Saturday, July 16, 2011

Great Expectations

I met a man last night named Bill who has spent several years in Kenya. He spoke of the cultural differences and about how much we, as Americans, not only take for granted- but how much we expect in life- and how drastically it differs from Kenyans' worldview.

We expect to be healthy. We expect to be happy to to lead a life full of love and joy, with minimal hardship. We expect to be rich. We expect for babies not to die and for all of us to have long lives, liked we are owed this by God or by the universe.

Of course with any good conversation that provokes life and thought, I spent some time reflecting today. I spent some time pondering about the things that I expect to have in my life, and I sat down and made a list.

I expect:

To not get any severe sickness because I take great care of myself
To find a partner in life and not be alone
To have children of my own and not have any complications getting
pregnant
To have my parents until they reach a very old age- I'm thinking 95
To always make enough money to not only pay my bills, but to have
some left over to save
To be able to continue to travel the way that I have in my 20's
To age gracefully
To have healthy kids who also get married and have kids, thus making
me a grandmother
For love to last
To be successful in my endeavors and to be a published author
To have clear skin
To never be in a car accident and to always be able to walk
To have a nice, comfortable home and be able to own a car
To always be free and have the ability to choose how I lead my life.

And the list went on.

It was sobering this morning to look at all of the things that I expect for my life. We live in a society where we all just have so much that we can't think of life another way. And these expectations of mine were somewhat basic. I don't expect to ever own a mansion, to have a jet, to have a cook or to have all of my children attend Harvard. But ingrained in me is the desire for and expectation to have comfort.

I want to walk the line of hopeful expectation for things in life, balanced with a daily abundant sense of gratitude and understanding for all that I do have in my life. I once heard one of my mentors say:

"Do you understand just how rich you are? If you were blind, what would you pay for your eyesight and the ability to see the sun as it sets? To be able to look at your own face in the mirror or see the face of your child?"

That was really the first time that I began to even think about how rich I already am. So, I challenge you to do the same. Life becomes so daily. And it is hard. Work is difficult, paying bills- especially in the past few years- is stressful, relationships can be tough sometimes. But we are so very rich, each one of us. When you practice gratitude and have a thankful heart for each day, you will inspire others to do the same.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Thankful


Dad in Hawaii in 2006

Today, I'm focusing on the things in my life that I am thankful for. And with it being Father's Day, I cannot help but feel immense gratitude for having Jim Castle as my father. He just turned 66 years old a few days ago, and with me soon turning 30 and understanding how quickly these years seem to pass us by, life becomes more and more precious to me, and my love for my family grows deeper. Maturity as the years goes on finds us in a different place, wishing we hadn't spent so many years not truly appreciating the things that we hold most important.

My dad is a jovial man. Dark italian skin, weathered by years of hunting and fishing, a thick head of greyish hair that at one time was jet black, cheeks that get flush when he laughs or drinks beer, both which occur quite often.

He's not only a great father, but a fantastic, loving papa

He tells the best jokes. I have a rolodex of 'jokes by dad' in my memory- but what I love most about his joke telling is not the joke itself. It's how he manages to laugh about the joke for the following 10 minutes, chuckling under his breath, sometimes until little tears fill his eyes. How something can be so funny, I am not sure- but that is so endearing to me of my father.

Every year since grandkids, dad has dressed up as Santa as our grandpa used to do. The Santa accent and the floppy Santa hands are the best. You just have to see it :)

I was always a daddy's girl. I'd follow him around our pecan tree-filled 3 acres, picking up sticks and helping him do yard work. We would go to Houston Astros games as a family growing up and he'd sneak in freezer-size bags of peanuts into mom's purse because he didn't want to pay the exorbitantly high price at the Astrodome. Sorry for giving away your secrets on the internet, dad, but you passed it on. I also sneak my candy into the movies. Like father, like daughter.
At the hunting lease on dad's hunting jeep back when Jaime and I were kids

Mom & Dad in Hawaii in 2006- yes, he is wearing my ROXY hat. Hilarious.

I remember glowing when I saw you come to my freshman year volleyball game. You walked with me on the football field when I was homecoming duchess in my cheerleading uniform. You did what dads are supposed to do: you loved your girls. You took care of us. You still wash my car when I go home and make sure it has gas in it. Those little labors of love that have shown me over the years just how much you care. Dad, I love you and am thankful for you. I hope that my kids have a father one day who love them as you have loved us.

Dad and me in the summer of 2005 when I got my Arbonne, white Mercedes Benz. He was there with my to help with all of the paperwork. He was so proud of me.

Happy Fathers Day, everyone. I hope you can also spend some time thinking about your dad, grandfather or a man in your life who has acted as a father to you and how grateful you are for them.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

A Little London in Your Life Would Do Some Good

I just returned from a 4 day mini trip to London, a city that delighted me with its cleanliness, its history and its people with flushed cheeks and jovial grins. Not to mention, that notable and gorgeous English accent. I hadn't been to London in nearly 10 years, since my European backpacking trip through college when I was entering my Senior year in college. Goodness. I was only 20 years old then. Needless to say, life has changed dramatically and it is interesting to re-visit a place that is relatively the same when your life has done so much changing, and in such a short amount of time.


When I first went to London, it was my first European experience, my first taste of International travel and really my first taste of freedom. That 2 and 1/2 month trip through 9 different European countries was what birthed my love for travel and intensified my desire to explore every inch of life that this life has to offer. I remember arriving in London after being in non-English speaking countries for 6 weeks. I felt so relieved to be in a place that had somewhat of a resemblance of home, simply because I could understand people without needing a translation. My brain could take a rest from interpreting signs and asking questions beginning with, "Ou est...??" (meaning 'where is,' for you non-French speaking readers).


Back in 2002, I felt young and free and alive. Now it is 2011, and I still feel all of those things; I just feel a bit wiser and more seasoned with life, which is a good thing. That is a natural progression in the order of how life works, at least one might hope. It was London where I specifically recall having my first wine cooler with my best friend. Yes, I was 20 years old, which is an age where most kids have had at least 4 years of keg stands under their belts. I, however, grew up in the conservative south and I was both sheltered and naive. My friend and I got them and I remember feeling a mixture of cool and adventurous- when in fact, drinking a wine cooler doesn't lend to either of those images. We walked out of the convenient store and realized that these were not twist off caps and we had no bottle opener. A homeless man saw our confused struggle and came to our relief, taking the wine coolers and popping the tops off by using the door handle of the stoop that he had made his home. With a toothless grin, it was almost as if he was welcoming us into the world of debauchery and into his own private social club of alcoholic bliss. We tipped him a few pence and went on our way, coolers in hand.

Needless to say, almost 10 years later, this trip was a very different experience. I noticed and appreciated things about the city of London than I did back then, as I have seen much more of the world and have more travel experience under my belt. I noticed the beautiful architecture of the city and its layout and how tidy their tube system is compared to our New York subway system. In fact, I cannot imagine what the English think of Americans when they come to New York and enter our subways stained with graffiti and lord knows what, reeking of trash and many times of urine. It probably confirms their pre-conceived ideas of us, actually. I noticed how 75% of the people that I saw running along the Thames were wearing backpacks. And not just small camelbacks for water, but large backpacks, like they were training for an event. It was definitely a cultural difference. And, I noticed how even in the summertime, most women wear pantyhose under their skirts and shorts, even if dressed casually. It must be something about being English and being ranked substantially higher on the 'proper' scale than we are over here.


All of that said, in my reflection I am supposing that is how life works. Our perspectives change. It's not just a place that changes around us, but we are the ones who are evolving more rapidly to give that place its different meaning and feeling. Our first 20 years are mainly spent just learning by taking things in our environment in. In those years most of us don't have enough life experiences to really compare them to others. We're building our database of experience so that in our 20's, we start to really learn from mistakes and from the foundation of life's lessons that have been building and being stored in our minds and hearts for their proper time when they will come and teach us what they will.

As I am soon approaching my 30th year, I look at my life and see it as a collection of those lessons. In my early years and up until my early 20's, I was young and naive in many ways, and those years were spent gathering the information that I needed to form into the person who I am today. In my 20's, I have explored many aspects of my life and myself and made some mistakes along the way, all of which I am grateful for, as I have learned from them and been changed by them, to form the woman that I am today upon the strong foundation of my past. And yet I am still growing, and in to my 30's I will soon enter with the knowledge that I have gained through these prior years, more confident in who I am, more loving, more gracious and compassionate, more bold but also more tender.



From my last trip to London to this past one, I love what has transpired in my life and who I have become over the past 9 years. Sometimes it's not until we are in a place like that, a place we have not visited in quite some time, that we remember how far we have come in life's journey. I think ahead to 10 years from now, that perhaps I will see London before that time or possibly never again... but if I do have the privilege to visit again in a decade, Big Ben will still ring loudly, the changing of the guards will still be changing, and English bread pudding will still be as heavenly as it is today. Yet I will be different, hopefully more lovely with time, with more experience, with more of life's lessons. I hope that no matter where your journey takes you, it will be the same for you.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Green is My Fav-O-rite Color


I can't say that title without thinking about Aerosmith. Irregardless, after 29 years I have finally found an answer to the ever-ridiculous question, "what is your favorite color?" Unless you say black, no one cares.

Although no one cares, I was walking today under a canopy of blossoming spring trees, and I finally identified my favorite color. It is the bright, translucent spring-green that blankets the greyish-white branches of the trees, creating a beautiful forest out of the parks in Manhattan. In the winter, everything is grey. The grey sidewalks become a familiar sight, head down with each rapid step to slice through the wind that whips fiercely between stone cold silver buildings. The leaves are lost like fallen soldiers in the fall months, leaving the trees naked and exposed in their shades of grey. The sky is grey. The clouds are grey. People become grey. I wonder if Adam Duritz gained his inspiration from a New York winter for so many of his lyrics... grey guitar and play... something about the shades of grey...

Perhaps that is why this vibrant green lights up my soul each time I step outside. It's the end of May, and spring is just now settling in on New York. The initial blossoms have come and gone, and in their wake they bestowed a gorgeous spectrum of green that symbolizes life, renewal and change.




I have always loved trees. I grew up on 5 acres of pecan trees, free to roam with open space around me and my imagination gushing forth in the sticky Texas summers, fireflies dancing at dusk. As I've gotten older, they have become so symbolic of life. In the wintertime they look dead, barren. But they always bloom, and their buds bring hope and beauty.



I have never endured a winter comparable to my first winter in New York. The cold set in around late October and didn't relent for seven months. Spring brings a unique and intense energy to New York City. People have been couped up in their shoebox Manhattan apartments for over 200 days. When the Lady sunshine finally makes her grand debut, New Yorkers literally gush onto the streets, sitting out on sidewalk cafes and lying in the green grass of the many parks of the city, basking in the rich sunshine on any patch of earth on which they can bask.

Spring, I am glad you're here. It's been a while since I've seen you, and I've never experienced your splendor quite like this. Continue to bring hope to my spirit as you show me how in time, all things become new, once again.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Where Would I Be If Not For These Women?


Hats of to the mothers of the world. Today, hats off to the mothers in my family: my beautiful mother Carla, my grandmothers Florence Cora "Flo" and Doris, and my beautiful sister, Jaime, now a mother of her 2 precious boys, my nephews Lawson and Peyton, who are the loves of my life.

I got to spend the week with my family this past week, and love is gushing from my heart with gratitude for the 'tribe' that I was so graciously put in. Of course no family is perfect, but I am thankful daily for the family that is mine, and I ponder on how I got so lucky to have such a family when so many people don't.

I could talk about my beloved dad, Jim, and how I adore his jokes and how he'll chuckle heartily under his breath for 5 minutes after telling a joke because he thinks it to be so funny. I could talk about his love pats and adoring eyes when he looks upon his 2 daughters and 2 grandsons, but this time is devoted to mothers.

I will always treasure this picture. To have my young mother and dear grandmothers so attentively participating in my Fisher Price cooking school warms my heart and brings little flicks of tears to my eyes. I was so loved as a child. I still am so loved.

The powerful love of my mother set a foundation of love and kindness in my life. Every morning she gently opened my door, glided to my bed in her blue floral bathrobe and quietly sat down next to me, stroking my back with her graceful hands as she brought me from my slumber. "Ashley, sweetie. It's time to wake up," she would speak almost in a whisper as to not wake me too abruptly. She picked me up and carried me downstairs and was so tender in all of her ways. I loved how she made my favorite breakfasts, either teddy bear pancakes or 'egg in a frame.' Moms know how to love in such a way that they show you the worth of who you were created to be.

She was always there. Cheerleading and gymnastics practice, watching me in the stands at pep rallies and football games, at every award ceremony. I knew that I could count on my mom. As I've gotten older, I've seen how much I took that faithful love from my mother for granted. I didn't know at the time that it was special. That not all moms loved like she did. I never had to look into the crowd with a sinking feeling in my stomach wondering if she would be there or not. She just was. Always.

Thank you, mom. You loving kindness has helped to shape me into the woman that I am today. You have built a legacy of love that has already started to be passed down to your grandsons through Jaime, and I hope that same legacy of love will be passed down to my children in the future.


To my grandmothers, you lived in a different era, and era when women had to be superwomen. Thank you for the sacrifices you made to be all things to your family in order to show love and provision. Summers spent at your houses are childhood memories of adventures that lie dormant in the volcano of my mind, always bubbling and reminding me of the foundation on which my life has been built. As you soon turn 85 and 90 years old, I treasure each moment we have together and grow more thankful for you each day.

So I reflect on this Mothers Day with a full heart, grateful for the women in my life who have mothered and shaped me in to the person and woman that I am today. With love and gratitude in my heart, I thank you.





Friday, March 25, 2011

I Stopped Should-ing on Myself

Right now I should be at the gym. On the stairmaster. Step after step, sweat dripping down my fair-winter complexion. Instead, I've chosen to eat a vanilla cupcake frosted in baby pink buttercream deliciousness rolled in an outer layer of vibrant, playful sprinkles as I watch the people meander by outside my window. I must say, I am quite content.


I have found that it is so refreshing to live life from my own heartbeat. I believe I spent my first twenty-five years 'shoulding' on myself. Yes, I did say shoulding. Yes, it is an expression that I picked up during my time in counseling. And no, I am not afraid to say that I was, in fact, in counseling. Everybody needs a little help sometimes.

I have always heard that your 20's are a time period of figuring out some things. Getting comfortable in your own skin. For me, this decade has been precisely about that. Life is about balance, and more and more I have found that the 80/20 rule holds true. 80% of the time, it is important to stick to the 'should' of eating a plate of organic veggies and lean meat from Whole Foods and going to by Bikram Yoga class. But, the other 20% of the time I love the freedom to eat decadently and sit on a park bench, bask in the spring sunshine and watch people scurry along and squirrels nurse their winter's stock of nuts. And I love that I finally feel the freedom in that balance instead of punishing myself for never doing enough, for eating too much sugar, for not being so efficient enough today... blah ... blah-blah ... blah-blah.

Today was a damn good day. A bit chilly, but good. Worked a bit, enjoyed time with a dear friend in Brooklyn, went to a Russian nook for some traditional lamb dumplings and homemade puree of carrot-ginger soup. I took time to see today. To look at the architecture of the buildings as I walked. To take joy in children as they skipped down the street. To savor each rainbow-colored sprinkle on that cupcake. Enjoying the small things in life and cherishing them as life's delicacies is a beautiful thing. I might just go and pour myself a glass of wine.




Monday, March 7, 2011

Rocking Into the Sunset

My dear friend just took his own life. Normally this blog is about life experiences, the richness in seeing something new and majestic, but tonight it is about sorrow. The kind of raw emotion and shock that enters the heart after hearing such news. How anyone ever begins to absorb such a sorrow, I do not know.

He was one of the most kind, gentle human beings to grace my life and the lives of so many. The loss of his presence will be a blow to his community and is truly a loss to human-kind.

What saddens me most is the degree of loneliness and sadness that he must have felt to come to such a decision. And of course being human, I wonder how I could have touched him more than I did to make sure he knew that he was loved. That he was important. That his life being in mine meant something to me. But I cannot reflect on those things. They don't bring him back.

My mind keeps seeing a rushing river. I don't know if it is because water brings all things- purity, life, clarity, renewal, movement, change, constancy. I want to feel this rushing river flow over my immense sadness. I want this river to bring him back to me. I want there to be some kind of cleansing answer to why and how something so tragic has happened.

And that might be the hardest thing. Even when you know what the 'why' was and the source for his immense sadness, to actually wrap my mind around a why that could make sense of something so painful is beyond what I am capable of.

And so I picture him on a white rocking chair, with his stylish black glasses, his designer blue jeans and his warm smile that always touched me to the core. He's rocking into his later years, the years that should have been his, with the sun displaying a magnificent canvas behind him. Years that were taken from him by the dense fog of sadness that had to have filled his heart. Years that, in the end, he took from himself in order to get to some place that was brighter than what he could see now.

Marion, I will miss you. I will always hold you in my heart and cherish the time that we did have together. You truly were special. A gift in my life that I will cherish for the rest of my days. And one day, when many seasons have come and faded on, when I hopefully reach a ripe old age with a crown of grey, I will sit on a white rocking chair and think of you, rocking in your memory and for those lost years that you didn't behold. Truly, may your soul rest in peace.