Trust (Gevurah)

When the retreat leader asked for three volunteers who were comfortable with looking ridiculous and could be trusted to not cheat, my hand immediately went up. We were each asked to stand in a two foot square drawn in blue painters tape on the floor, close our eyes, and start marching in place. The retreat leader then put on music and told us to march in place, and no matter what else happened, to just keep marching. 

Almost as soon as the music started I could hear laughter breaking out amongst the larger group. I wasn’t sure what was happening, what other non-verbal instructions might have been given to the rest of the group. At one point I was certain that others had been asked to get up and start dancing around us. But I was focused on my task: march in place, and have fun. That meant letting my legs keep me moving in place while my upper body danced along to the music. At different moments I could feel myself leaning in one direction or another, so I made sure to account for that and recenter myself. 

Then the music stopped and we were told to open our eyes. When the other two volunteers opened their eyes, they seemed shocked to find themselves having strayed very far from their boxes. I, on the other hand, seemed to have shocked everyone else in the group by having spent the entire song not moving from my box. Multiple people expressed this shock by naming that I never stay in the box, and that they expected me to have strayed so far that they would have had to stop me from hitting a wall. But one of my friends, the group's dance leader, told me she was not surprised. “You’re very grounded in your body”, she said, “it makes sense that you were able to sense where you were in space, that you were able to feel yourself walking”. 

I don’t remember learning to walk. By the time I started making memories that I can still access I was already walking, running even. In fact, one of my earliest memories is of running. I was three years old, it was early in the morning, and I was running down the apartment hallway to my parents' rooms. If I sit still and close my eyes I can remember what it felt like in my three year old body to run. It was, perhaps, more of a rumble, my legs racing to keep up with my inertia. I was in that moment of development where running is easier than walking, where I didn’t quite have the body control to stop, where I would just run until there was something that stopped me. In this case my rumble ended with a flop into my parents bed. I flopped because I couldn't yet jump.

Jumping came a couple of months later, and that I do remember. My family was spending a week at a farmhouse in the country. Just across the street there was a field full of bales of hay. My best friend and I spent hours climbing, or getting placed, on top of a hay bale and jumping into the arms of an awaiting adult. I remember standing at the edge of the hay bale, feeling the knot in my gut as I got ready to leap into the air, to know that the surface beneath me would disappear, to trust that I would be caught. It was terrifying and it was exhilarating. When atop the hay bale I could feel the fear, feel that I didn’t want to jump, until eventually I would. Then, almost immediately upon being caught and returning to the ground, the exhilaration would take over and I wanted to jump again. 

I was getting to know my body. I was learning what it was capable of, what its limitations were. I was also learning what it felt like to trust. The adults standing below me were telling me that they would catch me when I jumped. The knot in my gut was my body working out the dissonance between the physical knowledge that the ground was too far away, that it was not safe to leave the stability of my hay bale, with the emotional knowledge that the person who said they were going to catch me would do it. Each time I chose to jump and was caught, my body was learning how to blend its own sensory perception with the information that these adults in my life could be trusted. 

A couple of years later, I learned that these adults also trusted me. I was walking with my father along the California coast. The waves of the Pacific Ocean were much larger and rougher than the Atlantic Ocean waves I was used to. Ahead of us was a formation of rocks that jutted out into the ocean past the rest of the coastline. I was immediately, and very predictably, drawn towards these rocks. They were wet and slippery and quite jagged. I remember the feel of these rocks. I remember what it felt like in my body to navigate the slipperiness, to take measure of my balance, to calculate where it felt safe to venture off to and when I needed to step back. 

At first my father stayed close, ready to catch me if I fell. But then, after a while, he let me go a little ways beyond his reach. Could he see me taking these measurements? Was he able to tell that I was starting to figure something out about how my body worked? Did he know that he could trust that I knew how to be safe? 

I think about that moment a lot. It is a significant moment in the story of how I learned to trust myself. Was some of that trust I developed in myself built off of a transference of his trust in me? I have always thought that it was. My father’s trust in me lives at the center of the trust that I have in myself. They are intertwined. His trust in me gave me the space to develop trust in myself, and that trust I built in myself was reinforced by the fact that one of the people that I trusted most, so demonstratively trusted me. 

I learned very early how to trust my body in space, how to read the visual and physical cues coming both from the external conditions around me as well as my internal senses of balance, strength, and capacity for keeping myself safe. I don’t think I fully understood the importance of these early experiences, the ways that they helped me develop a deep trust in myself for navigating not only the physical world around me but the intellectual, emotional, and social worlds as well. 

I was recently talking with a friend who asked me how I balance trusting myself with knowing that there are things that I don’t know, perspectives that I cannot have. What do I do, they asked, to ensure that trusting myself and my own perspective doesn’t slip into arrogance, into believing that I always know the answer, into assuming that my perspective is always right or better? How do I know when to trust myself and when I should be trusting someone else’s perspective?

I’ve been thinking about this question a lot, about what trust is (trust of self, trust of others), about where it comes from, about what it can do for us. I know that trust must begin with trust in self, that only by trusting myself can I begin to truly trust others. If I place my trust in others before knowing how to trust myself then I am giving my self away, I am relinquishing my responsibility as a person in this world.

Ultimately I keep coming back to that day on the rocks by the ocean. I think the difference between trust in self and arrogance is that arrogance would look at those rocks and say, “I trust myself completely to be able to climb safely along all of those rocks and get to the very end”, and that true trust in self would say, “I trust myself completely to, every step along the way, be able to take the measure of my body’s strength, balance, and capacity to navigate the conditions of those rocks, and determine if I feel safe taking that next step”

Another way of putting it: trust in my ability to know my own capacity does not allow me to go climb those rocks, but to know which rocks not to climb. And it is my trust in my ability to know which rocks not to climb that allows me to feel safe and comfortable setting off to go climb the rocks. 

This is also what trusting myself looks and feels like in the intellectual, emotional, and social worlds. I don’t trust that I will always be right, or know the answer. I trust that I know where to look inside myself to determine what I know, what I don’t know, and what it feels like when I am up against things that I don’t know that I don’t know.

Community (Chesed)

Community is a shared playlist 
Community is singing together
                                                   dancing together
                                                                               laughing together
Community is inside jokes 
is knowing how to invite people into an inside joke
Community is inviting people in

Community is time in the company of people that I love and know are with me
Community is knowing there are people that are with me even if I haven’t talked with them in months
Community is knowing there are people that are with me even if I haven’t seen them in years
Community is knowing there are people that are with me even if I haven’t met them yet

Community is a practice of love
                                                      a practice of joy
Community is a practice of disagreement 
                                                                 of accountability

Community is blowing up fifty balloons at one o’clock in the morning to surprise and celebrate a friend
Community is staying up until two o’clock in the morning rigging those balloons so that they will fall from the ceiling when that friend opens the door of their room
Community is getting up at seven o’clock in the morning to film that friend opening that door and walking into a hallway full of balloons and friends

Community is sitting by a fire with people I know, love, and disagree with 
Community is engaging in our disagreement with love
Community is speaking my truth and listening to theirs 
Community is searching for the common values that bring us together
Community is dissecting the experiences and beliefs that led us to see things differently

Community is loving people that I don’t agree with
Community is not trying to change them
Community is holding them accountable when I think they are wrong
Community is being held accountable when I am wrong
Community is calling the people I love towards the better versions of themselves
Community is allowing myself to be called towards the better versions of myself

Community is holding people I love in their grief
Community is allowing myself to be held in mine
Community is witnessing people while they become undone
Community is allowing my becoming undone to be witnessed 

In community we love and disagree with each other
In community we choose curiosity and release righteousness
In community we hear each others’ truths and hold each other accountable to the truths that we know
In community we grieve and celebrate together 
                                                                             …often at the same time


The Space Between (Malkhut/Shechinah)

If I am here for anything, it seems that what I am here for is to wrestle in the space between: to stand in the grey areas, to make friends with the discomfort of not knowing, of not being sure, of holding both. If there is such a thing as truth, this is where it will be found - in the place of limbo, in the space between. 

There is an irony to this being the location of my purpose. There has always been something in me that wants, more than anything, to have certainty, to be able to know something is absolutely true. I have a deep and perhaps insatiable yearning to know where I stand, to have arrived, to get to finally stand on the solid ground of a truth that will not change, a knowing that is finite, concrete, unmoving. 

And yet, where I find myself landing, time and again, is in a place where the only truth that makes sense is one that holds uncertainty, one that makes space for all the things that I do not and cannot know, one that exists as paradox. 

When I was in graduate school I was introduced to the work of the artist and educator Maxine Greene. She wrote about the idea of becoming, of being on the way with questions still unanswered, of being… not yet. Something about her work struck a chord with me, though at first it was a dissonant chord. My initial reaction to hearing her speak about the beauty of continuing to discover who she was well into her elder years was one of exasperation. Sill discovering who she was… Not there yet! 

In my early twenties, I was doing so much work to figure out who I was, to land in the knowing of what I was here for. I wanted nothing more than to arrive in the life that was for me, to arrive in the me that I was meant to be. I felt so close to knowing who I was, narrowing in so precisely on what it was that I was here for, on what my life’s work was meant to be. I had such clear knowings at that time in my life that being confronted with the notion that those knowings might change, might evolve, might be wrong, was a disruption I was not ready to embrace. 

But it stuck with me. It was a powerful enough sentiment that even though the note was discordant, I could tell that it was one to hold on to, that there was something in it that was already speaking to me, if perhaps a part of me that was hanging out in the background, not yet ready to drive the ship of my life. 

The place where this chord struck was the part of me that was already familiar with the space between, that already had spent some time in the land of limbo, that already was wrestling with the very idea of certainty and a singular notion of truth. It turned out that her words, and work, and example, were exactly the thing I needed to give that part of me permission to continue exploring, to continue questioning the things I thought I knew, to continue imagining beyond the scope of where the me who knew, was willing to look. 

I credit that part of me, and the influence she had on it, with my ability to navigate the hard moments that were waiting around the corner. This part of me that was strengthened by her words, became the part of me that could find comfort in that place we call limbo, that could stand strongly in the midst of the unknown, that embraced and learned to relish the mysteries that we will never understand, that came to accept paradox as the only way to experience reality. 

Today when I reflect on the space between, on the gift that standing in that space offers, I think first about my relationship to conflict, about my understanding of conflict as being a manifestation of the fiction that we are separate from each other, about the paradoxical way that conflict can feed the myth of separation and also debunk it. 

The version of me that found discordance in Maxine Greene’s perspective was also a version of me that was not very comfortable with conflict. My certainty did not play well with the discomfort of truly taking in other perspectives, with embracing the humility required to imagine that I might, perhaps, be wrong. That version of me tended towards avoiding conflict in the same way I avoided the unknown. That part of me was wrapped up in being right, in centering my righteousness, in exaggerating the fiction of separation by creating clear distinctions between myself and the people with whom I did not agree, by holding tightly to the truth of my perspective, and to its obviousness, its infallibility. 

It was through spending time in the space between, spending time getting comfortable in the discomfort of the unknown, that I began letting go of my attachment to the rightness of my perspectives, that I built in myself the ability to imagine a place beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing, that I came to value the truth of connection over the attachment I had to my perspective being the truth. It is through that process of sitting together in the discomfort of the space between, that we can come to see separation we believe to be between us as a myth, as truly non-existent. And it is through that process that I have seen conflict used as an opportunity to bring us closer, to dissolve that myth of our separation. 

Steadiness (Yesod)

Steadiness comes from being held by the earth, by the water, by a community, a friend, a lover. 

Steadiness comes from being held by myself: a hand on my gut, a hand on my heart. 

Steadiness comes when my heart and my gut are aligned with my mind and my body. 

Steadiness comes with noticing the shaking of my body, from not stopping it but allowing it to continue, from breathing into the discomfort that comes with that lack of control. 

Steadiness comes from my breath, from deep down in my body, below my gut; from sitting up straight, from engaging my core, from feeling the strength at my center. 

Steadiness comes when I feel at one with myself.

Steadiness comest from the deep knowing that before I believe in any of the socially constructed realities that I find myself swimming inside of, I believe that I belong to the earth, I believe that I am of the water, I believe that when the air from the sky fills my lungs the very essence of life is simultaneously captured and reborn in each of those moments.

Sometimes my steadiness is so strong that it can become the ground that others walk on. Sometimes, when it’s at its strongest, it can become the ground I walk on myself. And every once in a while, when I am at my very most steady, I can allow myself to release control completely, not to fall into another’s arms, not to rely on their steadiness, but to float with them, blending ground and air, spinning together, creating a centrifugal force in which I can simultaneously be held in place and in motion. 

I was twelve or thirteen when I learned that steadiness can come from being in motion. My friend Libby and I had just stepped into the cool air of a summer night in the mountains, a perfect foil for the thick air and loud music of the Friday night dance party - a weekly tradition at our summer camp. Standing at one end of a large soccer field, we looked up at the stars and just started spinning. After a few minutes we started spinning across the field. It was not a race, it was simple, joyous, the most innocent version of childhood play. 

We found it so exhilarating that we turned it into our own Friday night tradition. Each week we would take a break from dancing and spin ourselves dizzy. Inevitably, somewhere between half and three quarters of the way across the field we would veer off course and end up collapsing on the ground, the earth spinning below our backs, the sky rolling in circles above us. 

Or perhaps it felt the other way around. Perhaps we, in those moments, understood what it truly meant to be upside down, stuck to the surface of a planet, rolling its way through space. Perhaps in those moments we were free from the story of up and down. Perhaps those moments were the closest I ever came to knowing what it is like to be one with the earth. To feel so steady on the ground while everything around me was spinning and rolling, tumbling and turning. 

Perhaps that physical sensation prepared me for the emotional turbulence that has come for us all in these last years. Perhaps it is because I know what it is to be stuck to the surface of a planet and look out into the vastness of the space it is hurtling through, dispelled from the notion of which way is supposed to be up, that I can stand today, on that same earth, while story after story that I was supposed to believe, crumbles and disintegrates before my very eyes, and know that the steadiness of the earth upon which I stand is not going anywhere.

Awe (Hod)

“For me the entire universe was created”

“I am but dust and ash”

- Rabbi Simcha Bunam Bonhart of Przysucha

A couple of years ago I was listening to a podcast about heartbreak. They were talking about the physical pain that manifests in our bodies and the difficulty that some of us have in getting over heartbreak. At one point the guest said that one of the ways that the body heals from heartbreak is through the experience of awe. 

In thinking back on my own experiences of heartbreak I found resonance in this idea. I noticed that whenever my heart is aching, my immediate impulse - once I’ve finished numbing myself by eating lots of ice cream and watching several days worth of not great movies - is to get myself outside, away from the constructed world, away from the things I am used to. 

I go to the desert with its vast open skies, dry air, and stunning landscapes of rock, brush, and the occasional bright flower. I go to the forest with its rays of light dancing through the trees, lush canopy that feels like a warm intimate embrace, and earthy aromas that smell like life itself. I go to the ocean who’s waves roll and roar in constant motion and with such force that it brings my nervous system into alignment with its natural steady rhythm. And in each of these places, the primary feeling I experience is awe. 

In trying to describe it, I struggle to determine where in my body the experience of awe occurs. I feel it in my stomach, an almost lurching forward from the deepest parts of my core, as though there is something in there that is yearning to get out. I feel it in my heart, a radiance of heat surging, pulsing, flaring up, as if the physical container of my ribcage is too small to hold the amount of energy my heart is longing to produce, to release. I feel it in my throat and lungs, an irregular expansion that leaves me short of breath and full of pure clean air at the very same time, that has me coughing out toxins I did not know were there. I feel it in my eyes, softened by the wide expanse and life size scale of the natural world, a deep heaviness wells up as tears that are a thousand years old seep forward to clear the way for crisper more focused vision. I feel it in my skin, tingly and vibrant, awake, alive, alert, but also relaxed. And I feel it in the part of me that lives outside the physical boundary of my body, a blurring of the separation between my skin and the world beyond it, a sense of connection and oneness with the air, the trees, the ground, and the water. 

What is healing about the experience of awe is that it isn’t about making me feel better, it is about making me feel connected. One of the things that I think we forget in our good/bad binary way of thinking, of naming experiences, is that our emotional lives are way too complex for good and bad. Awe allows me to feel profound relief at how very insignificant I am. It allows me to feel freedom in the beauty and wonder of a world my mind will never fully understand. It brings forward in me a confidence that is at once emanating from the core of my being and completely disconnected from any notion I may have about a thing called self. 

Rabbi Bunam of Przysucha walked around with two slips of paper in his pockets. On one he wrote, “for me the entire universe was created”. On the other he wrote, “I am but dust and ash”. His practice was to pull out and read the one he needed to bring balance to the thing that he, in that moment, was feeling. I too have a practice around these phrases. I like to look at them together, to take them in as one. They are, to me, a written version of the experience of awe, of a truth that I know in my body when standing at the edge of the ocean under the bright full moon: that my insignificance to the roaring of the ocean or the cosmic rhythm of the moon is only matched by the profound privilege I have at getting to experience the awesome beauty of both. 

The experience of awe knocks me straight into presence, releases me from the habits and patterns I find myself stuck in, and dispels me of any story I might have constructed that would otherwise serve to solidify those habits and patterns. Awe is the visceral, full body experience that does for me the thing that the words in Rabbi Bunam’s pockets seek to evoke: remind me that the full experience of being alive is so much more than whatever temporary emotional state I find myself in, be it heartbreak, triumph, or anything in between. And with the clarity that comes from stepping into presence, I am able to show up to whatever moment I find myself in with the the fullness of my being.

The Long View (Netzach)

You are not expected to complete the work in your lifetime, nor may you refuse to do your unique part

- Rabbi Tarfon

There’s a story that has been at the top of my mind lately. I have found myself telling it in nearly every class I teach, and many of the conversations I have. It’s an old story that I’ve heard different versions of over the years and I don’t quite know to whom I should attribute it. The version of the story that I’ve been telling goes something like this:

This is a story about a person in a moment of searching. Their world was full of conflict and strife, and while they were committed to taking action towards the betterment of their world, they did not know what to do, where to begin, or how to go about working for the change that they knew was needed. After many years of efforts that did not feel fruitful, they became disillusioned with their work and set off in search of a piece of wisdom that could help them navigate the challenging times that they were living through.

One day their journey brought them to a remote castle at the top of a mountain where they had heard there lived a wise elder. They arrived at the castle, as people often do in these kinds of stories, at dusk just as a storm of wind and rain was making its way up the mountain. Upon entering the castle they were greeted by a young person who took care of the elder. This host told our traveler that the elder could be found at the top room of the castle. They then gave our traveler a cup filled to the brim with oil, and told them that to see the elder they must bring this cup to the top room without spilling any along the way. 

Our traveler, up to the challenge, took the cup of oil and - very slowly and very carefully - made their way through the castle, passing through every room, with their attention focused on the very full cup of oil. Finally, our traveler reached the top room and, not having spilled a single drop, felt accomplished and ready to receive the wisdom they had been seeking. 

The elder greeted them warmly and, referencing the storm that was approaching, invited the traveler to spend the night. “As you walked through the castle”, the elder asked, “which room called most to you?” The traveler was taken aback, first by the kindness of the elder, but also by the fact that they had to admit that they were not called by any of the rooms, for they were so focused on not spilling the oil that they barely noticed any of their surroundings. “Well”, said the elder, “you must walk around the castle again and this time notice the rooms, notice the art, the views, the feel you get from each one”.

So our traveler, cup of oil still in hand, set back out through the castle, this time placing their attention on the many beautiful paintings and sculptures that filled the rooms and halls. A few hours later, our traveler returned to the top room where the elder sat, this time curled up in a chair by the fire. The traveler was in a state of euphoric awe, so beautiful the art and views that filled the castle were. For nearly twenty minutes, the traveler described in stunning detail each painting, each sculpture, each view from a window that called to them, as well as the feelings and sensations that these experiences stirred up. 

When the traveler finished, the elder, having smiled through the entire monologue, took a deep breath and gently asked, “and the cup of oil?”

The traveler looked at their hands and noticed that the cup was gone, but there were oil stains on the legs of their pants. With their attention on the beauty that surrounded them, the traveler had completely lost track of the cup of oil they were holding, first letting the oil spill then, absentmindedly, placing the cup down somewhere they did not remember. 

The elder, noticing the shock on the travelers face upon realizing this, smiled at them and then turned back to the fire. 

I think the reason that this story has been living so close to the surface for me these last months is that one of the biggest challenges that I, and many of the people I’ve come across, are struggling with in this moment, is how to find the balance between looking at the big picture and focusing on the very practical tasks at hand. 

Many of us are finding ourselves narrowing our vision, focusing so much of our attention on each and every horrific news story that comes across our feed that we can barely breath. We are literally constricting our airways with the narrowness of our attention, completely unaware of the beauty that still exists in the world, almost determined to not see it because the task at hand feels so important and so impossible. 

An antidote to this narrowing of focus that helps me in these moments is to take a deep breath, take a step back, widen the scope of my vision, and take the long view. The long view reminds me that the horror and the suffering that is showing itself in the world is not particular to this moment, that throughout time there have always been forces of greed and destruction, there has always been strife and conflict, and there have always been people working towards making things better, there have always been people driven by and towards love, there is always beauty to be found, to be inspired by. 

Taking the long view allows me to place myself in a lineage of these people, it allows me to learn from and be inspired by them, it allows me to imagine the world I want to live in and find the paths that might lead us in that direction. 

But I want to be clear, the long view is not about getting caught in abstractions, getting wrapped up in utopian dreams to the point that I lose touch with reality. The long view invites me to place the moment we are living through in context: to look at reality right in the face, get clear on the places where my actions can be impactful, take those actions, and keep my eyes up and looking in the direction I want us to be going. 

Taking the long view allows us to imagine the world we want to get to while acting in the world that we currently are in.

Joy & Sadness (Tiferet)

…Your joy is your sorrow unmasked. And the selfsame well from which your laughter rises was oftentimes filled with your tears. And how else can it be? The deeper that sorrow carves into your being, the more joy you can contain…When you are joyous, look deep into your heart and you shall find it is only that which has given you sorrow that is giving you joy. When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see that in truth you are weeping for that which has been your delight…. Verily you are suspended like scales between your sorrow and your joy…

- Excerpted from Kahlil Gibran’s On Joy and Sorrow


It has often been the case in my life that moments of exuberance and fulfillment have been accompanied by deep sadness and heartbreak. I do not think I am unique in this experience, though I may be particularly attuned to the ways in which my emotional body experiences and has had to practice holding both. 

In the early spring of 2011, a dream that had lived in me for many years was actually coming to fruition. The outdoor education program that I had designed and had been running piecemeal versions of for a few years had finally reached the point where I could hire a full staff for a month-long run of programs. During the first week of programming, I received some news that cracked open a deep well of personal heartbreak. The next few weeks were filled with a profound experience of dissonance. 

I would, in one moment, be fully present to the incredible dream unfolding around me: interacting with groups of middle and high school students as they made their way through our obstacle courses, supporting my staff as they built supportive relationships with the students, and coaching teacher chaperones. In those moments I felt so vibrant, so fulfilled, so clear headed and alive in my body. 

And then, when stepping away from the group, the deepest forms of agony would wrap themselves around my body. I would be walking the path from the camping meadow and I would suddenly have to stop, unable to catch my breath, unable to tame the beast of grief erupting from my heart. Barely able to hold myself up, I would collapse and cry until I regained enough strength to make it back to my cabin. 

At the time I had a lot of feelings about having to hold these two things together. It didn’t feel fair that this Joy that I was experiencing in the fruition of one of my dreams would have to be diminished by a wound from a different part of my heart. 

A few years later, in the early fall of 2015 I was in a different moment of deep heartbreak and an existential undoing. This one was not paired with any dream fulfillment and had me stuck in a deep state of Sadness. One afternoon, on the advice of a friend, I walked into a near empty movie theater and went to sit near the back. Aside from me, the theater was sprinkled with a handful of young children and their adult caretakers. The movie, Inside Out, follows the inner emotional life of a young girl as she navigates a new and stressful moment in her life. 

What I especially loved about the movie was the relationship that developed between the emotions Joy and Sadness. When, towards the end of the film, Joy realizes that Sadness is the only one that can help break the main character out of her place of emotional overload and willingly gives over the controls, I found myself crying uncontrollable tears. It was a truly beautiful moment, the recognition of the place and power of Sadness. 

At the time I was deeply invested in the power of sadness. The friend who recommended I see the movie did so because of the sadness she recognized in me. I had let sadness take the controls and steer me into a place of deep and prolonged grieving. It was not pleasant but it was necessary. 

Looking back at that version of myself, there was another big takeaway from the movie that - while I may not have articulated it at the time, did resonate with the way that I understood my emotional world. Soon after the climactic tears, Joy and Sadness learn how to share the controls, they learn how to live in the main character together, and they start producing memory balls that glow blue and gold - that contain Sadness and Joy together.

This week, I have been holding in my body that very familiar feeling of Joy and Sadness. I spent much of this week operating at my very best: sharing in powerful learning, deep conversation, laughter and play, song and dance with wonderful friends from many of my communities. And, in every one of those moments, there is an underlying sense that I might, at any moment, collapse into a puddle of tears that are living just a millimeter beneath the surface. It has been a full and beautiful week.