Showing posts with label generation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label generation. Show all posts

3/26/2013

Pretty by Katie Makkai - Poetry Slam 2002

To my daughters and to all girls out there:

“Mom, will I be pretty? Will I be pretty?” I will wipe that question from your mouth like cheap lipstick and answer, “No! The word pretty is unworthy of everything you will be, and no child of mine will be contained in five letters.

The Priceless Truth - thank you Katie Makkai for being a VOICE and LIGHT shining Truth upon people living conformity (camouflaged in everyday influence). Thank you!

   
Katie Makkai, a veteran poetry slammer - defining the word "pretty".
National Poetry Slam 2002 [Team Denver, CO]

Transcript:

Pretty by Katie Makkai

When I was just a little girl, I asked my mother, “What will I be? Will I be pretty? Will I be pretty? Will I be pretty? What comes next? Oh right, will I be rich?” Which is almost pretty depending on where you shop. And the pretty question infects from conception, passing blood and breath into cells. The word hangs from our mothers' hearts in a shrill fluorescent floodlight of worry.

“Will I be wanted? Worthy? Pretty?” But puberty left me this funhouse mirror dryad: teeth set at science fiction angles, crooked nose, face donkey-long and pox-marked where the hormones went finger-painting. My poor mother.

“How could this happen? You'll have porcelain skin as soon as we can see a dermatologist. You sucked your thumb. That's why your teeth look like that! You were hit in the face with a Frisbee when you were 6. Otherwise your nose would have been just fine!

“Don't worry. We'll get it fixed!” She would say, grasping my face, twisting it this way and that, as if it were a cabbage she might buy.

But this is not about her. Not her fault. She, too, was raised to believe the greatest asset she could bestow upon her awkward little girl was a marketable facade. By 16, I was pickled with ointments, medications, peroxides. Teeth corralled into steel prongs. Laying in a hospital bed, face packed with gauze, cushioning the brand new nose the surgeon had carved.

Belly gorged on 2 pints of my blood I had swallowed under anesthesia, and every convulsive twist of my gut like my body screaming at me from the inside out, “What did you let them do to you!”

All the while this never-ending chorus droning on and on, like the IV needle dripping liquid beauty into my blood. “Will I be pretty? Will I be pretty? Like my mother, unwrapping the gift wrap to reveal the bouquet of daughter her $10,000 bought her? Pretty? Pretty.”

And now, I have not seen my own face for 10 years. I have not seen my own face in 10 years, but this is not about me.

This is about the self-mutilating circus we have painted ourselves clowns in. About women who will prowl 30 stores in 6 malls to find the right cocktail dress, but haven't a clue where to find fulfillment or how wear joy, wandering through life shackled to a shopping bag, beneath those 2 pretty syllables.

About men wallowing on bar stools, drearily practicing attraction and everyone who will drift home tonight, crest-fallen because not enough strangers found you suitably fuckable.

This, this is about my own some-day daughter. When you approach me, already stung-stayed with insecurity, begging, “Mom, will I be pretty? Will I be pretty?” I will wipe that question from your mouth like cheap lipstick and answer, “No! The word pretty is unworthy of everything you will be, and no child of mine will be contained in five letters.

“You will be pretty intelligent, pretty creative, pretty amazing. But you, will never be merely 'pretty'.”

3/18/2013

Boosting Your Positive Outlook: Tips & Tricks

The following information received from a Positive Outlook / Stress Management session I attended a few years ago. The presenter and the information was provided by: Shepell FGI


Stress is not an event that "happens to us". Our beliefs and perceptions of events are more important than the actual events in determining our level of stress.

When "Stress" occurs (EVENT) how do I typically react (INTERPRETATION)?
Do I react with a state of: Stress | Neutral | Positive 

When we're in the "Stress Whirlpool" the cycle typically looks like this:


Crooked Thinking Habits

Many of us fall into the trap of 'Crooked Thinking'. This term refers to patterns of thought that increase our negativity, fears or worry levels, and as a result elevate our stress levels as well. Such patterns end up altering our view of ourselves and of the world around us.

It is important to note that all Crooked Thinking involves some form of distortion. A number of these distortions seem to be very common and are shared by many in Western society. The good news is that distorted thinking is simply a bad habit. And like any bad habit, one can eliminate or minimize the habit to a point where it  no longer is a problem. The first step is to understand what Crooked Thinking  actually is and what common distortions are present in most cases.

Here are some common forms of thought distortions. You can find more on these and other common thoughts distortions in any book written by Dr. David D. Burns.

Personalization: When we hold ourselves responsible for things over which we have little or no influence, or which have only a minimal connection to us, we are participating in personalization. For example, if a colleague is in a grumpy mood, it would be rational to ask ourselves, "What's going on that he's in such a bad mood?".
However, if we engage in the habit of personalizing, we ask, "What did I do?".
Two useful tools to break out of the crooked thinking pattern of personalization are:
(1) asking ourselves, "Does this realistically have anything to do with me?", and
(2) reminding ourselves of Reinhold Niebuhr's Serenity Prayer:


Magnification or Minimization: This thinking habit occurs when the impact of an event, or our role in it is exaggerated. "Awfulizing" or "Catastrophizing" fall into this category. For example, if I'm having difficulty at work, but I tell myself that I am about to be fired, I am engaging in catastrophic thinking. To challenge this bad thinking habit, we need to ask ourselves, "What is an accurate, realistic description of my actions, or this event?" Talking about an event with others can be helpful, since they can often provide a third-party perspective to help us examine the situation rationally.

All-or-nothing thinking: This type of crooked thinking occurs when we think in absolute black or white terms, with no room for grays. I'm either perfect, or useless. Someone is either wonderful, or hopeless. The future is either heaven or hell. To move into a realistic framework, all-or-nothing thinkers need to look for middle ground where people and events are a mix of good and bad, positive and negative, helpful and unhelpful.

Mind Reading:  When we engage in mind reading, we assume that we know what others are thinking, or what they need or want - usually to our detriment. For instance, going to a party and thinking people are not talking to you because they know you've just gained five pounds is taking the "mind reading" distortion to an absurdity. When we are guilty of mind reading, we need to remember to gather data and information from other people not to assume that we know what they are thinking.

Discounting the Positives: This thinking error occurs when the negative aspects of an event are attended to and the positive aspects are ignored. The phrase, "Seeing the glass half empty" speaks to this particular thinking habit. To break this thinking habit, we need to see events in their entirety, not to focus only on the negative aspects.

"Should / Ought / Must" thinking: When we engage in should/ought/must thinking we habitually set perfectionistic or unrealistic standards for ourselves and others. Statements such as, "My children should be more obedient" or "My husband ought to be more thoughtful" suggest that the current status quo is inadequate, thereby creating stress. To break this habit, we need to become more accepting of "what is" and set standards that can be realistically met.

"Blame" thinking: Blaming others or oneself for events that have occurred, whether or not this assignment of blame is accurate, is a common thinking error. It is premised on the belief that if something has gone wrong, someone must be responsible for it. But this is not always the case, or accurate accountabilities may be complex and inter-related. To alter this thinking habit, we need to be willing to take the time to understand how events occurred, and not immediately point fingers at others.


Negative Thought Diamond





Thought Samplers:
  • No one else seems to struggle the way I do.
  • I just know we're destroying the ozone layer quicker than experts say, soon we'll have nothing left.
  • Feeling like an outsider will always plague my life.
  • My boss is making unreasonable demands.
  • I'll never be able to get my life "together".
  • No one loves me.
  • The way things are today, kids don't have a future.
  • The problem is so big, I won't be able to cope with it.
  • She didn't really mean what she said, you can't trust anyone.
  • No one ever helps me. They just don't care.
  • I'm hopeless.


Steps for the "Daily Catch"

1. Recognize when you are participating in excessive negative thinking or experiencing excessive stress in your body.

2. Record the situation / events which triggered the negative thoughts or stress.

3. Record all Negative Thoughts that emerged (at least 4-6 thoughts).

4. Identify if these thoughts focus on self, other, future or the world.

5. For each Negative Thought, write down other, more reasonable response based on a clear, rational assessment of the facts (at least 3-4 responses for each negative thought).

Examples:

Triggering Event: My boss just called and asked about the progress of the last project he assigned.

Negative Thought: I should have had it done by now.
Focus of Negative Thought (Self, Others, World, Future): Self.
Reasonable Response: I have not done it by now, because there was no deadline on the project. | He told me other projects were priority right now. | I did complete significant pieces of it, so it'll be clear that I am dedicated and competent.

Negative Thought: He's so useless! He knows nothing at all about delegating!
Focus of Negative Thought (Self, Others, World, Future): Other
Reasonable Response: He asked about the "progress" - not if it's done.

Negative Thinking and Organizational Change: The Deadly Duo

Many of us experience "tough going" when we're surrounded by organizational change. A merger, a round of downsizing, changes in senior leadership - these all create enormous stress. Less extreme changes like getting a new IT system, or a new supervisor, count too! And most of us respond to these stressors by participating in negative thinking. When our means of earning a livelihood starts to shake, we react with fear. Thoughts such as "I'm going to loose my job", "I can't work with this new person" or "The end result of all these changes will be disaster" fill our minds and at times seem to swamp us.

So... if you're experiencing organizational change, take note! If a lot of people are impacted by the change, anticipate to see negativity in the work environment. But you don't have to be part of the problem. Use the Becoming Aware tool frequently to catch small negative thoughts as they pop up. Recognize the stress you're experiencing, and find ways to manage it that are more helpful than indulging in negative thinking. Maintain a proactive, flexible and patient attitude. Look for opportunities in the new changes. Be an exception to the rule, and react to workplace change positively. Decide to be part of the solution!

There's more than one way to...

When we get stuck in looking at an issue from only one perspective, our body reacts with by becoming stressed! Being able to see a situation from more than one perspective is a skill we can all develop to reduce our stress levels. In the book "Managing Your Mind", Butler and Hope offer the following list of questions to help us get better at seeing both the forest and the trees:
  • What are the facts?
  • Does my thinking fit the facts?
  • Could I be making a mistake in how I'm thinking?
  • Am I thinking straight?
  • What other points of view are there?
  • How would someone else (my partner, my boss, a friend...) think about this?
  • What is the worst that can happen?
  • What can I do if that worst case scenario happens?
  • Who can help me with this situation?

And last but not least - probably the most important - the key to positive outlook and happiness is always GRATITUDE.

Keep a GRATITUDE journal always near by and ensure to update it daily!





Related Resources:

www.Mandalacoach.com

www.lifepositive.com

www.meditationsociety.com

 

1/30/2013

How Peace, Love & Misunderstanding can Bring on Understanding

Here are more of my thoughts and review with regards to the movie: Peace, Love & Misunderstanding (2011)

My first blogpost regarding this movie can be accessed here:
http://tammymathieu.blogspot.ca/2013/01/choosing-to-judge-is-my-problem.html

This is a more in-dept follow-up.



I connected with the mother, in a sense – but for me it was the resentment piece.
She resented her mother for being who she was, carefree.
She didn’t want to understand her mother’s way (the grandmother’s way);
And so blocked her out.
…and then at the end when she goes to bail her out, and her mother explains (something like):
“Now that you have children and know that love, how would you feel if one of them rejected you for 20 years?”
Ah-man that hit me in the gut.

We create our own judgements and “interpretations” as to what’s ‘right (for us)’ – and then build our lives on this “belief”.
What really happens – is all in our heads – we ‘think’ everyone else should see and think the same way, and if they don’t; then there’s something wrong with “them”.

The whole movie’s “message” (for me) was about Judgement.
The daughter judging her mother, and the mother judging her mother (the grandmother);
And the daughter judging the butcher / boyfriend.
The husband judging the wife (at the end when he states something like, I didn’t know you all had “that” kind of fun).

And then the fun part of the “message” was about “letting go”, that’s the [Peace, Love and Misunderstandings].
We create judgement upon ourselves by not “letting go”; we’re blocking our own truths.

Sure in the movie they included drinking and drugs – and the whole “Hippy” lifestyle – but I think that “stuff” was just marketing for Hollywood sales.
It just make things easier to understand “quickly”, since the “Hippy” lifestyle is already a stereotype most people know about.
Had they marketed the movie about a Grandmother living a spiritual new-age lifestyle, would it have had the same effect (and sales)??

Maybe some people really do live that way, and maybe they don’t – again we’re not to judge, we’re just to choose to love & understand. …we don’t need to do the same – we just need to “get over our-self-made beliefs” and Let Go (of everything outside of us).

The carefree piece was a sight of beauty (for me). Maybe at times, for the movie’s sake – it went overboard (sex, drugs and …well extras!)
But the foundation for that Grandmother was there – this was HER story, HER choices.
How many of us can claim to live our choices, freely… really?
We don’t. And why? Because of exactly this – we judged her choices and made them wrong.
And why…? She’s not us… and so this IS the piece we need to Let Go.

This “meaning” is similar to what the boy says at the end about judgement (having someone want to change someone else): “that’s your problem” …and not hers. The Grandmother found her “peace” and is choosing to live it. She understood what her daughter was going through and knew she had some “releasing” to do, but ultimately she pretty much just let her do her own thing and just “welcomed” her back into her life with Love.
How many of us could do this, just welcome “lost” ones back into our lives with open arms – after the hurt and abandonment? And to choose not to judge “them”…

There were several underlining messages and I’m sure they spoke differently to each of us, and I’m sure the “messages” get received very differently at different times in our lives.

I enjoyed it overall, and am looking forward to hosting Feminine Full Moon Evenings! ;)








6/20/2012

Having Fun Discovering Your Roots

Read an article in The Costco Connection (dated Nov/Dec 2009) titled: Discover Your Roots - Going Online to Trace Your Family Tree, by Paul Lima.

http://www.costcoconnection.ca/connectioncaeng/20091112?pg=35#pg35

The main outline of the article described how to get started and offered a few suggested sites.
I really liked Paul Lima's get-started list:

1. List all of your known relatives.
2. Interview your relatives, beginning with the eldest, and collect the names of all of their known relatives and place of birth and death.
3. Conduct research into family names on the internet.
4. Use Internet genealogy message boards to connect with others tracing similar family names.
5. If family information is not online, review records in church parishes located where relatives were born, married and/or died.
6. Document and organize what you find.

 I've always been interested in wanting to complete a family genealogy project - and do realize that this isn't something that can get completed over a weekend... hence why I've probably been putting it off. But time isn't sometime I can just retract and so making this a priority in my life (while I still have important key people around) probably needs to be brought forward.

I've also just recently embarked on a new business adventure - which kind-of fits in perfectly with this type of project. I'm a new consultant for Heritage Makers (www.kreativescraps.ca). HM is an online digital scrapbooking website (tool) that would allow me to meet all of my Family Tree needs; by allowing me to Tell My Story in my very own Heritage Story Book.

Coming back to The Costco Connection (dated Nov/Dec 2009) titled: Discover Your Roots - Going Online to Trace Your Family Tree, by Paul Lima - I'd like to provide a listing of some of his suggested genealogy website of choices:

www.1930census.com General reference for US Federal Census

www.ancestry.ca Canadian family history records online

www.archives.gov The National Archives and Record Administration (US)

www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/genealogy/index-e.html Library and Archives Canada, with excellent advice for beginners

www.ellisisland.org American Family Immigration History Center @ Ellis Island; site includes genealogy and passenger search tabs


www.familysearch.org Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints genealogy records and resources

www.freebmd.org.uk British ancestry site with parish birth, marriage and death certificates from 1837 on

www.immigrantships.net Volunteers focused on transcribing passenger arrival records and publishing work online

www.genuki.org.uk Census figures from ever country of England, Ireland, Wales, Scotland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man and other resources

www.loc.gov Online home of the Library of Congress

www.myfamilyinc.com Includes Genealogy.com and Ancestry.com, with more than 7 billion names and 26,000 searchable databases

www.ourroots.ca History books about pioneer towns and profiles of citizens

www.pier21.ca Canada's equivant to Ellis Island

www.rootweb.com Part of Ancestry.com


www.shipslist.com US

www.usgenweb.com US

Your Life is A Story, why Not Bring It To Life?!
Preview some our Heritage Templates:

http://www.heritagemakers.com/templateGallery.cfm?page=2&sort=communityShareDate&series=0&category=heritage&membershipType=all&searchQuery=

Here's a specific Heritage Book example:
http://www.heritagemakers.com/projectBrowserStandAlone.cfm?projectID=974682&productId=1&sponsorID=585234





Sign up for FREE here: www.kreativescraps.ca

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