Ok, it’s true. I’ve fallen in love. Kelly Himsl Arthur and Liz Overhuel Curry put their heads and hearts together and came up with a dream they could live into. Thinkpeace Workshops for girls is an extraordinary imagining. They have a one week camp for 14 girls (6th-11th grades), teach them about peace and introduce them to the Global Girls Community. The girls swim and do art and all the other cool camp things. And then they explore Peace. It’s crazy wonderful. They have a fabulous project they’re running to gather 5,000 pairs of underwear for women in Haiti and Zimbabwe. (undergird the movement, Ladies!) You want to know about this (if only because it makes you feel good.) You want to promote it to every little girl child you know. And you want to start banging your spoon on the table along with me and whining, “why don’t you have one for old girls?” (It’s true, we’re holding out for aerobeds and airconditioners, but hey! we’re old!). Here they are folks, giving peace a chance. Jes’ sayin’! go read every single page on their site. Kelly and Liz, hallelu! And thank you so much!
Tag Archives: making memories
Five Things I’d Tell the Teen Me
Recently, I saw an article on Chick Lit Is Not Dead guest-authored by Jen Lancaster, the unfairly funny author of books like Bitter is the New Black. Start with that one and move forward through the rest; that’s what I did. Anyway. The article she wrote was, indeed, her version of what she would tell her teen self and that got me thinking…what would I tell me, if I thought for a second that teen me might halfway listen?
In no particular order…
1) Put down the cigarettes. I suffered from a misguided sense of what it meant to look cool, so I started smoking as soon as I could; it took me a little more than twenty years to stop again. Once I quit for good, and got over the hump of quitting, and got the requisite string of colds you tend to get after quitting and hacked up mysterious humours that were hiding in the depths of my lungs I realized…even though I was feeling crappy because I was going through the various stages of withdrawal, I felt…good. Not great, but good. I was processing energy more efficiently, I had less of a brain fog, my skin felt more vibrant and I thought…damn…for how long did I let myself walking around feeling bad? And how did that factor into decisions I made? How many times did I think, I just feel shitty, so why bother? How did this limit me in ways I can’t even fathom yet? Sure, the health concerns that surround smoking are also real, but metaphorically speaking, if it makes you feel bad…don’t do it.
2) You don’t have it all figured out. And you never will; you’re not that clever. When you think you do have it all figured out, hit yourself in the face with a hammer and go back to square one.
3) There are better ways to prove you’re an adult than by getting married. I met my future ex-husband at the tender age of seventeen and was engaged four months later. There are many ways in which I can in all legitimacy claim that the friction between the two of us helped shaped me into the mental giant who stands before you today. But I didn’t marry him for his friction, she said unwinkingly. I married him because I fell victim to the blue-collar thinking that the only way to leave my parents’ house was by marriage. I could go on about why, but I won’t, because it doesn’t change the fact that there are, indeed, other avenues toward adulthood one can pursue. Careers! Weirder and groovier jobs! School! More school! Travel! All of these are more than acceptable paths to take and none of them necessitate marrying young and moving no more than ten miles away from your parents.
4) Celebrate your natural athleticism. Think about all the ways it feels good to move around, and then do them. Keep skating. (I don’t mean “skating through things untouched”, I mean “strap blades to the bottom of your feet and hit the ice”.) Try martial arts. When things break or wear out or stop working for whatever reason…and they will…you’re going to have to kick your ass hard at the gym to start getting it back. Defend against that inevitable future and embrace your inner jock.
5) Keep writing. Write like your life depends on it. Write like it’s your life preserver. In a lot of ways, it is.
And a bonus!
6) You’re right to trust your instincts about that hairdresser. When you walk into Supercuts and they assign you a hairdresser that causes you to instinctively recoil? Walk away. Or else, accept that you’re going to have a boy-haircut and will have to spike it for the next few months and will be that weird girl with the spiky hair, until it grows in enough to not be a boy-haircut anymore.
Come visit me at http://beyondpaisley.wordpress.com/
’tis the season
Dear Shoppers of America,
Black Friday has come and gone, and with it we have witnessed more than our fair share of the worst of humanity. The most attention-grabbing headline was the one about the woman who shot pepper spray into a crowd to defend her deeply discounted X-Box. But of course, there was a shooting in a parking lot as a family resisted a gunman trying to steal purchases, a tazing, and another trampling, though this one didn’t result in death. I could go on, but I’m sure you get the picture. ‘Tis the season, I suppose.
People, we’re better than this. This is supposed to be the season for expressing peace on Earth and good will to all men and all that stuff. Peace on Earth? Is not achieved by shooting people in a parking lot and strafing a crowd with scorching pepper extracts in the name of X-Box ownership. I could blame the stores—they don’t HAVE TO pound us relentlessly with ads promising everything at an unbelievable price, though that is their job. I could blame the advertising agencies who send out a beat beat beat to buy buy buy and have gotten pretty darn skillful in equating shopping with happiness. I could blame the news, who spend all of Black Friday following projected sales estimates and alternatively telling us we’re reviving the economy and fulfilling our patriotic duty by hitting the malls. I could, but I won’t. That lets us off the hook and people, it’s time for a moment of reckoning.
Of course we want to make our loved ones happy and of course we want to get them what they want, but are you sure this is the path to happy? Loved ones want time + an expression of interest. Do we think, “I’d love to have a conversation with the brother I don’t really talk to” or, “I have a brother I don’t talk to; I wish he’d give me a gift certificate to Macy’s so I know he loves me.” As adults, do we look back on our lives and think, “Man, if Mom and Dad had gotten me that Barbie doll in the fourth grade, I’d be so much better off right now…they should have shot someone in a parking lot to get it.”
Question: Has anyone died from not receiving something on Christmas? Of course not, and I’m ridiculous, right? Then when did the stakes become so high in the shopping?
In light of all this, I’m going to ask you all to remember these simple holiday tips:
- Going to jail to defend your holiday shopping (or, to get your hands on someone else’s holiday shopping) doesn’t make you a better parent.
- Stores and manufacturers don’t love you. They just want your money.
- Whatever the item, your loved one will survive if they don’t own it on December 25th.
- Celebrate the season by projecting good intentions, not pepper spray.
- Manners count. All the time.
- The best memories are made with you, not with the latest piece of technology that will be obsolete before you get it out of the store.
We’re all in this together, people, so let’s alter the direction this holiday season has started going down, and make it one filled with joy and peace. Let’s make this the year to start a new tradition, one of happy, healthy memories that have nothing to do with unfettered wants and neglected emotional needs. Bake the cookies, take the walks, plan the winter picnics and please, please, let the people you love know how much you love them in word and interested action. Participate in the spirit of the season because I guarantee you, that message isn’t printed on the outside of an X-Box.
Peaceful holidays!
Terri