I was going to post something today about personal space,
and how much my husband and I are enjoying having our offices separated—but it
just seemed too frivolous in the wake of Superstorm Sandy. We’ve weathered a few
hurricanes since we moved to Florida ,
but nothing like what the people in the northeast are experiencing with Sandy .
More than 100 people have died, and more than one million homes are still
without power, with a nor’easter bringing cold, snow and wind predicted for
later this week. (Click here for a state-by-state summary of Sandy ’s
aftermath. Jason Good, who lives in New Jersey and still has no power ,
blogged about Sandy here.)
I’ve been thinking about the people affected by Superstorm
Sandy—wondering how I could help. I can’t volunteer up there, so I’m looking
for ways to help right here. Cash donations may seem less personal, but they
are highly useful to relief agencies. Cash doesn’t have to be sorted, packaged
or transported, and agencies have more flexibility to provide for the true
needs of survivors. Here are a few organizations that are taking donations for
those affected by Sandy .
The Red Cross. Visit www.redcross.org,
call 800-Red-Cross or text the word “Redcross” to 90999 to make a $10 donation.
You can also give blood, since many blood drives had to be canceled because of Sandy .
In conjunction with the Red Cross, ABC is sponsoring a “Day of Giving” today. All day long, ABC’s shows will offer viewers a chance to donate to those
affected by the storm.
The Salvation Army provides food, clean-up kits, shelter and
“emotional and spiritual care” to storm victims.
Feeding America
operates food banks all over the US ,
and is distributing emergency food, water and supplies to the storm’s victims.
AmeriCares provides medicine, medical supplies and
humanitarian aid.
The Humane Society is working to help pets affected by the
storm, especially those were not able to be evacuated with their families.
In addition to the above organizations, you can visit the National
Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster website for a list
of volunteer organizations in your state.
I’ll get back to the personal space issue in a future post
(and include some pictures of my husband’s new office). Today, I’m just
grateful to have a roof over my head and electricity to power my household.
Photo courtesy John Nyberg |
Do you get tired of being told to look on the bright side
when you express a negative thought? Do you find yourself stifling your
concerns out of a desire not to sound “negative”?
Turns out, there’s a place for negative, especially if it’s
in the form of defensive pessimism.
I just finished reading The Positive Power of Negative Thinking, by Julie K. Norem, Ph.D. In this book, Norem introduced me to the
concepts of defensive pessimism and strategic optimism. People who use
strategic optimism seek to avoid stirring up anxious feelings, often by setting
high expectations, then not thinking about what could go wrong. Those who use defensive pessimism set low
expectations and mentally rehearse how things could go wrong.
On the surface, defensive pessimism sounds pretty dismal.
However, Norem explains, “Defensive pessimism involves learning to tolerate negative emotions in order to
get things done. [Defensive pessimists’] tolerance isn’t passive wallowing in
negative feelings; it embodies confronting those feelings and rejecting the
premise that feeling good should always be our most immediate aim.”
These two strategies are used by people who have differing
psychic make-ups: those who typically feel anxious and those who do not. Those
who feel anxious need to find a way to handle their anxiety so that they can
act, and those who don’t feel anxious need to find ways to stay anxiety-free.
As Norem demonstrates, the strategies that work for one don’t work for the other,
and if you try to change someone’s strategy, their performance suffers. Norem
writes, “Defensive pessimism and strategic optimism develop in response to
different experiences, and their strengths lie in the ways they address
different problems. Defensive pessimism works to manage anxiety and help people
feel more in control, whereas strategic optimism works to keep anxiety away and
to protect self-esteem. In both cases, these strategies motivate effective
action and often lead to good outcomes for those who use them.” (Norem notes
that these concepts are different from dispositional
optimism or pessimism.)
As in most things, if taken to extremes, both of these
strategies can be dysfunctional. Defensive pessimists can spend too much time
preparing for disaster and become such perfectionists that they never complete
anything. Strategic optimists may become overconfident, ignore real dangers, or
keep working at impossible tasks they should abandon
Norem doesn’t believe you should give up your natural
tendencies. Whatever your strategy, be it defensive pessimism or strategic
optimism, embrace it while making sure not to carry it too far. In addition, accept
the strategies of others without trying to change them.
I think I fall more towards the defensive pessimist end of
the spectrum, and this book clarified for me strategies to help get me through
the anxious period and into the active period. (Truthfully, I often use
“self-handicapper” strategies, discussed in chapter five—a tendency I need to
overcome.)
Which do you use most often—defensive pessimism or strategic
optimism?
Photo courtesy Karolina Michalak |
I’m not alone in noticing how time accelerates as we grow
older, and as the seasons grow ever more brief the holidays are gone in a
wink. This poem by Nancy Price about
Halloween catches a little of that.
She’s an Iowan whose poems are so heartfelt, clear and useful that we
could run them every week and none of you would complain. [Introduction by Ted
Kooser.]
Trick or Treat
The ghost is a torn sheet,
the skeleton’s suit came from a rack in a store
the witch is flameproof, but who knows
what dark streets they have taken here?
Brother Death, here is a candy bar.
For the lady wearing the hat from Salem :
gum.
And a penny for each eye, Lost Soul.
They fade away with their heavy sacks.
Thanks! I yell just
in time.
Thanks for another year!
Something’s not quite right with the color of the
photographs, and several are completely unrecognizable. The color problem
probably stems from keeping the film on my dresser for several years before
having it developed, but what’s up with the unrecognizable ones?
I just had my last roll of film developed, and it made me
kind of sad. I entered the digital photo age kicking and screaming. I loved my
35mm camera, loved the packets of shiny photos I had developed, loved the photo
albums and scrapbooks I made with them. I feared my digital photos would never
make it off my hard drive into prints. (I was mostly right about that, too. I
don’t know which is worse: boxes of unsorted prints or computer files of
unsorted images!)
I’m totally a digital convert now—I love the ability to take
tons of photos and, even better, the simple software that allows me to crop and
otherwise enhance them so I have images I think are beautiful. I’m looking into
websites that allow you to make photo books to replace the scrapbooks and photo
albums I used to make. The excitement of sending my film away and seeing if the
photos I took are as good as I think they will be has been replaced by
immediately checking the images, then popping a memory card into my laptop. Now
that I’m converted to digital, I’m going to sell my 35mm SLR
camera. It makes me a little sad, but I don’t need it or use it anymore.
So what was on that roll of film? Before-and-after photos of
our kitchen when we changed the countertops from Formica to granite and added a
new backsplash. (We made this home improvement right before Christmas—that’s
when we do all our home improvements. It adds that perfect touch of panic to the festivities.) My
husband and I were thinner. Nick was shorter. And Crusher was still with us.
(Sniffle.)
Look how young Nick is! |
Sometimes technology makes life better—it certainly has made
photography more fun and easier for me, even though I still have a lot more to
learn. My husband says I’ll soon exchange my paper books for an e-reader, but
I’m not so sure about that. There’s more to reading a book than seeing words on
a page.
How has technology made your life better? Is there anything
you said you’d never do/try/use that you now find indispensable, like my
digital camera?