I talked about empty spaces a number of weeks ago. Often, I feel that there’s something missing, something below the surface I should have or hold or feel.
Truth is, if we don’t have the comfort of familiarity, if we take life for what it is, really see it, we realize that nothing is permanent. Human relationships and physical possessions and status are all transient. My biggest problems come from attaching expectations to people, places and things.
I did this really awesome yoga practice tonight in the Mission District of San Francisco: Yoga Punx. In the beginning of the session, the teacher asks everyone to think of an intention for the practice. I got so lost running around these last few weeks, moving my stuff into storage, cleaning my old apartment, finally finding an affordable place in Oakland so I can keep working the same hours I’m working and spend the rest of my time on music and writing and meeting new friends and people.
I lost my center, not having a solid base and a person (and a dog) to come home to. I slept at friend’s houses, on the floor of my old apartment–wherever I could. I found solace in unexpected places. I feel like a million years went by rather than merely the month of June. Every day was like a year.
Then, I started to come back to earth and I realized I was missing something. The emptiness inside kept growing larger the more I tried to fill it with people and my expectations of them. I realized I needed to find my hub again.
What is my hub? I asked myself.
The answer came when I was driving in my car listening to the songs I’ve been working on for half a year with my friend Jafar: my art. I came into consciousness here, in this world, for a reason, with the family I ended up in–a family of musicians, dancers and artists. I was raised to believe in the power of creativity. My religion is art, in addition to the belief that the universe, or god, or something inside that is intuitive takes care of us and gives us what we need. So I dedicated my yoga practice tonight to getting back to my art.
Now you can argue that children are dying everywhere, wars and famines rage, but that doesn’t take away from the fact that for now, right here, a lot of us are being taken care of. And we can try to rail against the injustice of it all, or we can appreciate the space and gifts we have been given. We can take those gifts and turn them around. We can reach out and help others, here or far away, with what we have.
I was born to write music and words. I was born to sing. I was born to give what I have in the form of art. When I don’t do it, I run dry. I’m married to my art. I’ve tried to fill the space inside with substances, tattoos, men, exercise, obsession, eating or not eating, abstaining or indulging, and I always come back to this: When I do music and write and then share these things with others, I feel happy. It’s a simple guage. I’m neurotic as they come, I suppose, and perhaps this is just my way of finding meaning in a world where we have the ability find our own meaning individually and define what this meaning is to us.
I can’t fill myself with other people. I can give what I have to other people. And when I’m connected to my destiny, everything works out. I was stuck in the mud for a while, and the mud ejected me from its bowels of chaos. I suddenly found myself without a lot of things I used to have. But I got all the things I lost back—except one. My husband.
It was nice having someone who always had my back, who would drop everything to help because we made a commitment to put each other first. It was nice to feel safe and taken care of. He helped me through many years where I was drifting, trying to find my way back to me. I helped him, too.
An old lady came into the library today and we were chit-chatting about things like divorce and her husband’s death to suicide fifteen years ago. She told me when her husband killed himself, she found that people were attracted to the vacuum that opened up inside of her. She felt curious about this, why human nature was to nurture a bottomless pit.
I don’t know about that, but she said something else, about how it’s hard to lose a husband, because of the reasons I stated before. You have a bond and a commitment to each other. You agree that you will not leave the other person alone. When something happens, you go running to their aid. You know, until death or illness separates you, that you always have that one person. You have a bubble, a cushion to protect you against the world. We mutually broke that bond so that we could find a better happiness for ourselves, and it’s a hard bond to break. Friends don’t fill the space that lovers do. It’s a hard world out there with so many possibilities.
There are a million songs written about love and losing love, because this is the nature of human existence. Sometimes we have things, sometimes we don’t. All I know is this: I will appreciate and respect what the universe offers me. I have turned my thinking around from negative to grateful. And if I need a hole filled in me, I will focus that much more on my music and writing to fill it. It’s the only thing that works, because it’s real, it’s who I am, and it’s how I see the world. When you respect your art, you get more rewards than money and success. Money and success are not necessarily the rewards I want. I am seeking the substance behind the art, the power to connect with people and lift them to a higher plane through simply baring my soul.
Music (and art) is my lover. Music (and art) is a part of my makeup. Music transcends time and space and it’s what I was given and what I will give.



“she found that people were attracted to the vacuum that opened up inside of her.”
People intentionally or unintentionally are attracted to the weakness in others. Because they want someone similar, because they want something from them, because it echoes on the same frequency. The reason doesn’t matter so much as the result. We are all attracted to the results of damage.
We tell ourselves why someone is special with all the positive things we see in them, but at the same time, we are picking at them for flaws, trying to scratch away to the scabby truth that everyone is as fallible as we are. Do we do this for validation? For sadism? For curiosity? The reason is probably different for everyone. It’s human nature, the action comes first and then we try to justify it with meaning. The human brain is a machine with functions and pathways we haven’t even begun to understand, but we do have patterns to our madness.
We are hard-wired to act in a certain manner, to observe things a certain way, and we spend more of our life trying to unlearn these things than we do on learning new things. Learning new things is easy. Figuring out what matters, what your truth is, is different.
We never change, we just upgrade. Like our modern technology and it’s weekly, daily and occasionally hourly hot-fixes, security updates, app updates, etc. Our operating system is already fixed and everything we lay on top is just a new user interface, a new game/program, or some method of learning how to use what’s already there.
Creativity is just the way we think. We all put the pieces together and some people have an astonishingly creative ability to constantly convince themselves they’re the furthest thing from creative.
We all inevitably find our niche in life. Not because there is any sort of divine power directing our function, but because as human beings existing in a reality that the only constant is change, we are surprisingly afraid of it. We get comfortable with who we are. Who we are becomes what we do. What we do is really just what we are accustomed to, because learning something entirely new involves all that pesky unlearning of things we’ve come to expect as a given.
I of course am _not in the least_ saying your viewpoint is wrong, I’m just sharing my differing point of view. Because I, for one, have no illusions that I draw or really do much of anything because it was something I was born to do, it’s just something I do because after all this time it comes easier to me than the alternatives. I will never be a terribly driven ambitious person because it’s uncomfortable to me. It’s so far out of my comfort zone that the thought of taking such risks just rocks my world. I plug away taking what I view as small steps towards my future in the same way I see others take giant leaps towards theirs. It’s not that they’re better than me, or have more talent for business/etc, it’s just that their upbringing brought to them a comfort for taking a different kind of risks. That they feel if they aren’t traveling at the correct speed a bomb will go off. Some people would think that not going with the flow of social norms would be scary, that not having an iron-clad guarantee of their next paycheck or next advancement would make life unbearable, while for me it’s old hat.
It’s great that you feel confident with where you are right now, with yourself. I’m sure like all our family (probably everyone everywhere, actually) you have moments of terrified insanity at the changes going on in your life, but however you arrive there, a positive outlook is certainly the best way to go. You can’t buy anything without selling it to yourself first. Success is like that. You have to believe you want it, that you can do it, that you’ll make it, or you’ll never even try to get what you want.
(Forgive the run-on sentences)
I love this post! And, particularly this sentence: “I have turned my thinking around from negative to grateful.” We don’t have much control over events, but we do, or should, have control over how we perceive what is happening. I think it truly is ‘only in your head’.
Somehow, for me, it’s just always been easier to be thankful and positive rather than negative and unhappy. The list of things to be negative about is endless! And, money or fame or whatever, don’t seem to affect (much) whether people are satisfied with their lives or not.
To me, the list of things to be happy about is also endless.
Mike
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