What's in the gallery?

We dissolve stuck and rewrite patterns. We apply radical playfulness to life (when we feel like it!), embarking on internal adventures (credo of Safety First). We have a fake band called Solved By Cake. We build invisible sanctuaries, invent words and worlds, breathe awe and wonder.

We are not impressed by monsters. Except when we are. We explore the connections between internal territories and surrounding environment to learn what marvelously supportive delicious space feels like, and how to take exquisite care of ourselves. We transform things.* We glow wild.**

* For example: Desire, fear, worry, pain-and-trauma, boundaries, that problematic word which rhymes with flaweductivity.

** Fair warning: Self-fluency has been known to lead to extremely subversive behavior, including treasuring yourself unconditionally, unapologetically taking up space, experiencing outrageously improbable levels of self-acceptance, and general rejoicing in aliveness.

What's in the gallery?

We dissolve stuck and rewrite patterns. We apply radical playfulness to life (when we feel like it!), embarking on internal adventures (credo of Safety First). We have a fake band called Solved By Cake. We build invisible sanctuaries, invent words and worlds, breathe awe and wonder.

We are not impressed by monsters. Except when we are. We explore the connections between internal territories and surrounding environment to learn what marvelously supportive delicious space feels like, and how to take exquisite care of ourselves. We transform things.* We glow wild.**

* For example: Desire, fear, worry, pain-and-trauma, boundaries, that problematic word which rhymes with flaweductivity.

** Fair warning: Self-fluency has been known to lead to extremely subversive behavior, including treasuring yourself unconditionally, unapologetically taking up space, experiencing outrageously improbable levels of self-acceptance, and general rejoicing in aliveness.

Friday Check-in #36: “tractor trailer” edition

Friday chickenBecause it’s Friday AGAIN. And because traditions are important. In which I cover the good stuff and the hard stuff in my week, trying for the non-preachy, non-annoying side of self-reflection.

And you get to join in if you feel like it.

What a week. It got mostly taken up with Passover and related stuff.

Well, at least the house is clean.

And Ez made what might be the best potato kugel I’ve ever tasted. And since we all know that no one makes better potato kugel than I do, this was a hard thing to admit.

But it was that good.

It’s the little things. Again.

The hard stuff

Oh, Maddie.

For a long time I was addicted to reading Mike Spohr’s blog The Newborn Identity because I was madly in love with his baby girl Maddie.

Keep in mind that I’m not exactly a baby person. It’s not like I spend my time reading daddy blogs for fun. Well, except for BHJ.

But this one I would have read under any circumstances, just to keep seeing pictures of Maddie. Sweet Maddie.

But Maddie died on Tuesday. And this is such a crappy, hard, sad, impossible-to-comprehend thing.

You need to read this post from back in October. It’s one of my favorites. Man, what a genuinely ecstatic smile. Maddie loved being alive. You can just tell.

And, if you like, you can send love to Mike and Heather by donating to the March of Dimes on their The Spohrs are Multiplying blog.

I love you, Maddie. Too bad we never got to meet in person. LOVE.

You can’t write about the “hard” after someone loses their baby.

Loss. You know? Everything pales in comparison by a factor of … of … a factor of a lot.

And since all the hard things in my week were especially superficial this week anyway, I am an ass for even having this section. I mean, to hell with plumbing disasters and stuff like that.

But since my original commitment with the Friday posts was to share the trivial and the mundane as well as the Big Stuff, here I am.

No farfel?!?!

I realize that it is a little thing. A very little thing.

But there is no freaking farfel to be had in all of Portland, Oregon.

And Passover without farfel (unless you happen to be in Israel where farfel does not exist but where it does not matter because there are lots of other good things to eat) is just ridiculous.

Gah. I am farfel-less.

It’s the little things.

The good stuff

Friends.

Keren, my best friend from Israel, called this week and we spent a couple hours on the phone catching up.

Everything is better when she is around.

And it looks like we’ll both be in Berlin at the same time this fall. Huge sigh of relief.

Also, we talked about my friend who is dead and I didn’t cry. And I realized that I’ve managed a whole week without crying. For the first time since … July. Since I heard.

So this is also something that is changing. Something that deserves a place in the good stuff.

My arms: they are (slowly) getting better.

Guess what? Yesterday I forgot to take my anti-inflammation pills.

You know, the only thing that makes it stop hurting. I forgot.

YES!

And I wrote a grocery list! By hand! And did not say “ow” even once.

Improvement. This is fantastic.

Junk food day!

Things have been kind of crazy, as you know, and last weekend I was craving some serious decadence.

And keep in mind, that when you haven’t had caffeine or sugar in nine years and are generally the most healthy person you know, it isn’t easy to be decadent, even when you want to.

Well, you can try, but then you fail miserably and don’t even know it until someone else points it out to you.

So I have to share this conversation I had with my brother in the checkout line at the co-op.

My brother: Whoa. There is a bag of organic blue corn and cayenne tortilla chips in our cart. Someone must have put it there by mistake.
Me: No, I put it there.
My brother: Seriously? Who are you?
Me: I just declared it Junk Food Day!
My brother (jumping for joy): Yay! Junk Food Day!

And then we ate tortilla chips. And Brie. And black olives. It was out of control. My gentleman friend tried to point out to us that there are plenty of people in the world who do not consider any of these things to be junk food.

And I was all, but look, I’m only eating something with no nutritional value only because it tastes good! And then he gave me that look.

Fine. Someone’s crazy. I just don’t see why it has to be me.

Okay. I guess it’s me.

And … STUISMS of the week.

Stu is my paranoid McCarthy-ist voice-to-text software who delights in torturing me misunderstanding me. I can’t stand him.

Some of the gems from this week:

  • “This is completely Admiral” instead of this is completely admirable.
  • “Catholic evocation” instead of Biggification
  • “grew tight people” instead of guru-type people
  • “I think she’s a tractor trailer” instead of I think she’s a terrific writer.
  • “I have Norma’s respect” instead of I have enormous respect.
  • “a non-soldier induced” instead of nostalgia-induced
  • “cleaning up Cecily” instead of cleaning obsessively
  • “the goal is not to get that big egg” instead of the goal is not to get the gig
  • “we make money on R.’s” instead of we make money on ours

And let’s not forget Stu’s revealing Freudian slips. What an acetyl:

  • “I’ve been accused of that” instead of I’ve been okay with that.
  • “which triggered ulcers of other fears” instead of which triggered all sorts of other fears

Oh, and these two bits just from today’s post:

  • “I just declared it to include Bayer!” instead of I just declared it junk food day.
  • “and debris” instead of and brie.

That’s it for me …

And yes yes yes, of course you can join in my Friday ritual right here in the comments bit if you feel like it.

Yeah? Anything hard and/or good happen in your week?

And, as always, have a glorrrrrrrrrrrrious weekend. And a happy week to come.

The Story of Selma

selma_portraitI have a strong streak of davka. Contrarian-ness? Yes, I am a contrarian.

Not that I do everything to be contrary davka, but I do many things davka. And not writing a FAQ (though I did write an amusing — but really only to me — post on how to write one) is one of them.

Insisting on using the word davka because it’s better than “deliberately contrary” is another.

All that to explain why I’ve never written a post about “why a duck” or “how Selma and I met” or “what is wrong with me and why would I think that having a duck as a business partner is funny”.*

*For the record, I don’t think it’s funny at all. Bizarre, yes. Tragic, maybe. Funny? Not even a little.

Yes, these are essentially the three most Frequently Asked Questions that show up in the inbox that I never see. (You know what’s crazy? The post I just linked to also contains a FAQ. Fascinating. Apparently I write them everywhere and then pretend I don’t. We’ll talk about that later.)

And I don’t answer them. So I think it might be time. Yeah. It’s time.

Who is Selma? Or: “What’s with the duck?”

Well. I usually just say she’s my business partner. Which is true. It’s just that it’s the short answer.

Sometimes I tell people that she’s my silent partner.

Because she doesn’t say much. Again, funny pretty much only to me and Selma.

But you probably want more than that. I can tell.

And the truth is, I don’t really want to write about Selma. Selma is private. And not just in the sense that she’s my personal friend so I don’t want to divulge too much. No, she’s just a very private duck.

So here’s what I can tell you.

How my duck and I first came to meet.

I was living in a mostly-abandoned building in East Berlin and teaching yoga. In Hebrew. My wonderful friend David was visiting from London. He brought ducks. It’s a long story.

Never mind that.

The point is that Selma and I fell in love. Her brother Julius was sweet and kooky and adventurous and prone to getting into trouble. And Selma was just Selma. Always smiling, very calm.

She just has this lovely way about her, you know?

Julius ended up going back to London with David. And Selma stayed with me. There was another sibling but he got eaten by a baby and it’s a pretty tragic story and we will not mention it further here.

Walking the duck.

I’ve already referenced my bizarre living situation when I told the story of how the Fluent Self got its name, but I should add that there were always interesting people coming and going.

I’m not exactly a people person, so I would often take Selma out for long walks in the sun. Or in the rain.

One day I came back and one of our many international guests (a stop-animation artist from Barcelona) was in the kitchen. She grinned at me. She said, “You like to walk your duck.”

And then she told me a story.

After her dog died, she been pretty miserable. Obviously, she missed him terribly. But she also really missed the experience of having a reason to go off by herself for a while.

She had always gotten her best thinking done while walking the dog. So she kept walking the dog. Just without the dog.

She’d grab her coat, pick up the leash and announce casually, “I’m going to walk the dog.”

Eventually people got used to it.

We understood each other.

In which Selma and I begin to work together.

I was already taking her everywhere, so of course I brought her to class.

At this point I was teaching Dance of Shiva (my wacky yoga brain training work) in both German and English all over Berlin. Selma turned out to be a huge help in these classes.

For one thing, people kept forgetting to keep their palms flat (palms of the hands, not fronds or anything — it’s wacky, yes, but it’s not that wacky). So I’d use Selma to demonstrate the hand positions.

But even better, having a duck with me kind of took the piss out of what is otherwise a frustrating, challenging, mind-bending practice. It gave people — Germans no less — the chance to loosen up and have a little fun with it.

Once Selma started teaching breathing exercises, it was all over.

One day I didn’t bring her to class, and people didn’t like that. So I brought her on board as co-teacher and everyone was happy. Especially me.

In which I am an idiot and try to hide my duck from the world.

When I first started biggifying, I mistakenly thought that people would judge me for my duck. For having a duck.

Well, they do. But it’s just not a big deal. Here’s what happened though.

People told me over and over again that I had to appear as professional as possible, if I wanted to get clients and have everyone take me and my work seriously. Everyone I talked to advised against talking about Selma.

And for a long time I listened to them.

I was making the classic mistake of wanting to be an expert so badly that I wouldn’t let myself be human or seem vulnerable. I erred on the side of safe and boring, thinking that was the sacrifice I needed to make in order to be successful.

But eventually I realized that I couldn’t keep it up. My duck was my partner, my companion, my muse. I couldn’t not talk about her. I needed Selma to be a part of things.

So I psyched myself up. I started mentioning her in the noozletters. Eventually I changed my photo to one of the two of us. We’d both sign our names to stuff I’d write while she was sitting next to me, peering over my shoulder.

And the world did not collapse. No one fired me. I did not end up living in a cardboard box. I could not have been more astonished.

In which I become famous and then everyone thinks I was all strategic about it.

Selma became a superstar way faster than I did.

People love her. Not just that, but the right people love her. My people. In fact, that’s how I find my Right People.

Anyone who doesn’t get it? Anyone who thinks it’s stupid that I have a duck as a business partner? Probably not somebody I want to work with.

It’s the people who write to me saying, “Ohmygod you have a duck! This is so perfect!”

Those are the ones.

I never intended for Selma to become what Michael Port refers to as a “red velvet rope”, but that’s essentially what happened. More than that, she taught me how that whole concept works so that I can recognize other people’s red velvet ropes.

A lot of people seem to think that I’m a clever marketer and that Selma is some kind of strategic ploy. Which is hysterical, because when Selma and I met I still couldn’t even hear the word “marketing” without throwing up.

Not to mention the fact that everyone I talked to warned me that she’d lose me business.

Now she’s a total celebrity. And she’s made me one too, in her weird little way. She got us on German television. She got us onto the front page of the Style section in the New York Freaking Times. She got called a whore by Itty Biz. You know how it is.

But I can handle it…

So Selma’s more popular than I am. And I’ve mostly made my peace with that.

She gets fan mail. She gets presents. People will send things addressed to Selma the Duck, c/o Hoppy House.

And — even more bizarre — sometimes these packages are addressed to Selma Brooks. I mean, it’s not like I adopted her. We don’t share a last name. Oh well. That’s just part of living with a celebrity, right?

The truth is though, I love her.

I love having her around. I love her psychotic, goofy smile and I love the way she looks at me. If she wanted to leave the business and go off and sell shoes or something, I would cry.

Now you’ve gotten me all sentimental and mushy and Selma will never let me live it down. Actually, she will. Because she’s like that. But no one else will.

Man, I hope this was as interesting as what you were hoping for. Because I probably won’t get around to answering another Frequently Asked Question for a while. Let me distract you with my duck!

Clearing stuff out.

Despite all my threats — and despite some nostalgia-induced wishful thinking — I have not gone into crazed cleaning-obsessively-for-Passover mode.

Not that there hasn’t been a ridiculous amount of cleaning because ohmygod it starts tonight there has.

Just that I’ve been able to go about things in my own slow, measured way, and I’ve been mostly okay with that instead of ending up all Passoverwhelmed.

Yes, I know I’m the only person in the world who thinks Passoverwhelm* is funny. Just go with me on this one.

*Hat-tip to Cairene for introducing this word into my consciousness, where it quickly took up permanent residence.

Point being, I’m not as scattered as I’d imagined I would be, but my thoughts aren’t exactly coherent or anything either.

So I’m just going to think out loud a bit about what it means (for me) to clear things. Up. Out. It doesn’t matter. Just clearing.

There’s a lot of stuff to not like about being Jewish but at least you never end up with a five-year-old jar of pickles in your refrigerator.

That should totally be the title of a Woody Allen movie.

It’s so true though. Growing up, I had no patience for any of this. Not for the weeks of spring cleaning and definitely not for the general hysteria surrounding it.

The irony of being enslaved to a holiday that’s about freedom… I just didn’t get why any of it was really necessary.

And fine, I’m still not sure that it is. But I appreciate it so much more now than I ever did before.

The first time I was at someone’s house and discovered a bottle of something ancient in the refrigerator, I was baffled. How had this not gotten thrown out? WHAT ABOUT SPRING CLEANING?

All those years grappling with everything I don’t like about Judaism, fighting with tradition, arguing with identity… and I never stopped to appreciate something really, really important:

That you’ll never find anything in my refrigerator more than a year old. Small blessings. You take them where you can find them.

Symbolic clearing, part 1.

Since my hurt-ey arms don’t allow me to do as much scrubbing and scouring as I would normally deem necessary, I’ve been delegating like crazy to my gentleman friend and my brother.

But much more importantly, I’ve also been finding other ways to practice clearing out stuff that no longer needs to be there.

With some assistance on the clicking and deleting end, I took on the task of making sense of my web-browser-toolbar-bookmark thing.

Almost five years of bookmarking things on the computer … total chaos.

So I started with the goal not of making order or creating the perfect system or finishing this project, but just of symbolically clearing stuff out. If I could delete even a chunk of things that didn’t’t need to be there, that would be enough.

And each time something got deleted, I said “I don’t need you anymore. I’m making space in my life.”

This clearing out of bookmarks thing was so fascinating that it really deserves its own blog post.

For now I’ll just say that it was amazing to discover just how many things no longer exist. To see how advice I thought was totally biggified and impressive a couple years ago now seems completely boring and useless.

Anyway, we got twenty-two folders down to five. And eighty-something random uncategorized bookmarks down to seven.

Ahhhhhhhhhhhhh. Space. Even the symbolic kind. It just feels good.

Symbolic clearing, part 2.

This is the stuff I talk about here all the time. Interacting with walls. Having conversations with blocks and other stucknesses.

The internal kind of clearing.

There are so many ways to do it. And not just the “talking to your stuff” work that I do. Meditation. Yoga. The life-changingly great and completely bizarre epiphany-launching Dance of Shiva.

So yeah, it’s not just for Passover — I’m pretty much always doing internal symbolic clearing work.

But the kind of questions I’m asking myself now — especially in the context of my ever-changing relationship with time — are all coming out of the themes of this holiday:

What do I need to happen in order to move from a mindframe of bondage and rules to one of freedom?

How are the structures and boundaries of freedom different from what I know?

What needs to happen for me to appreciate the freedom I have?

What other experience of freedom is already inside of me that I haven’t been able to access yet?

If I know what needs to be done, what else am I waiting for?

My second-favorite Pesach memory.

We opened the bar late. Sometime between ten and eleven. Knowing that people would start to straggle in after the big family meal at some point.

Because it’s the first night of Pesach in Tel Aviv, where people can’t not go out and a lot of places are closed and come on, they have to go somewhere.

Just me and the manager, one of my closest friends at the time. You know that thing that happens when someone gets promoted to manager and turns into the world’s biggest asshat? It still hadn’t happened to him (yet), so we were still cool.

Anyway, it was just the two of us. No waitress. I was covering the bar and he was taking the kitchen.

We knew we’d be hanging out together until at least six in the morning when we closed, so it wasn’t like we needed to fill the space with conversation.

I was cleaning something. He was cleaning something. Johnny Cash in the background. All the space in the world. All the time in the world.

Just cleaning. And thinking. And waiting, but not impatiently. Knowing that any minute a door will open. A bell will ring. And there you are.

Apparently I don’t believe in free time.

So I’ve been doing a ridiculous amount of work lately on my complicated tangle of beliefs, experiences and patterns around Time.*

The feeling of “never enough”, the need for more, the lack of trust that this whole issue is going to get easier.

*Not capitalizing to be pretentious or anything! Just trying to draw attention to what a symbolic/thematic big deal it is for me right now.

Noticing.

There was that especially wacky meditation where I found a clock walled up inside of me (which then exploded, because a walled up clock isn’t trippy enough).

There was the session with Carolyn where we planted the idea that I’m allowed to have time for myself during the workday, which grew into my email sabbatical.

Then my hurting, unable-to-work arms spoke to me very clearly and said the following:

“You need your business to be a business. The kind that can run when you’re not there every second. Which it already can and you know it.

Enough treating it like it’s actually just another full-time job. Because we’re not getting better until you cut it out with the workaholism. So there.”

And I couldn’t even argue with them, because they were right.

So in addition to my own magic bag of tricks and techniques, I’ve also been getting coaching from Cairene. And more help from Carolyn and some wacky clearing-out-of-old-gunk from Hiro.

And learning even more about how I interact with time, how I think about it and how I treat it.

Hi, you must be my “I’m not allowed to have free time” block.

In my last Carolyn session we were talking about changes I could make to my schedule, and she asked what I would do if I had free time?

Free. Time.

The concept — in fact, just the combination of those two words into one united phrase — felt so foreign to me, so bizarre, that I couldn’t even really wrap my head around it.

Issues. I have some.

So I was (gently) poking around in my head, trying to figure out where this was coming from, and I found a couple of different fears to spend time with.

Fear #1: My fear of being a slacker.

Otherwise known as my fear of spending five years in a row doing nothing but staring at the wall and picking lint out of my belly button. Otherwise known as my fear of repeating the better part of my twenties.

Me: Whoah. Interesting. Okay, you’re totally allowed to be afraid of this if that’s what you’re feeling.
Fear: Uh-huh. I know.
Me: Um, can I just remind you though that we weren’t actually slacking off? We were just, you know, paralyzed by some seriously crippling perfectionism that kept us from even thinking about trying anything. Well, that and exhausted from working until 7 a.m. at the bar.
Fear: Whatever. Maybe. What’s important is that I need to keep that from ever happening again.
Me: Man, you are always trying to protect me. And I manage to forget that every single time.

Fear #2: My fear of abandoning my mission.

Me: Okay, that was almost creepy how fast that one went away. Hello, new fear. What’s your story?
New fear: I know you don’t like being a workaholic, but you just need to deal. Because you’re on a mission from god, much like in the Blues Brothers, only about a gazillion times more important. We can’t have you messing around here.
Me: Wow. I see we haven’t met yet. You’re pretty intense. Authoritative much?
New fear: You have to get your act together.

(Sound of me thinking ….)

Me: Let me see if I can reassure you a bit. I have enormous respect and love for my mission. I’m not going to abandon my mission.

You know what though? There isn’t going to be a mission if I get burnt out and lose my passion. And I can’t even do my mission effectively if what I end up modeling for people is self abuse instead of kindness.

The best way to protect the mission is by keeping me healthy and sane and well rested. The more time I take for myself, the higher quality my time is that I give to others.

(Sound of my fear thinking ….)

New fear: I see you’re pretty good at this authoritative thing too.
Me: So we’re cool? No way. Wow. Was that about a hundred times easier than last time or what? I’m astounded.

In which I receive some free time and don’t know what to do with it.

So that was last week.

Since then, I did some work with Jen Hofmann on creating a Non-Cheesy Healing Calendar for me, with a few experimental chunks of “free time” built in, and have gotten considerably more comfortable with the idea… at least in theory.

Then the other day I went to the one yoga class where I don’t need to use my arms, and it was canceled.

Bam! Instant free time.

No fear this time… but some internal dialogue:

Ooh! Free time! It’s happening! Ohmygosh!

I know! I could go sit in a café and write… oh wait, I can’t write because of my arms.

But I could sit on a bench or on the grass and write… no, I can’t actually.

Okay. There really isn’t anything I want to do that doesn’t involve writing in some form. in fact, writing is how I process things. It’s how I interact with things. It’s how I self-medicate. It’s how I sort out my thoughts and feelings.

And I really just need to be able to mourn that loss.

So I went for a walk.

And then I went and did some yoga at home.

And there was time for me. And it was actually uh … kind of freeing. So there!

Or at least, you know, close enough.

When “free” means that everyone loses.

So I was at a hippie-healing acupuncture-massage-chiro place. There are about a gazillion of those to choose from because, you know, welcome to Portland.

Waiting (of course).

Waiting for Chris, my massage therapist, who — for the record — is totally worth waiting for.

Anyway, I whiled away the time trying to rewrite (in my head) the piles and piles of ineffectual business cards at the counter.

Actually, they were so ridiculously bad that they were actually getting on my nerves.

To the point that I started worrying about turning into one of those asshat business guru-type people who are always going on about how “business is easy, if you just know how”.

And then you want to smack them because there is nothing more annoying than someone telling you something is easy when you can’t do it.

Here’s where it gets interesting.

I started chatting with the guy behind the counter to distract myself from my intense desire to careen around the room yelling “common sense, people… common sense!”

You need to listen to our conversation.

And if it doesn’t trigger a Moment of inspiration, understanding and bewilderment (like it did for me), you’re a smarter business person than I and you can skip the biggification posts and go straight to the wacky-ways-to-change-habits stuff.

“I just don’t really want to use my free massage until I need it.”

Me: Hey, so have you ever had a massage with Chris?
The guy: No, not yet. Should I?
Me: Ohmygod yes. Out of this world. He’s amazing.
The guy: Yeah, people seem to really like him. They don’t even mind that he’s always late. I should take him up on that free massage.
Me: You get a free massage? Awesome.
The guy: Well, I just don’t really want use my free massage until I need it, you know?

Whoah, whoah, whoah, what?!

Me: Wait, this is fascinating. I must know more. You get a free massage but you don’t want to use it. Talk to me about this.
The guy: Well, every healing practitioner who works here offers one free session to everyone who works at the front desk, to help us make recommendations about what’s best for people. You know, to let us experience their work so we can talk about it.
Me: Uh huh. Okay. That makes sense.
The guy: I know! It’s really great!
Me: So how many massages have you gotten?
The guy: One.
Me: Out of … what, fifteen? twenty?
The guy: Yeah. I kind of save them up until I really need them. That way, if I’m ever all sore or depressed or whatever, I could come here and get a free massage, which would be really cool.

In which I have a genius idea.

Me: So let me ask you something. If they didn’t give you a free massage, but instead you could get a massage with them for say, twelve dollars, would you do it?
The guy: Are you kidding? I’d have one right now. That’s a great deal.

And then try to understand it.

Me: So if it’s free, it’s something special and thus you have to save it until you’re ready for it… but if it costs twelve dollars, it’s (also) something special — but you’d go for it right away.
The guy: Yeah. You’re right. Weird, huh?
Me: With the free thing, you don’t want to use it up until you’re ready, but if it’s twelve dollars, you might actually have that on you and feel like a massage. Am I getting this right?
The guy: Absolutely.
Me: And is this just you? Or does everybody do this?
The guy: Oh, everybody. Hey guys! Do any of you use your free massages or do you save them until you really need them?
Everyone else: Confer, confer, confer
The guy: No, they don’t use them, but they would definitely go for a twelve dollar massage if they had twelve dollars that day.
Me: Someone should tell the massage therapists that.
The guy: Oh, I don’t know.

And then bring it to you.

Me: I am so going to write about this on my blog.
The guy: Huh? On your what?
Me: I’m going to go tell several thousand people about my great idea that you’re not going to use.

Let’s discuss. Not my genius idea, but the concept that free doesn’t always work.

Because it seems like there’s a lot more to say about what this weird truth means, why it is, and how you might apply it to whatever your thing is. I have thoughts.

The Fluent Self