UnteachableTher…

Unteachable

There I was standing behind my friend – helping him clean up at the sink in our home.
Leaning over him cleaning my hands with the hot water running from the faucet, when he started to reach out with one of his hands.
Stopping him with the concern that he would burn himself with the hot water – he started reaching out with his other hand as I placed the first one back onto the sink.
“What are you doing?” I said to him, “Stop messing around. You’ll get burnt with this water. It’s hot,” “I told him again.”
You see, when I met this young man he was living in a group home.
A home provided by the state that helped him with his disabilities.
His so-called maladjustments to life.
His body may not have been sharp, but let me be the first to tell you that that’s where it stopped.
He was bright all right, bright in the sense that he knew what he wanted and how to get it.
That’s for sure.
The young man that I was taking care of was non verbal – meaning – and for lack of any better words – he was unable to speak in any traditional way.
But let me say this right off the bat, he spoke in volumes.
With signs that were modified by him that he knew. It was up to us to learn and interpret what he was asking or wanting.
Oh, sure, he knew how to say please and thank you. Drink or more. One of his favorites was the sign for milk – lots of milk.
You knew if he was happy and believe me – you knew if he wasn’t.
He knew how to write phonetically on a Qwerty board. He would spell out things that he wanted or needed or just to say hi.
He even asked for his room to be painted red – all red. But that’s a story for another time.
When I met him a few years before he lived with me, the people that ran the group home told me he was unteachable.
That he had learned all that they were able to give. That he had reached his potential in his learning with his disability.
I think of today in my recovery – had they told me that I was unteachable.
That I couldn’t – for whatever reason – that that was it.
That you’re hopeless to learn how to stay sober and clean.
Sorry we can’t help you, thanks for coming.
But they didn’t – they said, “Just keep coming back; it gets better.”
They were right.
Looking back now and seeing with somewhat of a clear mind. There were teachers all around me or better yet – and I love this – agents of God, as I call them.
People that came into my life to show me things, anything really.
From my parents to my brothers to my school teachers of my youth.
To my heroes of life. The cowboys and firefighters to the astronauts that I would look up into the night sky dreaming on flying to the moon with them.
To my favorite comic book writer. To the people that would show me how to do the things to live a happy, useful life.
Then there were the ones that showed me the road or the door on using – by their own actions this was shown. How to get it and where.
And there came a time that I did it all on my own. Just think – no more teachers, I thought.
Learning all I needed to know for my life seemed right back then.
Heedless of where my drinking or what my behavior was doing to me.
But no one showed me the end.
Oh, I’ve seen people get sick or even pass away. But that wasn’t me.
The denial of this disease is wider then any ocean I’ve seen.
But when the end comes – as it surely does with us – there are some lessons that can’t be taught – they have to be lived, or we die.
Now I have new teachers.
Ones that have done the things that help me on this road of life.
The changes – the up’s and down’s – showing me by example what to do on a daily basis to live happy, joyous and free.
Teaching me the ropes, as they say, on cleaning up my life – and there have been many.
Thank God for that too. I just stopped looking or thinking I needed them.
But they were there.
Being open and willing was just the beginning to this journey that has many ways to live a happy life.
I really only have two types of teachers today.
What to do and what not to do.
Being teachable, willing to learn new things about myself. Staying in the now.
And there I was standing behind my friend.
Helping him clean up in the bathroom of our home. Thinking he was the one I was showing what to do when that God moment struck.
I stepped back and said, “What is it you want to do.”
He slowly reached out and started to turn the faucet on. Taking my hand into his to feel the temperature of the water – not too hot – not too cold. Just right.
Seeing him slowly reaching for the soap by the side of the sink and it hit me like a freight train.
“Do you want to wash your hands?” “I asked?”
With a big smile and a sign that said yes. We washed our hands together.
I had stopped being the teacher and was being taught. They say, “When you’re ready, the teacher will appear.”
Here was someone that when meeting them for the first time they said he was unteachable.
One only has to be open and willing to see that the only one teachable was me.
That I just had to let it happen – being open to learn from the Unteachable…                 

Fishing in the …

Fishing in the Soup Bowl

Get a grip, someone told me once when I started telling my side of the story.
Still talking to that half way point ‘til my brain catches up to what was said to me.
Mouth hanging open. Think – did they just tell me to get a grip.
What the heck was that .
Where did that come from.
I mean I know where – the person right in front of me, but the comment – get a grip.
Seeing the last 24 hours, hell, the last week playing over and over in my mind like some screwed up projector playing one of those films that always skipped that I remembered from school.
The ones like “The salmon swim up stream to mate, overcoming great obstacles – including death” or “When you hear the sirens – fall under your desk with your hands over your head”. Yah, that would stop the blast.
But get a grip.
I’m hanging here by the seat of my pants and all they can tell me is get a grip.
Yah – that’s what I said, oh, and breathe.
“What?”
“Breathe.”
You’ve been holding your breath.
“I have.”
“God. I have haven’t I?”
When I was talking to them I was explaining how in the beginning I was looking for the easy way out, telling them when I started fishing in the soup bowl of life I’m bound to end up with something I’d rather not.
Every time I said something to my sponsor he would give me a suggestion and I would say to him sure, then go find someone I could explain myself to – cause obviously he didn’t understand what I was saying.
Every time I start looking for something in life – new car – new job, even a new hair cut – I always found something different.
It seemed I always fished something else out of the soup bowl.
My father was a cook – so I heard many times how too many hands in the broth could spoil the stew.
Never really paying too much attention to that, even when I came into the program.
‘Til I started down this journey of recovery. Always going to too many people for the answer that I should’ve taken by my sponsor in the first place.
But that’s not how it worked out for me. I’m not the poster boy for the program. I’ll leave that up to the ones that seem to like the lime light.
For me it was like every time I’d go out to get, I don’t know, say a belt, I’d walk out with a job.
Going out to get my hair cut and being in a twelve car pileup and a fancy new leg brace to boot.
Always something different than what I was fishing for.
Just the other day I was with some friends and one of them asked when did I know that I was powerless over my alcohol. Oh, that’s easy I told them.
When the path of destruction I left behind started to catch up to me.
We all laughed at that. You know this is the only place that I’ve known that when we share about how bad our lives were we all pretty much nod or smile.
Sometimes laughing at some of the worst things I’ve ever heard while out there – using. Sometimes bad things happen – not a lot of people nodded or smiled, some – well, most were horrified that I would even be talking about it.
Let alone be laughing at it.
To them I was the oddity.
To the folks in the Halls of Recovery – I was just another clown on the bus.
Even in sobriety I have found that I still can go fishing in the soup. Throwing my line out – seeing the bobber go up and down – thinking I’ll get a nice chunk of meat when I would pull out a soggy piece of carrot.
When I’m not taking my sponsors’ advice and I’m looking for that out – the easier, softer way at the time. Going to two or three different people fishing for that answer that I wanted right along. That’s when I was in trouble.
The soup has many flavors and many ingredients, too.
You’ll think I’d know by now not to go looking – but just let it happen.
God’s time – not mine.
Well, it’s easy to say the words, but to put them into practice is another thing entirely. How often did I set out in doing something and always looking for the result that was going to be – just what I wanted.
How often did I set up the game board of life  – to make sure I would win.
Always fishing.
When I think of all the times I spent on making me look good. The results were just the same. People will always judge by actions, not intentions.
As soon as that came around for me, things started to get better.
As long as I stopped Fishing in the Soup Bowl…  
                       

Why How often w…

Why

How often we, as people – as a country full of different cultures, different diversities – look at one another – differently.
One would think that someone with disabilities has a hard time understanding or comprehending what is going on around them in their every day life.
On September 11, 2001, as with most people around the country, my day started off like the one before.
I woke up, had something to eat and went to work.
I have been given the opportunity to work with people with disabilities for over 10 years now and was at a job site with individuals that had some form of handicaps.
People that don’t know this type of field often say to me that I must have a lot of patience and I usually tell them yes they do, for putting up with me.
As the morning went on there were reports of a plane that had just collided with one of the world trade centers in  New York City.
As the clients and I walked down the hallway we started to hear more.
Now a second plane had hit and more people were gone.
I decided then to bring all of them back to their office where we could find out what was really going on.
Like most companies word spread quickly, but this was different. You could feel it in the air.
Small groups of people were gathering.
Talking about what was going on.
You could not escape it – it was everywhere.
By this time we had heard of what had happened in DC and still we didn’t know why.
By break time the company we were at had placed a television out in the cafeteria where even more people gathered as we silently watched – as two mighty buildings came down. I was very honest with them at this time, how could I not be – it was everywhere.
I gave them the choice of having lunch in their office that day or if they wanted to they could eat in the café where they usually sat.
Explaining to them that there was a T.V. on and many people of many diversities were gathering.
Some of them went – while some chose to stay in their office.
There were ones that wanted to go home. Didn’t really blame them. I called my family as soon as I had a chance, just to make sure that they were all right.
As our workday came to a close, we all talked and discussed about what had happened to our country this day.
Here now are just some of the things that were said by someone who on first glance one might think that they really didn’t understand what’s going on around them.
“It’s an awful thing – these people died doing nothing wrong.”
“That plane and things – that hurts and it makes me sad inside.”
“I’m sad for the people that are no longer here and for their families, scary.”
“Lots of people died today, but lots of people were able to get out of some of the buildings. This we should be happy about – it is a sad day.”
“It’s a very sad thing that happened and I don’t know why we have to live like this. I guess that’s the b-side of life.”
As tears slowly formed in my eyes, we all sat in silence.
Remembering what had happened this day in New York City, DC, and Pennsylvania.
No difference.
No wall of misunderstanding.
No handicaps.
Just people.
I came away with the same feelings that the clients had.
Feeling very sad and scared, and the unending question that we all felt that day.
“Why?”…