Saturday, February 7, 2015

Life By Numbers- February 2015

Time to set a new month!  Okay, well, I did that at the end of January but I'm only getting around to posting it now.

365- Keeping with that Journal. Day after day isn't always as easy as it sounds, finding something magical or 5 good things, but I'm doing it.

52- Recipes- this month I'm working on vegetarian. So far I have an eggplant parm, and a breakfast bake.
      Money Challenge- $5, 6, 7, 8 ($26 for the month)

30- 10 minutes of stretching and breathing. I'm having terrible issues with my psoas which are causing my back to seize up. I see the chiropractor every week (easy since I work for one) and have received massage therapy that while it works wonders sent me into fits of tears. Along with the tight psoas I found I am not nearly as flexible as I once was, and so I am doing daily stretching. So far it's keeping me in less pain and allowing my back more motion that it has at the start of each day. So far.

12- Book from challenge
      Greenman drawing #2 or a tattoo design

4- Submit to contest or publication
    Clean out dresser and night stand

101-
A. Fam/Friends- Call Gram more, Sunday Social, email one distant friend a week
B. Biz- Geek sign painting,  1 more 101 pg, Update Blog
C. Hobby- 1 scrapbook page
D. Writing- 2 chapters in Addie and one other story (total of 4)
E. Health/Personal- keep up with veg, 8 c H20/day, new social security card
Done. F. Financial Address the discrepancies in the RGH bill
Done. G. Spiritual- Twin Flame Blog
H. Bedlem- Clay grotesque for door, set weekly menu
I. Travel/Adventure: Sleigh ride, sledding party, or Roc Excalibur
Done. J. Remake- Bedlem Menu Board for kitchen
K. Learn- Book paper cutting

So far so good but there is something about February that just makes me want to get lost in a book, or a nap, or something. Gather strength for the coming growing season, perhaps?
I'm fighting against hibernation, at this point.
Let's see who wins.

By Special Request- Twin Flames

Recently a friend hit a frustration point with the "Twin Flame" information on the web that, after she vented to me, she asked that I help clarify things a bit.

Why me?  Because, whether or not others believe in it, I've met my Twinnie (as he and I like to call it). We've ties to one another that are enough to make my atheist husband a believer.

While people now confuse the notion of Soul Mates, two souls that long for one another to be one, with Twin Souls the notion of the split human is actually not as New Age or esoteric as the current culture would have us believe.

The first historic mention of this notion actually appears in a work of fiction by Plato. In his play the character Aristophanes wrote of humans with four arms, four legs, one head with two faces.  These humans had three genders; male, female, and androgynous (containing both male and female). When the Gods saw how powerful humans were, Zeus split each into two and Apollo stitched the individuals up. Males were from the sun. Females of earth. Androgynous from the moon. This diminished the power of humans and created more individuals to worship the gods.
This story was fully about gods exerting control over humans, and perhaps served as a parable to explain the longing or ties we occasionally feel for another person. Yet, the fact remains, it was a work of Greek fiction.

The most common findings of the Soul Mate/Twin Soul theory can actually be found in more contemporary religions. The Bible tells us that Eve was created from a rib bone from Adam.
In the Jewish faith there are plag nishmase, the concept that men and women are half souls that eventually unite in matrimony.
The fact that a culture that shuns much of formal religion, especially Christianity, readily embraces a notion set forth by them is quite intriguing to me.

Moving back to Plato, which started as three genders, gives more support to the idea that not all Twin Souls would have to reunite as romance. A male or female soul split in half and reuniting with another fe/male soul need not be homosexual, just as an androgynous soul need not be straight romance. Were this to be the set rule, there would actually be a population issue where only the androgynous would be the ones to breed. This is also stating that, with the other common belief held with Twin Flames, reincarnation, that we would continually reincarnate in similar form, mindset, emotion, etc. This does not lend itself to the growth we are supposed to encounter in each life. If we end up continually with the same soul, or even the same circle of people, our soul experience would not be expanded and its growth prohibited.

While reincarnation has been embraced with the Twin Soul concept, there is absolutely no evidence of the two existing together as part of a religious anthropology. Somehow this is tied to the belief that we spend our lifetimes pining and searching for our other half, and that our life is simply a half existence without connecting with that person.
This fills me with tremendous sadness.
New Age, Pagan, and alternative faiths are dedicated to personal strength, connecting to self on a deeper and stronger level and yet here we are being filled with the contrary, and potentially harmful, ideas that we are incomplete without another person to fill that empty half.

Fast forward to my meeting my Twinnie. It was an uncanny connection almost immediately, but it was not a Lifetime Movie style romance. Very often we were so alike that we clashed, but when we worked together it was..powerful. Magical. We were able to accomplish, to tap into, strengths and happenings that we did not know were possible. The journey was not easy and as often happens, all paths split. He chose one path, while I selected another that lead me to my husband, a relationship now 18 years and going strong.
Twinnie and I have gone periods of time without speaking but we've never lost our connection, one so strong that sometimes we even feel each others physical pain. We understand one another, at times when no one else does. It's a connection that can't be denied, and I love my Twinnie, but it's not romantic.
My husband would probably be very upset if it were.

Not that it was always easy on him either. A firm follower of science and a believer in what can be proved, my husband spent his fair share of time confused and exercising his patience to limits I'm not sure he knew he had. There were times he asked if it was worth the downs, and the tears that came with them, for me to stay in contact with my Twinnie. Hub asked me questions that, instead of my just jumping into a common definition of what the mythos or play tells us Twin Flames should be, forced me to really define what it is to me, what Twinnie and I are to one another. At the time I thought that perhaps Hub was feeling insecure, but now I know that I had a horrible time explaining it and he was searching for clarification, which gave me such delightful clarity for myself.

In the end Twinnie walked me down the aisle at my wedding, and when Twinnie finds a lady worthy of his affection, Hub helps explain the Twin Flame connection to help ease the new lady into the relationship. Still, and here's the important part that people miss, my life was not incomplete without my Twinnie. I have a full, wonderful life of joy and wonder, of love and connection. I have worked hard for it, because no one person, no one thing, will fill a void if we feel we are incomplete, and that is an unfair burden to put on someone that we are supposed to care so much about.
Instead my Twinnie makes my life richer, happier, and more wonderful with his presence, with our connection. He is not a bandage to what is wrong in my life. Instead he is a valued addition to this life, as he has been in my past lives, because he is worthy of that respect as my Twinnie and as my friend. Where we began, why we were divided, will most likely always be a mystery and that's okay. Looking back to where it started is not nearly as important as moving forward together enough to support on another and apart enough to keep things interesting.
Because love is not the exclusive domain of romance, and neither are Twin Flames.

January 2015 Recipes

I'm having problems with photos posting. When I try it kicks me out of Blogger completely, so I apologize for the lack of photos but here are the recipes- as much as I create them- if you care to give them a try! :)

Meaty Tortellini Cajun Soup:
       ingredients- Cajun seafood stock (or fish stock with Cajun spices added)
                             1 chopped onion
                             minced garlic or garlic powder to taste
                             4 sweet & spicy sausages, sliced into rounds
                             Peas (I prefer frozen)
                             Mussels
                             Tortellini
Simmer all ingredients, except mussels, until almost cooked. Add mussels and cook through.

Smokey Spicy Mixed Veggies:
         ingredients- 1 lg turnip, diced
                               3 sm. onions, sliced
                               garlic, minced
                               3 c +- frozen peas
                               sliced mushrooms
                               1/2c butter
                               salt and pepper to taste
                               creamy horseradish dressing
                               molasses bacon seasoning, or a touch of molasses and crumbled bacon

Melt 1/2 butter and sauté turnips and onions, season
Add frozen peas
Add garlic to taste
Add mushrooms
Add creamy horseradish sauce to taste
    stir, cover and cook on med-low until tender
Melt rest of butter and blend with molasses bacon seasoning, toss well with veg



Pan-Seared Pineapple:
        ingredients- Coconut Oil
                              Fresh pineapple, cored and cut into lengths
                              Brown Sugar
                              Cinnamon

Heat oil in skillet
Mix in brown sugar and cinnamon
Add pineapple and cook until soft and slightly brown, making sure to scoop sugar and cinnamon over it.
Serve with syrup drizzled over it.



Sweet Garlic Creamy Chicken:
          ingredients- 1lb chicken (I prefer boneless, skinless thighs)
                                1 can cream of (anything) soup
                                1 c. sour cream
                                1/2 c. H20
                                minced garlic= 3 cloves
                                maple sugar
                                black pepper
                                2 c. frozen peas
                                2 c. sliced mushrooms
                                fettucini
                                shredded parmesan cheese

Place chicken in crockpot
Mix soup, sour cream, H2O and seasonings, pour over chicken
Mix in peas and mushrooms
       cook on low for 6 hrs, or high for 4 hrs
Boil pasta, drain
Top pasta with chicken, veg and sauce
Sprinkle with cheese.

If you try any of these, let me know how you enjoy them!

       

January Wrap Up

So concludes the first month in my 2015 Life By Numbers.

Done: 365- maintain my journal-  Done, even adding in the new bits.

Done: 52- New recipe a week- And they were delicious. That's for another post.
            52 week money challenge- $10 in

Done:  30- Fuzz Therapy- 10 minutes a day in contact with our cats. It didn't bring down my blood pressure but the cats actually seek me out more than they used to and it definitely does a lot to add to the joy in my life.

*Not Done 12- at least 2 Books- I didn't even finish one
      Done- A "Greenman" inspired drawing-  I just have to finish the roots

Still working on it:
4- Submit to a writing contest or publication
    Clean out dresser and nightstand drawers

Items from 101 List:

Done- A. Family/Friends: 2nd Sunday- New To Me

Done- B. Business:  101 in 1001 workbook pages- 6 of them

Done- C. Hobby:  Make scrapbook/design book for inspiration for remake it projects

Done- D. Writing: 1 chapter on Addie, 1 chapter on Dove- and then some

Done- E. Heath: Eat at least 1 serving fruit or veg per day- this was very challenging for me. I learned that leaving fruit out on the counter actually inspires us to eat it more. Vegetables where I can see them in the fridge does the same.

Done- F. Financial: Start 52 week money challenge

Done- G. Spiritual: Yule 2014 art journal pages, Entry in Determining Sacred Journal on the virtues of quiet progress

Done- H. Bedlem: Characters Welcome sign, fill out more drink recipes for book and seal them in.- and I'm excited over them.

*Not Done- I.  Travel/Adventure: 1 Popsicle stick location- I just didn't want to.

Done- J. Material:  Clean out jammie/nightie drawer-  To the point where I cleaned out an entire drawer.

Done- K. Learn: Zen Art journaling- I found this tedious and not meditative or fun at all. I like actually creating something with an end rather than just a bleh.

Overall I consider it a win, and am already excited and into February. :)

How'd January go for you?


Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Quiet Productivity

In August I started a job where I interact with a wide variety of people from all walks of life, and in a capacity that is more than simple pleasantries. I like to engage them. Why they are in my office is generally due to some circumstance in life. This becomes a topic of conversation commonly. The statement that I actually know these people will never come out of my mouth, but I am starting to understand more about people in general, and how similar we all truly are.

I have a friend that I love dearly. She is strong, courageous and tenacious. She also is always in motion. One day when she was complaining about her to-do list, I asked her why she felt the need to constantly be on the go and her reply was simple, "How else does anything get done?"  

This happens at my work as well. In exhausted tones accented by copious eye-rolls people list to me all the things they *must* accomplish in a day, the running, the errands that fill the hours around work and family obligations.
Yet, no one can answer me when I ask them why this is so important.

But the answer is pretty clear, society has trained us so well that we feel if we are not moving we are not doing or accomplishing. If we are not actively engaged in every moment then we are lazy. If we are not out of the house, it is not a date.
How many times have we heard, or said, "I just want to sit, but I can't because..." or "I feel so lazy because I didn't accomplish.." task 34 out of 40 in one day.  How about, "I was so bad last night, I just sat and watched TV"?

Balderdash, I say.

In 2010 a LexisNexis Survey of 1,700 white collar workers in 5 industrialized nations showed that employees spend more than half of their time processing information instead of using that time to do their jobs. This information, flying at us from meetings, peers, internet, data, etc. may pertain to our job but it's filling our lives to a breaking point. A survey by Harris Interactive in 2012 showed that the average American takes only 9 vacation days per year, as opposed to the mandatory 20 of the EU. Most of those 9 days weren't actually spent on vacation but on other forms of "work".

We know what happens when our bodies are constantly engaged, they tire. They break.
So do our brains.
Essayist Time Kreider wrote in The New York Times, "Idleness is as indispensable to the brain as vitamin D is to the body, and deprived of it we suffer a mental affliction as disfiguring as rickets. The space and quiet idleness provides is, paradoxically, necessary to getting work done."

A collection of studies on the daily routines and habits of extraordinary athletes and musicians, and the habits of office workers has revealed that while relaxing and unwinding the brain does not shut down. Instead it becomes sharper.  In the same fashion that sleep primarily aids in many genetic, molecular and physiological processes, so does daytime downtime, thus enhancing creativity, cognizance, motivation and memory retention. The athletes and musicians spent time outside of their work more than those in an office setting. They took breaks. Took vacations. Spent time outside. Their performance and creativity was enhanced by the experience over those who did not. Scans of their brains showed centers for comprehension and empathy were heightened after such breaks. On memory tests the athletes and musicians scored in the 80th percentiles. The office workers did not fair so well across the board, their memory retention averaging about half that of the athletes and musicians.

Dating back as far as 1929 scientists and researchers have known that the brain gobbles up as much as 20% of the energy our body uses in a day. Daydreaming, scientifically known as DMN (default mode network) exists in 5 resting state networks- vision, hearing, movement, attention and memory. Just like every other network we are familiar with in our world, if you overuse it, it will break. This is the mental exhaustion that hits around mid-afternoon on Monday and seems to haunt us the rest of the week.

More recently research on the DMN conducted at the University of Southern California found that the resting brain is anything but idle, and downtime is essential to smooth conduct of the mental processes that affirm our identities, solidify our ethics and develop our understanding of human behaviour. When we wear this out we become less empathetic to those around us and much, much harder on ourselves. Our judgments become clouded and rushed or decisions we wouldn't normally make plague us.

A 2006 study in Amsterdam showed that daydreaming allows us clearer retrospect from which to learn from going forward, epiphanies strike, problems become solved, and we do not second guess our decisions.

Study after study proves that we require downtime, so why are people so reticent to take it? Because we are told we need a magazine ready home, kids have to be engaged every moment, errands can never wait, and we, as an industrialized society, live to work instead of the reverse because keeping up with the neighbors is somehow important.

How do we stop this draining and potentially damaging behavior?  Prioritize.
Is answering the calls from your boss at 7pm really more important than having dinner with loved ones?
Is running your kids everywhere for an array of activities really more important than taking a "discovery walk" with them at a park?
Is hitting the gym putting the weekly report on the bookstand while you run really better than taking a hike?
The house doesn't need to be immaculate, it needs to be lived in and enjoyed.
What is genuinely important to your heart, happiness and life?

Still feel the need to be "productive"? Put in a movie, sit down in front of it and read. Or make a list. Or doodle, even if you can't draw. Play a game. Several of my creative ideas are born from those moments. Take a nature walk with a bird book, or a plant book. You'll breathe and you'll learn.
Quiet times, peaceful moments are some of the most productive you will have.
So slow down.
It's okay. In fact, it seems it's required for good mental health.

Friday, January 16, 2015

Life By Numbers Mid-January 2015 Progress Report

We've hit the halfway point! It's absolutely *insane* for me to process that we're two weeks through 2015 already when it feels like Samhain was only yesterday.
My Yule decorations are still up even!  Perhaps I should have included taking them down on my January list, buuuut, since I use Winter as a theme, I can get away with them being up a little bit longer. ;)

At this point some progress should be started on Life By Numbers, so, graced with a surprise day off from work, I decided to evaluate how I'm coming. This is an important part of the project. If we don't check in, we don't know where we're at. I learned that the hard way my first time around with this.

365- This is my daily journal. It's going. I love the book I found to write it in, and I think that helps. I've come to find I like spiral bound books best because I like to fold the covers back. Sometimes I get a bit behind in a day, but curling up with a tea at night has become a lovely ritual.

52- A recipe each week:  Thusfar I have created a bone marrow broth that is a delicious base for soups, and a cajun spiced tortellini and sausage soup that we all just devoured.

30- Spend at least 10 minutes in contact with the cats. I don't know if it's actually helping my health since my blood pressure hasn't changed and I'm not generally a sad person, BUT they are becoming closer to me. They now greet me at the door and make a point to be with me for longer periods of time than ever before. It's lead to some amusing and joyful moments that I cherish, and that is always a good thing.

12- Book: I'm reading The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis. Despite it being a quick read it's slow going for me as I feel like I have so many other things I'd like to be doing. This is highly unusual for me as I normally devour a book a week.
       Art:  I have been working on a Greenman drawing, a winter woodman in theme, one I've not seen before. I'm very excited about him.

4- Submit a piece of writing to a contest or publication: I haven't even begun to research this. I should but I get so nervous just thinking about it that I procrastinate by doing *anything* else. I think this is why I put it in the "once every quarter" category.

101-
A. Host a Sunday Gathering (planned for the 25th) Email Terri (Done!)
B. Create a 101 in 1001 workbook page (not even close yet, maybe this weekend)
DONE C. Inspiration remake it pages- catalog photos ripped out and organized into inspiration pages (Done!), 1 scrapbook pg (Done 2!)
D. 1 Chapter each- Addie (2 and still going!), Red (2 and going!), Dove (not yet)
E. Eat at least one serving of colorful fruit/veg each day. (so far, so good!)
F. 52 week money thing ($3 in! lol)
G. PBP- autonomy, ancestors or journal thoughts on evil, and quiet progress (lots of thinking here)
H. Organize and add to Bedlam Drink Recipes book, washi tape for sides (coming along, have two more new ones to add)
I. 1 popsicle stick location (thinking the Webster museum)
DONE J. Remake it/Dematerial: clean out jammie drawer (Done!)  and/or remake Okracoke shell into viable necklace (Done!)
DONE K. Art Journal or Zentangle (Did the latter and hated it. I found it boring and tedious and not "Zen" at all but I'm glad I tried it)

Progress is being made here at Bedlem!

How's it going in your world?

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Life By Numbers- January 2015

I've been encouraged to create a workbook or printed pages, but I've not yet gotten around to it (I probably should put it on my 101 list! lol). Instead I have lined paper, a handy pen and I sit down at the end of every month and go through my lists to come up with what I want to work on the next month. Since it's the beginning of the year, I also made a list of little changes to update/change some of the numbers from last year.

Here's the breakdown for this month. I hope you enjoy or find inspiration. :) 

365- maintain the same journal I have for the past few years that includes: quote, weather(2011), gratitude (2012), 5 good things (2013), something magical (2014) and now I am going to track my 30 day progress and if I wake with a song in my head, that gets added too.

52- keep trying  new recipe a week, including making them up.
      Now I'm adding the 52 week money challenge. $1 the first week, $2 the second, etc for the full year.

30- According to studies at least 10 minutes a day of fuzzy pet contact (not just watching, engaged contact) is good for the overall physical and mental health of a person. Do this with the cats and actually make and effort to notice changes.

12- at least 2 Books, one must be from the 30 book challenge list
       A "Greenman" style or inspired drawing a month

4- Submit to a writing contest or publication
    Clean out dresser and nightstand drawers

Items from 101 List:

A. Family/Friends: Wreath paintings for gifts, 2nd Sunday- New To Me, possible Sunday Social
B. Business:  101 in 1001 workbook pages
C. Hobby:  Make scrapbook/design book for inspiration for remake it projects
D. Writing: 1 chapter on Addie, 1 chapter on Dove
E. Heath: Eat at least 1 serving fruit or veg per day
F. Financial: Start 52 week money challenge
G. Spiritual: Yule 2014 art journal pages, Entry in Determining Sacred Journal on the virtues of quiet progress
H. Bedlem: Characters Welcome sign, fill out more drink recipes for book and seal them in.
I.  Travel/Adventure: 1 Popsicle stick location*
J. Material:  Clean out jammie/nightie drawer and nightstand drawer
K. Learn: Art journalling

*Last year I looked up a bunch of weird, small local destinations online- from tiny museums to parks- and wrote them on popsicle sticks. I then put them in a small bucket and when I want to do something but am at a loss, I pull one out.

Already this month I have accomplished F., mostly completed a Greenman piece of art, have half of J done, this weeks recipe (marrow broth), and am sticking with my 365, 30 day and E goals. They are small so that helps a lot towards not being discouraged.

What does your January look like?