Friday, December 20, 2013

Reclaiming Christmas

Six years ago, my mother committed suicide six days before Christmas. Needless to say, the holidays weren’t exactly jolly.

In my world, Jesus’ birth never brought anything but broken promises, lumpy gravy, dead pigs, and reindeer sweaters. Adding funerals to the list didn’t make it any better.

As an anti-commercialist vegetarian, the month of misery usually serves to strengthen my position. December forever reminds me of dead family members, despair, and disillusionment. I know I’m not alone. Thousands of people fear the most stressful time of year. At every corner you turn, America’s multi-billion dollar advertising industry gladly reminds you of your inadequacy, lack of money, family, friends, or love of meat. This time of year, there’s no room for you inside society’s norms of normalcy. Here’s the season for depression, heart attacks, suicide, and sorrow.  

As a child, I remember crying desperately outside my mother’s door for hours, hoping she’d come out to share the Christmas meal with grandma and me. Sometimes she emerged from her dark cave right before my dad rang the doorbell. Then she rushed back into her abode of misery. Cursing me for letting the devil in. Other times she stayed in her room until we went home. I left my neatly decorated and carefully selected gifts outside her door along with my tears for years.


Until I realized, I make myself wallow in misery. I don’t have to keep telling myself the same cruel Christmas carol every year. I hold the power to change. The past remains the past, but the future’s all mine. This year, I start making new traditions. I’ll immerse myself in yoga and meditation instead of Macy’s madness. I’ll design cards with personalized poems for my friends. My marinated Tofurky will make meat lovers reconsider their dead birds. I’ll even light a candle for my mother, and pray I can forgive her after six sorrowful years. This year, I reclaim Christmas. Meditation, creation, forgiveness, and flow. Now if that’s not a proper way to celebrate Christ, I don’t know what is.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

I work out for me! Or do I…?

“Damn girl, keep doing what you’re doing! If you keep it up you’ll be married within a week. I know, you got that look. But make sure you don’t burn, ain’t nobody want no red chick..!”

As I ran around the lake, I passed by these motivating fellas, shouting me along my path. I laughed all the way home (while I put on my sweater to block the sun’s burning rays), thinking of how far away from the truth they were. But then I started reflecting on it. Am I really working out just for me?

I love to think I work out strictly for myself: “because it makes me feel good,” or due to its health benefits. But how good do I really feel trying to get up from that tenth pushup, and how healthy is blacking out at the end of a spin-class?

And then we have lunges. I honestly believe the devil created lunges. Would I really suffer through these hellish moves if I didn’t expect someone to look at my bare butt once in a while?

I sure don’t think I’ll attract a husband by running around the lake a couple of times a week. But I don’t think it pulls down the odds either.

Memories of suddenly falling in love with the stair-master every time I fell in love with a new man started emerging. Reluctantly, I had to admit that maybe, just maybe, I work out for others too.

Thankfully, I do yoga just for me. However, I can’t deny I like answering “yes” to “so, you’re a yoga teacher, are you like really bendy and shit?” A comment that probably counts more as a warning sign than anything else.


Damn it! At least I still have pole dancing. I’m sure that one is just for me..!