All posts by Vic

Back in the swing

I took a bit of a step back from TR after we went to Independence, MO. I had been running hard core for a month, and knew I needed to take some me time. So here I am a month later, returning in to the swing of things. I went to KC from OKC this morning to have a meeting with a local company we partner with. It was nice to hop back in to the swing of things and make the connection to further the mission in Region 7. I had the opportunity to see my peer leaders and continue charging forward.

It was a productive day. The drive from OKC was not very long, and I had plenty of time to freshen up before our meeting. Overall today was unexciting, except that new information is always exciting. It helps keep our torch burning. Being empowered with more information is always beneficial. Unfortunately, I felt that others were charging harder than I. I missed being in the swing of things, but I know that this past month has been important for my self-care and my mission to discover my purpose and place.

I am still missing that road map, but hopefully some time spent in KC with my TRibe will reconnect me and maybe lay out a plan.

Signing off from Peculiar, MO.

Memorial Wandering

Again today I did not get out of the house during the day. I suppose that the moral of OKC for me is that it is too hot in July to leave the house. Therefore maybe it is not the place for me. Either that, or I don’t really know what and how I am doing what I am doing yet… That’s frustrating! This is supposed to be some epic journey to the center of the world I want to live within. Instead I am walking in circles and not getting outside of my comfort zone in new places.

I think that if it weren’t for following social norms I probably would not have ever left my childhood bedroom. I have for years been seeking more from my life, and by my own ruler I have fallen short. Others maybe don’t think so, but I fear I have failed myself. Do I have to know what the treasure is I am looking for in order to find it? Because thus far I have no map to follow to an “x” which marks the spot. I am searching for the “x” without a map. How do I find a map?

The highlight today was dinner with friends followed by visiting the Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial. This site is near and dear to my friend Misty. She was there, she served her community on that devastating day. For me, all I recall was blips of news stories, and a lot of sadness I didn’t quite comprehend. Why would somebody blow up a building, a building with children, let alone adults? I still don’t know that I will ever understand why someone would do that.

The memorial is beautiful. It is a grand place of remembrance, one which tells a story of those lost and those who have suffered. Memorials are so morbid, a place where you go to mull over the suffering and despair of a group of people. I often find I am not comfortable at memorials. How am I supposed to react? Why do we choose to relive this? Are our memories of the events not enough?

Maybe some of those questions were answered as Misty walked me through her memories, through the explanations. She doesn’t have to carry what she recalls alone, she can take people to the memorial and know that she is not alone in remembering. So this becomes a healing act. Misty is part of my TRibe, my community. I wish to share her burdens and her sorrows. So even if I don’t my place at a memorial which did not impact me when the incident occurred. I sure as heck know my place is by the side of my friend, who still grieves so many years later. I find myself glad that she has a safe, beautiful place to go to and remember the things she will never forget, and I pray that the memorial brings solace to so many.

So tonight I may not have a road map, or know where my story is going… but I do know that being an integral loving part of my friends lives is a very big piece of the puzzle. I love you Misty. Thanks for letting me come hide in your house!

Signing off Oklahoma City, OK.

Oklahoma Where the Wind…

Today I am likely a terrible wanderer. What is this propensity I have for procrastination, sleeping all day, and not fulfilling these awesome adventures I plan? It is the same propensity which leaves me writing about this day many weeks after the fact. I struggle with keeping to my goals and plans. One of the easy things when working (even though I often showed up late in the morning) was to accomplish the tasks that were laid out for me by the job and the company I worked for.

I am not without thoughts and innovation of my own. I know this, people in my life know this. I don’t have the follow through necessary to accomplish tasks. As I have been traveling I have begun to make a list of things I wish to improve upon. I have not been blind to my failings, but I have never taken the time to account for them. Today was not a day that I overcame failings.

I enjoyed sleeping in today and being lazy. The problem is that being lazy is my favorite pass-time. There are things I wish to accomplish. When I awoke to the blazing heat outside, I decided I didn’t want to leave the house. I finally convinced myself to leave the house to run for items at Wal-Mart. Then I made my sister a wedding journal that she can record her wedding plans in. I hope she uses it. I am so excited for her to get it.

I regret however not accomplishing tasks on my to-do list. I also am upset at myself for not really exploring OKC. How can I find a new place to live and love if I don’t get out there? I made the leap in to this journey, but I feel I am falling short in the follow through. What is it I am missing? This is a question I need to start asking myself. I have so many tools in my toolbox, but have not yet overcome these seemingly simple hurdles.

The beauty of the day was a home cooked from Misty. I often find myself eating fast food, and miss making meals. Tonight’s was extremely delicious. Good food is always made better by good conversation. As I travel I begin to value my friendships even more. The fact that Misty put thought in to a meal to help me feel more at home was especially thoughtful of her. Often people are surprised by the kindness of strangers, but the kindness of friends is even more sweet and surprising. Relationships can often become stable and complacent, the spark can even leave friendships. The relationship gets taken for granted and there is less expected. Amazing friends are those friends who continue to go out of their way to serve those they are close to. Misty has helped me wake up in the morning, with sweet calls, good morning texts to get my days started, and when I come to visit opens her home and prepares me a meal, hoping it makes me feel at home.

Being on the road is not easy. So far I have slept in a multitude of strange places, on couches, cots, spare beds, my tent. It is an interesting adventure, but I do miss the home feeling sometimes. Especially the days where I am moving to a new place every day. Coming to visit Misty was amazing because she has left an open door policy for me to come and share her home whenever I need to get away. It is friends like Misty who help support me as I am journeying. They listen, encourage, and make this possible.

These relationships are not a one way street. I work to provide service, love, and care in return to each friend. It is work to have a relationship with anyone and to take care of one another. Community is important, especially if you choose to wander. When I was not wandering I did not understand the need to rely on my community, but now I couldn’t imagine living without these people who make up my community. Wanderer, work on those relationships, build trust, service, and value, with those in your community. I wish you luck.

As you see, every day has balance. There are things one may regret or struggle with, but there are also valuable life-giving moments. I can chalk up my laziness to my need to rest, which is of value. I cannot be disappointed in myself because that does not move me forward. Moments where I have made a choice that I am not happy with are learning moments that I am tracking in order to overcome these obstacles I feel in my life.

Signing off Oklahoma City, OK

New Horizons

Wanderers, you should determine for yourself how long is too long on the road. I think today may have been too long for me, but was well worth it. I have reached Misty’s house in Oklahoma, A BRAND NEW STATE!

One of my major flaws is the inability to wake up early. I am not sure if being a night owl or a morning person is in our nature when we are born, but I recall mornings always being a struggle. It is an item on my list of things I would like to alter about myself. It is also one of the few items I fear I will never succeed at. Due to my inability to wake up early I hit the road later than planned. I had not repacked my car and organized everything to my liking before this morning. So after waking up late I reorganized my entire car. It is one area that I have been a bit OCD on this journey.

I had intended to meet up with Misty and the local Team RWB for a Flag Run, followed by a social. I arrived as everyone was getting their tab at the end of the social. It was a very very long day in the end. Initially I thought the drive was only 6 hours, turns out it was 10. That was not due to slow driving, that was due to my inability to understand geography. I used to think I was so good at geography and maps, this journeying is really making me start to wonder.

I hope to see OKC tomorrow, while Misty works. We stayed up way too late chatting tonight and catching up, but it was well worth it. The great thing about my friend Misty is that we met once over a year ago on a Team Rubicon Operation. It shows the connections we feel and find within the organization when relationships are built off of a single meeting. We have kept in touch through Facebook and texting, getting to know each other.  So this evening was our second face to face meeting, and it felt as if we were always in the same area.

Seeing as this is my first stop in a really new location, and part of my journey is to determine a new location to settle, I hope to have some time to visit around OKC and see if this is an atmosphere I would like to live in. I am grateful to be back on the road and am looking forward to what tomorrow holds!

Signing off Oklahoma City, OK

All in a Days Work

I have been in Denver so long now, I really wish to wander away again. I find that I am anxious for the next adventure. The catch is that I made a commitment to perform some work for my mother’s company, which in turn helps me pay for the wandering.

No matter how much I wish I could survive without money and just serve others for free, our society does not allow that. I suppose I could walk the country, but I’m maybe not that free-spirited yet. This leads me to accomplishing work for my mother’s company. Data input, fairly simple, but tedious. So though I had intended to leave today there was more work to accomplish.

This brings up two issues. First I am upset that I didn’t get to stick to my schedule. I had finally figured out this schedule, and my old-self, that control freak is really distressed that I am still here. There is a small part of me which feels that I should throw the whole trip right out the window. Second, I really dislike tedious data input work. So today was just really tough. I am selfish in the fact that I don’t like doing work which is not entertaining for me. The matter is that someone needs to do the work and I need to do something to replenish my traveling money.

The job I was in prior to traveling was a job that I really did not like, but it was so multi-faceted that I was constantly hopping tasks. I did not leave that job merely because I disliked it, but I definitely am much happier not being there. For everything in life there is a cost, and the attitude I choose is how I determine the positive or negative value of the cost. Today was extremely valuable, though tedious. I have not yet finished the data inputting, but will finish it from the road this week. I appreciate that I have the opportunity to move on in the morning to the next adventure, and that I have more work to do which will provide me funds.

The issues I described above seem so menial, but they felt slightly devastating. Stuck in a place I want to leave, and stuck doing work that I didn’t enjoy was rather claustrophobic. When they are put down on paper (or computer screen) it seems ridiculous that I even recount the issues. This though is a tool to realizing what menial concerns those are. I feel better now having seen it written out. I am also able to be grateful for what I received and what I was able to do for others.

Time to get some sleep before I hit the road!

Signing off Denver, CO

Wandering Monopoly

Dear Wanderer,

I wish I could tell you that every day of this journey, and of life is exciting. I find myself often defining what an average, un-special day looks like in this blog. Often I consider not sharing on these days. The thing about not sharing is that then you might come to believe that the only important days in life are those that feel extraordinary.

Even as I journey I struggle to recognize the value of days where no large epiphany’s occur or exciting adventures continue. Defining this to you dear reader, helps me remember that I am striving to be ordinary and sometimes it is a little extra. I valued today because it was low-key, not much exciting going on. I was able to value the time I had to pause and reflect upon nothing. Many people find that they struggle to find down time, and when they achieve it to appreciate it.

I recall that in my previous world I often wished I had down time, and when I found it, I felt the need to fill it with activities or chores. I still have a lengthy to-do list, but when I take down time and don’t accomplish those tasks I am allowing my body rest. It is an exercise in valuing myself when I can just be, whether it is meditating, watching netflix, reading, or just sitting in silence. I used to be stressed in these moments, but find that with practice I am becoming better and be grateful instead of stressed out and anxious.

The big highlight for today was Monopoly. I often feel like nobody ever likes monopoly. My cousin Berto, his Fiance’ Calah, and I got to enjoy private time together, playing Monopoly. It wasn’t just any Monopoly, it was Jurrasic Park 3 Monopoly. That was a pretty exciting evening for me. We had Pizza, Soda, and played a board game. I miss having friends to play board games with. My entire life Berto has been a constant. He is one month younger than me, and so we grew up as close as siblings. (I think he forgave me for the time I knocked him in the family jewels… he was teasing me… I may have had anger issues… we were 9… ha ha ha)

Having a day where I was already slowed down, and not feeling stressed, I was able to enjoy this evening so much more. If in all things I am just taking things as they come, and working on not allowing things to stress me, then I can only become more and more successful.

As I tell you that I do this, you may wonder how it is done. The trick to removing the stress from areas of your life is to practice introspection. In moments where you find yourself stressed, have a conversation (out loud or in your head) with yourself. Talk yourself through it, admit to what is really going on in your head, and prioritize those thoughts. If it is too overwhelming, then take a break from it. It is okay to give yourself permission to take a break and not focus on it. Whatever you do, do not run away from it. Take a pause, but don’t hit the stop button. If you merely push it off and continue to push it off then whatever the issue is continues to build pressure and importance until it bursts. Often it helps when overwhelmed to talk it through with another person. Call a friend and ask them to just listen and not give advice. You already have the answer, sometimes you just need a listening ear to break the chaos.

Practice these things, and if you need help, reach out and ask questions.

Signing off Denver, CO

Healing Wanderer

 

Today was a day of healing.

After the time spent with my dad fixing my bike yesterday we took a ride this morning that went really well. Initially I felt bad, because I am a horrible rider. I knew I would slow him down. He had the ultimate amount of patience for me, and it was really fantastic. 7 miles in he offered to let me go back and he would continue on to do his normal 35 miles. I was so pleased. I probably would have sucked it up and kept going, just because I want to be awesome at riding like my dad, but he was smart. So I turned around and after getting lost I returned to my parents house for a total of 14.5 miles.

It really has me in awe at how the relationship with my dad is changing. We are communicating better and loving first, criticizing second. We are enjoying our time together and I can tell that we are both less stressed. I think this has to do with he is changing, I am changing, and we are both growing in to our adult relationship as father and daughter.

It was with pleasure that after this I went to meet with RA, a man who is like a second father to me, and someone that I thought I lost almost two years ago to my struggles. RA owned the company that I worked for in Denver. Everyone there was like family, when I started having troubles they pointed it out. I still don’t recall how much I was losing it back then, but I trust that they knew me well enough that their concern was genuine. However, I did not react well to their urging me to get help. I walked around scared and feeling alone. I assumed any day they would can me for being crazy.

At that time I think I was wearing the “crazy” as a badge on my shirt. I had a right to be crazy, right? There had been a lot of stuff in the previous years that my sweet, kind mind just couldn’t wrap itself around… so it was a great excuse. I now know that if I am wearing the “crazy” badge, it is because I am choosing to. I am choosing to play the victim, requesting special attention and affection because I am not quite of sound mind. It really wasn’t getting me anywhere. I didn’t have the tools or the understanding at the time to be any different. I have said it before, and it still stands true… I was either the victim or the hero… there was no in between.

So I met up with RA today and sat down to just catch up. This was something that I was terrified of, up until the moment I saw his smiling face. When I went to the office a few weeks ago and everyone was happy to see me I assumed that they were just being polite. That changed when I saw RA. The familial feeling was still there. The love and respect in his was unchanged from two years ago. One of his first questions was “What happened?”, right after he said “I’ve missed you”.

We got in deep quick. I laid out where I was when I left, what I perceived and felt, what I was going through. He shared his perspective on it, which was much different than mine. In that flash of a moment I determined that perception without clarification is just like assuming. If I had been more clear headed then, as I am now, maybe I would have never left. He asked if I would move back to Denver, and if I did, would I come back to the company.

That request was more than my heart could imagine. I am not ready to go back to Denver, and maybe I will never be, but if I am, I know I have a job or at least an extended family who I will always be connected to.

So wanderer, you are probably wondering where this story applies to you… If I had not kept myself open to the chance to speak openly with both my dad and RA, I would not have felt this sense of love and understanding that today I feel. This is an important part of the journey… searching for clarification in your past. We can leave the past behind us, but if we have a chance to heal, don’t we owe it to ourselves to try?

Please, for your own sake, take the leap and try.

Signing off Denver, CO.

Wandering Bicycles

It was just one of those days where I only felt like doing things because I had made plans with other people. The problem I find when I get comfortable is that I become lazy. If I am uncomfortable then I am continuously staying active. I find that a little ironic. Being home at my parents though I am very comfortable. Though they have moved, I still have a strong sense of home with the same pictures on the walls and the familiar smells of my parents.

My dad really wanted to go a bike ride. I was maybe a little more than reluctant because he is a serious rider, I am, what I would call, an imaginary rider. I drive around with a bike on the back of my car and imagine I ride my bicycle. Today was going to be the day that my dad took me on a ride with him… or so we thought. My dad being the good cyclist he is decided we needed to perform full primary maintenance on my bike. He basically meant grease the chain and fill the tires. I will admit I was slightly embarrassed at the state of my bicycle. Keeping it shiny, oiled, and clean has never been one of my priorities. I have always looked for my fathers approval and we have had many bumps in the road which have increasingly made me not want to work on projects with him.

Even this past Saturday when we did work on my car I stood by full of anxiety and trying to not be in his way. I am a lot like my dad. We get easily frustrated, it changes the tone of our voice and our words become harsher. If we are working with someone it often appears to have been directed at them, even though we maybe don’t mean it. Even though I realize this I have just tried to steer clear of projects with my father for years. No matter what I comprehend about the situation, it still hurts to hear harsh words and anger pointed my direction. I love my dad and it makes me sad that I don’t want to work alongside him. The moment of sheer panic and anxiety where I feel I can do no right with my dad is when I burst in to tears and go walk miles in the cold without a coat. I can’t blame all of this on my father, but I do wonder if we could have learned to communicate better.

I only point this all out so that you can understand what occurred today, and this past Saturday. I was full of anxiety in fixing my bike with my dad. He has high standards and he knows what he is doing. I could really care less, that is not my focus. So when the first POP occurred I about fell in to tears and just ran away. It was like an explosion in my heart, I felt like I just couldn’t do right by him. I knew my dad only had a limited amount of time to bike today and here I was getting in the way of his plans. I didn’t really think this was going to end well for me. I don’t have the money to fix a bike, nor do I have the patients to deal with an upset dad.

I’ll tell you right quick that both tires blew, and then the patches on each one blew, and the gear cable was all sorts of jacked. We did not end up going for a bike ride. What physically happened to the bike is not the moral of today’s story.

I don’t know that I have seen my dad with so much patience for my failings in quite a number of years. I recall as a small child I would help him paint or in middle school I helped him remodel the basement. These moments from my early days are fond memories that have appeared as dreams. In high school I felt I could do no right by him, and that continued into my adult years. I have had my moments where I stood up to him, and felt maybe I was making headway, only to feel the verbal backhand another time.

Don’t think my father was a horrible person. He is human, just like me. We have for years struggled to communicate and I have had some very hard feelings. I have always been determined to figure it out, because I don’t want to live in a world where I feel I have no father, which seemed easier than dealing with the emotional upheaval.

So to the happy part. Today my dad had unlimited patience for me and my bicycle. I kept waiting for the outburst as the problems increased and continued. I waited for his upset and frustrated words as I told him I didn’t have the money to fix it, so he my as well keep it. I felt like my bike defeated me and it was easier to give up than argue with my dad. With tears in my eyes and a quivering lip my dad rallied me and we went to get the parts we needed. I had plans with a friend and he had a meeting a little while later, so he told me we would fix it when I got back. I was anxious about this thought, because at any moment the other shoe could drop.

I returned from hiking with my friend to find my dad humming pleasantly almost finished fixing my bike. He even had enough patience to teach me how to finish fixing it. Much like when he had enough patience last Saturday to teach me how to replace my own spark plugs.

We sat there at the end of the day and chatted. I recall for so many years my dad had been really sick, and no matter our struggles I was always afraid his bad health would win out before we could understand each other. At the point that his health was not in a good place he got the transfer to CO. It was with this transfer that he got better specialists and the help he needed. His world started changing after he got the help he needed. It is like it revitalized him. We had a conversation about how he felt different, rejuvenated, and blessed. I suddenly was seeing the dad I recall from childhood, the one who wasn’t aggravated by my every short coming.

I realized that I have seen this dad a lot over the years but because of his own struggles this was not the dad that won out in most cases. This was the dad that hugged me before judging me when I shared the hardest news I ever had to share with him. This was the dad who sat there and listened as I told him about my struggles with anxiety, depression, and PTS, with tears in his own eyes. This is the man who has loved me my whole life, but we both hit a rough patch and failed to communicate.

So over the last year as he has been learning and growing and healing in his new position in CO. I have been doing the same in my own life. I know that there is significant change in my dad, where he feels revitalized. I also know that I am going through significant change. So here I am at the end of the day less afraid of my father. More accepting of the fact he is human and I am human. More able to love before judging, and more capable of communicating.

The thing is that I have offered this chance to so many people in my life, but it was always hard to stay open minded about my family and the fact they are human too. The chance I offer is one to communicate, where I focus on listening, or being more patient than usual. I could have just said no to all of this, often that is my go to, but I really wanted to understand this man who is my father. Relationships take work, patience, kindness, and above all love. My ability to keep this in my today allowed me to let my father in, and led to understanding for both of us.

At the end of the day the terrible scary monster of a father I imagined I had is gone. My perceptions were crushed and in their dust was the man I have always known was there, but now it’s just honest and true, no more shadows. We’re all just human, aren’t we? I love you dad, and am so glad I am getting to know you better.

Signing off Commerce City, CO.

Today I cried

Today I cried. Not all day, not necessarily for that long. Today I cried because I needed to cry. I wanted to cry. I have a pretty morbid unfeeling reaction to death most of the time. I reserve myself from it. It is not the idea of a body rotting in the ground that pains me, or even the way the person was removed from this world. The pain occurs when I think of the what won’t be. Therefore I cry less when someone of a respectable old age passes away. They have lived a long life, we can sit and rejoice in the passage of time and the blessings that came with it. Death is inevitable, that is why it should not be feared.

I can’t fathom what is on the other side, is it heaven/hell, is it nothing? Maybe nothing can be either heaven or hell depending on the soul. I really try not to focus on what is next after this life, because I can’t know for certain.

I had this dream once that made me feel like angels are real, and so is heaven and hell, but that is a story for another day, even though it applies to everyday in my life.

Today I cried because the world is so unfair, people die at the hand of others… they die by their own hand… or sometimes they die without a real reason being known. I am of the age where people are starting families and having babies. I have had so many people join the club of parents who have lost babies. I say baby when others may say fetus. I am not here to debate science or politics with you. For any parent who ever wanted their child that they no longer have it was a baby, whether 9 weeks or 9 months pregnant.

I honestly try and give myself a good cry at least once a month. It is not that I hide from it the rest of the month, I just don’t feel like crying as much since I stopped drinking and started meditating. I guess this week I will have two good cries. I cried over the same thing on Sunday, apparently the death of those who never get to experience life has really been on my mind this week. I know why that is, but I am not ready to tell you yet. I also know why today I cry over it, but that is not my story to tell.

I used to cry over the past and the present and how I wished my life had been different or I had been a different person. Now mainly I cry over the lives that won’t be. Even these tears have changed from what they were a year ago. I cry because it hurts that they are gone, for everyone who experiences a loss too young. I cry for those people, not for myself, but also for myself. I think I cry because I was almost one of those gone too young.

I am living my life for those who can’t, I cannot take this for granted. I don’t think any of can. There are so many lives that will never be fully lived, so those of us who get the chance. We can’t go wasting them. We have to really live for those who won’t, because if you could ask their ghosts, most of them probably wish they could.

Signing off Commerce City, CO.

Typical Tuesday

Wanderers, it is hard to find something poignant to say every day. Today was not special, I had no new epiphany to share or any great moment to tell you about. This I am fine with. So that’s what we’ll discuss today.

You cannot expect everyday in life to be a roller coaster full of ups and downs. That may be what gives you an adrenaline rush and makes life worth while, but we are not meant to have every day be extraordinary. If that were the case then we’d never feel that excitement of living. It is also true that if we feel that every single day we will go insane at some point. It’s the origins of midlife crisis and work place breakdowns. It’s alcoholism and anxiety attacks. The body needs a rest.

This is hard for people in America to believe, because we are taught to run faster and harder than everyone else in the rat race. Then if we don’t achieve these extremely high expectations we are failures or just mediocre at best. So what happens if you don’t achieve the job, the house, the spouse, the car, the kids, the status? If you allowed yourself to believe that was your purpose in life, it can lead to mental health issues, physically issues, and especially emotional confusion. You might lose the confidence or the drive to survive in life. It’s common, the world had never taught you life can be different. You’ve never been taught that “mediocre” isn’t second best. It isn’t even real.

You are a person of value, for your friends, your neighbors, that random person you kindly help, because we are human. Our value is not established by the GDP of the country we live in, though many think so. Our value is by our contribution, which may look different than someone else’s contribution. Because though we are all human, we also have individual strengths and weaknesses. It is not indicated by the gender you were born or the color of your skin.

I find moments where I feel I am not contributing in my life, since I pay no rent and don’t hold a job, I have even not gotten back in to school yet. I am contributing though, I love my neighbors who are everywhere around me as I travel. I show value to those down on their luck and share smiles. I tell my story, which has a whole lot of value. That is not my ego talking. I am working to facilitate open conversation with people in my life, both known and strangers. I also receive stories in return. Confidence is built by being okay with telling our story.

So being okay with a day where I don’t tell my story, where I tackle the necessities of life, and allow my body, mind, and soul rest… That is part of the process, it’s part of life. It very well may be that this story ends one day, because I don’t find each new day unique and beautiful. It may be that the poignant parts become my norm. I may find I no longer wander because my appetite has been fulfilled. Oh how part of me longs for that day, but the wanderer is still hungry, still searching. I’m beginning to wonder what I’m looking for… What do you think?

Signing off Commerce City, CO