The Sand Mandalas of Everyday Life

Ever since he retired, my husband accompanies me to Costco almost every time I go. It’s like a standing, extremely non-sexy day date. We keep the magic alive, what can I say. Follow me for more marriage advice!

It IS nice to have the company, and to also have a witness to the absolute chaos that is shopping at the only Costco in a 200 kilometre radius. We were there a few weeks ago, and I learned an important lesson: the week before Mother’s Day rivals that of the one before Christmas. Evidently this has to do with the garden centre, and not because everyone is obtaining massive ingredients to put on a feast of sorts. Whatever the reason, both the parking lot and the warehouse could only be described as insane, with lineups to the cashiers snaking all the way down to the end of the store. Every aisle was crammed with people, and my husband suggested that we turn around and go home.

THERE’S NO TURNING BACK NOW.

I had a significantly large list to get through, and it would not improve by NOT shopping. Also, even with all evidence to the contrary, I had a weirdly optimistic feeling. There was a shopping cart with two wheels jammed into the meridian near our car, and we had rescued it rather than taking one from the carrel. I cannot save all the abandoned carts that litter the parking lots, but I saved that one. Also, who DOES that? It’s so much more work to jam half the cart onto the meridian than it is to just wheel it over to the carrel that is twenty steps away.

In any case, my optimistic feeling panned out. The shopping experience was somewhat hellish, to be sure. As we were finishing up, I told my husband I would just grab a few things from the produce section and meet him in the lineup. I started walking, holding my tomatoes, cucumbers, and sweet potatoes, and then I kept walking. And walking. Where was he? The lineup had magically disappeared and he was preparing to put our items on the conveyor belt.

And that is called Cart Karma, and is why we rescue shopping carts.

In my not-so-recent Ask Me Anything, my friend Diane (HI DIANE) asked What are three things you consider yourself an expert on? As I’ve gotten older, I feel like I am less and less an expert on anything, and more of a lifelong learner, although I do consider myself pretty knowledgeable in the area of karma, both cart and regular.

Sometimes I think of my life as one giant sand mandala, the kind that Buddhist monks make and then destroy as a way of practicing non-attachment and impermanence, except instead of a beautiful divine palace, my sand mandala is a pantry full of groceries. It’s a thing of beauty. I love the feeling of having a stocked fridge and pantry, so full of fresh ingredients, destined to become delicious meals. But nothing lasts forever, and I know that in mere days the stock will deplete, only to lead to me heading to Superstore and Costco with grim determination to create the mandala again. Impermanence!

I also think I am an expert when it comes to the sand mandala that is actual dinner. For over two decades now, I have honed my skills in this area. I make a weekly menu plan, I grocery shop, and then I execute. I know dinner is a struggle for many families, so I don’t want to flex too much, but I enjoy cooking and everyone in this house enjoys eating my cooking.

But dinner truly is a beautiful sand mandala. There is a lot of preparation involved, and although I am the kind of cook who literally throws things together with only a that seems good thought, and definitely no recipe, it still is a labour, the product of which gets destroyed upon setting it on the table.

The ultimate sand mandala at this time of year, though, is weeding the garden. Can a person be an expert on weeding? I don’t know, but if so, I am one. I spend time almost every day weeding, with the understanding that the next day, I will be out there weeding again. There’s no end to the weeds, and although that can feel a bit Sisyphus-ish, it’s also very Zen. Impermanence, non-attachment, etcetera.

Malcolm Gladwell popularized the notion that it takes 10000 hours to become an expert on something, and if that is the case, then most of us are experts on things we didn’t plan or want to be. Like, am I now an expert on laundry? Washing dishes? Vacuuming the floor because someone fuzzy likes to go on adventures in the vineyard and tracks in acres of dry grass and other vegetation remnants?

It’s best to practice non-attachment in those areas as well. Clean laundry, dishes, and floors are all impermanent and, like Newman said about the mail, they never stop. But the brief time where the laundry is clean and folded, dishes are all put away, and the floor is gleaming, well. It’s beautiful, and it – like everything else – will not last.

Weekly Reading

My reading count this week is bonkers, and almost entirely due to the fact that I read a total of three books on Mother’s Day alone. What can I say, other than yoga and walking the dog, I did nothing but read that day. I also had two DNF’s that I expected to love and did not: Still Life and Mornings In Jenin. You win some, you lose some.

Pick a Colour. This was an interesting little book, told from the point of view of a nail salon owner, who used to be a boxer. It’s a commentary on social status, power dynamics, and the road not taken. 

A Winter Book. My friend Laura (HI LAURA) suggested this book of short stories by a famed Finnish children’s author. These are auto-fiction, and span from the author’s childhood to her old age. My favourites were the episalatory variety, but all contain vast nature descriptions of the Finnish landscape, both within Helsinki and on the isolated island where she spent a lot of time.

The Bobbsey Twins and the Tagalong Giraffe. The book that spurred a lifelong desire to go on safari in Africa! I read this when I was seven, and for the past forty-four years I’ve been longing to go to Africa to see the animals. And I will be, soon! Now, will my adventure involve an orphaned baby giraffe named Crackers who I will accompany to a new herd of giraffes? Who can say? I hope so! 

The Things We Never Say. If you know me at all, you know how much I love Elizabeth Strout. She is an auto-buy author for me; I love everything she has ever written, and this, her latest, is no exception. It is an incredibly moving story of a high school history teacher who learns a secret that changes how he views his own life and the world at large. As he teaches the American Civil War to his students, he is faced with a country divided, and he learns that everyone has things they never say to anyone. It is a statement on loneliness, and how a person can be dreadfully alone even when surrounded by people. Strout’s writing is, as always, beautiful and precise and I loved reading every word of this.

Kokoro. It would be difficult to overstate how much this book moved me, how much it resonated with me, how seen I felt while reading it. I wanted to note down every phrase that was meaningful to me, but I quickly realized I would be soon transcribing the entire book. This book of Japanese wisdom for living a life of meaning and fulfilment, particularly for people in midlife, is incredible in every way. I think I had an out-of-body experience reading this. I think the lessons are for everyone, but particularly for those of us in our “back nine eras.” Thank you again to my friend Laura (HI LAURA) for bringing this book to my attention, and I will be immediately looking up everything this author has written.

I cannot BELIEVE I forgot to mention one of my favourite Canadian groups, in last week’s post: Blue Rodeo! Here I am with JIM CUDDY, at a 2008 Plates of Gold Olympics fundraiser. If I look starstruck, it’s because I was. Also in the photo was my husband’s colleague’s wife and Kelly Hrudy, both cut out to make it look like it’s just me and Jim Cuddy. I also got to meet Sale and Pelletier, which will mean a lot for you pairs skating fans out there.

We have had houseguests for an extended long weekend, and it feels just like a holiday. I’ve been flexing my dinner-making muscles, as well as my wine-drinking ones. I’d like to extend my sand mandala metaphor to include the latter, but I cannot think of how to do it. xo

Comments

  1. That’s an interesting metaphor for life.

    If you do encounter an orphaned giraffe, will you tie a big red ribbon around its neck?

  2. jennystancampiano says

    An orphaned baby giraffe named Crackers?? Could there be anything more absurd? Now I want to reread a Bobbsey Twins book.
    I like your sand mandala metaphor- much better than my own Sisyphus-ian attitude towards housework. I’m going to try to become more zen about these things.
    i want to read Kokoro!!!

  3. The Strout book sounds like something I’d like to read. Noted.

    Isn’t a well-stocked pantry so comforting and satisfying? I also love my fully-stocked extra freezer.

    I really liked reading this post; your attitude about karma and sand mandalas is inspired/inspiring. Even though I’ve put in my Expert Hours doing housework and childcare (and pet care!), I’ve also put in thousands of hours doing things I love. Now I’m going to remember that as a positive light. Thank you.

  4. That is a beautiful pantry! I find that I organize mine (the size of one half of yours) and a day later it looks like I just threw everything in it. I also like the artistic touch of the bright red bag in the fridge reflection. I love to cook and plan meals but once in a while it gets old. What to make…spend an hour or more cooking a meal that will be consumed in minutes. Mind you I have been doing it for 50 years- that’s a hella long time.

  5. This is a great metaphor for life right now. Life with little kids involves so many repeated routines and tasks that are done and undone. I read Beth Kimpton’s book “Calm Christmas,” but I want to check out “Kokoro” too.

  6. Oh, I can’t wait to get that Strout book! I’m on hold at the library. I love her.

    I love the idea of the mandala, of the impermanence of the things we do and create. The impermanence of our lives, really. Something to mull on.

  7. WILL YOU BE COMING TO CAPE TOWN AFTER THE SAFARI?? You absolutely have to let me know once your husband has finished the master travel plan 😄

    I really like the non-attachment idea. I think the reward moments make such a difference to the “sand mandalas”: happy guests after a dinner party, fresh fruit and vegetables from your garden, climbing into bed with fresh linen… those small things make it all worth it.

    Running feels similar. So many repetitive hours! But then race day arrives and suddenly the whole thing makes sense again!

  8. Ha! I am reading this right before I go outside to weed– which is something I love to do even though it is thankless and never ending. I have been putting on my weighted vest to pull dandelions, and it is a helluva core workout. Ben and I also costco together– it’s where we spend most of our money, so we might as well enjoy it 🙂

  9. I didn’t even realize Strout wrote a new book, so I immediately ordered it from the library. And I just now checked the status of your book and it’s out on loan and there are two people on the wait list. I think that is so cool!

    I’m reading an enjoyable book now – Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell. I’ve enjoyed her other books, so picked this one up. The last book I read is one of the best books I’ve read in a long time – The Sweet Spot by Amy Poeppel. Very few books make me laugh out loud, but this one actually did. The characters were hilarious.

  10. I needed your impermanence talk this morning. I’ve been slacking on yard work — I used to be in my garden beds all the time. I haven’t even planted my zinnias yet (I know).

    I do the laundry, dishes, all of that, and I really do love that moment when everything is done, even though I know it will all be waiting again the next day.

    Maybe I need to stop waiting for one big yard work day and just do a little bit of weeding each day instead.

    You were my TED talk this morning. You just didn’t know it. 🤣

  11. Such fun to check in and see your (huge) reading this week (week? Yikes!). Ah, Costco. When I used to have to travel far to one, I never got out of there for less than $250. Now that one is only about ten minutes away, I never get out of there for less than $100. Is this better? I suppose. But if you go more often, what’s the law of diminishing returns? Rick and I don’t do well there. He can power through. I stop everywhere. And the crowds can be — well, a lot! How many cart collisions have I seen. And all this reminds me, next time I go, I need toilet paper and paper towel.

    I digress, but I used the restroom at the Costco I go to and they had the worst toilet paper. You would think that they would be promoting what they sell, but if I’d never bought Costco TP and was judging by the bathroom, I’d never buy it. Just saying….

    Well done on the weeding. Not my skill set, which is why this year, for the first time, I’m hiring it done (in the front yard; I’ll tackle the herb garden myself!) I’m rather excited! Have a great week!

  12. I’m reading and loving the latest Strout book. I was to savor every word but I also am so pulled into the story that I can’t put it down. I had to stop reading earlier than usual last night because I was just SO VERY TIRED (still trying to bounce back from that late flight last week…). I should finish it in the next couple of days.

    I wish I had your dinner skillz!! It is not my favorite part of the day. We have one very selective eater one that is a decent eater but doesn’t like anything remotely spicy. So they tend to eat something different from us and I make something for Phil and me. It’s such a headache and always a rushed experience since they wanted to eat dinner about 3 minutes after we arrive home, ideally. But someday, I will enjoy making dinner again, but not until I’m retired.

  13. Oh Nicole I love the idea of approaching these, let’s say, less desirable parts of the everyday as one would a sand mandala!

    I do sometimes wish that a stiff wind would wind its way through my home, whisking away all the fur tumbleweeds. But perhaps if I lean in to the idea that the tumbleweeds are teaching me non attachment to my clean floors I will feel less despair.

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