Archive for March, 2008



Calm

The only thing I remember from my dreams was about text aligning, endless pages, in Times New Roman even though I wanted Arial. There were no memorable feelings attached and it wasn’t important. Today I will put those documents I have been working on to bed, hopefully, for awhile.

I found a message in my email from one of our participants in a virtual program we did with Iraqi doctors. He invited me to his Facebook page. Imagine that! I had resisted joining Facebook until now but that email compelled me to sign up. If he can do it, and feel sufficiently safe, why not? The force towards removal of boundaries continues relentlessly and this seems another sign that it is unstoppable, even by the evil people (you-know-who) our president is combating so valiantly

Some time ago I had set up a lunch with two women, Susana and Sandra, who both teach about moral leadership; one does it from the ivory tower of Harvard, to the elite and the well off, while the other does it in small villages in Nicaragua, Guinea and Peru. It seemed a good idea to bring these two women together. It meant that I would not have the entire Friday to focus on work but it was the only day that worked for all of us, and, being the connector I am, it fell in the realm of worthy causes. I got into my car and drove to Cambridge where I only found Susana who is my colleague and with whom I could have had lunch any day, not requiring the sacrifice of my precious work-at-home day. At first I was annoyed about Sandra not showing up but then remembered something that Joan used to say a lot, we plan, and God laughs. Not only did I have a wonderful lunch with Susana, I also decided to forget about the work planned for the afternoon and join Axel, Tessa and Steve at the Institute for Contemporary Art in its new home at the Boston waterfront. We had a great time. Of course I had to make up for this indulgence later at home, but it was worth every minute of it.

Tessa went off to celebrate her best friend’s 30th birthday, at a surprise party and the main reason for her quick visit to Manchester, while Steve waited for Roy (his buddy who made the tiny ramp into my sickroom some 8 months ago) and then left to see friends in Everett, taking dog Chicha along.

London and sleeps, with her Jim, across the driveway, while Tessa, Steve, Chicha, Axel and Roy are sleeping upstairs. All is peaceful, even the storm of yesterday has gone. I think I’ll start a fire and curl up with a book.

Parallel Life

I woke up from what felt like a parallel life. My dreams were so vivid, so real and,except for Axel and myself, populated by people I either don’t know or who I see very little, like minor characters or extras in my life’s play. There was the scene at the beach, a bit like Rockport but but different: the sea was shallow and the land had fjords; an amalgam of Cape Cod and Norway. A friend with a baby in her belly, who looked a bit like Fiona who also (still?) has a baby in her belly, came to visit and we talked about great places on the ocean to take babies too. The best place, we concluded was anyplace as long as you brought a nanny, while I looked out over the water of an inner harbor that was full of enormous water lillies about to break through he surface. The water was so clear you could see them growing to the surface. There was a younger woman who claimed to have worked for a store called ‘Best Leather.’ She did not know Tessa? I did not ask about DJ because it seemed so obvious that she would know him; no use wasting a question on that.

Earlier or later, temporal sequences seem meaningless in dreams, I went to what looked like a bank but was really a place where you could ‘re-balance’ your votes, the way you would re balance an investment account. I traded in my one 100% vote for one candidate and received in exchange 3 votes of 33.3% for each of three candidates. I think our district’s legislator himself did the exchange, which did not strike me as odd. I could not do the exchange for Axel though, that was illegal. These weighty things had to be done in person but the place was about to close. I got all sorts of forms for Axel to fill in. He was supposed to be waiting for me outside in a car (that looked like the old Peugeot 404 that my father had) but when I walked out of the building he was gone and I realized I did not have my cellphone with me. I walked up and down the block and then into town. At some point streams of people walked out of a building onto a street towards buses. I scanned the place from higher ground and followed a man who looked like Axel but later morphed into someone else. Eventually I found him and there was an exchange of some angry words I suspect. I can’t really remember, the images are popping like soap bells – gone!

The dreams and deep sleep were probably triggered by another very, very long day that consisted mostly of a 7 hour workshop on negotiation and conflict management, offered pro-bono to us by a local consulting firm. It was followed by another 3 hours of doing the work I couldn’t do during the workshop, getting me home 12 hours after I left it in the morning. I had brought my computer to the hotel meeting room where the workshop was held in the hope that I could do some work feigning to take notes, in the back; but the room was tiny and I was too exposed. There were long periods of lecture where I would have liked to do something else as my level of panic about everything that had to be done before I get on the plane next Wednesday mounted steadily.

I am still wondering whether it was a good use fo my time. What was good about it was the opportunity for me to be a participant and experience the event from that side. I heard my colleagues mumble before we even had started what they hoped no one would ask about expectations (we were asked as good protocol demands). We also got to gossip about the facilitators (we sometimes forget about that). It was a good reality check. This is what I was reminded of: Seven hours with a working lunch break is not good, if you cannot cover all the material, remove some rather than stuff things into the allotted time. Cases do little for me and they never capture reality like real life does. Theory before application requires so much more time lecturing. Energy in the room matters, etc. etc. Since I am doing a TOT (training of trainers) in Kabul next week, thiswas a good reminder, but it was a bit of a costly reminder of things I tend to stress anyways in my teaching. They did teach us a nice model about roles and decision making that I think I can use when there is tension about these things.

I came home to an empty house which was actually fine. With a beer and fajitas Tessa had prepared me I collapsed in front of the TV where I watched the end of one Agatha Christie mystery and then watched another mystery from murder to resolution. Halfway through it Axel came home and he watched the last ending with me. I tumbled into bed and remember nothing more except for the dream bubbles that I grasped before they vanished.

Full House

I started off the day with Obama’s speech for breakfast; food for the soul. It was the speech he made on Tuesday in Philadelphia. I listened to the entire speech while reading along with the text. It was a feast for the ears, less so for the eyes, so the YouTube video itself did little for me. The speech inspired and moved me and then moved everyone in the nation to speculate about its effect on the elections. I liked his refreshing proposal to talk about race relations. What he proposes is that we engage in productive conversations. Since that (productive conversations) is my life’s work, it resonated deeply with me.

Tessa, Steve and their fast growing puppy Chicha arrived last night just when Jim and I were getting to the final untangling of intrigue and misrepresentation by Hercule Poirot in another one of Agatha’s brilliant mysteries. That will have to wait. The puppy bounced into the house, followed by two tired drivers. They made the long trip from the Canadian London in less than 11 hours, bad weather all the way. So our house is full again; Sita’s return from the other London on Friday will complete the picture.

I dragged myself into the house only two hours earlier after a much too long day at work. My departure date of March 26 looms large, not negotiable at this point. The program for Kabul is asking for my attention. But I am not ready yet; there is much still on my desk(top) that needs to be removed.

In between the oatmeal and coffee I tried to call my niece Emilie who is in the hospital in Holland to find out how she is doing and whether she wants the book back that she sent us last summer (the Art of Idleness). I have a feeling that she could use it now. I may bring it along when I leave for Holland next Wednesday. She did not answer her phone. Cellphones are nice but they make us overconfident in our ability to reach someone, no matter where he or she is. I failed in that just now.

Last night, when Tessa and Steve had arrived I called Axel to tell him so but failed to reach him (those cellphones again). Jim had to go into town and fish him out of our local pub – it sounds so Irish, it must be the St. Pat’s day afterglow – where Woody and Gary and comrades had taken him after some town event or another. It is the usual route after every such town event. Since the accident it is not half as much fun for Axel, especially when your wife tells you ‘only non-alcoholic beer!’ I never checked and suspect he had something else. Are we acting out some age old script?

Today will not be a workday in the usual sense. A non-profit arm of a for-profit consulting group has offered to do some pro-bono work with our senior managers, that includes me, around conflict management. Such things are good for a bunch of people who thrive on harmony. It will be nice to be on the participant side of things for a change and I hope to pick up some new ideas. However, it also blows an entire work day for which I will have to pay later, no doubt.

For once Tessa does not need to read my blog to find out how I am doing. It has been the main source of information about her parents, maybe providing more information than she cares to get. For the next few days we can show and tell rather than write and read.

Fast Track

I have been working as if I were on fast train speeding towards completion. Axel had to shake me out of my trance and drag me outside for a walk. That was a good idea. It is amazing how fast a day goes by when you are on such a fast track one rail train. This is the third day in a row. I decided to stay home today so I could stay on this one track. In Cambridge that would not be possible. One week from now I will be packing my suitcase for Afghanistan. It signifies a hard stop for many things that I am trying to get off my plate; stuff I cannot postpone, things that have been patiently waiting for my attention since October but now the patience is gone.

As a result I am totally attached to my computer for 9 to 10 hours a day. I realize how risky that is. The possibility of a computer crash is the scariest thing I can imagine. So from time to time I send myself an email with the file I am working on attached. Just in case my faithful but old computer collapses, which it does in minor ways from time to time; luckily nothing that a re-boot cannot solve. So far, all has been well.

The intense work shows up in my dreams as Word document files that come to life in ways I cannot remember but faintly feel, the way I imagine one could feel synaptic connections in the brain; small recognizable bits that travel hither and dither along old and new paths, line up in columns or justified paragraphs. There is more but I lose it if I don’t write it down immediately upon waking.

Axel and I walked to the library and back. We refused a ride offered very nicely by a tired and worn Woody who has just completed two weeks at the Boston Flower Show. We explained that this was our constitutional, a health thing, and an important distraction.

When we came home the house smelled great. Jim had made a Curry Fish Chowder, a wonderful combination of the best of India and New England. We could eat fish because Sita is in London. She won’t be able to smell the fish and so we take advantage of her absence. The only thing that is good about her being away.

Tessa is coming home tomorrow for a short Easter visit with Steve and the new puppy Chicha. Both girls will be coming back from Londons, Tessa from the Ontario one and Sita from the real London. By Friday night our little family will be complete again, like we were last summer and over Christmas. This is another reason why I am trying to get as much work off my plate as possible. It would be hard to have to work when everyone is hanging out in the living room within earshot of my office. I can be pretty disciplined but that would be a bit of a challenge.

Promise

The reflection of the sun in the Putnam windows caught me straight in the eye. Before it woke me up it mingled with a theme in my dream that was about doing several things concurrently. Holding the sun in my eye and continuing the dream turned out to be too much. Wanting to, but not able to do several things at the same time is probably an accurate description of my state of mind as it relates to my workload. I have to be creative, and ask for help, in order to manage. I tell Axel to do this, so why not apply it to myself.

Yesterday I took over the facilitation of the virtual leadership course from Morsi. He has been facilitating the course for three weeks non stop and was rather tired. Taking over meant that I had to review all that had happened in the last three weeks, where each team (of 11) is, checking correspondence, their progress on tasks, etc. The module I am leading will continue till the 28th of March, when I will already be on my way to Kabul. That too I have to sort out.

There are two other virtual events that are happening or in preparation that ask for my full attention plus a whole host of non virtual stuff that require writing, thinking, designing, telephoning, etc. At times I feel like I am skating on the edge of panic. The feeling was intense enough yesterday that I decided to reserve all of Tuesday for another day of working at home. I get more done that way, being able to have long stretches of time during which I can work without interruption, something that is impossible when I go in to my office. Working from home also saves me two hours of commuting time for more productive use. Why not work from home all the time? Some of the work is being in meetings and I do love working with my colleagues and hearing the stories of people coming or going. I missed that part of my work from July till November and it is one of the reasons I do not want to be a consultant.

Yesterday afternoon Axel and I went for a walk around the loop again, hoping that it would get Axel’s muscles out of their knots. He continues to be in pain and we keep trying to figure out what happened that caused all this. Today he will see his physical therapist again and we hope the visit will bring some relief.

After our walk, in between snow and sleet an hour of mild spring weather seduced me into the garden where I started to clean out the winter debris. There are tiny green sprouts poking out of the ground everywhere; the onions are already half a foot high and one tiny Swiss Chard plant has survived the winter. If last year the garden was abundant, this year it is going to be magnificent. After I had removed the debris I stood for awhile, leaning on the rake, surveying my handiwork and contemplating this little patch so full of promise. I know this, but have to re-discover it again and again, that gardening – or any physical activity for that matter – is a good way to subdue waves of panic and neuter the stress that comes with it.

Udder Clutter

I woke up in time to write but stayed in bed until there was no more time. With this I squandered the chance to write in great detail about my dreams that included a trip with Joellen to somewhere that took forever to get started and some brilliant thoughts about my work. These have gone back to the place where all the other brilliant thoughts live, in complete obscurity and irretrievable.

I biked to Quaker meeting and counted the empty beer cans along the way. If I were to pick up all the empties, in each direction, it could buy me one gallon of orange juice each month; there is money lying on the street! It makes you wonder what happens at night on these stretches of road.

Our youngest Quaker attender was 2 weeks old, little Gemma Louise. She handled the one hour silence like a pro. I suppose that after 9 months of silence in utero, this one hour is not much of a challenge.

While riding my bike I thought much about cleaning and clearing out clutter, an ancient spring ritual that is badly needed in our house. Back home I added deed to word and started un-cluttering a very small space. It quickly became a silver cleaning chore and took much longer than intended. In the end, I realized I was just moving clutter from one place of the house to another. There is a system dynamic at work that is stronger than my or Axel’s will; it is much like putting a policeman in one neighborhood to discourage criminal activity and the crime simply moves to the next neighborhood.

I did throw out some little things without asking permission. No one will notice the missing pieces of glass, rock, sand dollars and other neat stuff that, I know, will automatically slip back into our house as soon as someone comes back from the beach.

Yesterday we went to the Flower Show in Boston to see Woody’s exhibit and cheer him on to great sales. Those have mostly been absent. He tries to sell 400 dollar plus planters and basins, wedged in between 10 dollar Christmas ornaments, an all purpose gardening tool and tubes of udder balm sold as miracle hand cream by a woman and her, now free from eczema, boy. You get a squirt if you want one. While massaging it into our hands we discovered the saleslady is also a nurse at UMass Memorial Hospital in Worcester, which led to a long conversation.

We wandered through the main horticultural displays where Axel’s father used to show his talents and wares some 30 years ago. The experience of walking on concrete for several hours reminded us of our ill-advised trip to IKEA several months ago. We can still not do this very well and we arrived home limping (me) and Axel in great (back and hip) pain. We cooked ourselves a light dinner and ate it in front of the TV. It seemed fitting to watch Moore’s documentary about the US health care system (Sicko) to forget our pains by immersing ourselves into the bad (health) luck of others. The operative phrase is ‘so you think you are covered?’  I learned about all this in my early years in the US when I delved into the world of insurance and discovered nothing but scams.  We made it about halfway through the movie when we called it a day and got our tired and sore bodies into bed.

No joke

I woke up to grey skies and rain. Axel woke up to a terrible pain in his back which required emergency massage. I settled him among pillows with a hot pad and made breakfast. It seemed like a good day for breakfast in bed; no appointments, no need to be anywhere for anyone except ourselves. While Axel’s back was calming down under the heatpad I made French toast from Italian bread, the kind that ends up like custard in between crusts of cinnamon toast. While we were eating the rain turned into snow and everything is turning white. Now there really is no point in getting up. I reserved a plane for 12:30 but I think I will let it go. There is more tea to drink, a newspaper to read and a book to finish.

Yesterday was another intense and long workday, and the juggling continues. A somewhat edgy three-party phone call with partners who we also compete with at times ended up producing strong feelings that drain people but also spur them into action; more or different than expected. This is why rational planning often underestimates time – we simply leave out such scenarios, and yet they happen all the time. I ended up spending half the day on something for which I had budgeted only an hour or so.

It was good that the St. Johns called in the middle of the afternoon to tell us that they were going into Cambridge to a comedy show; would we want to join them. Such prods from outside are good and put an end to the possibility of contemplating work beyond five o’clock. We bought the tickets, drove into town, had a bowl of Chinese noodles and sat down in the tiny third-floor comedy club, and laughed, which is what we paid for. I had not realized there were so many styles of stand-up comedy. I could not understand everything, sometimes because of accents and language and sometimes because I am a little dense or could not imagine that jokes could be made about such things. For example I did not get the KKK jokes from the black comedian and this was, how embarrassing, publicly acknowledged. Katy-Blair offered my Dutchness as an excuse which then led to more jokes. It was a tiny place and I was sitting at 2 feet from the host so every facial expression is picked up and potential material for more jokes. At least I was not asked to get on stage, that would be have been the ultimate embarrassment.

Back home we tumbled into bed, tired from the long day. And then, suddenly, out of nowhere, I relived the last few seconds before the crash; the plane veering off to the right and out of control, the trees rushing up to meet us and the sense that this was it, game over!

It took awhile to shed the image and let it go, partially because I wanted to understand why it suddenly appeared. It is true that on the 14th of the month the crash does tend to come back to the center of my attention, depite the work and other distractions. Also, Axel and I talked about his EMDR sessions with Ruth. They don’t talk all that much about the crash but yesterday they did.

What was left after the crash image disappeared was the realization, and surprise, that I think nothing of getting on a plane again.

Weighty

The fourteenth of every month still sets it apart from the others as we count backwards to July 14, 2007. We are now in month 8 post-crash and the experience is slowly splitting into three parts: the nightmare of the crash itself; the immediate response from family, friends and colleagues, combined with the effect of painkillers that make those early two months seem rather nice and then the slow up and down trajectory of healing, first in body, then in mind. We are still in part three and may continue to be for awhile.

Are we alright and our old selves again? Yes and no. Axel still walks with a slight stoop and is often in pain especially after a long walk, like the one we took yesterday. His hand is inflamed and, as he says, his head is still not quite right. Yesterday, for example, he discovered that he cannot read the newspaper and listen to the radio at the same time, something he did effortlessly 9 months ago. But from the outside he looks and acts like the old Axel and we could fool ourselves.

As for me, no one can tell from the outside that anything happened to me. The scars are hidden behind clothes and the neuropathy cannot be deduced form my gait; I sometimes forget about all this as scars and senseless toes have become so much part of my daily physical experience. But the sadness remains and has never quite gone away; sadness about things going wrong one day and tentacles that reach out from that time into the present, never quite relinquishing their grip. It is like a heavy weight on my shoulders that I can’t seem to take off and put down. That is my stoop, not visible like Axel’s but there nevertheless. We don’t talk about it all that much during the week. But last night, while Sita and Jim were out, we talked about the continuing aftermath and the lives that have been affected and the whole gamut of feelings that goes along with the pain, the regrets, and the gratitude.

It has become some sort of a ritual that each time the14th comes around I read through all the previous entries on this milestone day. I have tagged these entries and I can select them as a set. In re-reading the entries I hopscotch through our recovery and the jumps of the early months. With the focus on recovery and our loving community of care-givers, the agony of pain and sleepless nights, and the interminable wait for all of us to get back to normal is not as visible (anymore?). The written story is far from complete, whole chunks are missing, but they come back into view when I read about what happened on the 14th of every month since July.

It is Friday now and I turn my attention to the things I cannot do in the office because of multiple and constant interruptions. It is to be a day of long stretches of concentrated attention to reading, thinking, designing and writing. I have a vision for the end of the day, and that is checking off items from my to-do list and, with a sense of great satisfaction, closing my computer at cocktail time!

 

Juggle

I woke up from a long night full of dreams about juggling. This is not surprising since I am juggling what feels like a 1000 balls at work. In November I could not have done this, holding this much stuff in my RAM (random access memory) but things are better now and there is more space available although I am bumping up against my limits. Axel, on the other hand is still experiencing the after effects of his concussion: he is forgetful, easily distracted and has other symptoms that require specialist attention. He will soon see a head injury specialist at Spaulding Rehab Hospital. The doctor is Chinese and does acupuncture as well, so we are hopeful.

I just got off the phone with William in Ghana who reported to me about the second leadership workshop that the team we created in Ghana for this purpose has successfully led. He was enthusiastic and reported that all participants returned with reports of progress and that a healthy competition is fueling the commitment of participants to do even better next time. It warmed my heart to hear that teams had gone out in their districts to consult with groups they otherwise would not have. They collected data about the true state of affairs (rather than assuming they know) and engaged their peers who stayed at home. The coaching visits were critical and made people realize that this program and the commitments they made are for real and they will be held accountable for producing the results they said they would. It was a great start of my day!

Yesterday was another intense and long day with new tasks coming over the transom as soon as an old one was completed. I drove home exhausted. When I turned into Masconomo Street I saw people walking and enjoying the extended daylight hours. At home, Axel suggested we go for a walk as well and celebrate daylight savings time.

Going for such a ‘constitutional’ was one of those intentions from last fall when we could only contemplate a walk around the Masconomo/Proctor Street loop but not actually do it; now we can and have been able to for some time now. But the pace of our life has picked up; we need to be more intentional about this walk, otherwise it will never happen.

It felt good to get the stiffness out of our limbs. We both tend to get very stiff when we sit in one position for some time. Axel was stiff from sitting at his desk the whole afternoon and I was stiff from sitting in the car for an hour.

While Axel cooked I read him the latest entries from Mike Morris’ sixcense blog (see blog roll on the side) about the elections. We prefer to listen to Mike on stage but reading his entries as an aperitif for dinner is pretty darn good! Sita and Axel then settled down for a movie but I had nothing left and went to bed around 9 PM.

Stories

With the new daylight savings time I am waking up again in the middle of the night it seems. It is pitch dark and cold; another one of these ‘having to bite through’ periods; this time not because of bodily pain or anything like that, but a simple ‘because I don’t like it.’

Having learned to bite through (not really bad stuff) as a child is part of my cultural heritage. It is woven into the protestant work ethic of the Dutch which taught me that life should not be lived in pursuit of fun. The childhood variant is ‘homework first, play later.’ I was lucky in that the homework was always a cinch and play, with the many children on our street, was fun and outside the door, not requiring parental drop off or pick up.

I woke up with fragments of a dream. I quickly scribbled these on a piece of paper before I took my shower so I would not forget. I do this with my eyes closed. Sometimes, when I get out of the shower and have my glasses on I cannot decipher what I wrote. But this time I could: looking at street scenes of one culture while sitting inside and with people from another. We were watching a slide show. I had intended to hook up my iPod to the slide show and have some of my favorite music, but someone else had already done that. He had selected other music, not what I would have chosen, but it matched so well that we kept it on and I put my iPod away. I remember saying to the people watching that these street scenes were not all that different from those in their country. I also remember expecting protest (‘No, everything is very different from us!”)

I think the dream was triggered by an email from a colleague who said the (African) country he lived in was unique. I wrote back, ‘of course it is, every country is unique!’ The dream is not about surface but about what is underneath. As a psychologist I am intensely interested in people’s life stories and hear how their current ‘being in the world’ was shaped. Much like my growing up in a Dutch protestant family shaped me. This is also why I have to understand my dreams; that comes from the thread of Enlightenment that is also woven into Dutch Protestant culture.

Another trigger for the dream might have been the lunch we had at MSH with the Minister of Health from Guyana. I was already impressed by him when he remembered Cabul who was a volunteer in Guyana several years ago. While we were eating he told us one story after another. There is much writing in the leadership literature about story telling as an important tool for leaders. This gentleman was a master of the trade. He has also been minister of health longer than most any of the many MSH has been dealing with over the years. Storytelling is a craft of the long haul I think and he proved it. It combines seeing patterns and then collecting moments in life that illustrate those patterns.

Later in the afternoon the story of the day that is only now revealed to me through my dream continued. I was asked by our young (20s/30s) staff to help them hone their facilitation skills. Two of them practiced a short session on the rest of us which we then critiqued and I got to tell stories. I loved it. They kept thanking me profusely at the end for my time; what they didn’t know is that such sessions are the highlight of my day. I think I am a mentor/teacher at heart. My one piece of advice to them was to get a sturdy backpack, an imaginary one, and keep tossing stories inside it, much like the minister has done. These stories can be pulled out any time to illustrate a concept, a theory, or a belief. I have some well-worn stories in my backpack. They are like the old blankies, teddy bears or dolls from our childhood, and comfort us as much as they enlighten others.

Axel dropped the boys off at his old school (UNH) where they teamed up with a third friend who is now studying there and who, according to Axel, had already become an American in speech and outer appearance. He had lunch in the school cafeteria and told them stories about the student protest he was heavily involved in nearly 40 years ago.

In the evening Axel went to a career fair at Mass. College of Art and he was welcomed back in the crowd like a long lost son. He made some good connections and returned back in high spirits. It was a community that he temporarily lost because of the accident and one that he discovered was more important to him than he had realized. Stories and communities, these are also two big elements of our recovery.


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