Tag Archives: A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy

Mindfulness & Saskatchewan Farm Wives

I say I’m not a spiritual person, but in one particular way I’m a yogi. A spiritual super hero. Because I’ve learned how to do something that spiritual seekers strive to be able to do:

I live in the present.

Some call it mindfulness, or living in the moment.

People go on retreats to learn how to live this way. They practice yoga, and meditate, and take vows of silence. They invest in plane tickets to India and LuLuLemon pants.

My own super hero origin story involves co-owning an organic vegetable farm for eight years, and loving someone with terminal cancer for three.

Living in the Now & Organic Vegetable Production

While living in the Cowichan Valley in 2016, I spent a few hours every Monday spinning sheep wool, listening to a circle of older, wiser people talk about fibre and life. We drank spicy Celestial Seasonings Tiger tea from pottery mugs and our fingers got sticky from the lanolin wax in the wool.

One day, the conversation turned to Saskatchewan farm wives, and how they are (apparently) the calmest people in the world. The Zen-est. Nothing ruffles their feathers. (Which is, ironically, an agricultural saying.)

I related to these farm wives instantly, because I had been a farm wife. Brock spent the winter making detailed, elaborate crop plans and business projections … and then we did our best to adapt them to an ever-changing reality through the spring, summer and fall, because no amount of forethought and preparation can inoculate a farm against the weather or human fickleness.

Brock, looking mighty mellow for a farmer in the spring season.

We faced extreme drought, windstorms, wire worms, ravens, labour shortages, mechanical failures and many more obstacles every season. That’s just part of farming.

You can do your best to plan for contingencies, but there’s no point in worrying about what might happen. You can either rail against the unexpected, or do your best to swim with the tide and find your way to the other shore.

In short: farming trained us to live in the present.

Living in the Now & Palliative Care

Then Brock was diagnosed with stage four kidney cancer and we stopped farming, because no matter how well you plan ahead, you can’t anticipate every curve ball.

A year after his diagnosis, we began to understand that Brock wouldn’t live much longer, and he began “palliative care,” which means his and our quality of life became the most important priority, rather than clinging desperately (futilely) to hope for a cure.

For two years we avoided the future tense. It was especially painful to use the future tense involving Isaac, because we both knew Brock wouldn’t be there for our son’s small steps toward independence. The driving lessons. The grandkids.

Isaac learned to fish from his grandpas.

That’s when I realized how often we humans talk about the future. At meals with friends and family, people would mention their “next year” trips or their “someday” career plans, and I would cringe at the accidental insensitivity. Unlike the rest of us, Brock would not have a next year or someday.

And I wanted to shock these friends awake: maybe they too would be thrown a curve ball, and not have a future. A car accident. Divorce. Cancer. Why postpone these dreams and plans?

We had been shocked awake, and we made the most of Brock’s every healthy day. Instead of planning ahead (even a day ahead), we chose our adventures every morning, depending on whether Brock was able to get out of bed.

We made the most of every good day. We didn’t postpone our adventures.

When friends invited us to dinner, days in advance, we’d accept with the caveat that we might cancel at the last minute, if Brock hit a rough patch or I couldn’t wake him up from his nap.

Two years of living like this, especially that last year, when Brock spent most of his time in his adjustable hospital bed or in his LaZ Boy recliner, refined our “living in the present” habits.

And I embraced that way of living, because to think about the future was to think about a time without Brock. When my thoughts wandered ahead, and I saw that sad and scary future without my husband, I would scold myself back to the present: it was silly to be sad about Someday, when I still had the man I loved right there beside me.

The Downside of Living in the Now

Living in the present isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. I struggle to accept short-term inconvenience, because I have trouble seeing the Big Picture.

Being the primary caregiver to an infant was a nightmare, because I couldn’t see past the day-to-day sleep deprivation and other challenges of those first two years. Even now, every time my son demonstrates some new independence (like pulling a chair over so he can reach a muffin on the counter) I am surprised and awed.

I also have problems focusing on a single task (although that might be the widow-brain fog). I’m like a bird, drawn to every new shiny thing. I burn food all the time, because I wander out of the kitchen and start doing laundry or hot-ironing my hair. I set timers for everything, and Isaac has learned to repeat “beep beep,” grab my hand, and lead me back to the oven when the timer goes off.

But overall, I think this is a great way to live: to wake up every day and choose how to make the most of these hours, instead of drifting on auto-pilot. Instead of postponing plans and dreams and adventures for some future time.

Stoic Meditation

So how do you achieve mindfulness if you don’t farm, or if you’re lucky enough to not have a spouse dying of cancer?

There’s a mental exercise you can try, which I discovered in William B. Irvine’s A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy. As an example of a Stoic meditation, Irvine suggests you choose something in your life — your kid, another loved one, your job — and then take a few minutes to imagine a life without that something.

Feel what you would feel without it. Are you sad? Relieved?

Then bring yourself back to the present, when you still have that something. Maybe now you see the need to change a part of your life, or maybe your appreciation for that something has been refreshed.

Even for a yogi like me, this mental exercise helps me see how lucky I am in the present.

Living in the Moment

We had some friends over for board games this winter, and I found myself singing along to the Tim McGraw song in the background:

“I went skydiving,
I went Rocky mountain climbing,
I went 2.7 seconds on a bull named Fu Man Chu …”

Because I’d recently paraglided, hiked in the Rockies and even rode a mechanical bull at a kids’ fair, it felt like I was just telling my friends what I’d been up to lately.

Thanks to Brock, thanks to eight years of farming, I’ve learned how to live in the moment and make the most of that time. I’ve learned how to “live like you were dying.”

What’s more, I’ve found a balance of responsible, future planning and day-to-day joy. My son has an RESP … and we go sledding when it snows.

This song is the soundtrack to my life these days.

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In Defence of New Years’ Resolutions

In August, when Brock was very weak and dependent on an oxygen tank, I went for a run around the neighbourhood.

I’m not a “runner” and therefore this was miraculous. But I was getting rather cabin-fevery, being home all the time, and I needed the fresh air and exercise.

Within a block, I realized (my lungs burning) that I was doing something that Brock — once a track and field star — was no longer able to do. He couldn’t run, and he would never be able to run again. I had a little epiphany about how symbolically powerful the annual Terry Fox Run is, ditto the Run for the Cure: people are running, are being healthy and physically able, in defiance of cancer. Take that, cancer: see what we can do. This thought fuelled me to run almost the whole distance, which I never thought possible given how out of shape I am.

Also

Today, I inherited an incredible collection of spinning and weaving equipment and materials from a family friend. It had belonged to his wife, who passed away this year. She was too young to die: she did not deserve to die. I went through the collection today, and fell in love with her. I never met Val, but she was obviously someone with a strong aesthetic sense: she had gorgeous wooden spindles, and the softest wool rovings. She experimented with using plants from her garden to dye wool, and her notes are detailed and enthusiastic. I would have loved to be her friend. I am sad for her husband and family, to have lost her too soon, but I am also selfishly sad, that I never got to meet her or sit and spin with her.

In Summation

I understand that making New Years’ resolutions sounds cliche and talk-show gimmicky, but here’s why I LOVE them:

The New Year is our annual wake-up call. It’s our chance to think about how we can do better, how we can live better. These wake-up calls come too infrequently. Annual self-reflection is insufficient.

Living with someone who was dying made me uber-sensitive to this opportunity we have, to change our lives frequently for the better. Most of us expect to live a long time, but so often we waste that time by settling into our safe routines.

If I knew I had only a year/month/week to live, I would spend it writing. What would you do?

Hopefully I have more than a year to live, but I see no reason to postpone doing what I want to do.

So my New Year’s resolution for 2018 is to focus on my writing. I’ve applied for an online coach with One Room, I’ll renew my Sisters in Crime and One Stop For Writers memberships, I’ll dive back into writing the last half of my murder mystery novel (“write the book you long to read!”), and I’ll submit that manuscript to the contests and grant program I’ve had on my “future rejections” to-do list since 2017. My reward for finishing my book will be attending the 2019 Malice Domestic conference, so I can shmooze with other mystery writers (and get free books). All of this is doable. It’s just a matter of deciding to do it now.

My happy place.

What Came First: the Stoic or the Stoicism?

My beloved life philosophy Stoicism advocates for frequent self-reflection. Just another reason why it’s great. Maybe you want to adopt a New Year’s resolution to read A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy?

An Essay Should Have a Logical Flow

I suppose my running and inheritance stories didn’t naturally, logically flow into my Summation … they emotionally flowed, for me, and that was enough to justify this blog post. I don’t intend to say “live for those who died too soon!” In fact, both Brock and Val (from what I know of her) did an excellent job themselves of making the most of their time, and doing what they loved to do. They are role models for the rest of us.

The Big Question

So: what are your New Year’s resolutions?