No Shit!
Lama lo?
Letâs dive in.

A few years ago, I took my three kids to Israelâa place vibrant with life so palpable that it can only come from years of yearning for a homeland and the constant existential threat that looms over itâsomething real that defies words. The second I step foot in Israel, an internal key turns, and I donât know, I become a bit more⊠I have no idea, but for one thing, I remember why I have elbows⊠I wanted to show Israel to my three kidsâtwo teenagers and my youngest, who still kinda liked me back then.
The morning after we landed, I took them to the supermarket to share with them my childhood love, Shoko Besakit. Itâs this chocolate milk packaged in a cheap plastic pouch, you bite off a piece of it with your teeth, and suck on its delicious nectar.
As we were in the supermarket, I got so excitedâI wanted to show them how fun Israelis are. So, despite or maybe even because of the half-judgmental, âMom, donât embarrass usâ look in their eyes, I asked random people if theyâd take a picture with us. We went to the butcher, who was busy cutting all sorts of pieces for early morning customers, and I asked, âHey, do you want to take a picture with us?â Without blinking an eye, he gave us a full smile, one that pulls you in right away, and said, âLama lo?ââWhy not?âas he stepped from behind the counter and put his arms around us.
“Lama Lo” is not a questionâitâs a trusting, lighthearted embrace of life that honors the unknown with such playfulness. Itâs become a âthingâ for me and my kids, the “Lama Lo” mentality, with the butcherâs full smile always coming to mind whenever I say it.
Last fall, after coming back from Yosemiteâanother magical place on earthâI started to wonder if I should try this thing Iâd heard about: âlistening to my body.â Do you know what that means? I had no clue. But I figured, Lama Loâit sounds convincing enough. What if thereâs truth to mind, body, and soul (some throw in the heart for good measure)? Lama Loâwhat do I have to lose?
Iâve been living in my head for so longâmy thoughts, answering my thoughts, arguing with my thoughts, processing my thoughts, and then circling back again. Wouldnât it be a breath of fresh air to listen to my bodyâwhatever that means? I didnât even know how to do it. All I did was set an intention. What the fuck does that mean? Just saying it to myself. Thatâs it.
I had absolutely no idea what it meant to listen to my body or what my body even knew how to say. Or shall I admit it, that all I knew how to listen to were very basic things: âFeed me. Feed me. Chocolate. Feed me. Bread. Pasta. Feed me. Yumm. More. Yum. Give me more.â About sex, my body and mind were in cahoots, all be it leaving my heart and soul out in the cold.
My body sometimes said, âI have to go to the bathroom,â to which I often replied, âNot now. Iâm too busy.â
âIâm thirsty.â – âNo, youâre fine.â
âIâm tired.â- âNo, youâre not. You only think you are.â
Lucky for my body, Iâve always loved the outdoors, so I took it with me and my endless thoughts on a hike at least once a week.
So, imagine my surprise when I finally dialed into my body, asking, âWhat do you have to say?â And the answer was: âOUCHââreally? Thatâs what my body had to say as I opened the conversation? It yelled at me: âFuck youâmy ass hurts!â
I donât suggest declaring on your journey, âIâm ready to listen to my body,â unless you actually want to hear what your body has to say. Because you cannot unhear itâor at least, once I opened the floodgates, they were there. All of a sudden, it was hard for me to sit. Was it hard to sit because I was noticing? Because I was paying attention? Had it always been there, a dull pain that I was now more aware of? Or was it just a coincidence?
I used to wonder this to myself as my body started giving me clues.
I remembered another coincidenceâtell me if this happens to you. You know when you work like a crazy person? That so-called pride of âbeing like a machineâ â you can do so much! Do you know what Iâm talking about? Or do you have this thing, the illusive, empty joke of our modern life, the concept called âwork-life balanceâ? Do you have that in your life? Hahaha⊠if only.
When I looked back at times I was especially busy with workâthose days that stretch from 5 AM until 10 or midnight, giving up your weekend, because you must workâŠand then into weeks, even months, with no rest for your body or your mindâdid you have periods like that? Where there are just a few deadlines, and if you just run and get to them, you can finally sit back, relax, and take a breath?
And then did you notice that, so often, when that happens, all of a sudden, you get sick? What? Did your body betray you? Is it really a coincidence?
There was a time in my previous job when I got promoted from director of education to executive director, but I only got the job if I agreed to do both for a while. I didnât know I was allowed to have boundaries. Nobody told me that. So I told myself, âSure, Iâll do it. Iâll just work that much harder.â
Why did I say that? No, thatâs a totally valid question. Why did I put myself in a position of being so clearly taken advantage of? Why try to do better than my best?
Iâll tell you why. Because I have three kids.
Because at the time, I was making just enough to buy groceries. But I saw the writing on the wall. I was freshly separated, and my ex was spending money he didnât have like it was growing on trees. He was following his passion: being a comedian. Thatâs the biggest joke of his comedy routine â just ask my friends who burst out laughing at this tragedy when I first shared it with them â all of us in tears but not for the same reason.
Work? Nah, that cramped his lifestyle. Of what? I donât know⊠watching TV⊠getting high? I have no idea. All I know is that he hasnât held a job for more than a few months at a time in 6 years, and those gaps just kept growing. It was like I was watching him shrink, watching him disappear, leaving me with everything. The kids were with me the vast majority of the time, and I was losing sleep, trying to figure out how to stand on my own two feet.
When I did manage to close my eyes, I fell into haunting nightmares of huge tidal waves approaching me and my kids, of dark waters threatening to swallow us, me trying to get them to shore, to safety. That is terror that grips you at the throat, my friends, that you cannot run away from. Not with your eyes open. Not with your eyes shut. Not even Lala land is a refuge from that. The promised escape that sleep should offer. I saw it. The heavy responsibility coming my way. I saw him, my ex, shrinking again, trusting that, without a choice, I would have to hold it all, take care of everything.
And itâs true. I had no choice. I had to. Because if I didnât, who would? I had to hold it together. I had to do what at the time felt like the impossilbe. So yes, I had to do the hard work it took to get my kids onto shore. And as I happily took this crazy job, another huge project fell into my lapâthe annual gala.
Donât even get me started on the evils of a gala. I fucking hate it. Hereâs what we do: give me your money, and Iâll waste it on throwing a fancy party that no one wants to attendâsorry, thatâs inaccurate. One person at least wants to attendâthe honoree, who gets to tell us all how great they are. Iâll give you food thatâs just okay, for which youâll pay top price. Youâll give me time you donât have, and Iâll sit you down and demand that you pretend to have fun, all while shaming you in front of your peers to give more. Hooray, and Lechaim to that – we all win! Put on your smile for this fucking circus.
So, as the gala landed in my lap, and I was running a school while figuring out this new position I had never really had before, it felt like every direction I looked, there was a mess I had to clean up.
Iâd come home to my kids, to a house that was once alive, and now felt haunted. We were all ghosts of ourselves. Each of us trapped in our own realityâmy ex moved out, they didnât see him much, and I was absent in my own home. My little one, was only 7, ripped my heart open with questions like: âwhy canât we still be a familyâ. And where was I? I was gone. Not just the physical space we shared because I was working long hours, but in my own body too. I had so little to give. I was running so fast at work, working so many hours just to be able to feed them, that Iâd come home, make dinner, and they would talk to me, but I would hear nothing. NOTHING.
I went from being super present with them to fitting into this role of âthe lights are on, but no oneâs home.â Not a damn thing. My mind was consumed by the running list of tasks at work. After they went to sleep, Iâd come here, to this computer (well, Iâve since upgraded it, but you get the point), and work some more. If only I ran on this treadmill faster, surely I wouldnât be running in place, right? Iâd go to bed so exhausted, and my last thought would be: fuck, I donât remember what my kids told me at dinner. Then Iâd shut my eyes, and Iâd be outânot because I was listening to my body, but because I couldnât help but listen to the exhaustion.
Wake up. Hop on that hamster wheel again. Run. Add more. Run faster.
There was a time when I started my job, I worked six months without taking a single day off. One timeâshit, that was bad. I had to write a message to the community. I couldnât sit at my desk anymore. I mustâve been four months in, trying to juggle all three jobs, and being a single mom, working from 5 AM to midnight, and having my sleep overtaken by nightmares. So, I made the âwiseâ decision to write in bed. Iâd write a sentence, drift off, wake up, and think to myself, mind over matter. I will win the war with my body. I wrote like that for maybe an hourâwriting, dozing, writing, dozing. Finally, I hit send, not having reread the message, because frankly, that wasnât an option. I just couldnât.
Shit. Big mistake. What went out to the community was so ridiculous, so nonsensical, that people didnât even believe it was from me. They asked if there had been some sort of computer glitch. Yes, thatâs how bad it was. I took away the small lessonâdonât write half-asleep, and always read it before sending. But the bigger lesson? The hamster wheel and how running that fast isnât conducive to anything? That I didnât get yet. I kept pushing throughâone more hour, one more day, one more week, one more month⊠almost to the finish line.
And what was the finish line, you ask? It was the day after the gala. The moment I could finally rest. Iâd prove my worth at work. Look at me, look at me now. Yes, I could stand on one foot, balance the school, see the smiling faces of our kids, make the parents happy, balance the budget, grow membership, build a team… oh, and I could also make money at the gala. Look at me! What a big girl am I? Then, after I did that, could I finally rest? Could I close my eyes and really rest?
Please, can I?
And that moment I allowed my body to rest? Yep, you guessed itâI got sick. Was it a coincidence that my body chose this exact moment to break down? Would I have gotten sick if I hadnât let go of the crazy wheel?
So, as I sat here last fall, with my ass hurting, I had to ask myself: Did my ass hurt because I wanted to listen to my body? Or was it hurting all along?
So as my butt, tosh, assâwhatever the hell you want to call that thing I sit on most of the dayâstarted to say, ouch, all these questions came to mind. Is it a coincidence? And another question: how the hell do I stop it from hurting?
No, the answer didnât come soon. I hate to tell you that. But now that I was listening, I was hearing. I was feeling. Yes, I felt alive in my bodyâalbeit my aging bodyâsitting in traffic for a 64-mile commute three days a week.
I did yoga. Stretching. Yes, it helped tremendously. But no matter what I did, I couldnât shake the feeling that my butt was always holding me. I canât explain it. If you donât know what I meanâbless you. And say thank you to your butt for knowing how to let itself be supported by the furniture you choose to sit on.
Mine always resists.
As my spiritual journey unfoldedâboth independent of and completely intertwined with my aching assâI started to realize that our mind and body are connected. That maybe our bodies are maps to something deeper. Our soul?
Have you ever noticed that people with a stick up their ass actually look like they have a stick up their ass? When they smile, their lips are still tight, you want to say: âOpen big and say ah,â because youâre just dying to finally see that stick peeking out? When they laugh, it is this tiny little thing because shit, what will happen if they release, will that stick drop a tiny bit?
Or the ones who carry the world on their shouldersânot the ones who talk about it constantly, but the ones who actually do it â and donât have time to talk about it because theyâre too busy doing, âtheir shoulders are always raised. Tense. Bracing.
And the stubborn ones? The truly unyielding ones? Look at their necks. They move their whole upper body just to look sideways because their necks are so stiff.
Do you really think those are just linguistic coincidences?
So why did my ass hurt so much?
Am I actually anal? One look at my house and youâll knowâI donât exactly fit the Freudian definition.
Do I have a stick up my ass? You tell meâdoes it sound like it?
So why? What am I missing?
As I sat (uncomfortably) with these real questions, I had to ask: Could it be that I am, as my literal pain in the ass might suggest, controlling? Could my ex-husband have been right…
(I am resisting every urge not to go on a long rant hereâplease, say thank you.)
Itâs easy to ask good questions. To make sharp observations about everyone else. To see with incredible clarity whatâs wrong with all of you.
But somehow, when it comes to us, the rules of reality just… donât apply. Right?
So what would it mean if I allowed myself to consider that Iâm controlling?
Not accept it. Just consider. Just a Lama Lo- of possibility.
What would it mean if I looked in the mirror and entertainedâjust for a secondâthat maybe thereâs some truth to it?
And if I dare to look…Might my ass finally stop hurting? Because, literally and figuratively, my ass is on the line. So… maybe I should at least consider it. Lama loâŠ
As I was learning Kabbalahâwhich, in Hebrew, quite literally means âacceptanceââI started to wonder: What is it that Iâm refusing to accept about myself? My body was screaming, and we were finally starting the conversation. Ok, I said to my pain in the ass, what if Iâm controlling? What choice do I have?
Ah! Now thatâs a different question altogether.
And then⊠as I was finally willing to come to the table, bow my head, and actually listen, I started to look into the root of the problemâYes, here comes another pun: my root chakra.
Oy, gevaltâdid I lose you? Might I tell you something? If the mere mention of the root chakra lost you⊠that might be the root of the problem for you, too. Sorry for being cheeky đ
Each time I did meditationsâand fuck, Iâve done so many of themâtrying to open my root chakra, or listening to Hz music tuned to that frequency (yes, thatâs a thing), thoughts would start flooding in from my childhood. And Iâd shove them away. Nah. Not sure why this is coming upâit has nothing to do with what Iâm doing.
Ha. Think again.
Eventually, I said to myself: Okay. Lama lo. Lean into those memories. What comes up in my body? In my heart? Just sit with it. Notice. And what came were painful memories.
Memories of feeling unsafe. Of having to hold myself because I was scared. How do I reach back and tell that little girl not to be scared? And will it even help? After so many years of holding myself tight…
Can I fucking let go already?
And hereâs the thing that was happening without my knowing: itâs the interplay between control and surrender. Control is the tight lid. Surrender is softening the gripâletting some steam out, letting fresh air in.
As long as I wasnât even willing to look, to consider what my body was trying to say, I was controlling the narrative so tightly that it started tightening around me. I was closed off to the very change I was seeking.
What shifted wasnât that one day my body just relaxed. Far from it. I did everything: yoga nidra (which, by the way, is total body relaxation from heaven), breathwork, meditationâyou name it. My body would melt into the ground… except my ass. My ass would not relent. Not even when I begged it to.
The answer wasnât going to come from the body alone. I had to step in. I had to say, okay, Iâm willing to listen. Willing to hear what this part of meâthis ache I had folded into my identityâwas trying to say. I had to trust that I was strong enough to survive the truth of it.
Lama Lo became that safe crack in the door. âShit, this room is dark. But maybe I can just open it… a little.â That crack was enough to start releasing the pressure. It was a shift in direction.
Imagine your relationship with your body. Your body stands at the center, still and waiting. You are the horse, tethered to it by a rope. The more you runâtrying to escape, outpace, or ignore itâthe more the rope tightens around your neck. Youâre not really getting away. Youâre just running in circles, getting choked by your own resistance.
But if you slow down, change direction, and start walkingânot runningâsomething shifts. Your body doesnât need to hold the rope so tight. Thereâs no need to fight. You can approach it gently. You can meet it in the middle. And maybe, just maybe, become one.
Now, riddle me that? What is an entry point to your body that is in a shape of a circle and you grip so tight when you are uncomfortable. Bingo â your ass. Or in this case, mine.
As I sit here, a bit more comfortable â breathing just a bit more softly, I wonder about you. I actually wonder about you quite a bit. Thank you to you â who ever you are, my curious partner across the screen. Thank you for landing me your eyes. Thank you for stepping in, into my journey, into my mess, into my humor and my pain. Thank you for just being here as I say, hineni â here I am, even if it is through me being a bit of an assholeï
And I wonder if you wonder â what is your body trying to tell you?
Is it whispering? Screaming?
Are you ready for the conversation?
Because the real question isnât why now â
Itâs why not.
Lama Lo?
To my Swedish friends: Hoppas din röv mÄr bra.

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