Voice your hops and drems
Yesterday afternoon, five-year-old Tess begged to use my laptop. I understand the attraction, the tiny white keys flat and inviting, a world of blank screen to fill. I opened Word for her and walked away because she told me what she was writing was private.A little while later, I stopped by the dining room table where she stood, deep in thought, the table top hitting her mid chest. I watched her for a moment, that satisfied and quiet and glowing watchfulness of a mother who can hardly believe she gave birth at 44, before Tess realized I was there.
“Can you help me finish my story, Mama?” she asked, after a long pause.
Tess taught herself to read when she was barely four—in a house full of readers, I can imagine she was feeling quite left out and determined to remedy the situation herself, posthaste. She carries a copy of Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights and Staring Back: The Disability Experience from the Inside Out everywhere she goes. For all I know, she’s actually reading them. From a very young age, she has been composing long, complicated, amazing stories on the computer, arduously “spelling” very complicated words like “constellation” and “otherwise” and “remarkable” in pixels and Scrabble tiles as only a five-year-old can.What she had written yesterday was short, but powerful. She had typed three lines, then dictated the final three for me to type:
Dere hops and drems hops? Have you ever! Come back? To me?
Well? Have? You? If you do you will not wine a pries you
Will go! Back with my! Drems! And drems you to!
And my heart needs hope and dreams and sometimes
My heart loves to play with my hopes and my heart my hopes are related to my dreams.
My dreams are connected to my heart
Here’s your translation key:
“dere” = “dear”
“hops” = “hopes”
“drems” = dreams
“wine” = “win”
“pries” = prize
When we grow up, we lose that ability to speak—out loud—of what we hope for, what we need. Or many of us do. We hide what we most need, sometimes because we don’t know what it is, but often because we fear that voicing that deep desire puts us in a vulnerable position. Others can taunt us with it, like on a middle school playground when we are teased about who we love, who we are K-I-S-S-I-N-G-ing in a tree. Or we become passive aggressive, saying no and meaning yes, not asking but expecting anyway.
Or we just don’t think to ask. At our recent Life is a Verb retreat in the mountains of North Carolina, one of the participants—in introducing herself—said she wished she had a fig to use as part of her introduction. I knew she had spent the night before in a bed and breakfast literally across the street from my house near downtown Asheville. “I wish I had known,” I said to her. “I have a fig tree in my back yard.” Later, someone wished they had a cat there to illustrate their introduction. “I’ve got one of those too,” I said.
It occurred to me then how important it is to say out loud what we most need and want. That someone in close proximity might have what we need, might even offer it to us if we make it known. Even if we are on a quest to detach from things and outcomes, sometimes we do need and want. Or believe we do.
My friend Jodi introduced me to the concept of God Boxes, a place to hold wishes, dreams, prayers. “Once,” she said, “I wrote a note for my god box that said, ‘Just writing to say hello. Love, Jodi. P.S. Please notice I’m not asking for anything.’” Another of the slips of paper in her God box once read, “Would it kill you to introduce me to someone nice?”
Every story, writer Robert Olen Butler tells us, is a yearning meeting an obstacle. What is my yearning? What is yours? Not the symptoms, but the roots. (And what obstacles are we facing? Are they real obstacles or convenient excuses?)
What if the person next to us on the airplane from San Diego to Atlanta or from Cincinnati to Asheville or from Miami to Parsippany has exactly what we need to overcome that obstacle? What if the person across the street from us has figs in their backyard and that is what we most need?
I asked a question on Twitter recently—what three things do you most need and want right now? Here’s what people told me:
• Balance, perspective, support
• Sleep, chocolate, elves who will grade papers for me
• Balance, more hours in the day, great chocolate
• Learn to stay “unstuck,” find at least one moment of beauty daily, stay present
• Creative fulfillment
• (giving) forgiveness, (self) permission to stop trying to do it all, more time in nature
• a personal trainer, a good night’s sleep, a romantic night out
• solitude, a force field that keeps me from absorbing other people’s energies, a room of my own
• a brilliant thinker—to help vet an idea, an organizer—to keep things moving, 2 sponsor/partners to participate
• A place to stay, more work, more sleep
• NO “thing,” NO “place,” NO “time”
• Rich friendships, sashimi, and peace in the world
• I need space to say no, I need help getting my work done, I need love
What are your three things? I don’t necessarily mean the three biggest desires you have—not those big, altruistic ones like solving world hunger—but the three things you need right now to start moving forward toward those bigger desires?
Mine seem pedestrian, not lofty or special or ideal, but very, very human and—perhaps—circumstance driven rather than values driven, focused on the now. Perhaps they aren’t really the three things I need, but they are the three things I think I need, right now. Perhaps they serve the bigger good that underlies the book itself—I hope they do:
1. A quiet, simple, clutter-free white room with one chair and one small desk on which to write.
2. For everyone who loves LIAV to write a review of it on Amazon.
3. For Oprah Winfrey to receive and fall in love with Life is a Verb and invite me on to her show and give me a fabulous makeover and a hip, new, slenderizing wardrobe, and surprise me with guest appearances by (my choices are a shocker, are you sitting down?) Johnny Depp and Billy Collins, and for her to give away 100,000 copies of the book all over the world (hey, I think specificity matters. Smile). And letting me borrow her private chef for a year wouldn’t suck, either.
How do we reach our hops and drems? I think we have to voice them first. Out loud. For others to hear. Who knows? They might have the fig we need, the partner we’re in search of, the private phone number of a certain Mr Depp. I’m just sayin.’
Sometimes what we receive is not what we asked for. And that’s a gift of a higher calibre. And sometimes, just sometimes, we actually receive what we need by giving it to others.
37days Do It Now Challenge
Mark Twain has said, “I can teach anybody how to get what they want out of life. The problem is that I can’t find anybody who can tell me what they want.” I think we know what we want, deep down. Telling others feels unsafe, egocentric, too much a fantasy sometimes. We might be mocked for our dreams rather than helped to reach them.
Risk it.
Tell someone what you want today. Be specific. Don’t say "no," when you mean "yes, that’s exactly what I need." Let someone else help you, even if it’s hard.
But it’s the telling that’s the important action, not the receiving. So what if you don’t receive what you asked for? Perhaps not today, perhaps never. But you’ve asked. And that means you’re thinking about what you need and want. It also means you are opening the space for someone else to provide it. And you are believing yourself worthy. Because, you know, your dreams are connected to your heart. And so are everyone else’s.
Dere hops and drems hops? Have you ever! Come back? To me?
Well? Have? You? If you do you will not wine a pries you
Will go! Back with my! Drems! And drems you to!
And my heart needs hope and dreams and sometimes
My heart loves to play with my hopes and my heart my hopes are related to my dreams.
My dreams are connected to my heart