Yug. I'm incontinent.
Not
all
the
time
of
course,
not
that
bad
and
it's
not
a
medical
condition
that
requires
intervention—just
a
royal
pain.
Half
of
my
preparation
for
3
weeks
in
India
involved
getting
my
Visa,
how
to
minimize
luggage
and
arguing
over
whether
I
was
in
business
class
for
one
of
the
four
legs
of
the
trip.
(I
wasn't.)
The
other
half
was
spent
imagining
crapping
myself
or
having
to
reach
for
my
groin
in
public.
In
a
hotel
lobby.
Don't
talk
to
me
about
kegels.
Fucking
kegels
are
mythology.
I
am
firmly
convinced
that
biofeedback
is
the
answer
and
I
will
tell
you
why.
During
the
many
iterations
of
daily
activities,
some
things
become
habitual—like
walking
over
to
the
store,
or
driving
to
a
rehearsal
and
then
pulling
up
to
the
house
afterward.
Both
of
these
particular
activities
involve
going
up
to
the
front
door
don't
they?
And
guess
what
happens
then?
5
or
10
minutes
pre-arrival
I'm
fine;
suddenly
the
appearance
of
the
entrance
beyond
which
lies
the
bathroom
says
to
my
birdie
brain ooh,
wouldn't
you
like
to
pee
now.
The
antidote
I’m
practicing
is
to
focus
on
distraction
like
a
color
or
an
object.
This is a work in progress.
*****
Having
survived
India
with
zero
intestinal
issues,
a
lot
of
rice
&
chapatti
&
idli
&
mango
lassi.
Hallelujah
no
leakage,
something
about
returning
to
the
scene
of
my
previous
food
poisoning/diverticulitis
scare
felt
like
I
should
spit
over
my
shoulder
or
maybe
hang
some
garlic
or
something,
but
resuming
my
old
dietary
habits?
Here
we
are
though;
jet
lag
is
waning,
got
our
new
furnace
with
its
fancy
thermostat
app.
It's
very
cold
and
rainy
out,
so
cocoon!
Tonight,
in
addition
to
reaching
the
200th
episode
of
ER,
I
had
popcorn
for
dinner.
I
did
finally
walk
in
the
rain
over
to
Trader
Joe's.
I
refuse
to
take
the
car,
but
one
of
the
problems
with
going
on
extended
trips
is
that
you
empty
out
your
refrigerator
and
that's
what
I
did
so,
between
a
lot
of
rain
and
feeling
somewhat
food
fearful,
the
cupboard
remained
pretty
bare
except
for
granola
bars.
Kind
of
had
to
force
myself
to
make
those
decisions,
get
back
on
the
horse.
(I
brought
back
two
lovely
silk
salwar
kameez
tunics
from
Jodhpur.
If
that's
not
an
incentive
to
keep
portion
controls
in
place
I
don't
know
what
it
is.)
However
here's
the
rub:
I
arrived
back
in
the
US
around
2:00
in
the
afternoon
on
Sunday.
7:30
Monday
was
the
first
rehearsal
with
the
present
(not
tour)
choir.
Despite
all
of
my
efforts
and
all
of
the
helpful
paraphernalia
I
took
with
me
including
paper
music,
and
a
tablet
with
electronic
versions
and
MP3
files
for
upcoming
gigs,
I
spent
99%
of
my
time
neither
thinking
about
nor
looking
at
new
gig
music.
The
whole
trip.
I
suppose
I
could
cut
myself
some
slack
because
in
a
volunteer
situation
most
people
would
say
you
know
what?
You
can
be
one
of
60
singers
and
you
will
be
the
only
person
who
knows
whether
or
not
you
hit
that
G
above
the
staff
or
whether
you
fudged
it.
I
mean
I'm
singing
soprano,
and
there's
a
couple
of
measures
in
the
piece
we're
doing
coming
right
up
that
feature
a
little
slap
on
a
high
C.
I’m
not
going
to
do that. I don’t need to.
Technically
though,
I
never
did
actually
own
high
C—although
I
did
do
an
audition
once
that
ended
on
the
ole money note and I pretty much nailed it so there's that. But they used to say if you don't have at least a third above a note you don't own it.
So
no,
I
here
I
am
in
the
vicinity
of
that
G
but
depends
on
the
music.
It's
a
strictly
Case
by
case
basis.
More
problematic
is
that
it
was
wonderful
being
back
in
this
particular
group,
even
jet
lagged
and
feeling
a
little
guilty.
Although
I
only
missed
two
rehearsals.
Confounding
that
I
appear
to
be
wrestling
again.
On
the
one
side,
there's
my
dad:
resolute
fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants
operator
both
in
practical
life
and
general
philosophy.
On
the
other
side
my
mother:
never
met
a
book
she
didn't
want
to
mark
up
and
analyze.
She
actually
admitted
one
time
that
she
would
not
turn
the
page
of
a
book
until
she
was
satisfied
that
she
had
absorbed
everything
on
the
page
she
was
reading.
That's
a
little
OCD
or
something.
And
French
school
system,
of
course.
Anyway I think my Reptilian Brain knows what I should be doing and my conscious self is completely aware of the existence of this lassitude. How the hell else could you arrive at 200 episodes? Although to be fair you do get the chance to log an insane number of guest appearances by familiar actors some of whom are A-list now.
Between
miserable
weather
and
subtle
resistance,
it's
way
too
easy
to
just
glide
through
each
day.
Getting
a
little
sense
of
attraction
to
an idea for some food, a bit of hunger pang in the middle of an episode. Just close the laptop, go down to the kitchen and make it happen. Bring it back upstairs, it could be a bowl of grape nuts with some cashews and almonds and blueberries and maybe some cranberries, and sometimes milk and sometimes kefir, or some roasted yam, but it's all good. Leftover black rice & lentils & barley steamed in apple/carrot/celery/kale cold pressed juice (really).
And
a
weird
thing
occurs.
The
old
messages
and
judgments,
training
or
pressures, why aren't you working, fade away.
I'm just me.
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