Sunday, March 2, 2025

Mindset

Some of these posts may seem pessimistic, but I got some much needed perspective after my sisters met a friend for dinner.

They were talking about the sorry state of the world and finding various points of agreement. She recommended some books, some of which I agree with, some less so.

Then it got weird.

I should mention that this is not a friend from church.

She started emphasizing the importance of having camping supplies (not too unusual) and gardening. 

Gardening is great, and still in line with things we think about, though her obsession with sun chokes was a little weird.

Then she mentioned how she really wished there was an underground city to live in, and how you also need to remember to be quiet, have blackout curtains, and not cook anything too fragrant; you don't want people to know you have electricity and food.

My first thought there was that if you have electricity when others don't, either you are using a generator (some of which can be very noisy) or you switched to solar and they would see the panels.

I just don't think it's well thought out.

(Remember that you need the battery backup system if you want to be able to function off-grid.) 

It occurred to me that this was getting specific enough that with the right keyword search I could probably find her source. There it was, on a Doomsday Preppers site. There was a post about how after society collapses you have about three days, because most people have 2-3 days worth of food.

After that is when they will come to steal yours, guided by the smell of your cooking; betrayed by your use of herbs and spices.

Look, if I am going to go to the trouble of preparing, I'm not doing it so I can sit silently in the dark eating cold beans while my neighbors are hungry. 

Oddly, she still talked about the importance of building community.

Instead I am remembering a city after a bad snow storm, and power strip hanging over a fence with a sign inviting people to charge their phones... I want to be that person.

If this is the end, remember that one of the key things you get judged on is whether you gave hungry people food.

Beyond that, expecting a clear societal collapse does not show a strong understanding of how society functions.

I definitely expect supply chain issues. We got glimpses of how that worked with COVID. 

I expect more adverse weather. It would be better to not have FEMA dismantled, but it generally doesn't involve a total collapse of society even locally.

Resource scarcity becomes an issue and it can be hard to get help. Those are great reasons to have food and water storage and first aid training and backup plans for staying in contact or getting home.. those are all good things.

Part of survival is also having mental resources, where you remain able to think clearly and have hope. Doomsday prepping may not be the best option for that. 

I guess the name kind of implies that.

Her fear is largely based on this round of the Trump presidency, and I get that. Bad things are happening and more will. It's not good. 

Viewing everyone around you as an enemy out to steal the fruits of your labor is how we got here. It's not going to help.

Here is how preparation is going at our house. Although I do not have any sun chokes, it did occur to me that we don't have a lot of shelf-stable fruits. On our last shopping trip, I bought two large jars of applesauce.

Next week I am going to get some extra peanut butter.

There will be other things -- including some inventories of what we do have -- but it will be in wisdom and order.

Ideally, we will not be the only ones doing that, so encouraging your neighbors to be more prepared is a fine idea. That can mean more people sharing.

I would rather share than hide. 

Sunday, February 23, 2025

One story

Last week I started typing up two other ideas before I wrote what was posted. Sometimes order is important.

I also started thinking of one story earlier in the day, for something else. After posting, I realized that it may help illustrate last week's ideas.

It started with our Christmas ham.

It was big and came out really well. I knew it would make good sandwiches, but there was too much left over for us to go through it before it went bad. I was planning on freezing some, then the thought came to me, "You should make sandwiches and take it downtown."

Okay, I could do that.

I had different thoughts, but what I ended up taking with me was eleven ham sandwiches (eight with Swiss cheese), four Mandarin oranges, and some dipping sauces that I thought could work in place of condiments.

I worried about it being awkward. I can have a tendency to be overly apologetic, like sorry they are dry or that there isn't more or all of these things, but I am trying to be less awkward, and it was fine.

I ran into one person almost immediately who took two, and then I met up with a group of three men who took the rest. 

Okay. Easy.

Then I kept going and saw a group of about fifteen, and I had nothing left.

Well, you have to think of it like that story about throwing beached starfish back into the ocean; I made a difference to that one (or four).

There was one person on that sidewalk who stuck out to me; I needed to do something for him. Fortunately, I had a $5 on me, so gave him that.

I decided that there isn't any reason that I can't take some sandwiches with me when I go downtown, and maybe not just downtown.

I have done it a few more times. It has been mostly easy. It was a little more complicated one night. I don't mean it was scary, but there wasn't this immediate pull toward specific people.

I realized that people are more wary after dark; I can't blame them for that. Also, by the end of the day they have probably already done what they were going to do. In the middle of the day, it may save them some effort. After dark, maybe not so much.

I would probably still feel guilty not taking sandwiches at night at this point, but I will figure that out the next time it comes up.

That was the one time I did not immediately see other people who could use a sandwich after I gave out my supply.

Anyway, I think this illustrates what I was trying to say last week.

This was the inspiration that I had. It's a small, not life-changing thing. It wouldn't necessarily work for everyone else. You don't figure it out all at once. 

When you get those ideas, take those seriously.

Don't be discouraged by the work that is remaining. You cannot do it all, but the more people who are doing something, the more that is done.  

It really does matter. A sandwich is one meal; no one's life has been made lastingly better. However, at least one of them seemed close to starving or had really low blood sugar or something. I was able to see him after he had eaten and he had really perked up.

Maybe it was just being seen as a human, which doesn't happen nearly enough. 

Find what you can do and then do it.

Sunday, February 16, 2025

If this is the end

Writing about death last week, I said it was not about the Second Coming, but there are commonalities.

One sure thing about mortality is we will die; that end is always coming.

If it happens in a global apocalypse there are some different specifics, but it does not change how we would want our souls to be.

In this current timeline, it is really easy to question how close we are to Christ's return.

It would be foolish of me to try and answer. The scriptures tell us we don't know when it will be. Looking at times when prophecies were fulfilled... yeah, it's obvious that's what it meant after it happens, but not clear in advance how it will happen.

But yes, I do believe that Christ will return, ushering in a thousand years of peace. 

Yes, it does seem like we could be pretty close.

Does that make anything different?

I would like to express my disappointment that people -- including people who claim to be Christian -- voted for Trump. I don't think a lot of people had doubts on my feelings about that, but I do want to be clear.

I have to accept that there are a lot of things that are outside of my control. That has always been true, but there are ways in which it is more obvious -- and in scarier ways -- now.

However, I also have faith. Sin and death have been conquered, and a thousand years is a lot of time for healing and for promises being fulfilled and for things being made right.

There is a balance to be struck between what is known and what is not known, and what can be controlled and what can't.

Remember, I have written many posts on emergency preparedness, and I still think about those things. There is also a limit to how much they might matter.

For example, you can do things to make your home more resilient to earthquake conditions, but I am not sure how well those things would hold up when the Cascadia Megaquake hits. 

It your house is reduced to rubble, but you have tents and sleeping bags and flashlights and food and water supplies, that could be really helpful.

If part of the reduction to rubble is a big piece striking you in the head and killing you, those supplies won't do much for you. They could still help someone else.

Also, if you reinforcing your chimney and strapping your water heater tank to the wall and bolting your house to the foundation was not enough to stand up to the Cascadia Megaquake, but was enough for some of the smaller quakes we have had, well, that's something too.

I know some of the things that I am going to want to write about, but there are three things to think about over all.

If this is the end, it's going to look like we are losing right up until then. You can't let that discourage you. It will be better than good, eventually.

Instead of meaning that your efforts don't matter, it means that everything matters. It matters because that ultimately is who you are, and whom you will be after. It matters because when things are terrible, anyone doing good is really important.

Get good at listening to your inner voice. Maybe you will get a thought to buy sleeping bags and I will get a thought to get training on Naloxone... do the things that come to you.

If you are not particularly religious, this may sound weird, I know. 

I want to affirm that why I do what I do is based on my faith and my love. 

That gets me through.

I will take questions if you want to ask. 

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Facing the end

This is not about the Apocalypse, though that is coming.

This is just about death.

Yes, we are still dealing with details of my father's death and my mother's deterioration. That may influence some of my thoughts, but this comes more from something else.

In our circle of acquaintance there is someone else's mother who is dying from cancer. They are working very hard to grant her every whim.

On one level that is very understandable, but there are things about this that have not felt right. That is largely because she has been a very selfish and kind of mean person. Still, they love her, they are losing her... we are not going to tell them how to deal with it.

Last week I was reading in the April 2017 General Women's session and read "Trust in the Lord and Lean Not" by Sister Bonnie H. Cordon:

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2017/04/trust-in-the-lord-and-lean-not?lang=eng 

She shared the story of another woman who faced a cancer diagnosis with a low (17%) survival rate. She found the chemo so difficult that she wanted to stop fighting, and told her husband that.

In his wisdom, my sweetheart patiently listened and then responded, ‘Well, then we need to find someone to serve.’

That sounds insensitive, and maybe even condescending, except that he was also right.

“Service,” Amy testifies, “saved my life. Where I ultimately found my strength to keep moving forward was the happiness I discovered in trying to relieve the suffering of those around me. I looked forward to our service projects with great joy and anticipation. Still to this day it seems like such a strange paradox. You would think that someone who was bald, poisoned, and fighting for [her] life was justified in thinking that ‘right now it is all about me.’ However, when I thought about myself, my situation, my suffering and pain, the world became very dark and depressing. When my focus turned to others, there was light, hope, strength, courage, and joy. I know that this is possible because of the sustaining, healing, and enabling power of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.”

As it was, she lived. I don't know that the service is why she lived, but it is why she was able to bear it. 

I believe it would also have better prepared her for death if it had come at that time.

That's not saying that there can't be a balance. If there are things that she wants to do again or people she wants to see again, of course do that. 

As it is, it sounds like her greatest pleasure is in the catering, and I am not sure that will transfer well onto the other side.

It would also be hard to change from a life of selfishness (and a little bit of meanness) in just six months, I still think any efforts to that end are a good idea.

We can all be sure that we will die. I am equally sure that will not be the end. 

I was taught long ago that the only things you carry with you are your personality, your relationships, and your intelligence. 

If those are yours to keep (maybe the memories will take a vacation before you die, but they will come back), then that is worth some effort, and preparation.

And if death is quickly stalking all of us, then it becomes more urgent.

Sunday, February 2, 2025

The Decades Long Healing Plan

Just in case you have an accumulation of damage that would take decades to heal -- even though you may be well into that process -- I thought that I would document my journey in case there are tips in there that can be useful for someone else.

The frustration is that I have documented parts of it all along -- on this and on the main blog -- but searching all the links just does not appeal.

To be fair, a lot of what was documented was only partially documented; my perspective has changed and understanding has been added over time.

To recap...

The starting wounds were that I came to a father unhappy with himself in general but also at a time of grief. Even with a loving mother, she believed that proper parenting was telling other people your kids were great, but telling your kids what they needed to correct.

It was exacerbated by having communication shut down at various times, because they were busy or didn't want to bother.

That left me with a feeling that there was something lacking in me, and no one wanted to hear about my problems, so I tried to be very good and make up for it.

In school I learned that the problem with me was fat, and that no one was ever going to love me until I fixed that. If a boy pretended to be attracted to me it was a joke, and if I showed that I liked him, that was gross.

Also, I probably have ADHD and sensory issues.

The mix of things in how it happens is very important.

Yes, there will be people who will judge you right away for your body size. There are also people who can be attracted to you, and it not be a joke.

I know women who are heavier, and would have faced at least some criticism for it, but they were very validated by their fathers and they were still able to have some confidence and romantic relationships.

I want to stress that, because while there were definitely people along the way who were selfish or cruel or jealous or thoughtless, different people could have reacted differently to it. 

I took everything as my own responsibility, and also I accepted things that were very harsh against me. 

When it was revealed that I liked a boy who was also my friend, I believed we could never be friends again. I am not sure that was true now, but withdrawing seemed like the only option.

Anyway, that's the damage that I had.

I mentioned recently starting to realize that in fact it is better to admit when you are wrong, and that such a thing was possible. That happened in my early 20s, and happened by observing other people and their reactions.

Caring about other people's feelings was also an important part of that. I don't want to worry about people's opinions on me that much, but if I am causing other people to feel devalued or put down, I do care about that.

Also, if I am wrong about something, I would rather know and change it.

Learning that was important, and possibly my main growth until my early 30s.

That was when I started to believe someone could like me, was crushed terribly, and was clinically depressed for several months.

This is also when I lied to the therapist. 

One key thing about that session is that it helped me understand that some very clear memories had that clarity because they shaped me. I didn't really analyze them at that time to see that the lessons I had learned were wrong, but having the reference points still helped.

As it was, the depression only ended through prayer. I was healed of that pain through the Atonement.

I prayed because I realized that if I was still hurting that much after so long, I was not going to get better on my own. 

At the same time, I suspect that all that pain that came out -- the months of crying and gloom -- was necessary. I believe I needed to feel the emotions I had shut down so hard for so long.

Emotions are inconvenient, but they are real.

At the end of that particular phase of healing, there was an understanding that I was capable of being loved, but I still did not have a vision of how that would work and what it would look like.

While I don't know that it was directly related to healing, this next phase involved blogging, and starting on social media, and employment issues.

Expressing myself more probably did help with that belief that no one was interested in hearing about my problems. 

Starting to have money and job problems cracked at that need to constantly fix everything for everyone else, though that was a process.

It still is, in some ways.

Still, I think the next big stage in healing was that I started adopting depressed teenagers on Twitter. 

First of all, I started a lot of reading to try and understand and help them better, much of which also had insight for me. 

The other big thing is that if I wanted them to believe that happiness was possible and that they should be allowed it, how much of a hypocrite was I going to be if it was only for them but not for me?

The thing that felt big most recently was connecting the need to fix everything for everyone else to Dad not being happy with himself. Caring for others is good and a core part of my nature, but there are limits to what can be done and what is my responsibility.

That was the basic trajectory. Is it helpful?

I believe in paying attention and analyzing. Sometimes there is a sense that it will be painful, but usually not examining the pain hurts worse and over a longer time period.

I also believe in the power of prayer and the healing power of the Atonement. We don't have to do it all on our own.

We all incur damage. I would like to say that it doesn't have to define us, but my damage has been so much a part of my life, it might define me.

Fine. That definition includes the compassion and strength that I have gained, and the healing. 

Sunday, January 26, 2025

Healings, rhymes with feelings

Last week's post made me think I should write something about being emotionally healthier, working out the issues that we have with loved ones before they're gone.

It's a worthy goal, but I find it very hard to say anything helpful about it. I kept thinking about different things one could try, and then found myself thinking they wouldn't work.

I believe I mentioned that my own healing regarding my father took about fifty years. Does anyone really want a 50 year timeline for healing? 

Part of my pessimism comes from reading YA and middle reader books.

Most recently, I read The Sea in Winter by Christine Day. 

Maisie loves ballet. All of her hopes and dreams are there, and all of her friends are from her ballet class.

Then a friend encourages her to try a move that she isn't ready for, she gets injured, and everything falls apart.

Her parents are very supportive. They would be willing to listen, but she doesn't want to talk to them about finding new goals and activities, because that would mean giving up. She is embarrassed to tell them that she has been shutting out the one friend, especially as she has less to share with her other friends. 

You can get pretty tired of reporting when all you can really say over and over again is that it still hurts. 

Plus sometimes the super energetic and enthusiastic younger brother that she does love is just too much.

When I initially thought about writing on this topic, I thought about the importance of being able to tell someone if they have hurt you, and them being willing to hear it. It would be important to be able to both give apologies and accept apologies.

There are people who cannot do this. They have their own trauma around it. 

If they don't do anything too terrible, that can be okay. Maybe you can live with it, and them, or maybe you need space.

My father (here he is again) could never admit he was wrong. I remember picking up from him this sense that if people see that you have made a mistake, they will never let you live it down.

That is true of some people, but it is also pretty common that if you are wrong, people are going to know. That means not admitting it is only exacerbating whatever you have going on. (I learned this on my mission, so around twenty-one and twenty-two.)

Noticing things can help, but sometimes it hurts a lot, and we shrink from the pain. 

Sometimes the solution will actually solve the pain, but we cling to the pain.

I believe I have told this story before, but I did once lie to a therapist. It was on the issue of whether I could see that I could be loved. I could not, but I knew if I responded honestly she wouldn't let it go. I did not want to have to fight the issue.

I was around thirty-one then. I did learn that I could be loved not too long after, though it still took over a decade to understand what that meant. 

I am sure there are people that can learn faster. Some have a better foundation, so don't have as far to go.

There were probably times when I was unnecessarily stubborn. That might be a family trait.

What I keep coming back to is having grace for each other, including ourselves.

People need times to be sad and grieve and to be angry. They can even need some time in denial, possibly. We can care while knowing what we can't fix, and not trying to impose impossible timelines for healing.

We can care more about others than our pride.

We can share, and we can back off. 

There are lots of things that we can do gently.

It helps if you are not in a hurry. 

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Readiness, part 2

I think a big part of needing to write this is that I dropped a bombshell last week. It was in the pursuit of making a greater point (and I still believe the point was relevant) but yes, my father died. 

https://preparedspork.blogspot.com/2025/01/readiness.html

The point of the last post was that something I had been working on for almost an entire year prepared me in a way I could not have foreseen. That we can be guided and that we should listen to that is very important to me.

We are also handling the death pretty well, so it didn't occur to me to dwell on that. However, the death of a parent can be a big deal. As we tell more people and they express more condolences, I see that I was insensitive to that potential reaction.

I guess part of today's post can be to assure you that we are neither cold hearted and terrible, nor are we in denial. There were various things that helped, and some of those may be helpful to look at.

In last week's post I did allude to this meaning he will not have to go into assisted living, which he would have hated. There are some specific fears that he had that did not come to pass. I am grateful for that.

There are some other assurances that are pretty personal, but ultimately this does seem like the best possible outcome for him, assuming that actually changing and becoming a better person in this life was off the table.

That might sound a little cold, but it comes from love.

Another thing that I think cushions the loss is that he had not really parented us since... technically the last time he disowned me was 2005. However, after the first time in 1989 and when we reconciled in 1991, there was not a lot of nurturing, and there wasn't that trust built where I could really depend on him. To the extent that losing your father can leave a hole in your life, it was left a long time ago.

That also might sound a little cold, but it's the truth. If I had not faced the truth, I would still have a lot of healing to do.

So the other thing that makes this easier for me -- and where I may be somewhat ahead of my siblings -- is that I have spent a long time on all of this baggage, and how it affected me and why it was like this.

I'm not saying that I have all of the answers, especially to what life would have been like if he had been different. The self-image that I'd had and the lens it created for how I engage with the world, however, has changed and healed.

When I say "a long time", that is literal; I was 50 when the last (at least as far as I know) part of healing clicked into place. 

That time was worth it. It makes everything better.

If I was still waiting for some kind of validation from him, or permission to be happy, this would be a lot harder.

If I were going to miss him, that would be a different way of being harder, but there would be compensations for it.

Also, I know even the most loving and caring parents make mistakes or miss things. Because of their large role in our early lives, that has a big impact.

For the best and the worst parents and all parents in between, for the things they caused or didn't prevent or didn't know about, it is so valuable to work for healing.

I might have some things to say about that.

Related posts:

https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2022/10/all-better.html  

https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2022/10/on-paternal-side.html