SMOPL
I wrote about Feasts of Liberations this week, a beautiful and grounding practice for when a day or [time period] holds some extra grief and where there is also some liberation to be marked.
What do we do though with the days that are just plain painful, when we can’t conceive of anything beyond existing in the pain, when feasting isn’t a good answer, isn’t possible or isn’t indicated.
Or
Sometimes we know in advance: X date of Hard Month is going to be extra challenging and not-fun.
Or, sometimes this happens too: we forget the heavy anchor a day or a holiday carries and are only reminded when we think we are sailing on our way, only to realize oh right we aren’t going anywhere.
Ahhhh, or we’ve managed to convince ourselves that this year we’re gonna be fine actually, it’s gonna be okay, we’ve been doing greeeat. And then it hits so much harder than anticipated.
And what do we do when we the grief shows up not on a day of known grief, surprise visit! When we are unprepared for how huge it is, grief loves a surprise. All this is what I want to talk about today.
When the calendar pulls sudden grief tricks
I never used to know what to do when the calendar pulls these sudden grief tricks, you think it’s a day and then it’s not, you know?
And then I remember that I have already solved this. Not the grief, I don’t know that I have too much wisdom about that, other than that I live with it: I can acknowledge and confirm that it Really Fucking Sucks.
But I have some thoughts about what we can do on those days that are still really hard, and we aren’t ready to be someone who can hold a feast day to get through it.
Ritual
My brother and I invented a practice during the first year after our mother died in 2014. It’s not one specific thing, it’s more like a framework, a symbolic ritual that can change shape as needed, something to do when you’re hit by the grief and the not-knowing (not knowing what to do, not knowing anything).
It has a perfectly simple name, we call it SMOPL. Noun and verb.
SMOPL = Something Meaningful On a Personal Level
Something Meaningful On a Personal Level.
Yes, I know, it’s extremely vague. That’s the point. Its vagueness serves as a compassionate permission slip.
So yes, it can be anything
When it comes to our mother, we SMOPL by either doing things she liked to do (reading a book while wearing ten blankets! baking muffins and scribbling chaotic notes all over the cookbook in pencil!), or we do things we think she’d appreciate.
For example, listening to Roy Orbison at TOP VOLUME, the link is to one of my favorite pieces I’ve ever written here, not to Roy Orbison, though you are welcome to listen while you read.
We do Ruth pursuits!
We do Ruth-oriented things.
Or we do regular things in a Ruth-like way.
Or we pause to consider a possible Ruth-perspective as an additional filter to whatever we are doing, which changes the experience.
The yellow house
Back in January I took her to the Desert Art Museum in Tucson, she loved the textile exhibits and wanted to linger at every single explanatory card, and we both appreciated the exhibit on the Dust Bowl immigration more than we expected to.
There were also works by local Tucson artists who had painted barrio houses en plein air and then gone back to their studios and painted a new version of their outdoor painting.
Mom wanted to know if I recognized the yellow house and I did. I will take her there next time.
Sometimes I SMOPL by doing something for me
I go walk a labyrinth when I am feeling [the big feelings], my mom doesn’t really care about labyrinths, she’s more interested in the beauty of the location, what is *that* tree over there, what is that flower called (I don’t know, mom), but walking the labyrinth is a calming, stabilizing and reassuring experience for me, and that counts as SMOPL-ing.
When we drive to the arboretum, that’s more for her. I don’t care that much about the arboretum, but I like listening to music on the way and I like the views. It’s an outing for both of us, and I feel better after.
Heading heartward, again, and hearting headward, maybe also
I don’t think it matters so much what the SMOPL is, what helps is doing a something beyond just staring into space or getting lost in the misery-fog, or the many other forms grief can take (sometimes raging, sometimes flailing, sometimes spacing out for hours, these are things I experience, your mileage may vary).
And I like reminding myself that I am tending to my grief, moving heartward, choosing towards grounding comforts.
Does it matter that she wasn’t that excited about vegan ice cream on her birthday in October? I don’t think it does, the ice cream was for me.
More SMOPL examples
My friend was telling me about a conversation with their mother. My friend’s sister died several years ago, the mother wants to plant a tree next to the house in sister’s honor. Friend is conflicted: what if they move, then they can’t visit the tree.
I told my friend about SMOPLing, and they were very relieved. Because a SMOPL is something you can do in the moment.
The sister can be visited by listening to her favorite song, or making her favorite pasta, or wearing her favorite color, watching her favorite movie, or just doing something she’d enjoy, doing it for her.
Everything is connected (or: what if we imagine that everything is connected)
Like how I light a candle when I don’t know what to do, a candle is a default SMOPL, the ritual that reveals if another ritual is needed.
You can light a candle or a candle in your mind. Blowing a kiss out the window becomes a candle.
And actually anything at all can be another form of lighting a candle. Breakfast tacos are a candle? I say yes. Absolutely.
Many possible available forms of [this is a candle and I am lighting it now].
Similarly
Similarly, any tree can be a friend of a tree you want to visit.
Kind of like how I believe all cemeteries are connected, but also that anything can be a proxy cemetery.
Like how I went to Santa Fe to visit the grave site of Waverly even though it is in Seattle. I don’t know if that makes sense or not. It does in my heart. When I pick up her book, I say, I visited you. Communing with my bookshelf is a moment of SMOPL too sometimes.
Everything is connected and fractal. Or it is if I want it to be, the imagining does the work.
How do you find a SMOPL
Obviously whenever we talk self-fluency techniques, we keep in mind that People Vary, situations do too.
Maybe you’re already getting an intuitive hit, or idea sparks for your own SMOPLs. Maybe you don’t know for sure yet but you know which clues you want to follow.
Or it’s still a mystery and this is something you want to journal on or skip some stones to find out more.
Possibly SMOPLing isn’t what your particular situation needs right now, and that’s a form of useful clarity too. In that case you can add it to the repertoire of [techniques for later] or toss it completely and invent your own thing, I’m not married to any of this.
And if you’re actively seeking a SMOPL of your own, I hope this is giving you possible starting points.
More ways to SMOPL, for example
Sometimes I scatter things that are not ashes, because I don’t have ashes. Old dried herbs you aren’t going to use work well, or gathered leaves.
Sometimes I just do something the person in my mind would definitely do, or do something in a way that is uniquely theirs. I read a book the way my mother would (last chapter first!).
When I listen to the song Short Skirt Long Jacket, I dance-walk around around the room and clap my hands above my head the way Srul did the first time he played that song for me. Sharp as a tack. CLAP.
When I feel a strong feeling about people I miss (alive or not), I do something small for them, make them tea, read a poem out loud, go do something I know they’d enjoy, or do something I enjoy in a way that includes them.
Why the practice of SMOPL is so useful
For two reasons, I think, at least two.
A SMOPL subverts the cultural expectation to hurry up and be okay
Our culture is so painfully lacking when it comes to loss, so inadequate at acknowledging grief at all, never mind the immensity of it, never mind at acknowledging that it doesn’t end, you don’t get over losses, you just get more practiced at day to day functioning.
We have to be in our grief while living inside this cultural expectation of Hurry Up And Be Okay, and that is exhausting and stressful.
That cultural expectation of Just Be Okay Already is cruel, it’s unfair, it’s honestly fucking impossible, and it does a lot of harm.
A SMOPL is a way for me to remember that I am in process; my grief is real, legitimate, sometimes intense and overwhelming, and it is something I am in ongoing relationship with. It’s my grief party and I’ll cry if I want to! 🎶
A SMOPL is concrete and do-able
And the other reason I love a SMOPL is how it gives me something to do, a small, concrete, do-able mission. Here’s an action I can take in the moment.
Something tangible, palpable. Sure, it’s symbolic but also I can perceive it with my senses.
Light this candle. I can do that. Make these muffins. Maybe I can’t do that today but I can make an ingredients list. Find out when the museum will be open? Sure.
Flowers in a jar? I can make that happen, and if I can’t then I can draw a flower and it will be a placeholder.
Side note about not rushing things
If you can’t think of a SMOPL yet for your situation(s), no worries, no stress required here.
I have found that often a SMOPL reveals itself to me in right timing. Aka cosmic right timing, not necessarily as soon as I am hoping it will, it’s a practice of trust.
Maybe just planting the seed of [this exists as a possibility] is enough for now.
Sometimes I wait for the SMOPL to find me, and I try to just trust that I will know when I know. And in the meantime I light a candle or make waffles, or stick a candle in a stack of waffles.
Whatever I have energy for is a good start. It all counts, I believe that.
Clue-searching to help with grief
One way I like to SMOPL when I can’t think of a good way to SMOPL is going for a clue walk. You don’t have to walk for a clue walk, I have conducted these while seated in a chair, standing at a crosswalk, waiting at a red light.
A clue walk is not about the walking, it is about being extra attentive and observing in a new way. Though sometimes the meandering part helps too.
A clue walk is where you wander or look around (in your living space or work space, on a street, in a store, in a park, location irrelevant) and notice what you notice. What do you observe?
For example, right now, in this moment, as I sit writing, if I pause and breathe, what do I notice?
I notice the light on the mountain, a tipped over chair on the porch, there is a bird on the ace of swords card. I have looked at this card a hundred times easily and never saw the bird.
What do these clues tell me? The light on the mountain says I will be here again tomorrow, the chair says small adjustments, the surprise bird says flight can be grounding.
SMOPLing with the calendar
October is basically one long SMOPL-ing for me, February has a lot of SMOPL needs. The older I get, the more SMOPLing I need, because the losses just keep coming.
It’s good to know when you might need one, and it’s also good to keep an ideas list somewhere (maybe in the Book of You), in case you need one and weren’t expecting it.
You can think of this as an ongoing experiment. We try a thing, it helps or it doesn’t, or it helps more than we thought it would but not enough (wow is that ever a thing), we make notes, adjust, try again. We keep going, we brave our way onward.
Summing up and offering you one more fun more word!
SMOPL is a useful technique or approach for a painful day and also a good call when it doesn’t feel right to have a feast day, the energy isn’t there or who knows, a feast day just isn’t the answer for whatever reason.
A SMOPL is helpful when the feelings are extra-complicated.
And! A SMOPL day is also a form of Namjooning aka getting out in nature, visiting a museum, prioritizing quiet contemplative time, in the spirit of Kim Namjoon from the band BTS.
Some people have the minhag of taking a Namjooning day to celebrate his birthday, but you can go namjooning whenever you are able to make time for it, just like a SMOPL!
You can SMOPL as a form of namjooning or go namjooning as a form of SMOPL-ing, how’s that for a sentence.
What I wish for
I wish for great comfort for all who need comfort, in a wide variety of sources and forms, surprise comforts, built-in comforts, the expectation that it’s okay to need to be comforted.
I wish for a culture that is infinitely kinder, about grief and loss, and about everything. About how people vary, and grief looks different for different people at different times. I wish for more compassionate approaches.
And I wish for a world in which SMOPL-ing can be more overt, more socially acceptable. What did you do this weekend? I went to the art museum with my dead mother.
Or: I like your hat! Thanks, I’m SMOPL-ing for someone and it required a costume!
And I wish for ease, sweetness, for us to be received and perceived as human beings who grieve. And we don’t just grieve people who are no longer here, we grieve lots of things. We grieve situations, lost love stories, friendships and other relationships, places, past homes, animal friends, jobs, truly no shortage of losses in this life.
So yes, I want a better world, and that includes space for the big feelings, to grieve casually or deeply, tiny monuments, places for grief picnics. I don’t know what else, but we can dream it up together.
Calling all SMOPLers! Play with me in the comments (I love company)
You are welcome to share anything that sparked for you while reading, any SMOPL rituals you already have, or ideas coming up for things you want to experiment with. SMOPL-experiments!
You can leave pebbbles -o- or light mind-candles, or actual candles if you have, or eat tacos as a substitute candle, I receive it all with love.
One of the beautiful things to me about community is the way we can make room for each other to experience what we are experiencing. Big love to everyone.
FLASH (flood) SALE TIME! Announcement!!!
As some of you know, I have been dealing with kind of a lot, a fire in my tiny trailer, then flooding, and now a personal emergency that is taking precedence over fixing the damages from either of those.
So we are having a FLASH sale on one of my favorite ebooks from the vault of things I’ve written over the past seventeen years. It’s called Saying Everything Twice (Saying Everything Twice), I wrote it in 2014.
It’s about lots of things, the first year I spent nonverbal, what I learned, challenges I processed in my journal using self-fluency techniques, resulting insights. Definitely a settle in, make tea kind of read… 😘
Anyway, it is temporarily BACK, super on sale, a way to read my thoughts that are too intimate for the blog, and to help out with my various things that need fixing, and I am so appreciative of everyone’s kind generous wishes.
Here is the button to purchase my 113 page ebook, Saying Everything Twice! (Saying Everything Twice)
So many sparks for the practice of SMOPLing (and also Namjooning! What great words!). I can certainly fall into a way of thinking that if I don’t do something big and overt, I’m not “properly” recognizing an occasion or giving acknowledgment to grief–and yet, these small gestures can be so, so powerful.
Yes! Thank you for saying the thing I was trying to get at, it’s as if I have internalized so many cultural things about grief that I think I either have to ignore it or be in some big ceremonial moment, when actually the small markings of SMOPLs, waffles, candles, reading a book in a certain way, these are the grounding practices that help me actually cope with grief even though I’m not doing anything Big And Overt, which is the only kind of grief practice that our culture is okay with (funerals, yes, ceremonies, yes, but just existing with the grief and doing things that help, what’s that)
❤️
Oh, yes. Yes. I love the way this practice can shapeshift into whatever form is needed in the moment.
I sometimes like to do crossword puzzles with people that I am missing. Or read aloud to them (in my head, usually, but still). Or take road trips with them. Anything, really, that invites their presence and gives me an opportunity to open myself to them, to hear/feel their voice.
Crossword puzzles with people who are not here! Brilliant. I love reading aloud, I do that too. ❤️
This is so helpful right now. I’ve had so many losses in the last two years that I’ve felt like an egg-bound hen with my grief. I think this can help me ease it out, a bit at a time.
Thank you, Havi.
What a powerful image, I really feel that. Here’s to the easing a bit at a time. ❤️
Yesterday I rode my bike over the new cycle/pedestrian bridge that’s recently gone up across the river close to where I used to live, and I thought how much my father would have liked it a) as a bridge in itself, as the finished product of the works he always used to go and look at when he came to visit us and b) as a place to stand to take pictures of trains going over the railway bridge that it runs parallel to. Perhaps next time I will take a picture of a train.
Yesterday also my mother dropped off all the family portraits that I’m taking charge of (four generations, if you count the cartoon which has my great-great-great-grandfather in the background) and I think that this weekend’s task of dusting the frames and hammering picture hooks into the walls and hanging the pictures could very well be SMOPL. Pa did not see this house (he very much wanted to, but the pandemic happened) but hanging the pictures of his ancestors who are also my ancestors which used to be in his house in my house feels M.
I love bridges and I love a picture of trains, and I love hammering as memorial-ritual, and I’m so sorry ❤️
You first wrote about SMOPL-ing before my Big Grief happened, and I think it influenced how I dealt with those losses. It’s a powerful practice!
For Mom, I like to have her favorite flowers in the house through the whole of her birth month. On her birthday, I play one of her favorite songs. On the anniversary of her death, there’s another song that I listen to — it makes me cry. When we can, my siblings and I visit the cemetery with flowers and popsicle sticks on which we’ve written loving messages. We stick these in the ground by the headstone. All her life she loved batting balloons around, and that is another way to SMOPL.
Around my son’s special days I hear his laugh. In the midst of moving, I’m finding old photos of him, and I want to tell the stories that they remind me of. I may only tell them to myself, but they’re important. I have a medallion that honors him as an organ donor, and it is in a prominent place in the curio cabinet. I think it needs to be with his portrait, when I find the right place for it.
The ways I SMOPL for my husband are — many. There are things that he wanted to do and never got to, and when I have a chance, I do them. For some time after he died, I looked at the sympathy cards and the funeral book nightly, and cried, and it eased my soul. I still have them, and still look at them sometimes. I have a ritual for when I visit the cemetery — the words to a song and kneeling (if possible) to say a Hail Mary. Sometimes I tell him about things that he’s interested in, and sometimes I sit with him to plan my week. I carry his picture with me when I travel — on my last trip, I was with some of his siblings, and we put his picture on the dining table and we toasted him, and they told me stories of before I knew him.
Thinking about it, I realize that some of these SMOPLs are things my mom used to do, after my father died 49 years ago. She was wise, my mom.
Oh, what a beautiful collection of SMOPL ideas. Batting balloons. Medallion of honor. Popsicle sticks with messages. Toasting a picture and telling new stories. Generational SMOPL rituals. Inherited wisdom. So much here. Thank you, it’s beautiful, and so much love your way for all these losses. I am definitely going to start writing messages on popsicle sticks as a memorial SMOPL too now, and will think of you! ❤️
Also I like the word and the concept of minhag.
Havi! HAVI! You’re still here. I’m SO grateful for your work – it’s helped me through some very difficult times. I still have the ‘you’re having a freak out’ audio on my phone, just in case, even after All These Years.
I love the thought of SMOPLing for world grief too. Overwhelmed with grief about the climate? I can go touch a leaf of a plant. Or five. Or put all ten fingers into soil. With the intention of lighting a candle. Or actually light a candle.
Overwhelmed with… the kyriarchy? I can ground something in the ground, or warm something up, or burn something (down), or touch some vertical things.
So useful. Thank you. And I’m about to buy a copy (buy a copy) of your vault book.
Meg!!!! I love this and am completely inspired by the idea of SMOPLing for the greater good. Especially when situations feel so overwhelming and like nothing we can do matters, touching in and grounding earthward for the collective! Setting things on fire for the collective! Touch some vertical things to fuck up the kyriarchy! Supporting the work through intentional moments. That’s really beautiful to me. And it reminds me of how my uncle Svevo walks in the woods each day and visits his two therapy trees and hugs them. ❤️
Havi! <3 I'm in the midst of reading 'Saying everything twice' (saying everything twice) and there are so many sparkles of ideas and helpfulness! Everything *IS* connected and fractal, and I know not everybody sees that, I guess, but I am so glad to know other people (like you) who do! <3
Thanks, Suzie! LOVE THIS