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Entries in michelle marchildon (3)

Friday
Dec282012

Round-up: favorite year-end posts

credit: www.sun-gazing.comGood morning, one and all!  

I'm up a little later than my usual Fuck Yeah Early-Early Wake-up Time, but still with plenty of time for some year-end loose-end-tying and preparations to head to Tahoe for a snowy weekend with friends. YES. Much deserved!

This morning I've been reveling in the bounty of some really inspiring year-end blog posts from friends and people I read regularly.   

Perhaps this is the biggest gift of the interwebs, the way it can keep us close to the best among us, keep us clear and motivated.  Read on. Enjoy! 

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb032012

Elephant Journal can kiss my fine writerly ass

You know how there are some days that just stand out?  Like the time your boyfriend surprised you with a sloth for your birthday or the time you discovered a tiger living in your apartment building?  You know, those days where something completely amazing or extreme or insane happened, and you don't just remember every detail -- you feel every detail.  You've got the sights, the sounds, the smells all queued up enhancing the memory, making it fat with meaning.  Fat with specialness.

Yesterday was one of those days for me.

Look, if you think I'm whipping out sloths and tigers in the next few moments, I'm letting you down right now.  I WISH there had been some animals involved, even just one -- besides Mr Burns, who continues to be an utter joy.  No, yesterday was all just about stupid human tricks -- no exotics.

I got up at my favorite Fuck-Yeah Early-Early Wake-up Time -- aka, 4:30 -- and got down to it.  Taking my writing teacher Susanna's words to heart, I sat down with a cup of coffee and started re-working a piece I wrote last October, for publication on Elephant Journal.  It's a piece about my experience at Wanderlust last year, which you can read in its revised entirety here if you wish.  By 6:00 am, I'd made the changes I wanted to make and was formatting it on the Elephant platform.  By 7:00 am, I was done, and hit the hills with Burnsy, trying not to obsess about the piece or the new website but really, really take in the trees.  Keep my head where my body was. 

If I could, allow me just to sing, again, the praises of the Fuck-Yeah Early-Early Wake-Up Time.  What's so wonderful about it for me is that I basically can get in 4 hours of whatever I want, before I have to head in to the job that keeps the lights on and the kibble flowing.  Four entire hours of writing, reading, hiking, scheming.  I figure if I get these 4 hours in before work, and I have roughly another 4 after work, then I can manage an entire 8-hour day of Shit I Want To Do even though I also devote 8 hours to sitting at my paid-desk.  That so works for me.  I'm an early bird but I'm no sleep-hater.  I'll admit that getting up that early is sometimes challenging.  But just for 5 seconds.  Then it's back to Fuck Yeah.

OK, so listen, everything was going great yesterday.  The post was on Elephant and I was watching the Views number tick up, playing a little game in my head of competing with Michelle Marchildon whose piece about mercury retrograde posted at about the same time as mine.  She was kicking my ass, but I wasn't too far behind. I had a delicious lunch outside with a colleague at the Marin County Farmer's Market -- really just the most glorious sunny winter day, utter perfection.  I could see the hills I'd hiked in that morning as I greedily consumed the most delicious fish taco ever.  

In the car, my phone informed me that Wanderlust had just tweeted a link to my piece on Elephant.   More than 11,000 people follow them!  I was stoked that they liked the piece enough to send it out to their people.  So awesome, right?  Everything in my master plan for world domination was well underway. I was jump-around happy, wagging , Snoopy-dancing, stoked.

And then I got back to my job, checked my personal email and set my jaw.  Here's what awaited me.

I won't lie.  I was both on the verge of tears and shaking-mad, super-disappointed and super-mad. Don't get me started on the whole etiquette aspect of this.  Really, in the Subject line?  That email was sent 20 minutes after the Wanderlust tweet.  On a day when some subset of the 11 THOUSAND people on Wanderlust's Twitter-feed might have a) read me b) on Elephant Journal, Elephant's editorial decision was to take the piece down, landing any clickers-through on an unhappy error page.  

What a wasted opportunity, and not just for me.

The part that made me sad -- ok, I admit that I was truly sad not to have the chance to get in front of all those sets of eyes, because YES, it's true: I just want to be read, loved maybe, but read for sure -- was that what I wrote got taken down BECAUSE OF MONEY.  Which is just so lame.  It reflects so poorly on Elephant and was really and truly the last straw for me.

Because I'm not going to lie: it's not my favorite.  I read the people I know who post on Ele, but mostly am completely uncomfortable with its overall prurient tone, sensational headlines, childish obsession with booty (and don't get me wrong: huge fan of booty over here).  I've published to Ele before of course.  Naturally, the piece of mine that had the most traction was my old "Retiring the Porno Pants" one.  To get eyes over there, you need sex in the title.  So yeah, that bugged, but I was willing to overlook that in favor of more eyes.  Oh wait, eyes who are willing to pay a $1 for the privilege of reading what's posted there.  MONEY again. 

But no more.  Elephant Journal can, as titled, kiss my fine writerly ass.  I don't respect what they're doing and I don't need them.  It does bum me out -- I don't want this hate-on over them -- but it's time to face facts.  They're bogus.  They can kiss my ass.

What's super-awesome is that even though those suckas pulled my writing down, everything turned out so much better than if they hadn't.  They did me the gigantic solid of showing themselves for who they really are -- so now I'm done, and that's a good thing.  But check out what happened next: I got a super-nice email from the co-founder of Wanderlust later in the afternoon, when I'd done my emotional highs and lows, my weeping and my gnashing, telling me how much he liked what I'd written because it spoke to why he started Wanderlust in the first place, "to bring people together and inspire them to follow their dreams." THAT right there is enough for me, to know that I was able to give something back to him, in thanks for the deep way that Wanderlust changed me, in unexpected ways, in lasting ways.  Super-awesome.

So yeah, yesterday was CRAZY.  But I learned so much.  I am standing so much taller on my own two feet, knowing I don't need some other website to move my writing in front of people.  I got it all right here, yo, and thanks to Ele's lame BS, I'm bringing it FOR FREE from my own heart, no middle man, straight to yours, 7 days a week, rain or shine, in sickness and in health, loving you forever to infinity and back.  

XO

Sunday
Jan152012

Ego causes injury? Go thank yourself.

Before I say another word, I’d like to acknowledge my enormous debt of gratitude to Michelle Marchildon for her genius “Thank You is the new F* You.” Sister, deep pranams to you for the radical and instantaneous e-nlightment of that post.

Now, to the rest of you currently writing and expressing the opinion that injury is caused by ego, let me say, as an injured person, that you can all go Thank yourselves.

To those defending yoga from the perceived attack of the recent New York Times and other pieces, I’m not buying this line that Yoga doesn’t hurt people. Ego hurts people. Thank off.

Yes, sure, I know that I have a role to play in this piriformis syndrome – this poor piriformance -- that has had me off my mat since December. But really, is ego the only option?

I am suggesting two other explanations. Naturally, these are explanations that make me feel a whole lot better than the ego explanation does because, let’s face it, the ego explanation feels like shit, really does feel like, to me, someone wagging their high-and-mighty self-righteous yogic finger in my face. You did this to yourself, so shut up. The truth is always complicated, right? Sure, there’s ego in it; I’m human. But when I think about what landed me here, with an aching booty and radiating nerve pain down my left leg, dude, it’s not ego.

First, instead of ego, I’m saying bhakti. Yeah, that’s right: devotion. Suck on that. My piriformis has been murmuring its unhappiness at me for a long time, for probably a year. But my dog was dying and when I lost him in March, and then my husband had a really serious accident, I couldn’t imagine giving up my practice – doing without my teachers, without my kula, without the teachings in the midst of all that heartbreak and grief and anguish, so I worked with the murmuring, backed off, modified, took breaks. I had lost so much already. I couldn’t very well give yoga up too. Yoga was the thing keeping me together. So I kept at it, gingerly, listening.

And then came puppy. My shattered heart mended and I fell in love with Mr Burns, a rescued puppy who came to live with us 6 months to the day after we lost our beloved Jasper. Burns was four months old, adorable and exhausting. I had totally forgotten how much work a puppy is, after fourteen years with our Jas. And Burnsy, we discovered at the vet a few weeks later when we asked why he might be so reluctant to go for walks, had a broken toe. We were told to keep him from jumping on and off of furniture, in and out of the car. So, more bhakti: I would carry him like a baby, lift and place him carefully, lovingly, guarding his foot, wanting him to heal. A devotion which was easy in the beginning, when he was 26 pounds, and became more challenging, though I didn’t notice it, as he grew, as he was 35 pounds, then 43, then 52.

And all the time, I kept practicing, a little less because I had this new baby to care for, a baby I couldn’t bear to leave.

So it was that the week before Christmas, I sat up in bed one Saturday morning and my piriformis, finally, sick of not being heard, let out its big scream. Since then, I’ve had almost constant pain and have been 100% off my mat.

And second, on top of bhakti, I’m also crediting my adhikara for being where I am today, benched by an injury. That’s right: my studentship. Adhikara is an equal partner with devotion in this whole arc toward my current immobility. I love the study of yoga so much: I love being in class, I love learning through the practice and so I hung on to it, even when I was not feeling strong, because I love it so much -- the wanting to know, the thirst for knowledge, for making the connections in class, the delight of feeling a truly gifted teacher turn all the lights on in my heart. ALL the lights on in my heart!!  Do you even know how hard it is for me to be away, to not be receiving fresh input, to be outside the studio looking in? It’s like a weird exile, one I never wanted.

My injury began in yoga, began in a repetitive motion I was making in response to a verbal cue, a motion that I can re-create right now if I want to be in more pain. I take responsibility for the fact that my piriformis was getting involved where it didn’t belong, my big ass compensating for my quieter inner thighs.

You can say that ego is what injures us in yoga, but I know better. I know what happened to me: that my devotion and my studentship, my beloved bhakti and adhikara, helped me to land in this particular spot, this quiet place where I am not doing asana but still doing yoga with my mind. And this is exactly where I need to be right now, practicing other limbs of the path, being a devoted student in my own way, resting my poor sore butt. And marveling at the language flying by right now, at how our poor egos are being maligned and held responsible for situations to which they may contribute but which are, as is everything, so much more complicated than one single factor can explain.

So really, I mean it, Thank you all you people who keep blaming the ego for injury. If nothing else, you’ve given me a lot to think about while I remain at home, unable to do asana with my teachers and friends. If someday you have this same pain in the ass I have right now, you may think differently.