Category: spiritual psychology

  • Ole! Ole! Ole?

    One day we’re all going to be the same race. I can’t wait. I give it seven more generations. All of our skins will be caramel colored and our eyes brown. We’ll all have Christmas trees, menorahs, and burkas. We’ll all walk on the same side of the street. We’ll eat kimchi tacos and collared green pierogis. Half of comedians will be out of jobs. Kids will fail the high school slavery lessons because they just won’t grasp the idea. Mexican food will just be called food. Aliens will say, “Humans. You just can’t tell them apart.”

    Until then, we’re in race limbo. Some of us are sixteen things. Some of us are half and half. Few of us have papers that would win dog shows. In the end, it doesn’t matter. We’re all living. We’re all here. Our ethnicity is rather unimportant within the grand span of the universe.

    But for me it’s always been an issue. I’ve always wanted to be ‘something else.’ In high school, I hung out with the Greeks and named myself Laurenne Salapoulous. In college, I only dated black guys and signed up on BlackPlanet.com as BigBootyWhiteGirl (what? I do have a rather large booty for a white girl). I was searching for culture, and I didn’t know where to look. I wanted customs and tradition. I wanted to know special dances and recipes handed down from an ancient great grandmother. What I think I really wanted was a big family. My mom is the best. But a single mother and an only child can lead to some less-than-riveting Christmas dinners. You can play few card games with two people.

    Since most people on my dad’s side were dead, I never felt like I could really embrace his cutlure. But if anyone had one, it was him. While my mom is third generation American, my dad was first. My dad’s baby books are all in Spanish. He was raised speaking Spanish with his very Spanish dad. He even went to high school in Madrid! Still, this half thing bothered me. I felt like a faker trying to know more about my very own Spanish culture without having an actual relative teach me. I sort of felt like my speaking Spanish was as phony as Madonna’s sudden British accent.

    Of course, this was something I totally made up in my head. There is not a committee of Spanish people out there evaluating whether or not I learned how to make a typical Spanish tortilla from my grandmother or the internet. I guess everything anybody is self-conscious about is really NOT that important. When I finally analyzed it, it reminded me of junior high when I used to bring a curling iron to school because I thought I’d be judged if my bangs weren’t perched in a perfect wave above my head. You’ll never guess but nobody cared about my bangs as much as I did. Still, I was so super self-conscious and afraid to use the language I absolutely love.

    In order to graduate from Psychology School (which is almost over!), we had to choose a thesis project that we’d take on for 9 months. The goal is to accomplish something that we’ve always been scared of doing. Something that comes from our heart. Something that we’ve always thought impossible. Some people climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. Some people learn how to ride horses or write a book or start a business. The idea is that we’ll each run across many instances of “I can’t.” We’ll hate life. We’ll have a hard time. We’ll make mistakes, choke, suffer (yes, I am paying money to suffer). And from all of that, we’ll learn how to overcome fears, how to believe in ourselves, and that we can accomplish something we never thought possible!

    I chose to figure out my own culture and clear out all the weird issues I had with it, the goal being to feel comfortable speaking Spanish with anyone and to speak it so confidently that I could use it in my career somehow. I wanted to stop searching for things outside of me and finally just define myself by learning about myself (seems kind of obvious now). Well… IT WORKED! I learned a lot by analyzing myself over and over again. Those details I will spare you, but I have several 30-page reports that can lead you down the holes in my brain. Basically, I’ve spent the last two years studying myself, which is the most self-centered degree ever. And obviously fascinating. What I learned is that I am an American who really wants my father’s culture to live on because I’m the LAST SALA! And that’s okay. I’ve taken Flamenco classes for six months. I’ve been seeing a private tutor weekly, and my Spanish is off the chain (as they say). I feel comfortable hablando con todo el mundo.

    I’m a mix of cultures. I’m my own culture which, is a selective blend of my mom’s Polish cookies, my dad’s Spanish brandy, and a few episodes of Jersey Shore that I purchased one day in a moment of weakness. Sorry. In the end I’m really American.

    Part of my project required that I put my Spanish out there without worrying about people judging it. So, I wrote some Spanish poetry, which helped me to realize that I really like poetry! Who knew? This whole thing is blowing my mind. So, I put that bitch online, and I like it. It’s called Half & Mitad (mitad = half).

    Here’s an excerpt:

    The project culminates with a summer trip to Spain. You are allowed to create your own project, and I happened to write one that included a mandatory trip for the ENTIRE summer to immerse myself in the culture that runs through my bliggity blood. SO I AM LEAVING NEXT WEEK FOR SPAIN AND IM NEVER COMING BACK I WONT BE BACK UNTIL September! Yahooooooooooooooo (I think everyone would benefit from this school).

    Thanks to everyone who has been learning lessons with me along the way during these past 2 years of self-analyzation. I can’t wait to get back to writing about vaginas!

  • Your brain is full of pipes and coins.

    I went on a date with a scientist about two years ago. It was like any normal date except we spent the night debating whether or not humans have free will. I have to say it was good first date fodder. I mean, how many fucking times can you really talk about where you’re from?

    His logical science mind said that humans most certainly do NOT have free will because we have DNA and that determines things we cannot control. And he had some other arguments too, but my brain could only comprehend one-third of what he was saying. He was smart. Not that I’m not smart, but I just realized the other day that I’ve been saying the word ‘parable’ wrong my whole life. Why didn’t people correct me?

    After last week, I feel like I can say for sure that humans DO have free will. Or, they CAN have free will if they choose.

    Last week, I spent fifty-six hours in therapy. Not because I’m insane, although maybe.

    I signed up on a whim last year to get a Master’s Degree in Spiritual Psychology.
    Yes, a whim. Some people go skinny dipping on a whim. I get a Masters– man, I’m a hoot.

    When I’m finished with school in 2012, I will be certified not to be a psychologist, but a life coach. I don’t want to be a life coach. I’m sitting on my couch right now wondering what smells so weird, and my insurance keeps threatening to cancel me if I don’t pay on time. I really doubt I’m in the best place to coach other people about life. I am more interested in studying my own mind. I guess that could be considered narcissistic, yet another reason I could never be a life coach (Yes, continue telling me your problems, I’m just going to look in this mirror here.).

    I haven’t told too many people about my studies because it’s really hard to explain what is spiritual psychology. I define it as figuring out how we got so fucked up and why. This brings me to my next conclusion: We’re all fucked up.

    It’s okay. At least we’re all fucked up together.

    Last week was our six-day culmination of our first year. There are three-hundred people in the class, and we break into groups of three to have mini-therapy sessions. This kind of therapy is very cause/effect. I might tell my ‘coach’ that I find myself nervous in social situations. And she has to search my mind and figure out that I’m nervous because I am doubting myself. And then together we figure out the source of the self-doubt. When I’m the ‘client,’ it’s like my brain is a big game of Super Mario Bros, and together we have to find the princess. We go through the pipes and we gather lots of pennies. And when we finally get to the princess, we realize she’s really a dad who was depressed and told me to go away when I was little (not sure why he’s wearing a dress and tiara. My dad was gay but not a transvestite). That dad spits out fireballs of inferiority from his eyes, so you gotta watch out. But if we press A+B +SELECT, we can stop the fireballs. And then we can forgive the dad because he didn’t do anything on purpose.

    It might sound confusing and woo-woo, but I really think it’s the way to free will. Otherwise, we don’t have free will. We want to write a book or have a healthy relationship or move across country, but we can’t because we’re held back by fear or we can’t stop smoking pot or we’re lazy. We have to become aware of all those blocks to finally be free.

    It’s so easy to feel nervous and have a few drinks to make it go away for a night. It’s much more courageous to figure out where it came from and fix it. Heal it. Make it go away forever. If we are aware of why our brains are doing what they’re doing, then we can choose to follow them or not. It’s a choice. But it’s a really tough choice to make because in order make it, we have to be willing to go to the dark places in our minds, play lots of Super Mario Bros, wear hippie clothes, and deal with the stigma of possibly being a life coach.

    I realize you may not have been wondering about your free will at all. That’s okay too. Perhaps if we go on a first date, we can talk all about figs and then I can write a post all about figs two years later. Anything can happen, my friends. Anything.