Me Becoming Me: Volume 3 – The Not So Fine Art of Meditation

The best time to meditate, the best place, the best length of practice is the one that you actually do. Showing up for practice today, however long or short, is enough. – Kate Johnson, “Calming the Not Now Mind”

I’m horrible at meditation, just terrible.  Buddhism speaks of the ‘monkey mind’ that can’t settle down and pretty much does what it wants – a very apt description of what’s going on inside my head when I sit down to do it. Yet it is the first thing I do by choice after waking (nature’s call isn’t a choice) every single morning. 

Why?  Because it works.

I remember my first attempt at meditation several years ago. I got about ten pages into a book on meditation and started to give it a whirl for three minutes. It… was… excruciating. I just could not master keeping my mind fixed on the blank piece of paper that was suggested. My mind kept wandering off to wherever and I would get frustrated and give up before three minutes had elapsed. I became angry with myself because I felt like I failed.

The thing is I hadn’t.  I had actually succeeded.

We can’t all be Thich Quang Duc (you may not know the name, but you would certainly recognize a picture of what he’s known for if you’ve ever seen it) and achieve a deep level of serenity that persists even when we’re literally on fire.  We can, however, achieve the first aim of meditation and deal with the thoughts in our own mind when they appear.  When they do appear, thank your mind for bringing it to your attention and turn your attention back to your breath.  Doing this over and over again is why meditation is a practice.

I have anger issues. While I have a long fuse, a huge powder keg lies at the end of it. A 6’3”, 300 pound male with a booming voice and an explosive temper do not go well together. I can be down right scary when I lose control. The first time I saw the fire moving quickly down the fuse and stopped it before the barrel was one of the most impactful moments of my life. I arrived at that moment because of my meditation practice.

The simple stool in the picture is my place for meditation. Ms. Boss gave it to me as a ringing endorsement of my new found practice. I, unfortunately, abused it by using it in a manner that failed to give it the respect it deserved about a year ago and broke it.  To recommit myself to the practice as part of Me Becoming Me, I asked one of my employees who does woodworking as a hobby to repair it for me.  Since the day it returned, I have not missed a single day sitting on it in meditation.  As the quote at the beginning states, I can and do meditate anywhere, but the stool reminds me how important meditation is not only for me, but my family as well.

I may wake before the enemy, but I do so to become a more mindful and gentler man.

Me Becoming Me: Volume 2 – Rising Before the Enemy

I recently read Discipline Equals Freedom: Field Manual by Jocko Willink.  He solved a mystery I could not just wrap my mind around when I was younger – why do people in the military get up so early?  As someone who craved sleep in the past, I just could not fathom why anyone would want to get up at ‘oh-dark-thirty’ to start their day. Jocko explained that mystery for me by saying that throughout history, the enemy often attacked at dawn.  The military wakes up earlier than that so they can be ready for the enemy.

I’ve known forever that the secret to getting things done is getting up early in the morning and knocking things out.  I tried getting up early off and on for years but the lure of the snooze button dragged me back to my natural state. It’s funny how sometimes you just need that one piece of information to click into place for it to make all the difference.

I love sleeping.  I like being under the covers and being warm and cozy. For a good portion of my life, I squeezed every last bit of sleep I could before reluctantly rolling out of bed to start my day.  This dovetails nicely with the fact that I also like to be lazy. 

Who is the enemy? When I told Ms. Boss about this concept, she was afraid that she was the enemy.  I hasten to add that this is not the least bit true – she is my staunchest ally and friend in battle.  The enemy consists of everything that keeps me from meeting my objectives. The enemy consumes my time, attacks my resources, and diverts my attention from what’s important in life.  The enemy relentlessly presents a countervailing force to what is right.

During Me Becoming Me, I’ve only hit the snooze button once.  The alarm goes off at 5:15 promptly.  When the alarm says go, I go.  What’s more, I often find myself getting up even before the alarm goes off in the morning. 

I will not win every battle, but I am trying my hardest to win the war. The first thing I do every day to strive for victory is choose to get up before the enemy every morning.

Me Becoming Me: Volume 1 – Taking Care of My…

This is – or at least was – my favorite coffee cup. I can’t quite remember when Ms. Boss gave it to me (though I do remember it was a gift), but it’s everything I wanted in a coffee cup – big, stout, nice handle, and a strong reminder of a different time in our lives together. If I found this mug clean and in the cabinet, my morning coffee would find its way into it… until last week. Look at the top of the cup next to the dash on the label, you’ll see a chip that I caused while being careless putting away coffee cups. It did not break and shatter into a bunch of pieces, but it became unusable for its purpose in life.


Six months ago, I went to the doctors office knowing exactly what he would say: I lacked any kind of control over my type-2 diabetes. Despite taking medication, my numbers kept increasing over several years until the values on the lab report strayed too far from the upper threshold to ignore. I did not need those objective values to tell me things weren’t good. I just plain felt wrong and those feelings were impacting those around me. I decided to do something about it…

I surrendered.

My doctor knew that I loathed taking additional medication and probably discerned that the feeling came from a general “I’m a smart guy, I’ll do it myself” stance to my medical care, but he apparently learned his lessons on bedside manners well enough to know to be somewhat gentle. He put me on two new medications, adjusted a third, and gave me the general spiel on diet and exercise. He did his part.

The rest was up to me.


I threw the mug in the trash immediately after I broke it because it no longer had a purpose in life. I then went to tell Ms. Boss what transpired with a bit of a heavy heart. She asked me where it was. I told her it was in the trash. She asked me why I didn’t use it for another purpose in my ‘project’.

Smart woman, that Ms. Boss. I married very well.

The ‘project’ she was referring to is an ever-evolving program of experiments, changes, and creative endeavors designed to put more years in my life and life in my years. My vision is a state where both my figurative and literal houses are in order. My mantra is to not only “what’s next?”, but “what’s now?.” The Skipper from Wall-E says it best, “I don’t want to survive. I want to live!

The cup in the picture now has a purpose. It’s tangible purpose now is to serve as the last place items go in my workspace before they end up in trash. Psychologically, it serves to remind me that I don’t take care of myself and my things, that I am going lose them. It also serves to remind me that I myself can be repurposed and have yet another life.


“Me Becoming Me” is the name I have finally foisted on this project. It is intended to be a look into the changes that I have, am, and will be making. It will be a creative outlet for me to share my journey with you, dear reader. It is an attempt to provide me with an additional purpose in life. It is designed to help me live through my fifties.

Won’t you join me?