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MAKER
OF MAGIC
The Amazing Complexity of My Role as a Woman
by Kathlyn Schaaf
This article was originally published in GoOff:
News and Views, December 15-21
The holidays have just ended and I am taking a moment to reflect
in awe on what I accomplished. As usual, I did all the stuff that
defines our holiday season. I carried the torch of what we "always
do"; I made the magic happen for the people I love most in
the world.
I bought all the gifts and wrapped all the gifts and shipped all
the gifts that had to be shipped. I didn't do this in any
careless, hasty way; I spent time holding each recipient in my heart,
choosing something that would be resonant and validating of how
special each person is in our lives. I lay awake a bit at night
or early in the morning strategizing about how to create the magic
of Christmas for my family. I was Santa – and when my youngest
lost a tooth on December 23, I also doubled as the Tooth Fairy for
one night.
I struggled a bit over our holiday cards, worrying whether the
picture reflected well how we each look at this point in our life
process. I put the photos on the cards and updated our mailing list
and printed labels and bought stamps and set up an assembly line
with my kids to get them all ready for the mail. I wrote personal
notes when it was important to honor a connection.
I attended our neighborhood cookie exchange, bringing my nine
dozen cookies (all one kind, baked at 6 a.m. one morning, along
with a copy of the recipe to be put in a little recipe book by the
equally creative hostess) and laughed with friends and drank coffee
and sampled a few of the cookies and returned home with nine dozen
assorted cookies. We "always" have to have cookies for
the holiday.
I selected and decorated the Christmas tree with my kids, hung
the stockings, made sure the outside lights and decorations all
worked. These are the things we "always do", the kind
of reliable and consistent foundation that is so important to my
kids – or any kids for that matter. It is what makes them
feel safe in a crazy world; they know there are certain things we
will "always do".
I attended all of my children's musical concerts, recitals
and sporting events, as I do every week of the year. I took the
teenager to movies with his friends. I made sure they attended all
their guitar and piano lessons and did their practicing; I made
sure one son took his antibiotics every day so that his ear infection
would clear up and the specialist would quit threatening to put
tubes in his ears. The dog developed some bumps under her chin and
needed to visit the vet to assure us this was not a reoccurrence
of a previous melanoma. At some point we realized (as we do every
year) that the boys' dress slacks no longer fit either of
them and we had to face the holiday shopping hoards again in order
to find black slacks for that chorus concert. I used the time alone
with each of them in the car to check in with them about how they
were doing, to connect with some real conversation.
I worked at my office, seeing clients in my psychotherapy practice.
The holidays are particularly stressful times for people, on many
levels, and my practice always gets active between Thanksgiving
and New Years as people revisit old family dynamics and other relational
struggles. There is something about the contrast between the hype
and the reality that brings up lots of truth for many of us during
this month, and I often see a number of my old clients return for
a few visits as they cycle through another important layer of their
process. I consider it a sacred honor to participate with these
people on their amazing journeys.
I hosted a family who visited from out of state; I took a group
of eight to Disneyland for ten hours and a group of six up to the
mountains for a few days of snowboarding. I cooked dinner for nine
one night, thirteen the next night, and nine the night after that.
I picked up endlessly behind kids who left a trail of dirty paper
plates, candy wrappers, half–emptied drink containers and
plastic wrappers as they opened all of the things they had gotten
for Christmas. I had great conversations with my sister. I also
listened as my kids laughed with their cousins, shared stories about
life as it is unfolding for each of them, negotiated conflicts and
differences.
There were moments in all of this when I complained, when I screamed
at the car ahead of me in parking lot and when I snuck off to a
quiet corner to have a little cry because I needed to. I was not
necessarily sad or angry or afraid or overwhelmed; I just needed
to let off a little emotional steam to make room for all the incoming
experiences and feelings during this complex relational time with
people I love.
I did what women do, what they have done for generations. I held
the needs of others in my heart and did my best to honor them. I
listened and mirrored what others were saying. I created the space
for them to experience love and connection. I planned ahead and
anticipated and multi-tasked and intuited and remained as flexible
as I could so that I could bend with the flow of events and not
break. I showed up for the people around me on a physical, an intellectual
and an emotional level. I carried forward the traditions, the safety
of what we "always do", for the members of my family
so that they can each relax somewhere deep inside and more fully
express their own unique human potential.
Now that the holidays are over, I have another important date marked
on the calendar: International Women's Day on March 8, 2003.
On this date, I plan to gather together with a group of women in
the community where we live to celebrate the complexity of what
we do, to validate one another in a way the world seldom seems to
do and to explore what kind of magic we could create in the world
if we focused our incredible skills, experience and power on helping
to heal some of the wounds of this world.
We will be gathering under the sheltering umbrella of a movement
called Gather the Women, a grassroots initiative that describes
its purpose with these words:
Gather the Women is evoking at a profound level
an experience of our own woman's worth to the world.
As women we bring life forward.
We are in touch with the cycles of life
and we function in a context that is deeply relational.
This realization is allowing women to risk leaving
the safety of our comfortable conformities.
We have the capacity to generate
creative solutions that benefit
all life on the planet.
Gather the Women is creating
a rich exchange of cultural values
to dissolve the ties that bind us to the illusion
that one segment of our human family can win
while another loses.
Together we women are contributing
to a new collective wisdom
and we are lending our strength
to that which we wish to embrace.
From this emerging balance is being born
a new dimension of our humanity.
These words are found on the website of Gather the Women, located
at www.gatherthewomen.org. They make my heart sing. They speak the
truth about what I contribute to my family, my friends, my clients,
and my community. They speak about a calling I feel to bring the
healing power and complexity of the feminine to this unbalanced
world. They express a depth of recognition and validation that makes
me feel like I can risk stepping more fully into my true magical
potential.
It was a man, Matthew Arnold, who articulated over a century ago,
"If ever the world sees a time when women shall come together
purely and simply for the benefit of mankind, it will be a power
such as the world has never known." When I first heard those
words, they rang with truth someplace deep inside of me. They have
inspired me to risk stepping out of the safety of my comfortable
conformities, for while the defined roles of my life as a wife and
mother and daughter and sister and neighbor and friend have indeed
been familiar and comfortable, they have also been confining. There
is an aspect of my true self that has never been welcomed or validated
in any of those defined roles. I have always been looking for an
outlet for my deepest passions, my most profound creative energies.
I have been looking for a home where my true power would be welcomed
and honored.
This is not an easy commitment to make. As women, I don't
think we ever truly forget that women have been attacked again and
again throughout history because of their power. They have been
burned at the stake; they have been raped and banished and exiled
and silenced and tortured and disfigured and stoned and branded.
There is a history of pain and fear that comes with the gifts described
in the words of Gather the Women: "We bring life forward;
we are in touch with the cycles of life and we function in a context
that is deeply relational." It is not an exaggeration to speak
of the risk of stepping out of our traditional roles and our comfortable
conformities; it is a stark reality we carry in our genetic memory
and we see confirmed in the news even today as a young unmarried
woman in Nigeria awaits word on whether she will be stoned to death
for her crime of becoming pregnant.
I need to gather with other women on March 8. I need to talk and
listen and laugh and share stories. I need to celebrate how we enrich
the lives we touch with our attention to details on so many levels.
I need to explore the possibilities of what we could create in this
world if we "came together purely and simply for the benefit
of mankind." I need be there as we do what women have always
done, and then kick it up a notch to create a whole new kind of
magic.
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