I Hide My Chocolate

Midlife observations

Category: Yoga

Waking from Anxiety

virabhadrasanaII

Letting Go of an Anxious Past

Sunday I woke.  That familiar feeling was there.  I didn’t want to face my day.  In times past (before children), I would succumb, lying in bed, staying home-bound, overwhelmed with the feeling that it was all too much to handle.  In times more current, I ignored the feeling, plowing through my day, my duties.  This time, I observed the feeling without getting lost in the feeling.

I lay there reconstructing my dreams.  All anxiety dreams.

Dream #1:  A classic – I forgot to go on my upcoming business trip.  After that horrible moment when I realized I had missed my plane and was supposed to be in Miami for an important meeting, I was rushing around trying to find another plane to get me there that same day.  New job performance anxiety.

Dream #2:  Our parakeet, Cooper (who I am ridiculously attached to probably because I feel guilty for not being a better pet care-giver as a child), was struggling up the stairs looking for me.  When he found me, something was the matter with him.  I looked at him and his body was missing.  Just his head and his tail feathers.  A big gaping hole where his body was.  He was going to die.  And it was my fault.  Parenting anxiety.  I am a terrible mother.  Especially when I am absorbed in my work.  See Dream #1.

Dream #3:  I had a tattoo.  I thought it was kind of cool that I had acquired this tattoo.  My having a tattoo would be quite out of character.  But the tattoo was of a stick dog with a skull.  I did not like it.  It was not my choice.  And now it was a permanent fixture of my body.  Anxiety over what?  Not having a say?  Elements of my past imbedded in my body that I don’t want – were not my choice. were inflicted upon me?

I lay there ruminating.  I made a decision.  I did not want to have a “generalized anxiety” fog of a day.  I decided to not succumb.  Time is too precious to waste a blissful day off feeling unsettled and blue.  I made an important discovery for myself a few years ago on a ski vacation that anxiety was a habit that I could choose not to give in to.  We had arrived at the top of the mountain.  The wind was blowing, which always increases my skiing anxiety, and we were going to do a challenging run.  I stood there looking down.  My heart was pounding and my breath was short and shallow.  “I can’t do it!  I hate skiing!  It’s your fault and you better notice how hard this is for me and take care of me!”  My husband, truly the perfect match for me, calmly chooses not to notice my panic, calmly chooses not to cater to my false victim-y incompetence.  And then the shift happens.  I change the tape in my head.  “I can do this run.  I did it several times last year and loved it!  I am a good skier.  Anxiety is a habit.  It got me attention as a child, as a young adult.  But it does not serve me well any more.  Let it go.”  I took some deeper breaths and felt my confident persona rise up.  There she is!  Let’s go.  And down we schussed, my confident persona and me, leaving the anxious child behind.

I left my anxiety dreams in bed and got up and enjoyed coffee with my husband and went to my Sunday yoga class with wise Alex.  I have worked hard to create a community of friends at my yoga studio.  But I regularly forget that they are there and that they notice when I am not there.  I walked in and was greeted with hugs and a genuine welcome.  Good God, I have friends.  Friends I have cultivated with care.  And then another shift happened.  During Warrior 2, where my left hand was my back hand, it started vibrating.  What was happening?  The only child of (anxious) cerebral scientists, I searched for a scientific and physical explanation.  Probably some mildly pinched nerve was being released.  But maybe, just maybe, there is a different point of view worth considering, worth being open to considering.  I wonder what the yogi’s have to say?  Some crazy hokum, I am sure.  Kundalini awakening or some such nonsense.  Oh yeah, I am a yogini.  I am supposed to believe this crazy hokum…right?  Skeptical, I ask Alex.  He suggests that my back hand represents my past.  I am releasing energy from my past.  The left side is my feminine side, my heart.  I am releasing energy from my past, from my past with my mother, my anxiety enabler – as I make the passage through mid-life and become more grounded in my confident self.  Good God, this resonates as true and believable!  Could it be that it is not crazy hokum?  Perhaps the logical explanation is not the only point of view?  I felt the decision I made that morning, to leave anxiety behind, in the vibration of my left back hand.

Meat

butternut-squash1

More Meatless

I love meat.  Juicy, rare, marbled steak is a favorite of mine.  Roast chicken, with the skin on, is another.  But when I hit my 40’s, a variety of disconcerting changes occurred.  15 pounds creeped on.  (The Perimenopausal 15?)  When I ate steak, my stomach complained, gurgling for hours and keeping me up at night.  Speaking of sleep, I couldn’t sleep any more.  Every night around 2 am, I woke up to go to the bathroom (beyond tedious) and then was UP for hours.  One (of many) tactics I employed to lose weight was to eat less meat.  While everyone else was having 3-4 meatballs with their spaghetti, I cut back to 1 meatball with my whole wheat spaghetti.  When going out, I split a steak entrée with my daughter.  Now I forego the steak entrée altogether, opting for fish or a vegetarian option.  My stomach stopped gurgling, I slept better, and the 15 pounds (and more) crept off.

Also around this time, I dove deeper into yoga and yoga philosophy. I studied the Yama’s and the Niyama’s, yoga’s ethical guidelines, the most famous of which is Ahimsa or non-harming.  This “Do/Don’t” is an overarching belief that one should live with love and compassion for all beings and not behave in any way that harms another being.  It is generally cited as the reason for yoga practitioners to adopt a vegetarian diet.

As this virtuous circle expanded:  I ate less meat, I did more yoga, I felt better and slept better, I loved more and stressed less, I ate less meat and did more yoga.  I became a big fan of Michael Pollan and Mark Bittman.  Both write with great conviction and adopt a pragmatic approach to eating less meat.  Pollan’s simple advice is to “Eat Food.  Not Too Much.  Mostly Plants.”  Bittman’s approach to eat vegan during the day and loosen the rules at dinner works for me, allowing for more flexibility with my family and our dinners together.

Because, you see, my family does not share my intense über desire to eat healthily and to eat as a responsible world citizen.  It becomes very challenging to eat nurturing meals together when family members have different ideas about what they want to put into their bodies.  We tend to compromise which works fairly well, but it does mean a lot of double cooking and other juggling and shopping for me, the one who is more determined to not just eat something because it’s easy or tastes good.  (My husband, the weekend Italian chef, cooks food that tastes very good.)

Eating less meat makes me feel better.  The health benefits are compelling.  The environmental benefits are compelling.  I made this soup/stew over the holiday break and the whole family enjoyed it (well, not my picky son).  It just got better and thicker as each day passed, a delicious virtuous circle. Turn it into more of a meal by serving over barley, brown rice, or quinoi.

Butternut Squash Soup/Stew

  • 2 Tablespoons olive oil
  • 4 cups of butternut squash, cut into even-sized ¾” cubes
  • 1 large baking potato, cut into even-sized ¾” cubes
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 1 small yellow onion, chopped fine
  • 4 cloves garlic, chopped fine
  • 3 cups vegetable stock
  • 2 15 oz cans cannellini beans
  • 1 14 ½ oz can of diced tomatoes, drained
  • 1 Tablespoon of fresh thyme or fresh sage
  • 1 Tablespoon of fresh lemon juice (or more, to taste) – adds brightness

Preheat oven to 350°F.  Place squash and potato on a baking sheet, drizzle with 2 Tablespoons of olive oil, and roast in oven for about 35 minutes.

Saute onion and garlic in ¼ cup of olive oil until golden brown, about 10 minutes.

Add stock and bring to a gentle boil.  Add squash, potatoes, beans, tomatoes.  Simmer until squash and potatoes are soft, about 15 minutes.  Puree half the soup in a food processor until consistency as at desired thickness.  Add thyme or sage.  Stir in lemon juice.

Serves 6, gets thicker and tastier with time

108

Devotional Meditation in Motion

“Have you ever done a 108?” Katherine asked, in response to my impulsive and enthusiastic acceptance of her invitation to participate in Operation Finding Peace – a day of yoga at Kaia Yoga benefitting the Give Back Yoga Foundation, a nonprofit that provides yoga to veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. 

No, I have never done a 108.  I barely know what a 108 is.  All I knew was that I felt compelled to do it.  I was sure of very little, but I was sure I had to do this 108.

The familiar, superficial reason was because I am attracted to challenge.  The harder it is the better.  If it’s not hard, it’s not worth it.  A yoga marathon?  To prove I am a true yogini?  I am in. 

The outward facing reason was because it was for a good cause.  In my mid-life search for meaning, the cause aspect of the event was completely appealing.  I could tell people I was doing a yoga marathon to benefit a good cause which would make me look like a good person. 

Digging a little deeper, a subtler reason was because I like to be agreeable and inclusive.   And certainly this was an easy yes.  Katherine was a new yoga friend and my connection to a new yoga community.  I wanted to say yes to her.  I wanted to fit in to this new yoga community.  Being agreeable and inclusive serves me well, but only up to a point.  As a relationship evolves, whether it is personal or professional, you will reach a place of disagreement and it becomes important to put yourself out there with a clear point of view.  This statement of ME terrifies me.  I don’t do it well and have historically hidden from situations involving such a strong expression of ME, letting friendships wither and jeopardizing my professional development.  It is easier to begin new endeavors and new relationships then to work through the challenges of fighting for ME while fighting through the challenges of the relationship. 

But the real reason I said yes to the 108 was because yoga has saved my life, giving me the courage to create the life I want to live – a joyful loving authentic one, not the life I was living, a more duty-driven one filled with chores and work and a focus on responsibility.

When, at the auspicious “mid-life-crisis/enlightenment” age of 47, I was passed over for promotion, losing my team, and sidelined to a quieter job, I questioned everything.  On my daily commute to mid-town Manhattan, I cried every morning on the walk between Grand Central and the gleaming office tower, feeling humiliated and old and mourning the loss of my outward self that I had presented to the world all these years.  Athletic and trained as a ballet dancer in my teens, yoga became my refuge.  Some days, I just wanted to rest in child’s pose and breathe.  Other days, I wanted to work so hard I didn’t have enough breath to chant “om.”  And who was I to be chanting “om” anyway?  The only child of cerebral scientists, I jokingly referred to myself as a 3rd generation heathen.  Moreover, I was woefully disconnected from my body.  As a dancer, I had wonderful body discipline and body control, but I did not respect my body. 

I discovered Ashtanga yoga – the elixir for type A personalities that I proudly imagined myself to be.  I dutifully mastered the primary series and welcomed the intense assists, because it took a lot of pain for me to feel my body.  But then the neck pain became unbearable.  I had pushed myself too hard and was forced to feel my body.  I had to acknowledge that perhaps I had not mastered the primary series after all, at least not safely and wisely.  Perhaps my body had something to say to me.  I revisited trauma from my childhood and the resulting perfectionism, eating issues, difficulty with relationships, and more.  Back in talk therapy after a 20 year hiatus, I delved into meditation and slower forms of yoga, and began to awaken to ME.  I began to honor an intuitive understanding that I had to practice yoga and to share yoga.  It was helping me connect to my body and helping me to be honest, compassionate, and loving with my self and people I love.  All I know now is that loving my family and my deepening circle of friends is the only thing that matters to me, so I will listen to my yoga intuition and follow it. 

My yoga intuition brought me to the 108 at Kaia Yoga. 

What is a 108?

When you google it, you will get various explanations about why the number 108 is sacred.  I found I could not retain any of these explanations, other than Katherine’s:  “It’s a devotional meditation.”  Oh, and it’s a lot of sun salutations.  I was up for the physical challenge.  Was I up for the devotional meditation?

But first, what to wear?  When I have anxiety, it’s easy for me to fall back on a familiar neurosis – equating how I look with my worth.  I found myself madly – madly! – contemplating shopping for a new yoga outfit at the last minute the day before the event even though I spent the day at work and was hosting my best friend from my childhood for dinner that evening from out of town.  I talked myself out of the urgent but ridiculous desire to shop for and sport a new outfit.  (I succumbed to getting a haircut.)  For the record, I did choose comfortable leggings and a top that would require no undergarments.  The less clothing the better and who needs a t-shirt flopping over your head when you are upside down in Downward Dog a multiple of 108 times.

Next, what to eat?  I have food issues. (Remember, how I look equates with my self-worth, so I better look good which, for me, means being thin.)  Eating the right amount of food to give me sufficient energy but not digestive gas was important to me.  And, you know, maybe I’ll lose some weight – always a good thing.  Isn’t that why we do yoga?  The event started at 3:00, so I knew I had to eat something around noon.  I chose a concoction of quinoa, black bean salad, and feta cheese.  I was a little worried about the beans, but it worked out.  No gas, phew. 

I arrive and there is purposeful energy in the place.  It feels both calming and exciting just to be there.  I don’t know very many people, and there is much buzzing amongst the people who do know each other.  I could go to a place of feeling like I don’t belong, but hey, it’s a yoga studio.  By definition, it’s a welcoming place.  I feel like I can belong if I choose to.  I survey the studio and it’s crowded with people, primarily women.  (Where are the men?)  I place my mat on the outskirts.  I have never practiced yoga with this large a quantity of people.  It could be overwhelming, but I choose not to let it.  I spy an open space right in the middle.  That is where I want to be, right in it.  I move my mat.  I make friendly connecting eye contact with a few of my neighbors, but I know this is going to be an internal experience.  I settle into child’s pose and breathe. 

Because I have tried to move beyond my type A approach to yoga, I begin talking to myself.  You don’t have to do all 108.  You don’t have to jump back.  You don’t have to do Chaturanga.  You don’t have to prove anything.  Just be here now. 

Stan is our leader for the 108.  There is a collective anticipation as we prepare to begin.  We chant the traditional opening Ashtanga prayer.  I hear my Ashtanga teacher Constanza’s voice and notice that Stan’s pronunciation is different.  The difference throws me off.  Even though I know the chant, I forget it in the excitement and decide to let it wash over me, joining in the opening and closing “om’s.”  The vibration of the om from all those people is intense.  It feels like we are going to take off!  I LOVE IT. 

We begin. 

Stan sets our intention for the first 10.  The purpose of yoga is to end suffering.  Yep, no problem.  No suffering for me!  The first 10 are easy for me.  Yay for me!  I shake out my jitters.  And then I remember that I do suffer.  A lot.  And then I remember it’s not about me anyway.  Stan calls to my mind the suffering of the veterans we are honoring and the global suffering of our world.  We are all together in this. 

Gratitude for the next 10.  We are so lucky to be in this beautiful place all together.  I am deeply grateful.  (When I remember to be grateful.)   

Peace for the next 10.  My mind begins to swirl and is anything but peaceful.  How does he keep count?  Did I step back with my left foot last time?  Should I step back with my right foot this time?  Wow, we’re at 20 – there are a lot more to go.  This is going to be boring.  How about that, my shoulders are more sore than I expected.  This is going to be hard.  I wonder what kind of food will be at the celebration tonight?  What if I am too shy to introduce myself to all these people tonight?  I am missing my daughter’s Spanish Honor Society induction ceremony tonight.  I am selfish and self-absorbed, a terrible mother. 

Unity for the next 10.  We are doing this together in unity, but now my pride separates me from being one with the group.  Look at ME!  (Too bad I don’t have a new outfit.)  I am better than everyone else.  Look, she’s sitting.  Look she’s standing.  I jump back to Chaturanga this time.  Oh yea, I’m good at yoga!  Oops, I am not as good at her.  Uh oh.

Clarity for the next 10.  $#@! Who cares. 

And then, the shift happens.  I stop thinking. 

The next four groups of ten are a blur.  I take one decade “off” – resting in child’s pose and breathing.  I rejoin the movement, feeling a sense of peace and determination.  The room has gotten very quiet; it is just Stan’s quiet leadership and our collective breathing.  A devotional meditation it is. 

The ninth decade is Family.  I love my family.  I will do anything for them.  They are the source of joy and meaning in my life.  I give each sun salutation special attention and a special prayer for Thom, Kiera, and Aidan.

Last, we devote our selves to Love.  What else is there?  Yoga is love. 

108 Sun Salutations later, we rest in Savasana together.  Unity, clarity, peace, gratitude, love.

My Left Thumb

Image

Healing My Left Thumb

My left thumb is healing.  Slowly. 

I pick at the cuticle. 

I pick compulsively at the cuticle even though I know I should stop.  Any rough edges of the cuticle become fodder for a picking session.  I will create a rough edge in order to have an excuse to pick at it.  The slightly painful sensation is a pleasurable distraction from anxiety. 

I pick when I am sitting at my desk looking at my computer wondering which project to tackle or which decision to make – the one that makes someone happy or the one I believe to be the right one for the business.  So, more to the point, I pick while postponing confronting a person or situation that makes my stomach lurch. 

I pick when I am driving.  Yikes!  Two hands on the wheel!  I stopped when the kids were in the car, mainly because my son would point it out:  “Mommy, stop picking!”  I started wearing gloves when I drove.  That was annoying.  Now I place two hands on the wheel and breathe – commanding myself to focus on driving and not the incessant chatter in my head.  It works for about a minute.  And then I try again.

I pick when I am sitting still, because I can’t sit still.  My mind races through my to-do/to-worry list as my hands fidget and pick. 

I pick when I am standing in the kitchen, ostensibly preparing a meal, felled by some anxious thought until I shake myself back into the task at hand.

When my cuticles are smooth, I will find a rough spot somewhere else on my skin to pick at.  Usually around my right ear.  My hair covers my ear so you can’t see the damage.  It is better than it was.  The cuticle of my right middle finger is also a target.  At its worst, my left thumbnail was so damaged and ridged that it throbbed in the middle of the night and I was afraid it would get seriously infected.  I wore band-aids.  This was effective if I didn’t use my hands or wash my hands.  The best bandage was Band-Aid Ultra-Strips.  They stayed put – so well that it hurt to remove them from the nail.  Keeping my cuticles and rough skin patches moisturized helps.  The best moisturizer for this task is ChapStick, neither too light nor too greasy.  I got manicures.  The manicurist would tut-tut and scold me for picking and try to fill my left thumbnail with ridge-filler.  Manicures helped for the first few days after I got my nails done and are a recurring tactic for weaning myself from this ocd, addictive, self-injurious behavior, which apparently has a name:  Dermatillomania.  I made this discovery after reading Alexandra Heather Foss’ post about Trichotillomania in the NYT superb anxiety blog.

But manicures don’t fix the underlying cause of obsessive, ruminative, anxious thought and behavior patterns.  Is it genetic?  Definitely.  I do not need any scientific proof to know this is true at the core of my being.  My parents are anxious, risk-averse, cerebral introverts.  My mother rubs her cuticles and cuts them with cuticle nippers all the time, resulting in thick, ridged 90-year-old nails.  My father, who is arguably borderline Asperger’s, has a ritual for many activities and a well-thought-out explanation for each routine.  My son picks his nails and my daughter likes the sound and feeling of her hair ends pricking her skin.  What have I done to my children!  How can I help them?!  The tendency toward anxiety is genetic and the response to the anxiety in the form of nail-picking is modeled in the family. 

Nail-picking must correlate with thumb-sucking.  I was a thumb-sucker until age 11.  My daughter was a thumb-sucker until the orthodontist forced her to quit cold turkey at 7.  My son sucked a pacifier until he started biting them and they became a choke hazard.  When I called to order a case of pacifiers, the telephone customer service rep asked me why I needed a case of them.  I told her.  She refused to sell them to me.  Kudos to her.  Cold turkey for him at age 2.  One year, I created a chart and goals for us.  After all, I optimistically announced, it only takes 21 days to change a behavior, to break a bad habit.  We decided on what incentive we wanted when we achieved our goal of unpicked healthy nails:  A Playstation for my son; a bed frame for my daughter; a Prada bag for me.  They got their prizes.  That was about 4 or 5 years ago.  I am still waiting for my Prada bag.  I don’t need the bag.  I would be happy with unpicked healthy nails. 

Yoga for Anxiety

I don’t pick at yoga.  It is perhaps the only place where I am able to still my mind and my picking.  Here is how yoga works for me:

    • I move inward, closing my eyes, paying attention to how my body feels.  Usually, I tell my body what it should feel.  With yoga, I listen to what my body tells me.
    • I breathe.  Slowly counting my breath gives my mind something to do besides dither, helping me to relax and to focus.  Breathing and meditation have helped my perimenopausal insomnia, a profound relief. 
    • I enjoy being in a yoga community with other people who are contemplative and supportive.  I have friends!  (A big deal for an only child.)
    • I listen to the teacher and her many directions.  Concentrating on the poses and her voice gives my mind and my body something to do besides think and fidget.
    • I learn that I am not my mind’s obsessive thoughts.  I can observe my thoughts and begin to change them.  I can observe my anxiety and choose a different, happier and more optimistic way of being. 
    • I become aware of habitual ways that I hold my body.  I question why my right shoulder rolls forward chronically to protect my right breast and the tense pain in my neck that results.  I stand straighter, more sure of who I am and that I am all right.
    • I realize that I am not what I wear.  I stop shopping compulsively.
    • I savor the taste of food and eat mindfully.  I eat less and enjoy food more.
    • I learn that every step in the process is crucial and can’t be skipped.  I slow down and stop grasping at achievement.  The pose never ends.  
    • I make an intention on the mat to be more loving, honest and authentic off the mat.  I do it.