Ainokea: On Stress in the Aloha State

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I’m going to assume that you can guess.  That’s right.  According to a Gallup Poll, Hawaii is the least stressed state in the nation.  And while I know you’re thinking that it’s because folks who live here spend all day surfing in crystal clear waters at the base of Diamond Head, you’re wrong and I want to spend this post explaining why.

When you learn that Hawaii is the least stressed state in the nation, you have to understand some other statistics to have the full picture:  Hawaii is regularly listed among the most expensive places to live in the nation (Honolulu is third on this year’s list), it’s traffic is the second worst in the nation (although it might rank #1 if you do the calculation a little differently) and the number of people working more than one job to make ends meet is exceedingly high in this state.

The point?

We may have incredible beaches, incomparable mountain vistas and tropical beauty all around us, but most folks on these islands spend long hard hours at work or commuting.

And yet, the people of Hawaii really are incredible.  Laid back.  Content (or maybe sometimes resigned).  I say “the people of Hawaii” here because I don’t feel like I’ve been here long enough to include myself.  And offering that caveat, I’d like to share a list of reasons why I think Hawaii is the least stressed out state:

  • People are nice.  During my daily commute I travel 12 miles in 50 minutes.  You mathematicians know that means I average 14.4 mph.  On a highway.  And you know what?  If I need to change lanes, there’s always someone ready to let me in.  If a pedestrian needs to cross that highway, we all kindly stop.  Because people here are nice.  And, they’re not just nice in traffic.  I’ve been clomping around in my office in a post-op shoe trying to heal a stress fracture and every day, dozens of people I’ve never met stop me to ask what happened, offer sympathy and tell me they’ll pray it heals soon.  It’s hard to be stressed out when there’s so much Aloha floating around.
  • American culture as main-landers know it, is absent.  I love my country and I’m proud to be an American, but folks, there are some things American culture just gets wrong.  Like over-consumption.  Like keeping up with the Jones’.  Like making a perfectly decorated mansion with white picket fences a life goal.  Practically, these things don’t work here.  Over-consumption is cost-prohibitive and white picket fences?  Hey, you’re lucky if you even have a yard here.  But beyond practicality, I think Hawaii’s young statehood and cultural melting pot are its greatest attributes.  “Foreign” cultures are hugely influential here and since looking different from your neighbor is the norm, I get the sense that folks spend less time comparing themselves to one another and more time absorbing the beauty of all those differences…and realizing how much sameness there is.  Instead of pursuing the two-kids-SUV-white-picket-fence-golden-retriever cliche, folks here pursue the best part of the ‘ol American dream:  happiness.
  • Family.  Family, or ohana,  is big in Hawaii and you don’t have to share genes with someone to be in their ohana. When I still lived in NC and after my first close friend had a baby, I developed the habit of calling myself Auntie Sarah to the offspring of friends and acquaintances alike.  I am confident that a good 50% of those parents – who don’t mistrust me in anyway – felt like the designation of Auntie was awkward because we weren’t related.  In Hawaii, I’m Auntie Sarah to kids whose names I don’t know, because community is family.  I know strong family bonds are partly a product of geography:  people tend to live near their families because islands just aren’t that big.  And so, here at last, I’ll give a physical aspect of the Hawaiian islands a little credit:  thanks for being islands, which keep families close.
  • Work Hard, Chill Hard.  Before I explain this one, let me first say that folks on Oahu are very active in all kinds of outdoor hobbies, so I don’t want to imply that folks just sit around on their butts all day.  BUT. But, Hawaii understands the value of not scheduling every moment.  Go to a beach park on any given Saturday or Sunday and you’ll find huge ohana gatherings (use that definition of family I gave above) grilling out and just stone-cold relaxing.  Drive through a neighborhood pau hana (after work)  and take note of how many folks are sitting in folding chairs on their lanais or in the driveway just shootin’ the breeze.  People know how to relax here.  For real.  And they don’t feel guilty about it.

These reasons, in my opinion, are why Hawaii is the least stressed state in the nation.  Not the blue water.  Not the palm trees.  Not the Mai Tais.  It’s all in the way people handle stressors.

A favorite bumper sticker I see during my very slow commute reads “Ainokea”.  If you pronounce that with Hawaiian phonics and use a little imagination, you realize it means ” I no care” (Eye No Cay-uh).  Now, I do know the origins of these bumper stickers, but for me, they conjure up the old slogan of Alfred E. Newman of MAD Magazine:  “What, me worry?”.  And so when I see that particular sticker, I’m reminded not to stress out.  Why worry?  Lucky we live in Hawaii.

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Trip to the Mainland

Y’all the past few weeks have been a wonderful blur.  When last I wrote, The Gentleman and I had survived a series of disaster flights home from the mainland and I had just (re) started my new job.  That was three weeks ago and we have been busy bees.

For today, I want to acknowledge the mainland trip.  Hubs and I did a ridiculous (exhausting) tour of the homelands:  Charlotte to Charleston to Raleigh to Chapel Hill to Charleston to Jonas Ridge to Charlotte in just over 11 days.  We put over 2000 miles on rental cars and wore ourselves out with an awesome wedding, family and friend reunions.  Here are a few pictures from the trip:

The Gentleman and I all dolled up for Matt and Alissa’s wedding.  We are fully Hawaii-ized:  65 degrees just about gave us hypothermia.  Good thing we were at an awesome wedding to warm our hearts!

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Ya’ll know I’m a NORTH Carolina girl through and through, but if I have to travel to the south lands, Charleston’s a great stop.  We saw lovely sunsets like this one and caught up with tons of friends and family (even some UNC folks in SC…Brad).

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Then it was up to the Carolina on Top to visit with more great friends.  Loved seeing everyone!  We even enjoyed a night in lovely Chapel Hill at the Siena.  Southern part of heaven, y’all.  Here I am cheesing with the inimitable Jessica at Sitti in Raleigh.  Just like old times!

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After Chapel Hill, we drove The Gentleman’s Shelby Mustang back to it’s foster home in SC (Thanks Mom and Dad P!) and then headed for the hills of NC in a rental car where my parents were waiting.  No question folks, my heart is in the NC mountains.  LOVE that place.

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What’s that?  You see me wearing a toboggan up there?  Yeah.  It was COLD up in the Blue Ridges.  Cold enough for…. SNOW!  Y’all, I missed winter so bad this year and especially snow.  I seriously almost cried when we started up the hill to my parents’ mountain house and saw flakes falling.  Thank you, God, for the amazing taste of winter.  The pic below is my parents’ driveway.

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We ended our NC/SC trip with a home-cooked meal at the home of one of The Gentleman’s oldest friends back in Charlotte.  These folks always show us a good time and that night was no exception.

If you read NTD with any regularity (as if I post that way) then you know our flight(s) home turned into a nightmare.

Alas, here we are, safe and sound back in pretty Kailua.  I’ll post some updates on live on the island soon!

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Something Special in the Air

If you’ve ever asked me about air travel, you know I’m not a fan of the legacy carriers (United, US Air, American, etc.) as I’ve routinely experienced poor service and quality from them in my business travels.  However, a recent experience with American Airlines has me eating a little bit of crow.  I am impressed enough with the service care we received to share this story with you.

The Gentleman and I spent the last two weeks visiting family and friends in North and South Carolina.  We celebrated a wedding, drove about 1000 miles in 3 different cars to beds in five different cities, reunited, ate too much, slept too little and generally had exhausting fun.  When we woke up on our last mainland day at 4:15 a.m. we planned to sleep on planes for several hours and then, after a smooth noontime landing in Honolulu, collect our cat from the kennel and rest all afternoon.

This is not how things played out.  Instead…

…Our originally booked United Airlines flight out of Charlotte was delayed 3 hours meaning we’d miss our connection in Houston.

…We were re-booked on a pair of American Airlines flights connecting in Dallas

…Twenty minutes into our new AA flight, we learned a passenger on board was seriously ill.

…Five minutes later, our pilot announced we’d be making an emergency landing at the Atlanta airport to offload the sick passenger to paramedics.

…After wishing the ill passenger good health and good luck, and after taxiing for about 20 minutes, we began speeding down the runway for takeoff.

…Just before we reached takeoff speed, the pilot hit the brakes.  We taxied back to another gate.

…We learned that we had a major electrical malfunction that would take an hour and half to fix.  The pilot of was apologetic, honest, and efficient at working for a solution to the problem.

…We were deplaned and spent half an hour or so working with extremely nice and capable agents to  re-book(again) and secured a third pair of flights connecting through Dallas.  We were also provided with meal vouchers so I had breakfast courtesy American Airlines.

…Our new pair of flights pretty much guaranteed our bags wouldn’t arrive in Honolulu with us.

…Gate agents in Dallas assured us that our bags would be on the next possible flight to Honolulu.

… Our flight crew on the Dallas-to-Honolulu leg of the trip were super nice, provided special treats to active-duty military members and even knew how to spell the state fish of Hawaii.  No easy feat, that.

Seventeen ridiculous hours later, we landed in Honolulu (about 5 hours after our original arrival time).  Upon checking in with the baggage agent we learned that American Airlines had called ahead and provided an update on the luggage.  It was delivered to our home, intact and unharmed the very next day.

Based on all prior experiences with air travel disruptions, I’d expect to still be stuck in a Texas airport while our bags landed safely in Istanbul.  I’d expect to have been yelled at, insulted, lied to and ignored by customer service agents multiple times during the chaos.  I’d expect to never see at least one of our suitcases again and to then have to argue about the value of its contents in order to be reimbursed.

I’d expect the usual crappy service America expects from legacy carriers.

Instead, American Airlines did the very best anyone could do with a series of crappy situations, got us home on the same day (pretty tough considering the distance we had to travel) and managed to treat us with respect, kindness and care the whole way.

During our last flight, I remembered an AA commercial from the 1980s.  The jingle lyrics were “We’re American Airlines, something special in the air!

American Airlines, y’all really were pretty special on this trip.  Consider me a reformed legacy carrier hater…at least when it comes to you.

On Chaos

Yep, I’m still here.  Actually, I want to toot my own horn for posting anything at all during the last four weeks.  We went from TDY deployment to house guests to me starting a new job to an epic tour of both North and South Carolina in a ridiculously short period of time and I’m worn slap out.  I’ll (re)start my new job on Tuesday after we arrive back in Honolulu and The Gentleman and I are hopeful we’ll finally be able to establish a rhythm for our new norm.

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Then again, after the last – oh – 18 months or so, it’s becoming clear that chaos might be our norm.  If that’s the case, we’ll have to adjust our approach to life a little bit.  The Gentleman recently spent dawn patrol (that’s surfing first thing in the morning for you land lubbers) with a more seasoned [crazy] surfer who rides the big waves in Hawaii.  This experienced hanger-of-ten shared some strategies for surviving turbulent seas, one of which I’m calling the rag doll approach.  Basically, if you’re caught in breaking big waves and can’t get past them, the best thing to do is  to go limp, like a rag doll, let go of your board, and let the water take you where it will.  If you fight the surf, you’ll wear yourself out and really end up in trouble.

It’s an uncomfortable strategy in practice.  Imagine being pounded under the water, hurtled toward the shore or rocks or a reef and just relaxing, going with the flow when your greatest instinct is saying “Hold on to the board! Breathe!  Swim!”.  It’s not easy to let go and hope you’ll be able to resurface, but ultimately it’s the only option.

I’ve often thought God gives me chaos so I’ll loosen my white knuckle grip on the surf board, but I probably don’t take that far enough.  If our norm is chaos, we need to ask God for a fearless calm in which we totally let go of the surf board and go with the flow, rag dolls in God’s hands. 

As we prepare to fly back to Hawaii from our brief visit to North Carolina and South Carolina, I find myself focused on this strategy, and secretly hoping it applies to airport security lines as well.

Want a new Fabuless Wardrobe?!

Happy Monday, everyone!  I’m excited to have the lovely Taylor guest-posting today to kick off an awesome new site where you can buy and sell gently used clothes.  Y’all know I’m not a fan of shopping, so this is a great one-stop shop for me.  Can’t wait to check out all the great stuff at Fabuless Wardrobe.  Now, here’s Taylor to introduce the shop:

Hey y’all! I’m Taylor and I blog over at Pink Heels Pink Truck. First off…HUGE thanks to my friend, Sarah, for allowing me to share a project that I’ve been working on for the past 5 months!

I’m excited to be sharing with you all today a brand new dream that I’ve turned into reality (finally!!) Without further adieu…Meet Fabuless Wardrobe!!

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An online consignment shoppe. But not any online consignment shoppe. This consignment shop concept is different than most. :)

At Fabuless Wardrobe, you purchase an ad spot for $1.00 per item. Each item is listed for 30 days for that $1.00. If your item sells, you will be forwarded the money (via paypal) without any additional fees (well, less paypal’s original fees). The only fee you will incur is the upfront ad spot purchase! All items ship for free, so you build your shipping into your listing price. :)

This site is basically a place to list your gently used items (even maternity!), no more than 2 years old (preferrably..it’ll only help you sell!). You might even have stuff you’ve never worn before or even still has tags on it. So why not put it up for sale and see if you can add some cash to your pocket! :)

There are a few items already for sale in the shoppe, so you must head over and check it out. And if you are ready to get to listing your own items, click on the Sell Tab to get started!! You’ll tell me how many items you want to list initially, and I’ll send over an invoice and then the link to where you can start uploading your stuff!

I would love for you to follow Fabuless Wardrobe’s social media channels so you never miss a new item added to the shoppe!!
Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest

Thanks again, Sarah, for allowing me to share my brand new dream-turned-reality!! :) And I hope to see you all selling your items soon!! What are you waiting for??? Get shopping/listing now!! :)

Pink Heels Pink Truck

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Change is good

Rather than respond to the oodles “how’s the new gig?” emails I’ve gotten this week (and thank you, thank you, thank you to each of you for thinking of me and praying for me), I’m just going to toss out a quick blog post here and answer with…

….Excellent!   (as much as one can say that after a single week of work, but based heavily on one’s perceived ability to identify good people when one sees them)

I’ve always thought the perfect job was defined as follows: 1) I care about the subject matter; 2) I work with truly talented and pleasant people; and 3) the leadership is great.

I’ve just transitioned out of one job where 1, 2 and 3 were true and, near as I can tell, into another job where 1, 2, and 3 are true.  God is God.  Therefore, coincidences and “lucky” aren’t real and I’m feeling some serious gratitude in the midst of this change that I can say EXCELLENT.

Change is good, and so is my new job.

And, by way of disclaimer, I’ll get some legit content on this ‘ol blog soon!

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Big Changes

There’s been a ringing in my ears these last few weeks.  It’s subtle enough to not be debilitating, but it’s a nuisance nonetheless, like too much pepper in a sauce.

It’s the clang of change and of fresh beginning.

In hindsight, a season of newness, a time of packing away the “old” way of doing things and of fueling up for a new track, is greatly therapeutic for me.  My past experience tells me to expect a lot of flavor and energy and crispness in coming weeks.

At the same time, the control freak who lives in my heart keeps warning me that I won’t be the pilot in this season and my affection for order and constancy is going to be unfed.

Today, I find myself wedged between my thirst for newness and spontaneity and my reliance on routine and predictability and MY GOODNESS, what a cool place that is.  I don’t know whether to freak out or throw a party and that confusion leads to peals of forward motion.  I’ve got energy, I’m not sure where to put it, and thankfully God’s taking it out of my hands and sending it where it belongs.

I’m looking forward to basking in this sweet spot, even if only for a few days, as the gears grind on.

After eight years of working as a contract consultant to 800 lb gorilla corporate clients from a gloriously isolated home office, I’ll be walking into the headquarters of an equally large gorilla as a full-time hired consultant, focused on translating omnibus legislation confusion into publicly consumable and usable information.

That’s right.  I’m trading pajamas-past-noon and folding-laundry-during-conference-calls workdays for suits and water cooler chit-chat.  Back into the corporate frying pan.

I’m nervous like a kid on her first day in kindergarten

Wish me luck?

 

 

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Fracture: Installment Three on My Darn Foot

As y’all know, I stopped running for six weeks because of a stress fracture in my foot. Actually, I now might be counting it as eight weeks since I ran for about six days at the six week mark, felt familiar pain and then backed things down to rest again.  I’m not going to further jack up my old sore feet for the benefit of impatience.

Anyway, I stopped running.

Stopped logging 20-30 miles a week.  Stopped training for the 12 races I registered for in 2013 (without insurance, dangit).

Abandoned my preferred form of therapy.

Freaked out a little bit.

Regrouped and boring-worked-out (In my own private version of the movie Office Space, I beat a recumbent bike to smithereens in an open field).

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And I…

…got crazy toned.  So that’s my first revelation:  “THEY” ARE RIGHT!  Cross-training, even when it burns fewer calories and fails to leave you breathless actually does challenge your body in a way that produces visible results.  Y’all I’ve got a six-pack.  Of abs [and beer].  I’m not going to take a picture because it’s not my thing and I sense that such pix might breed more negativity than not.  You’ll have to trust me.  But I’m more cut than I’ve been in any year in my thirties.  Or in my twenty-nines.  Shout out to the bike, the Arc trainer, the pool and my husband’s stupid-large collection of free-weights.

…didn’t lose  or gain weight.  Because, BECAUSE (gasp!) despite what you read/hear/think, women don’t need to be in a constant state of trying to lose weight and if you’re at an ideal weight, having to back off of 700-calorie-burn workouts shouldn’t result in weight gain.   Also, I hate gyms.  That’s unrelated to my weight, but I just wanted to say it.

…fell into a surreal place I can’t quite describe. I think I’m in a type of shock. I feel like I’m in a bit of a haze some days and sort of all-around directionless, though by no means depressed or unproductive.  I supposed it might be described as “relaxed” but that’s not how I’d describe it – it makes me nervous.  I mentioned earlier that running has likely become an idol for me, so perhaps this is withdrawal from that drug.  For now, I’m looking forward to some upcoming (non-fitness) changes that will necessarily add structure and schedule to my life and may, in a healthy way, fill the gap left by running.

Needless to say, this forced running ban hasn’t been altogether bad.  I certainly, truly, definitely miss my quiet time, zoned out on a favorite running route, but there’s great growth in having to adjust and I’m eating that growth with gusto.  Here’s hoping this grumpy foot of mine decides it’s done rebelling and that I’m devoted enough to keep flexing new muscles in less comfortable ways.

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Throwback Thursday: Hula

Sifting through old pictures, I found a memento of my first taste of Hawaii.  This photo of me was taken on Maui in 1988 or 1989.   I wonder if I still have the grass skirt somewhere?

 

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Big Island

Last week we took a very quick trip over to the Big Island to see the volcano doing it’s volcano thing.  Since we’re a military family we have the benefit of staying at the Kilauea Military Camp, a collection of cabins with kitchens and fireplaces right inside Volcano National Park.  The Gentleman and I loved these little cabins (felt like camp, but less rustic) and have plans to go back as soon as we can.

We flew in at the crack of dawn and fortuitously sat on the correct side of the plane to see the sun rising over Mauna Kea.  It snowed on this high peak last weekend, so the view was especially striking, and the photo, I think, is not bad for having been taken through an airplane window!

Our first mission on arrival was to check out the black sand beaches along the Windward shore.  This is one the slightly less popular ones called Kehena.  It is also a “clothing optional” beach.  Y’all, I’ve had one too many experiences stumbling upon a grown man doing naked yoga on the beach (yes, it’s happened before).  Cropped that dude out for these  pictures!

 

Next up, we made our way in to the Volcano National Park to see the caldera of Kilauea.  This overlook is best viewed at night as the lava creates an eerie red glow in the crater, but our crew was too tired to make it back up in the evening.  Still pretty amazing to see it simmering away in the daylight hours.  This caldera is about 4 square miles and 400 feet deep.

While in the park we also checked out inactive lava fields, a lava tube, petroglyphs and the amazing views of the Pacific.  Y’all know I’m a sucker for this beautiful ocean out here!  I also got a much-wanted taste of “winter” weather.  Temperatures in the park dipped to the low 50′s at night and I got to wear a coat – I was pumped!

The highlight of our trip, however, was touring the flowing lava via boat.  Our captain navigated us through rough seas for about 20 minutes (NOT for the faint of heart) to several points where lava flows steaming in to the Pacific Ocean, creating an enormous shelf of barely cooled and unstable rock.  Big shout out to our captain who deftly maneuvered us within 30-40 feet of the “shoreline” to see the flow up close and personal.  In fact, he told us that we’d get quite wet from the ocean on the way out, but that he’d get us close enough to the lava to have our clothes dry in a matter of minutes.  All true.

The lava tour was a feast for the senses:  the acrid smells of sulfur and smoke, neon bright molten lava, and the sound of explosions as chunks of pumice rock exploded in the cool water.

This wasn’t my first experience seeing the lava flows of Kilauea as we toured Volcano National Park when I was a kid.  However, seeing the rare flow of lava into the ocean was a far more dramatic experience and one I highly recommend (tip to travelers: the lava isn’t always pouring in to the ocean – call tour companies ahead to check!)

Capped off with an unbelievable sunset over the lava flow, our two-day Big Island adventure was amazing.  The Gentleman and I will be back for a more extended tour in the future!

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Catching Up

It’s been almost two weeks since I’ve written in this space, but I’m back!  Quit groaning.  I can hear you.

Anyway, I’ve got lots of good excuses.  I’ll unveil excuse #1 in about two weeks when it’s appropriate (no, I’m not pregnant) and excuse #2 is that I’ve been busy entertaining my awesome sisters-in-law who came to visit our lovely island for a week.  Excuse #3 is that life has been a bit chaotic in both the good and bad ways.  So much has been going on I’ve not really taken a break to address it.  I’ll try to catch you up at least a bit today.

First, I’m delighted to have The Gentleman back home after a TDY (temporary duty for you non-military types) that took up most of February.  I’d like to point out that the Army has made sure my husband was thousands of miles away from me or stuck in the office for 1) our birthdays; 2) our first anniversary; 3) my first marathon; 4) Hallmark (Valentine’s) Day.  I’m very glad he’s not been full-on deployed, but the timing of temporary out-of-country work seems awfully coincidental.  I don’t believe in coincidences, Big Brother.  Anyway, he had a great work trip to Thailand that ended with him featured in a news story and snuggling fuzzy tigers.  I’ve dreamed of hanging out with these “tame” (we all know they’re not really) tigers for over a decade and it was awesome to see pictures of the hubs cuddled up with the big cats. We’ll be heading that way for vacay ASAP.

Second, I mentioned that my sisters-in-law came to visit.  It’s so great to have family in town  and I’d be lying if I said I didn’t enjoy showing off our beautiful new home town.  In addition to showing off our favorite off-the-beaten-path parts of Oahu, we took the sistas-by-another-mista to the Big Island for two days. I’ll dedicate a whole post to that adventure, but suffice it to say, timing was perfect to watch Mother Nature really show off with her lava skills.  I also got the opportunity to really get to know my sisters-in-law better and am so glad for that.

Having family in town, and doing some inter-island travel with them, solidified a feeling I’ve been having for the past few months:  that Kailua is really home.  If I’d said the word “home” back in August or September, I would have been referencing North Carolina.  Now, however, that word means here.  What a wonderfully turbulent adventure it’s been to go from aching for my roots back on the East Coast to really REALLY loving and craving where I live now… and not because it’s paradise, but because it’s our home.  We’ve reached the point of knowing local store clerks, having favorite running routes and surf breaks, haunting the same restaurants, and randomly running in to friends in town.  We leave our home for a few days and miss its comforts and expected irritations. I know the FedEx gal and that one of the property caretakers can catch a rooster with his bare hands. Kailua is home.  I love that.

In a final moment of change over these past two weeks, I was finally able to run again after six weeks of rest to heal my stress fracture.  I can’t understate this:  WOOOOOOO!!!!!!!  Okay, honestly the first run was quite awkward and I was clearly favoring (out of fear, not pain) my uninjured foot.  I’ve got a long way to go to be back in the running condition I was pre-injury, but y’all…. Oh it felt so, so good to see the pavement whizzing by under my feet and to hear my measured breaths.  I ran two miles in 18:20 and it was AWESOME.  Shout out to the forced cross-training, too. I could tell a difference in my stride that I attribute to the ever-hated recumbent bike.  My quads were bearing so much more of the running motion than usual and my ankles felt almost slack.  I still hate that stupid bike, but it really made the run effortless.  I’ll keep upping my mileage VERY SLOWLY for the next few weeks and hope this is goodbye to stress fractures!

So, there you have it, at least in part.  I’ll be back soon with Big Island photos, an update on my running and the REST of the news.

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How to Spot a Great Book (and few to recommend)

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This bookworm is excited to be linking up with Taylor and Lesley, my fellow Literary Junkies.  Like to read?  Join in and share the love!  This week’s questions really get to my reading soul, the source of my love for books.  I’d love to hear your thoughts as well!

1.  What are you reading right now? Tell us about it.

- I’m reading listening to Lost in Shangri-La  by Mitchell Zuckoff (who does the reading) during my interminable bouts on the recumbent bike.  It’s really the only thing getting me through those workouts… Anyway it’s a true story about some American troops on New Guinea during WWII who become marooned in an unknown land with what they believe to be a tribe of cannibals.  It’s beyond fascinating and very well-written.  Strong recommend for this one!
- I’ve also just started The Hare with Amber Eyes by Edmund de Waal, an intriguing history of multiple generations of one great European family as discovered while the author researched an inherited collection.  Too early to review, but so far I at least appreciate the prose!
- Finally, to add something lighter to the mix, I’m dabbling with The Paris Wife by Paula McLain (in follow-up to Hemingway’s Moveable Feast, which I just finished).  It’s about Hemingway and his “Paris Wife”, Hadley, though it is an historical fiction piece.  Having just finished Moveable Feast, I find McLain’s writing style to very much in line with Hemingway’s, so this book is really working for me so far.

2. Give us the recipe for a great book.  There isn’t one! In fact, I can tell the difference between someone who writes for the art of writing or because he can’t help but spill out a story and someone who writes to keep publishers and consumers buying, following some proven “recipe” or “method”.  The latter almost never grips me, feeling a bit like an arranged marriage: perfect pictures, great description and no actual feeling.    The former, however, are written in a way that I can almost physically feel the story pushing against the author’s skin from the inside, hoping to get out and be shared.  These books can suck me out of reality so profoundly that when someone who belongs in my actual space and time interrupts my reading, I’m momentarily confused, unable to place (for example) my husband walking in to the kitchen in the context of the book.  Maybe my short answer is this:  If The Gentleman interrupts my reading by saying hello and I look at him bewildered, thinking “wait, what are you doing in 1963 Michigan or the castle at Winterfell?” THAT, that is a great book.  Also, if I’m compelled to keep reading a book not because I’m curious about how it ends, but because I feel personally  responsible for liberating the story and resolving  the conflict of not knowing all its details, then THAT, that is a great book.

3. Tell us things you’ve learned from a book recently. Did you learn anything about history? Did you take away a deep & profound realization about the world around you? Or maybe even a beauty tip? One of the main reasons I read is to soak up history – not just events but the more subtle “where we come from” details that truly talented writers capture with ease.  It would be impossible to list all that I’ve learned, but I think a recent stand-out detail is the way different languages capture similar ideas in such different ways because of the influence of culture. Specifically, I learned in Lost in Shangri-La that the aboriginal people who “star” in the true story used the same word to describe their current place and time.  So, where romance languages describe those two things differently (as, um, place and time), the two concepts are represented as one word and therefore probably one concept in this particular tribe.  It makes me wonder about the unique characteristics of culture that would lead a people to not distinguish between place and time.  Interestingly, that language also spoke of war using a word the implied war was a constant and unending state.  Whole other can of worms, there, folks.

4. What was your favorite book as a child?I’ve mentioned these before, but Secret Garden and all of the Little House on the Prairie books were my favorite.  They are all perfect examples of subtle detail-capturing that when woven together show our history without bluntly stating it.  To this day, I have a vivid picture of the (secret) garden in my mind that taunts me and makes me want to discover concealed connections.  Great books, all.

What are you reading these days?  Have any authors particularly inspired you?

Have these questions inspired your own responses?  Link up here.

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More of the Rest of my Story

Today I’m wrapping up my testimony.  If you missed part 1, click here.

Near the end of this season of my life, I was on an airplane flying home from a business trip.  Our plane ran into turbulence of the cans-of-coke-flying-off-tray-tables-and-hitting-the-ceiling and flight-attendants-falling-down-in-the-aisle and total-stranger-next-to-you-grabbing-your-hand variety.  I’m not a fearful flier, but it was one of those moments that makes you suddenly pray, even if you never pray.  I suspect most people on that plane were praying that God wouldn’t kill them.  I think I also started out my prayer to a God I never prayed to with that mindset, but halfway through my silent words, I just said “F*$# it.  Kill me if you want to.”

That was it.  That was rock bottom.

I had “friends” and money (and debt) and a great job and a string of crazy exes and ginger ale in my lap and a bottle of pills that made me function  and about 27 years under my belt and I was so jaded and depressed and lonely that I didn’t care if I died or not.  Let me clarify.  I wasn’t suicidal.  Being suicidal would’ve required some degree of initiative – I would have had to care enough about how bad things had become to want to do something (however destructive) about it.

Instead, I was just done.  I was giving up.

The Law of Conservation of Energy says that in an isolated system, the total amount of energy remains constant over time.  I was definitely in an isolated system, so if physics is right, that energy I was letting go of wasn’t disappearing…it was just going somewhere else.  Someone else was picking up what I’d put down.

Shortly after that fated flight, from which we emerged covered in peanuts and free beverages, but alive, a girl I knew told me she was hosting a bible study.  She told me because it was the first time she’d done it and she was worried no one would show up.  She wanted me and some other gals to come so she’d have a full house.  I agreed to go, planning to drop out after the first class.

During that first class, I met three girls who I just knew had spent time living on the fringe (we weirdos can always recognize each other).  They weren’t goody-goodies who wanted to tell me how perfect and sin-free their lives were.  They drank beer while talking about Jesus.  They had gay friends and atheist friends and feminist friends and pot-smoking friends.  They weren’t the typical Southern “Christians”. I was intrigued, so I kept going to that bible study.  I don’t really remember what I learned from the study aside from the fact that Beth Moore likes hairspray.  I do remember deciding one day to go to the church that had hosted it.

The pastor at that church on that first Sunday I attended stood in front of a pretty motley artsy crew of people and said that he knew there were people there that day who were suffering, who were hating themselves, who were doubting that God existed.  He told us that some of us were profoundly lonely, struggling with pain and addiction and depression.  He told us that he was broken, that we were broken, but that we were loved just as we are.

And then, he told us a compassionate truth: that believing in Jesus wasn’t going to magically fix the hurt, the bad, the brokenness.  He pointed out that you don’t recognize Christians by how perfect their lives are or how well they fit in, because that’s not how Jesus was.  His life was full of suffering and rejection and persecution.  Jesus lived on the fringe.  Jesus wasn’t “normal”.

Jesus was weird.  And I’d spent all this time hating him – a fellow weirdo.  He knew exactly what it was like to stand to the side, looking and acting different.  He knew exactly what it was like to need to get away from the crowds to be alone with his thoughts.  Maybe He had something for me after all, and I had nowhere to go but up.  I went back to church the next Sunday and the next and the next and never looked back.

I’ve now spent several years learning what it means to believe in and follow Christ.  I’ve put as much energy in to dropping my idols as I once put in to pursuing them and conveniently, this doesn’t drain me.  Public Sarah only comes out when I need to schmooze.  Hey, we all need to bend to convention sometimes.  I have a much less “eventful” social life, but my friends are really my friends and they like me even though I don’t want to dish about celebrities over a pint of ice cream or scrape a drug-addled cohort off a barroom bathroom floor. Ever.

I met and dated a man who is also, gloriously, an introvert.  I’m pretty sure he does think I’m weird, but he married me anyway.  And that’s okay.  Because he’s weird too.  And I like him.  And I like me.  Why did I spend so much time trying to be someone who didn’t live in her head and enjoy her own company?  I’m damn good at entertaining myself.

One day, on an airplane, I stopped spending energy life. I didn’t realize that God was in my isolated system and that he’d picked it up.  The energy wasn’t lost –just transferred.  The Law of Conservation of Energy stands true. God, apparently, is a scientist.  I don’t hate him.  Probably never really did.

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The Rest of My Story

If you had to tell your life story – your testimony – without offending the people in it or divulging too many private details in a length and format appropriate for a blog, could you do it?  I’m not sure I can.  I’ve been grappling with how to bring you with me on the journey from pig-tailed oblivious kindergartner through 30 or so years of utter chaos to the current me for days, and all I’ve managed is this fairly disjointed post.  But now you’ll know…the rest of my story.

I suppose, though, that if I’m to give my testimony, my story, it ought to be disjointed since much of my life has been that way.  Before you read, let me offer a caveat:  I wouldn’t change ANYTHING.  Coincidentally, we talked in my church small group last week about what we would change about our lives given the chance and the only thing I could come up with was that I’d have avoided the two years of pretending to be a biology major in college so I could have graduated even earlier.  Lame.  The (trite) truth is, I wouldn’t be sitting in my house in Kailua typing this story without each and every let down, triumph, phase or moment.  So, I’ll keep ‘em.

For the sake of blog-appropriate length, I’m breaking this up into two days.

Let’s start with some basics: I’m the youngest of 3 and the only girl.  Those of you not similarly placed in a family or lacking brothers will immediately think “oh, she’s a princess”.  Those of you who’ve shared my plight know that being the youngest and only girl is tantamount to being a human punching bag and target of torment (and I mean that in the most loving way).  Little sisters make excellent test subjects for wrestling moves and scream in the most delightful way when you chase them with spiders.  Still my two older brothers are my favorites and I credit them with my love for basketball and NASCAR and slapstick humor and elaborate imagined scenarios and bluegrass music.  (And, if they’re reading, why would anyone do that do a monkey?)

Little ‘ol me with my brothers and my dad, circa 19-a-long-time-ago.

I grew up going to church.  I sang “Jesus Loves Me” and recited that I knew he was God’s son to anyone who asked and I coveted the little cups of grape juice we used for communion because they were so delicate and cute.  But, I didn’t understand what it meant to be a Christian.  My most striking memory of church from my childhood is that people who were mean to me at school during the week were nice to me on Sundays at church, and adults slapped fake smiles on their face and recited weird phrases like “God be with you” to each other instead of the usual “see ya later”.  Church, to me, was a place where we put on masks and behaved once a week.

I was an outlier as a kid. I think I was a little bit of an odd bird from day one.  My mom says I took a longish time to reach some milestones as a youngster, but when I did, I reached them like a pro.  I didn’t do unsure toddling steps, but just straight up walked across the pool deck on a summer day.  I didn’t carefully sound out a few vowels and eventually get to a word, but went from cooing to reciting Shakespeare.  Okay, that’s an exaggeration.  It was Tennessee Williams.  Stella!!!!!!  Anyway, I pretty much lived in my head, carefully observing the things I’d have to do until I [almost] had them down perfect.  I have enough memory of my very young childhood to know the feeling of being entirely immersed in imaginative play or pointed observation and being *poof* brought out of the fog to realize a parent or a sibling was talking to me.  Usually, I was irked.

A budding introvert, wanting to be left alone with her Christmas loot. Where’d that strawberry blonde hair color go?

Not much changed throughout my childhood.  I had lots of friends through my school years and knew everyone.  I was never shy or afraid to speak my mind, but I definitely preferred to be by myself most of the time.  I’ve mentioned before that I’m an introvert and looking back I can see the characteristics of that personality like neon signs.  Case in point: I looked forward to summer vacation as a grade-schoooler because I could spend hours playing Legos by myself; not because I couldn’t wait to haunt the local pool with my crew of friends or because I’d get to spend a week sharing a camp cabin with my best girlfriends.

Being an introvert AND a girl is tough.  Girls like to chit chat and share their every thought and spend days and days together analyzing life and hairstyles and boys.  And all of that makes my skin crawl.  I’ll take it one step further.  I am an INTJ (if you’re lost on that, click here.  I also really like this description, thought I don’t always think I’m right…much). Read some more about introverts here and here.  Also, here’s a funny about praying for different Myers Briggs types.

And then there’s this quote: “Perhaps the most fundamental problem, however, is that INTJs really want people to make sense.”(Heiss).  Yes.  And so when you don’t…  The proclivities of my personality type are clearly a soap box for me because they don’t fit with most folks but aren’t, as a result, invalid.  I also really resonate with this quote from Wikipedia: “They are often acutely aware of their own knowledge and abilities—as well as their limitations and what they don’t know”  What I know, I feel like I know.  But, I ‘m keenly aware that I don’t know a lot.

INTJ is one of the rarest personality types in general and is even less prevalent among women, so you can see how I’ve always  been a little bit of a fringe person.  Don’t get me wrong – I participated in tons of extracurricular activities through school, always had a solid circle of friends and even won school-wide awards for being a rockstar (read: involved in lots of clubs and sports AND having good grades) but I never, ever really fit.  I know most young folks feel like this at one time or another, but for me it was actually true.  I coped the way most introverts do: by gathering information about how “everyone else” lives life and creating “Public Sarah” who can small talk and network and giggle at slumber parties with the best of them.   I still put on Public Sarah (who’s not fake, by the way…she’s just a very narrow expression of Actual Sarah) when needed…but she exhausts me.

The point of all this introvert mumbo-jumbo is that I’ve spent most of my life on the margins, injecting myself into the action when I knew it was “appropriate” or “expected” but finding very few people with whom I could truly bond.  The thing is, I didn’t know I was an introvert or that there were other people like me.  I just thought something was wrong with me. When you’re the kid who never really bonds with her peers, you’re characterized by one word: WEIRD.  And I knew it.  And I hated it.  I was ashamed of it. Thanks a lot, extroverts (I kid, I kid.  You’re weird too).

By the time I was in high school and college I knew that I was “supposed” to do and be interested in certain things and like any gal that age, I was really focused on trying to fit in and be “normal”.  When I started dating, I went out with guys who fit the standard boyfriend image whether I actually liked them or not.  I hung out with other girls who seemed happy and vibrant hoping their bubbly personalities would rub off on me.  And I was miserable.

Sixteen years old and going to a dance…begrudgingly

At this point in my life, I’d been diagnosed with full-blown clinical depression and was put on medication.  The pills helped me function, but I still felt like I was floating in space, an untethered observer who didn’t have a role to play in this world.  I did manage to make a few good friends in college who remain close to me today and for a moment there was a glimmer of understanding: I bonded with them because they were like me.  But the glimmer was shoved out of the way near the end of college.  A long-term relationship ended in the utter heartbreak of infidelity and I hit one story up from rock bottom.  I finished college, broke up with that boyfriend of three years, watched my fellow-introvert buddies move away, and started a low-paying job and high-cost grad school all in the space of a few months.

God hadn’t been on my radar for quite some time at this point, but some people I knew saw the opportunity of tough times (hey, sometimes that’s when people are ready to hear about God) and starting working on me.  Unfortunately, good intentions went awry.  Tip: if you want someone to see God, don’t tell that person that she has made many bad decisions but if she will accept Christ as her savior her bad decisions will be forgiven (though they’ll still taint her) and her life will begin to look more like your own perfect existence.  Also, avoid intolerance like the plague.  When people feel like they’ve been so bad as to be contagious, well, they’re not encouraged.  Yeah.  That’s how that went down.

Twenty-one years old and graduating (with Jimmy and a job).  That was the worst haircut butcher job of my life.

And right there…right in that moment of impressionable 21-year-old youth, my toes, which had been monkey-gripping the edge of a cliff uncurled and I went in to free fall.  God was a judge who ALSO thought I was weird and bad AND who was willing to reprogram my soul so I could be more “normal”?  Hey, I knew I’d made some bad decisions, but I was feeling sentenced without trial.  Those decisions didn’t lead to good actions, but they came from places that were 100% ME.  I realized that I didn’t want to have my rough edges fixed or my odd-ballness cured.  I wanted to have those things loved, so in classic early-twenties-idiot style, I took that want to an extreme.  I wore my rough edges like a badge and crammed my odd-ballness down the throats of the people around me and I set out to prove that people would like me the way I am.

So, Sarah? How’d that work out for you?

I’m glad you asked.

Here’s the part where I’d detail every toxic relationship – romantic and not – that sucked up most of my twenties.  I’d tell you about the people who lied to me, cheated on me, manipulated me and used me.  I’d tell you about the drug addicts, the felons and the certifiable sociopaths.  I wouldn’t exaggerate.  I would probably actually leave a lot of dirty details out.  You would pop popcorn and put your feet up.  It would be like a gritty TV drama.  It would be darker because even TV won’t touch some of those things.

I would tell you about what I now know are idols that I chased with unparalleled devotion.  How I tried time again to reinvent myself with a new career, new home, new style, new friends, new car.  How I pursued money, believing that if I could just make enough I could be happy and comfortable.  How I believed the American Dream and pursued happiness, wanted success and picket fences and country club memberships.

And, I would tell you that every ounce of energy I put in to these things, these things in turn took without giving anything back.  I was bleeding dry and still weird and still alone.  I hated God.  If God loved me so much why would he put me in a relationship with THAT guy who’d been a legit psycho, who’d gone entirely Jekyll and Hyde on me and (true story) ultimately became a felon?  If God loved me, why was I struggling with money even though I worked my butt off, usually sixty hours a week, while my “friends” spent trust funds on $300 pairs of jeans?  If God loved me, why did people take their own lives and leave us no answers?   If God loved me, why did I keep making “friends” with people who turned out to prefer a line of coke to a can of coke or who were legitimately suffering from narcissistic personality disorder.  Did you know that most serial killers have narcissistic personality disorder?  If God was doing anything, he was sending me serial killer friends.  God and I were not pals.

Oh to be 27 (I think) again!  No.  No thank you.

I’ve chosen to leave out a lot of details to protect the innocent here, so I want to give you some image to sum up Pre-God-Sarah. When I look back at my life from where I stand now I see an enormous dust cloud of tragedies and pain that have become so blurred together that it’s like watching a cartoon tornado churn across a farm.  Every now and again, you see a cow or a kid who mercilessly made fun of you in third grade or a rocking chair or a verbally abusive ex or a classic Ford truck or an attempt at an identity as Junior League Sarah fly by.  There’s no one big elephant in my life’s room.  There’s just the unclear, unhappy muddle that comes from feeling knowing that most people will never understand or empathize with you, that you will always be “weird” and that as a final swipe of icing on that cake, you will be the type to feel these insults very deeply.

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An Awful (Great) Surprise

Mercy Mondays with Jenn LeBow
I was sitting at my desk, with one cat slung across my lap and the other attacking pages as they were spit out of the printer.  I was newly married, cold-calling advocates about some dangerous legislation and giving myself a pep-talk about moving to NoWhereVille, SC where we’d learned The Gentleman would next be stationed with the Army.

I was desperate for a break from awkward phone conversations, so I set the phone aside and started typing up a report.  Naturally, it immediately rang.  It was The Gentleman.

“What do you think about Hawaii?” he asked.

“I went there when I was a kid and it was fun, why?” I responded, distracted by my work.

“No,” he continued, “What do you think about living in Hawaii?”

With that, he had my full attention.  I don’t really recall the rest of the conversation, but I know that my heart rate increased and I had a feeling of dread.  I remember The Gentleman’s superior officer in the background shouting something like “C’mon, it’s Hawaii!!” as I stammered through the conversation trying to be non-committal and non-negative all at once.

Learning that I’d leave my beloved home state of North Carolina, not for its next-door neighbor South Carolina, but for the furthest American soil possible was an unbelievable and unwelcomed surprise.  I’ve already addressed my misgivings about that slap-in-the-face surprise, but I’ve not adequately expressed the great mercy such a startling change has been for The Gentleman and I.

Before we moved, The Gentleman and I clung to some typical American ideals:  we worked our butts off for financial success, we spent weekends improving the look and feel of our home, we juggled social obligations and gym time and long commutes and generally ran ourselves ragged.  We were throttling down that pursuit-of-happiness path with an awful blindness and an enormous cartful of baggage.

My relationship with God has often involved well-timed smacks in the face.  My memory tells me I’ve always learned from doing more than from being told and it’s clear that God knows he needs to shake me up from time to time if I’m to keep growing.  He shook me big time when he put in motion a move that would break down every comfortable and known thing in my life and replace them with drastically different things.

In his great mercy, God thrust us into a place where we must truly live in community with his other children: y’all, you can’t get away from people in Hawaii.  We’re packed in here like sardines!

He ripped endless work hours (and, at least for me, the related reimbursement) out from under us and reminded us that letting our professional lives eat us up in the name of more stuff was a road to death.

He snatched us away from beloved family and friends, not to remove them from our hearts and lives, but to force us to rely more on him.

He moved us to a place where traffic is unbelievable, so walking is easier than driving (really, y’all) and the mountains and ocean are within an arm’s reach and temperatures inside buildings get uncomfortable during the day.  As a result we are outside and moving more and are healthier than we’ve been in ten years.

Here we are, with fewer things, less peace and quiet, a smaller house, more traffic, fewer nearby friends…and happier, healthier, more peaceful and stronger.

That phone call a year ago was not the kind of surprise I like.  It made me intensely uncomfortable and saddled me with anxiety for months.  If only my faith had been in the right place –with God instead of with me – maybe I could’ve seen that God was stirring things up as an act of incredible mercy.

Linking up with Jenn for Mercy Mondays.

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