Blog Summary
Thoughts and Musings
2021 - Present
How do we cope when our bodies and minds aren’t what they were? How do we find purpose in life? Is adventure still on the horizon? Can we cope much less thrive in today’s chaotic environement? How might adventure change as we sprout wrinkles?
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Adventuring
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- Apr 15, 2022 Adventure finds you when least expected
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 10, 2021 Why Girl Scouts?
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
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Commentary
- Jul 18, 2023 AI is not the Monster, is it?
- Jul 1, 2023 Zooming with Ukrainians
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- May 15, 2022 Missed Rebellion
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Jan 17, 2022 Troubling Times
- Dec 23, 2021 Holiday Cards
- Dec 16, 2021 It’s not about me at Christmas
- Nov 27, 2021 Opera is not dead
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 19, 2021 Art Fights Gun Violence
- Jul 3, 2021 Humbled and Renewed
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- May 28, 2021 Dog Sitting
- Apr 28, 2021 Assumptions are Stupid
- Apr 22, 2021 First Kiss
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Feb 25, 2021 What’s in a Nickname?
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Feb 12, 2021 Breadth or depth?
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Medical Adventure
- Jun 11, 2023 Spine Surgery Epilogue
- Jun 4, 2023 Pushing too hard almost defeated me…
- May 30, 2023 A Step in the Wrong Direction
- May 21, 2023 No Bending, Lifting, Twisting
- May 16, 2023 Creeping Disabling Pain Got Me
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
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On Ageing
- Jun 7, 2022 Wise or Just Old?
- Nov 17, 2021 Memory on My Mind
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
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On Writing
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- May 16, 2022 They liked it!
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Feb 10, 2022 Rabbit Hole
- Oct 24, 2021 Fiction vs. Memoir
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 5, 2021 Ode to Southern Writers
- Mar 25, 2021 Criticism - Gift or Fault Finding?
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Mar 5, 2021 When writing ‘what you know’ is not enough
- Apr 22, 2020 The Writing Life
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Pandemic
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
When I worked full time and all out, I engaged in awkward connection dances to forward my business and professional career. They centered on finding people who could help —a new job, an award, critical information, speaking engagements, and sales leads. The entire experience of quick conversations, hearty handshakes, and business card exchanges was tiresome, enervating, and degrading. I put up a charmingly strong front, but inside I felt like a pauper begging for a handout. Most of those business cards ended up in the wastebasket. In the end, people important in my business life evolved into personal friendships. With patience and kindness I found people with on common beliefs and values. Through shared experiences and shared knowledge we can to rely on each other.
When I worked full time and all out, I engaged in awkward connection dances to forward my business and professional career. They centered on finding people who could help —a new job, an award, critical information, speaking engagements, and sales leads. The entire experience of quick conversations, hearty handshakes, and business card exchanges was tiresome, enervating, and degrading. I put up a charmingly strong front, but inside I felt like a pauper begging for a handout. Most of those business cards ended up in the wastebasket. In the end, people important in my business life evolved into personal friendships. With patience and kindness I found people with on common beliefs and values. Through shared experiences and shared knowledge we can to rely on each other.
No longer focused on business and retired, I plunged into mental sequestration and isolation. The quiet life was refreshing, but a desperate depression soon descended, fogging my mind. It frightened me. I was a social animal for 50 years while I worked and I wanted to remain a social animal for another 25.
How was I to rebuild connections wearing a mask wearing and staying at home pandemic? I couldn’t travel, invite people over for dinner or meet for coffee at a shop. Excursions were limited to the grocery store and workouts with my personal trainer in the open air. Six feet apart became my mantra.
My solution was to double down on technology—those ubiquitous phone, internet tools and apps we love to hate. I’ve reconnected to reinforce my relationships with family, friends and past colleagues. I even reconnected with previous husbands. Have all these people become BFFs? Certainly not, but knowing that they remember me and I remember them warms my innards.
The best connections are the surprise and enduring connections. Last week Sharon, a close friend that I lost contact with over 30 years ago, found me on Facebook. When we talked, time had not passed. My heart leapt with happiness to know her again.