The 4 Non Blondes’ hit song “What’s Up?”

i learned this past week that it takes seven days of shouting words of encouragement, direction, witty banter to lose my voice. i am loud. i am large. for seven days i was given an opportunity to hold space for participants of a large event sometimes only seconds at a time, up to twice a day. “if this isn’t ministry work i don’t know what is,” i messaged a friend who shares a similar calling.

debriefing the experience with a mentor earlier today she said something along the lines of “the more we share love and gratitude with others, the more we then embody it ourselves.” this was the validation i needed. i am exhausted. i am spent. i am addict – i want to do it again. holding space gets me high.

something that has become a common narrative for me over the past couple of months: when I have self-acceptance around being awkward & queer it creates a space where another can be more vulnerable & authentic. this takes some energy on my part but the return is often — not always! — of benefit to me1. i get to share the joy that said authenticity brings and i get to be a part of the good vibes. even tears are good vibes. there were lots of tears last week.

sometimes people just need a “good morning, sunshine.” at maximum volume at 7am. or perhaps a “welcome back to camp! you did it!” later in the early evening. my self-appointed job was to provide a small space (physical? emotional? metaphysical?) for the people to feel seen, loved, accepted.

  1. so selfish!

gorbachev

it’s been a minute. i’m too lazy to look at the date of my last post. i think it was a quote: so not really mine to begin with. post-lockdown (pre-second-lockdown?) life is busy. in mostly good ways, some a bit overwhelming.

i relish the times when the universe puts me in a spot where i’m asked/told/unknowingly invited to hold space. the past few weeks have presented me with a few such opportunities. i’m still dipping my toes back in after some time away. some times it’s like sitting down in a mountain river in late summer. the temperature is not too cold, but cold enough to remind you of where it came from. other times i urgently, briskly walk in the other direction. “nope.”

after months last year of stripping any interpersonal intuition. creating a misguided, haphazardly curated gallery of crackpot feelings, emotions, sensory “experiences”, mystical revelations, realities. it would make sense for me to write something like, “was it real?” “was it authentic?”

short answer: sure? i lived it, i made decisions that framed my life in that hazy filter. in that poorly rendered early version of augmented reality. i felt and experienced it. but in hindsight, it feels so disconnected. another cliché thing to write: it felt disconnected like in a dream. hazy filter. i’m running with that. the sum of all this was that earlier this year when things turned around a bit i realized that my bandwidth was limited for a number of reasons. mostly, i need(ed) to direct that time and energy to myself. holding space was not an option. the dealing with other peoples’ proverbial stuff store was operating limited hours. i had to be protective of myself. i was fragile. i am fragile.

she’s been doing Previews now. it’s been nice to feel my spirit open up a bit to other peoples’. to be honest i was beginning to get a bit worried i would forever be walled off. that the berlin wall i built around myself was a permanent fixture. that i would forever be standing on my 4th floor balcony of my brutalist East Berlin apartment longingly looking out at europe across the way.

well reagan had other plans apparently. feelings are returning. i just have to be sure to find that balance between selfless and selfish.

what a fucking trip, man. this life. but as i sit here, typing, i’ve got the tiniest of smiles cracked because for how much crazy has gone on, here i am. now. alright. ready for what’s next. ready to be equally alright with whatever it will be.