Saturday, February 7, 2026
Freedom From Bondage
Thursday, February 5, 2026
There's That Hairy Monster Again
I had a long conversation yesterday with a young man who grew up in foster homes, and to this day doesn't know who is parents are. Almost every time we speak he surprises me with some behavior that I should have known about - that it would have been healthy for him to tell me about, to tell someone about, anybody, some homeless dude just to hear himself talk - but that I did not, in fact, know about. I don't think he's trying to hide anything or to deceive anyone - I think it doesn't occur to him to talk to another person about stuff that's going on. For instance, he seems to have problems with a fear of abandonment. No shit, right? To be abandoned as a child, to feel unloved, to be raised in a chaotic environment, and then try to sustain a healthy relationship with other people? I see him careen between taking hostages and continuing to pursue relationships that clearly aren't working. None of this makes him a bad guy or a fatally flawed one but I'm continually surprised when he casually mentions spending time with someone who behaved in a way - not long ago - that convinced him the relationship was over. I find myself saying: "Wait . . . what? You did what? With that person?" I'm more surprised that he isn't keeping me in the loop over his behavior than with the behavior itself. I understand why two incompatible people who are driving each other mental keep returning to their own conjoined, codependent mental institution but why he doesn't think to loop me in is the cipher. I don't think he's worried that I'll tell him not to do something - I think it just doesn't occur to him to talk to someone else about what he's doing.
I will occasionally shoot off a text to a young woman whose father is an intractable homeless dude, a man who has been homeless for a long time and doesn't seem interested in changing, a man who is uninterested in being part of her life. So guess what? She's a fiercely independent person, not at all needy, who manages her life just fine most of the time. But, on occasion, I'll get a long reply full of drama and anger that shows me that she is not used to including anyone else in what's going on. Not me, not anyone, and I see how this isolation can really be a hindrance to a calm, collected day.
I'm convinced that we all get used to not having something and then if we get it we're surprised at how much we missed it and how satisfying it is to have it.
Misery: A condition of great wretchedness or suffering; extreme unhappiness. It's not dropping your ice cream cone - it's having a hairy monster steal your ice cream cone, eat it in one bite, and then kidnap you and carry you off to his cave.
Suffering: When painful emotions get activated in response to a difficult circumstance; the state of undergoing pain, stress, or hardship.
I read these two excellent words in The Big Book recently. When I staggered into A.A. I was suffering in misery. Misery is what I was enduring. I believe the old aphorism which states: "Pain is inevitable - suffering is optional." Today this kind of wisdom, hard-earned, often makes me immune to the suffering - for the most part or at least helps me manage it - when difficult things happen to me. I can feel the pain but I have the tools to deal with it so I don't descend into long-term suffering.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Timing Is Everything
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Ha! Ha! I Mean . . . Do'h!
Monday, February 2, 2026
Art!!
SuperK is the painter in the family. I'm the writer. I'm using those two terms generously. She isn't selling $10,000 paintings in trendy SoHo galleries and I'm not super busy with book signings at this point. But both of us are trying to tickle our creative sweet tooth - this is a good example of crashing parts of two totally distinct idioms together and ending up with an incomprehensible phrase - and staying engaged with our creative sides. I think it's important to exercise all parts of our being, and creating something new, all by yourself, whether or not it's worthy of a book signing or a gallery opening is not really the point. We learn to take care of our physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual lives. We learn to nurture all aspects of our being.
There's a new guy at my meeting who's a professional photographer. I mean "professional" as in he traveled and took pictures for magazine publications, photographed weddings, took portraits, and had showings at galleries. Today, trudging the early road of sobriety, he has a job taking pictures of newborns and their parents at a local hospital. He's content doing this. It cannot help but be satisfying being around people who are experiencing such a joyous moment. I suspect, however, that at some point this kind of work won't be as satisfying as it is today. I'm not a photographer but it sounds repetitive and not very challenging.
I'm not sure where I'm going with this. Maybe just a personal reminder that I have to take care of my whole being. I don't sit in front of The TV all the time. I think the average American has The TV on six or seven hours a day. I don't know how you do that. I couldn't do that when I was drinking and was too drunk to get up off the couch. When I compose a post on my blog I usually do some initial writing and then come back to the page later to review what I've written, and I almost always change some phrases around so they're more to my liking. To me they sound better and I'm really writing for me. I so much appreciate that you're reading this - it fills my heart up tick-full - but the pleasure is rereading my final draft and thinking: "Hey, that's good - that's what I was trying to say."
SuperK's work as a painter has helped me understand art in a much more significant way. She tells me often that I have a pretty good eye with a camera. I believe that because of our talks about perspective and composition and subject I can now see - sometimes, anyway - why a photograph I've taken catches my eye in a way that most of them don't. Any photographs I take that look good can be chalked up to dumb luck but it's gratifying to understand more fully why a picture is pleasing or why it doesn't grab my attention,