t say anything. I didn’t say anything. We both just stared at the offering, the symbol of promise, as time hung still and fluid like the held breath in which all moments of consequence are suspended…
I broke the silence.
“I thought you didn’t believe in diamonds…”
(This was true, he had proclaimed as much months ago.)
He became galvanized into speech:
“This ring”, he said, “is a symbol of my commitment to make things that are important to you, important to me.”
I took the ring. We kissed. We were really happy.
After the glow of engagement wore off, we fell into the task of planning the wedding and the first cold fingers of panic began to wind themselves around my heart.
Jesse was very involved. He had a lot of opinions. At first I thought that his involvement was cute. Soon, it became not so cute.
His vision was that we feed the guests pizza! He wanted to get married outdoors, but thought tents were ‘too fancy’. He insisted that the event be hugely casual and saw no need either for professional flowers or tablecloths for the tables. He became really excited by and eventually obsessed with idea of organizing a big wiffle-ball tournament to be played between the guests. He wanted to hire a country band from his hometown called The Drunk Stuntmen. He joked (I hoped he was joking) about possibly wearing all denim to the ceremony and reception.
I truly wanted this wedding to be a reflection of both of our personalities and tastes, but not at the risk of poor taste.
This is when panic became my ever present companion. As we began to make decisions about the details of the event, I came to realize that our widely differing opinions were delivering apt revelations about who we were, both as individuals and as a couple. My fear began to rise regarding the likelihood of ours being a union that was ultimately not meant to be.
I decided to let him take over. This was the man I was marrying and it didn’t matter if we were different. I had to learn to compromise, isn’t that what marriage is about? It was time to bury my controlling self and let a new, freer self emerge in her place.
I left town for a job for 2 ½ months, mercifully leaving all wedding- planning tensions behind. When I returned, our wedding was about 3 months away. He had taken care of everything, I was not looking back. I lovingly called him my ‘groom-zilla’.
He was really excited to make me his wife. Over the last months, he had come up with yet more…interesting ideas for our impending nuptials.
For instance, he thought it would be cool if we had the ceremony performed by our entire guest list. We would make cue cards with the words of the vows, prompting the congregation to ask us, en masse, the famed questions: “Do you take this man, etc”.
I thought that it was a crazy idea. We went to a vows couch, (i.e.: couples counselor) to help us through these important decisions. She thought that the group vows were an inspired idea. I didn’t have any better ideas. I capitulated.
He also thought that we should sing a duet with the band. We both sing, but not usually together. I was afraid I would be too nervous. But we went ahead and practiced a song with the stipulation that I could back out at the last minute if I was too freaked out, (ah the symbolism).
As the big day our wedding steadily approached, things started to go wrong.
First, our photographer fell through. The doubt I thought I had buried with my old controlling self re-surfaced and became my constant companion. I start to freak out. Jesse, on the other hand, remained cucumber cool. He called all of his photographically-gifted friends, (of which there were many), and recruited them for duty on the big day. I was wary about the lack of formality of such an ad hoc assemblage; could we trust a guerilla photo squad to capture the big moments of our big, big day? Still, I could not come up with a better option. I try to let it go, to go with the flow.
Jesse starts modeling ‘deep breath-taking’ for me. It kind of works, actually, when I take deep breaths with him, I feel better.
Then, the person who was supposed to drive our 12 cases of wine to the site was no longer available. My jitters became immobilizing. Jesse calmly upgraded our wedding rental to an SUV and picked up and delivered the wine himself.
It’s was the day before the wedding. We were setting up to rehearse the ceremony and we run into trouble with our amplification set up! There was no extension cord long enough to reach from the nearest outlet to the scenic spot by the pond where we had chosen to hold the ceremony. I went into a catastrophe coma. Why did we not work out this detail before? How had we overlooked such an important element? What are we going to do??
Jesse walked away from me towards the bed and breakfast.
“Where are you going?!?!” I said, “we have to solve this problem!”
“That’s what I’m doing”, he answered. “Follow me.”
I didn't want to follow him. I wanted to walk into the pond, sink to the bottom, and stay there until the weekend was over. Instead, I followed him.
“What about right here for the ceremony?” he said, pointing to a narrow red brick walkway which lead from the main house of the B&B, over the front lawn, to a wooden gazebo by a small stream.
“We could walk down this path, and get married in the gazebo”, he said.
“But we decided we didn’t want to walk down anything!” I protested. “I thought we said we didn’t want any processions of any kind!” (I was against the tradition of the father of the bride walking her down the isle and ‘giving her away’. I found the idea inherently sexist.)
“What if we walked down together?" he offered.
“You mean like, arm in arm or something?”
“Something like that, yeah. Holding hands maybe.”
My heart started beating irregularly. This was NOT what we’d planned; it was a huge departure from our original idea. I didn't feel good about changing things at the last moment. I like to stick to plans; I’m a ‘stick-to-the-plan’ kind of person.
He, on the other hand, seemed perfectly fine to throw caution to the wind and just…change everything at the last minute.
This was never going to work, I realized…not the wedding...not the marriage.
I felt dizzy.
He came over and put his arms around me.
“It’s going to be fine, babe. Trust me.”
I try not to throw up.
It's the night before the wedding. I am wide awake in bed. The moonlight bathes our room indifferently. Next to me, he sleeps peacefully, oblivious to my sleeplessness; the swirling of my fears.
How can we survive a marriage together? We are too different. Yes, I love him. Yes, we’re in love. But is love enough? What made me think I could be happy with a man who, in his mid-thirties, decorates his apartment with movie posters? I mean, they’re not even framed!
It is morning. Getting dressed for my wedding is like putting on a costume backstage before performing in a play. I just get ready and get into character and before I know it, its time for the curtain to rise.
He’s waiting for me at top of the stairs. When he sees me he smiles and tells me I look beautiful. There are tears in his eyes.
He looks gorgeous in his suit. (He isn’t wearing denim.)
I take his hand and as I do I feel tears in my eyes as well; happy tears. I am surprised.
We walk hand-in-hand down the isle he discovered yesterday. As the faces of our friends and family turn to watch us, I cannot help smiling at their joy for us.
The friends we had asked to take pictures are doing a great job. I can feel the happiness they are experiencing from being involved in a way that calls upon their talents, from being able to help.
We exchange rings. We hold up the cue cards we had made for the vows and are married to each other by 150 of our friends and family. It is awesome in the true sense of the word. I am laughing.
After the ceremony, we stand for more pictures, collect hugs and kisses, drink wine, and eat a really good meal. More than one person tells us that the food is the best they had ever had at a wedding; I have to agree.
People dance to the happy, easy music of the band. As I look around at all the people I love and my brand new husband, I feel a happiness I had not dreamed possible. I am relieved to be proven wrong about how the day would go and happily realize that I was wrong about a lot of things; the least of which being his rightness for me and our chance of happiness together.
I now also know that I don’t have to bury who I am and become someone new in order to be happy. I am grateful to realize that, despite myself, I have found an ally in my partner who, in being so different from me, compliments who I already am. I don’t have to become freer; he is free enough for both of us! I need only trust him enough to take his hand and let him lead me where he will, once in a while.
The time comes to sing the duet we had practiced. I am nervous and don’t really want to do it.
I do it anyway.
I am so glad that I did.
http://www.guideposts.com/angels
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Ikonz Script - Awards Show
Doll 1: Uh, ex-ca-use me?
Doll 2: Yeees?
Doll 1: Can you please tell me why we haven’t discussed the MTV movie awards yet?
Doll 4: OMG- seriously! What’s wrong with us?
Doll 2: My favorite outfit was Emma Stone’s! That cobalt patterned dress with all the ruching?
Doll 3: Ooo- and I loved her shoes! Electric blue with mad ruffle-y straps!!!
Doll 2: And that bright orange clutch? Dee-lish!!
Doll 4: I think my fave had to be Anne Hathaway’s little black mini-dress with the asymmetrical shoulder!
Doll 2: Yeah! It was super sleek and shiny! What kind of fabric was it made out of, do you think?
Doll 4: Dunno…something like leather or pleather? Very rocker-chic!
Doll 3: And it was ultra cool that they had a gold carpet instead of the usual red one… I liked that.
Doll 2: Not me, I prefer the classic look. I’m a traditionalist.
Doll 4: Speaking of classic, what did you think of Paris Hilton’s white and black dress with the round-toe patent leather pumps?
Doll 2: Ugh. I can’t stand her! She always sounds so dumb!
Doll 4: But you hafta’ admit, her outfit was pretty classy…
Doll 3: And those shoes were from her very own collection…which is pretty rad..!
Doll 1: Did you see the dress L.C. was wearing? I adored the color!!
Doll 4: Who is L.C. again?
Doll 1: That’s the nickname for Lauren Conrad, you know- from the show “the Hills”.
Doll 2: Again- cannot stand her! What does she do? She’s not an actress or a singer or anything…!
Doll 3: I think she did release an album, actually…
Doll: 2 Don’t make me laugh. (begrudgingly) Cute dress though. Good color.
Doll 1: (gasp) I died over the JEWELS Sarah Jessica Parker was wearing!! Her wrists were like covered in diamonds!
Doll 2: Super-Glam!!!
Doll 3: And her shoes? Lace-up, white, quilted ankle-booties! SO cute!
Doll 1: I liked Jennifer Hudson’s haircut! Her bob is so completely on-trend!
Doll 4: Totally. Oh, but I can’t believe “Hairspray” didn’t win best picture!
Doll 1: I wasn’t surprised. I knew “Transformers” would win. They always give the big prize to the blockbuster action flicks.
Doll 2: At least Zac won best breakout performance for his part in “Hairspray”!!!
Doll 4: Yeah! It was so sweet when he thanked his fans in his acceptance speech!!
Doll 3: That’s us!! He’s talking directly to us, girls!
Doo 1: I know! How awesome is that?
Doll 4: Hey, who won best actress?
Doll 2: Ellen Page! OMG- could you believe what she was wearing?!
Doll 3: Wait- who’s Ellen Page?
Doll 2: Star of Juno!!!!
Doll 3: Oh yeah! Duh. Love her!
Doll 4: But what was she thinking with that outfit!! Baggy tee-shirt with jeans and high tops?!!
Doll 2: I know!!! It was icky!!!
Doll 3: Yeah, love her- but her outfit was totally tragic. I mean, her shirt was all ripped! C’mon!
Doll 4: Put on a cute dress or something! Puh-lease!!!
Doll 1: Um, actually… I liked it.
(silence)
Doll 2: (together- outburst) Are you crazy?
Doll 3: (together- outburst) Yeah, right!
Doll 4: (together- outburst) What are you talking about?
Doll 1: I liked it! (pause) What? Can’t we disagree on fashion sometimes?
Doll 2: But…how could you like it? I don’t understand!!
Doll 1: I mean, she was doing something different, you know? I respect that!
(pause)
Doll 2: But you would never…wear something like that! Would you?!
Doll 1: I dunno, maybe…if it was the right vibe…
Doll 3: Like…to a costume party, you mean?
Doll 1: No! Like…Idk! Glamour doesn’t always have to be about looking super girly!!
Doll 2: It doesn’t..?
Doll 1: Glamour is about owning your own style, no matter what it is!
Doll 4: Huh. I never thought about it like that…
Doll 3: I think I see where you’re going here…
Doll 1: I mean, why can’t we mix it up sometimes…?
Doll 2: (considering, slowly) Hmm…mix it up…
Doll 3: (thoughtfully) I do see where you’re going here…(forceful) and I LIKE it!
Doll 2: It is kinda cool that she looked so different from everyone else at the show…
Doll 4: (can’t help herself) From all the girls, you mean.
Doll 1: But why should the guys be the only ones allowed to wear jeans and sneakers if they want to?
Doll 3: (gasp) She’s right!!
Doll 4: I never thought about it like that!
Doll 2: Why should the guys be the only ones allowed to dress down?
Doll 3: (musing) Omg. (short pause) OMG!!
Doll 1: If I want to dress “cas” [short for casual] then I’m going to! I don’t care what people think!
Doll 2: I am so with you!
Doll 4: Totally!!
Doll 3: I only see one issue with your plan…
Doll 1: What?
Doll 2: You don’t really own any clothes like that!
Doll 1: (giggling) Um, yeah. That’s true.
Doll 4: There’s really only one solution to this situation. It’s time to go shopping for some new looks!
Doll 3: Oh, she just said the magic word…!
All: (together) SHOPPING!!!!!!
Doll 2: Let’s go!
Doll 4: Hey, do they make high-heeled sneakers?
Doll 1: (giggling) Yeah they do!!!
Doll 4: Suh-weet!!!
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
The Reluctant Bride, A Love Story
I never thought I’d get married. I just couldn’t picture it happening. I never had a boyfriend with whom I could imagine spending the rest of my life. Not, like, happily. Growing up, I was never one of those girls who fantasized about the dress or the flowers. Grown, I was not one of those women looking forward to marriage as a pinnacle of achievement in her adult life. Rather, in my late twenties, living in New York City, I was happily single and quite proud of the fact that I had resisted settling for convention. I was only mildly pre-occupied with the idea of encountering a life-partnership. Or, ok, fine – ‘finding a husband’. Whatever.
Then I met Jesse. Well, re-met him. He was a boy I had known 10 years ago in college, had always been attracted to, and had even kissed once. When we met again in the city, the connection was still there. I found his good looks to have been enhanced by the years that had passed; he had gown from a cute boy into a handsome man. He was taller than I remembered…
We started dating but I was sure it was just a fling. He seemed far too cavalier, too slick, too cool, too…well, too fun to be ‘serious-relationship material’. He was an avid watcher of all three seasons of sports, he loved Bryan Adams (with little discernable irony), he played guitar in a band, walked with a swagger and was prone at times to grow and wear (again, with little to no irony) a handle-bar moustache. He wore tight tee- shirts, large sunglasses and belts with studs. He had two earrings in each ear and said things like, “hey mamma.” His favorite pastimes included grilling, beer- swilling, and spinning classic rock albums in the highly collegiate bachelor pad he shared with his kid brother. I would have been un-surprised to find the occasional bag of something illegal in his pocket. I found him sexy and very un- boring. He had a Big Lebowski poster on his wall. This was most definitely a fling.
Slowly, against all odds and my own inner- protestations, he began to prove me wrong. Underneath the slick swagger, a quiet conscientiousness slowly revealed itself. Despite his cool veneer, he was beloved by his big, tight-knit group of friends, many of whom he’d known since grade- school. Among these friends, to the last, he was regarded as someone to be relied upon, trusted and true. He had an extremely committed work ethic and a great job which he loved. He was dependable and cared about the things I cared about: family, friends, good food, music, film, travel, animals, nature, exercise…
He wanted to be a father, start a family. He was very good to his mother and grandparents. He could cook. I began to see that his fun-loving nature, which I had initially viewed as cavalier, was really just genuine joyfulness, a love of life. He didn’t take himself too seriously; he was goofy and not afraid to look stupid (the moustache was only the beginning). I began to enjoy laughing with him.
In addition to all of these winning qualities, (and perhaps most winningly), he was head over heels in love with me. He told me I was pretty all the time. He spoiled me with presents and flowers and fancy dinners. He seemed to immediately see, understand and cherish the ‘real me’. He intuitively knew how to handle me, when to nurture and when to be tough. He was a rare mixture of very affectionate and also self-possessed, independent and vulnerable. He wanted to be with me and didn’t try to hide it or play games.
After about six months of dating, I heard him whispering about getting married.
I got scared. I had fallen in love with him, too, but I wasn’t ready to get married yet!!! I wasn’t even really thinking about it, hardly ever really thinking about it at all! It was too soon! I mean, we were in love, but we still didn’t know each other well enough to be sure that we were perfectly compatible and should be together for the rest of our lives, it was way too soon to be able to know that and, I mean, you know…--eeehh--….Big Lebowski poster!!!!
I started talking about how I thought marriage was a conformist convention. After attending a wedding together, I would go on and on about what a huge waste of money such events were. I avowed that I would never want something like that, I wouldn’t want to do something that everyone else does, the same way everyone else does it. I don’t need a piece of paper to ratify my feelings, blah, blah, blah.
He asked me to move in with him. This was me:
“Oh, wow. So sweet! Ah, such a lovely – I, ahm…but I don’t think we’re really ready for that, do you? I mean, I think it’s important to take our time and…independence…and – yeah, no. Not yet. But someday, though! Yeah!”
He just shook his head and laughed. He said he was ready, that he had no doubts that we were meant for each other. He said he believed that I knew it too but that I was just scared. I thought maybe he was right, maybe not – still too soon to tell.
We continued as we were for almost a year, having fun together, living in the moment…
Then, I found the ring. I wasn’t snooping, really! I was honest and truly just organizing his clothes for him when I found a suspicious looking black bag which seemed as if it might contain a surprise for me. So I opened the bag (ok at this point I was kind of snooping, I’ll admit) and inside it was a VERY suspicious little box that definitely looked like it was maybe for me and so I (full on snooping now) opened the box and OH MY GOD – there was a diamond engagement ring inside it. I was in complete shock.
So I put it on my finger and stared at it. The shock did not subside. I stared some more. Then I heard Jesse coming upstairs and scrambled frantically to put the ring back in the box and the box back in the bag and the bag back in the sock drawer where I had found it when I was not snooping and tried to assemble my features into a look that was not one of complete shock. It was very hard.
“What’s wrong, honey?” He asked me, “You look freaked out.”
“Oh no, nothing! It’s nothing! I’m fine! What? Nothing!”
For the next two weeks, I spent most of every minute we were together wondering when it was going to happen – the big moment. What would it be like? What would he say? What would I say?? I didn’t know. I was unprepared for the big moment. I had no idea what I wanted. I still thought it was probably too soon to get married…wasn’t even sure I ever really wanted to get married…but I didn’t want to not be with this person with whom I was ever more in love. I was scared. But I didn’t run away. I didn’t try to avoid the moment or stop it from happening. I was in love with him. I wanted to be with him. I went through those weeks in a daze.
When it finally happened, I could tell ‘the moment’ was upon me from the very beginning of the day. He was not himself. He was nervous, I could feel it. He was being careful about the most mundane details of our day, he was being extra gentle with me, kept me in his sight at all times, avoided my eyes . He suggested (trying to be casual) that we shop for a picnic dinner for that night. He bought champagne and put on a button down shirt.
The moment was upon me and I was still unprepared. I could tell he was going through stress about the moment himself, and I wished I could make it easier for him. But I had to pretend oblivion, I wasn’t supposed to know it was coming, I wasn’t supposed to have found the ring by accident while not snooping in his drawers!
When he pulled the ring out of his pocket and held it out before him, I continued to try to act like I had no idea it existed. It was a surreal moment. He didn’t say anything. I didn’t say anything. We both just stared at the offering, the symbol of promise, and the culprit of my recent dazed state. Time hung still and fluid like the held breath in which all moments of consequence are suspended…
I broke the silence.
“I thought you didn’t believe in diamonds…”
(This was true, he had proclaimed as much months ago in a communal fit of conformity-bashing.)
He became galvanized into speech:
“This ring”, he said, “is a symbol of my commitment to make things that are important to you, important to me.”
(Yes, despite all of my loud protestations against the conventions of marriage, I retained a hardy regard for the hardest of minerals. A suspiciously self-serving, selective-value system, I know!)
He was waiting from a response from me…my head was spinning; I tried to think of what to say. This was it, this was the moment, and what should I say?? My brain was stalled out, it had nothing to give.
In coming up empty in the brain, I realized that I had been living in my head throughout this entire relationship; and that, in doing so, I had hovered just above the region wherein lay the benefactor and beneficiary of what was at the crux of all relationships. This was a moment my brain could not help me with. This was a moment I could only feel my way through. I dropped my awareness deeper, about a foot below my head, into my chest, where my heart was patiently waiting its turn to weigh in.
My heart was not confused or scared. It carried no mitigation, held no qualifiers. With only pure open acceptance, my heart was whispering yes. It told me that I’d been afraid to acknowledge let alone embrace that this was what I wanted because of, ironically, how deeply I valued and desired it. Jesse knew this, had known it all along.
As I gazed across the picnic blanket at his loving, waiting, hopeful face, I was suddenly filled with gratitude for the chance I had been given; the chance to learn about myself and grow with this person who wanted to do the same with me. To continue the evolution which had been ushered in without my knowledge, quietly, despite and in spite of my fears, and at a level deeper than thought.
I put the ring on my finger. I have never taken it off.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
money is not the root of all evil, money IS evil
Perhaps those who distrust the concept at it's core are not simply conflicted due to inherited imbalances with success or prosperity...perhaps we simply feel conflicted about a system that is built upon the necessity of the suffering of a percentage of the population of our human brothers and sisters. In order for the system of money to work, there must be a limited amount. Money is a rationing system which has no self-regulating component whereby balance or equality is served.
(From designing the future by Jaque Fresco:) 1. Money is just an interference between what one needs and what one is able to get. It is not money that people need, it is access to resources. 2. The use of money results in social stratification and elitism based primarily on economic disparity. 3. People are not equal without equal purchasing power. 4. Most people are slaves to jobs they do not like because they need the money. 20 5. There is tremendous corruption, greed, crime, embezzlement, and more caused by the need for money. 6. Most laws are enacted for the benefit of corporations, which have enough money to lobby, bribe, or persuade government officials to make laws that serve their interests. 7. Those who control purchasing power have greater influence. 8. Money is used to control the behavior of those with limited purchasing power. 9. Goods such as foods are sometimes destroyed to keep prices up; when things are scarce prices increase. 10. There is tremendous waste of material and strain on available resources from superficial design changes for newer later fads each year in order to create continuous markets for manufacturers. 11. There is tremendous environmental degradation due to the high cost of better methods of waste disposal.
The Earth has abundant resources and our practice of rationing these resources through the use of money is an outdated method which causes much suffering. It is not money that we need but the intelligent management of the earth’s resources for the benefit of everyone. We could best work towards achieving this by using a resource based economy.