This week's horoscope: by Cariel Crestin in the Seattle Weekly
"Cancers are fanatically loyal to their families. Tragically, the feeling's not always mutual. What some Cancers see as protective love, others can view as stifling control. For you, love transcends all. For some people, stuff like politics, practicalities, and the need for privacy can get in the way. Nothing's likely to change this week about who's close to you and who's not—except for your attitude. It's an ideal time to come to terms with the shape your family's in, good or bad, and assess whether or not improving it is actually in your power. If not, best to let it go, no?"I'm loyal, I just don't spend a lot of time with them. Not enough to control them for sure. But I know that were I to be in my mom's, nanette's, Katie's and Landon's life ALL the time, they might feel "stifling control". Nanette, Katie and Landon do just fine on their own, my mom will be fine eventually. With my mom it's all or nothing for me. If I lived near her I'd commit myself to helping her every day and it would drain me. So I do my own thing and just let her know I love her. She's only 50 years old. She'll be fine.
The problem this week in my family is that my dad has been mean to my sister, and it is definitely not within my power to improve his attitude. Not for lack of trying over the last 20 years! This Old Block that I'm a chip off thinks that 5 hours total with 3 different therapists over the last 10 years has done plenty to cure his anger. My time in therapy may be less, but ACKNOWLEDGMENT is the first step, so I'm exactly one step ahead of him. What's sad is that he thinks we don't love him as much as we do, and he thinks that his wife of 3 years, who also has kind of estranged her own 2 daughters, is the only true thing in his life. So they are probably going to move to the mountains without waiting for my sister to graduate from high school, and live in a place that is a 7 hour drive from Seattle most of the year. For the next 20 years we'll see him just a few days each year, and when he's old and sitting around all day he'll wish he'd spent more time with us, and been nicer and more forgiving of our youthful self-centeredness. Makes me cry. He's been far more loving to us than his parents were to him, though. A great provider and quite involved until both my sister and I stopped playing sports in high school. Very short tempered and distrusting though. His new wife knows this and pushes his buttons when she wants to get more control of his attention. I've heard her say outrageously manipulative things to him that just made me shake my head and give up. I mean, he's already distrusting of everyone else, so how can you counter that kind of manipulation unless you sink to her level? This is why my horoscope says "let it go"!
Ahhgh. Too much time to think these days. Landon says we need to do something to quiet our minds. 2 weeks ago I was pushing him away a little, feeling pressured into committed plans for the future - you know, live on a boat together, maybe in Galveston. At the time, every little difference between us translated into some insurmountable lifestyle difference that I had to sit and ponder whether or not I could accept. Then I suggested we live a little more in the moment, and the next day we were both more at ease. He has remained at ease. After a week of just enjoying each other's company, I've become the one who is stressing about the future. I don't want to leave him. It's as though earlier my fears of being trapped were overcome, then I was open to get more attached at my own pace, without my defenses up. Now I feel pretty vulnerable. It's a lot easier to convince myself that if I go work, and he finds someone else or falls out of love with me, then it just wasn't meant to be. I can't bring myself to think that way now. I run the risk of losing someone very important to me. Oh wait, that's part of being in love, isn't it...
He's a good sport. He's been living pretty solitary for a year now, reading, writing and drinking a little single malt every night. After an entire month of having no time to himself he still remains sane, kind and loving. For several years I lived alone and without much social interaction besides work - when I lived in Kingston without even a phone, and when I lived in my RV on a farm in Poulsbo - I remember that spending 2 whole days visiting someone would drive me mad. Now, after 2 years of almost always having a dozen people living, working and sleeping on the same vessel, this time spent in a small apartment with one other person has been deluxe privacy.
I bought my dad a book on meditating last Christmas. He said he used it once and it helped. Last weekend I bought myself "Power Yoga for Dummies". Now all I have to do is crack it open.