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Eat, Pray, YOU: An Evening With Elizabeth Gilbert

Monday, September 28th, 2009
Me, Liz Gilbert, and Pinkie friend Lynn Stasior

Me, Liz Gilbert, and Pinkie friend Lynn Stasior

Tonight, I had the pleasure to breathe the same air as Elizabeth Gilbert, who I’ll fondly call Liz, now that we’re buds after all (at least that’s how all of us sitting in the Marin Center felt tonight). I don’t know about you Pinkies, but when I read Liz Gilbert’s memoir Eat, Pray, Love, I felt like Liz was my twin separated at birth, as if her book spoke the truths that had been muddling my mind, which I had been thus far unable to articulate. I ate up everything I could on her website, gobbling up little morsels of her to feed my soul. I couldn’t wait for her next book. I added to my bucket list, “Take a yoga class with Liz Gilbert.” (Does tonight count?)

The First Time, the Universe Led Me Down Another Road

I meant to see Liz last year when she and Anne Lamott were having a live conversation in Marin, but alas, it conflicted with the fated trip to Esalen that changed my life. I took it as a Sign from the Universe that I just wasn’t meant to see Liz Gilbert, whose Eat, Pray, Love I had just devoured at the time. What I didn’t realize was that, without really meaning to, I was about to start walking a path not dissimilar to hers. Not to suggest that I ate my way through Italy, prayed in India, or found balance in Bali. But my spiritual path, which had begun a couple years earlier, was about to get really interesting.

Now, a year and a half later, my friend Lynn invited me to join her for An Evening With Elizabeth Gilbert. Maybe the Universe wanted me to go this time. I said yes, and boy, am I glad I did.

What’s Liz Like?

Liz is as unassuming, funny, wise, and self-deprecating, as you might imagine. She told a story about the time she was flying from Santa Barbara to Los Angeles to give a big talk, and she arrived three hours early for the flight but somehow missed her plane while sitting right at the gate, thinking about Nerf guns. (I would SO do something like that! Details have never been my strong suit. But isn’t that why we all love Liz, because she brings out the humanity in us all and makes us feel less alone?)

She said things like, “If you’re like me, you see life not so much as a journey, but more like a series of final exams that add up to your final grade. And if you miss you the flight that’s supposed to take you to that big event, then you’ve really fucked up. I tried to think of a way to excuse it, like a petulant child would, but you ultimately realize that there’s no way out but to own it.” (Haven’t we ALL been there?) Turns out Liz had to grovel to those in charge of the event, run for a later flight, beg someone to drive 150 MPH to drop her off, and ended up being a mere half hour late. And oh yeah – along the way, she lost her notes. And her hairbrush. Which was the final straw that lead to her meltdown.

People Expect Her To Be Some Sort of Guru

So there she is, kicking herself, winging it, with bad hair. And what do people expect her to talk about? About how she got her life together. Because that’s the happy ending we want. That’s how it’s supposed to be, “Like life is some Soduku puzzle I’m supposed to have figured out.” We laugh. Liz says, “I mean, are you fucking kidding me? Since I wrote Eat, Pray, Love, people assume not only have I gotten my life together, but that I am going to be able to tell them how to get their life together.”

She’s No Therapist or Mind Reader

She goes on to tell us about the woman with the crazed eyes who asked her, flat out, “Should I get a divorce?” Liz said, “You’ll know, if you think about this question for just one minute, that I can’t possibly answer that question for you.” And then the woman’s crazed face melted into a real face, a face so depleted, with so much pain, that Liz wound up in tears, because she KNOWS that face. She knows it because it has been her, because she remembers how you feel like you want to hand your power over to someone else and let them simply tell you what to do. There’s a longing to think that someone else has solved it, that they know how to help you. And yet, Liz admits, she is not this person. She says, “In your ascension to yourself, you go forward, then you plateau for a while, then you fall back 10 steps. Then you move forward again.” But writing your truth doesn’t make you a guru. It doesn’t make you God. It’s a lot of pressure, when people expect that of you.

Liz Gilbert Talks About Pleaping (Well, Sort Of)

Liz Gilbert talked about Pleaping (taking a Pink leap of faith). Okay, so maybe she didn’t exactly use that word. But when someone asked how she found the courage to change her life, she said, “You take a leap when you get to a place of the alternative being untenable. Nobody does what I did unless you can’t do what you’re doing any more. The only thing worse than not leaving is staying, and the only thing worse than staying is not leaving. An earthquake shakes your life, and your status quo becomes unbearable.” If you’re thinking about pleaping, and you’re not at that point, it may not be time yet.

I’m No Liz Gilbert, But I Understand What She Means

Around this time, I felt the tears start rolling. Why? I’m not sure. My tearducts have a mind of their own. But I suspect it has something to do with you Pinkies. Eat, Pray, Love affected me profoundly. When I read it, I had nearly finished the memoir I wrote, which has yet to be published. Reading her book gave me the guts to revisit it, to unleash my truth and rewrite my narrative. Shortly afterwards, the idea of Owning Pink began to unfurl. Her courage inspired mine, which has since inspired the courage of many of you, as your beautiful e-mails and messages bear witness to the transformation you are undergoing, as I transform on my journey. There are certainly tears of joy and awe shed over this alone.

eatpraylove smShe’s Only Human, Just Like Me

Liz Gilbert did many other things in our evening with her. She read a chapter from her upcoming book, Committed, about how she came to peace with marrying Felipe, the man with whom she fell in love at the end of Eat, Pray, Love and whom Homeland Security forced her to marry. (You’ll love it! It’s out in January and will be a must-read. Maybe we’ll make it our first Owning Pink Book Club book!) She answered Q&A from the crowd with her signature wit, candor, and inspiring voice.

While I enjoyed all these things, my own take-home message was something more. I realized that I am guilty of projecting onto Liz Gilbert all sort of things that may not be true. First of all, I assume she is my best friend, right? Isn’t she yours? And yet, when I met her in person at the end of the talk, I realized I don’t know her at all. I may know a few personal details she has chosen to share with me via her book, but do I know her? The real Liz Gilbert, the private stuff she would share with a real best friend? Nope. When she awkwardly put her arm around me for a photo op, it felt lovely, of course, but were we sisters? Nope.

I could see in her tired face that, although we all wanted something from her (books she could sign, photos with her, a few words of encouragement), she probably just wanted a quiet place to get away from the hustle and all the gushing attention. For one moment, we made eye contact, and I suddenly took on her energy and felt what I sometimes feel when I am the center of attention in a crowd: fatigue, shyness, a sense of being a bit overwhelmed. And yet, when I asked her what it’s like to be the subject of sudden fame, she said, graciously, “What’s to fear about people who love Eat, Pray, Love? It’s not like they’re Stephen King fans.” Right on, sister.

The Guru Is Within You

So why the tears in all this? I realize that I had been projecting onto Liz Gilbert. I had imbued her with all the goodness that exists within me, all the sense of possibility. In her, I saw the possibility of myself, filled with spontaneous joy and the richness of Italian indulgence. I saw the spiritual seeker, struggling to meditate and find God, all while fighting the monkey mind. I saw the adventure girl, struggling to find balance and love after a divorce of my own. What did I see in Liz Gilbert? I saw the best of ME. Because I know me so well, and her book shone the light on that part of me I want to nourish, I fell in love with her. I wanted to know her. I think, in some small way, I wanted to BE her.

Italy, India, Indonesia

I’ve heard that there are women out there replicating Liz Gilbert’s pilgrimage, following her exact footsteps, searching for their own Giovanni in Italy, their own Richard From Texas at the same ashram in India, seeking out Liz’s Bali healers Ketut Liyer and Wyann. Do they think that walking in her footsteps will make them brave and spiritual, like Liz? Don’t they realize she chose her path, sought healing in her way, and called upon her own experience to figure out how to mend a severely broken heart? Don’t they realize these things can’t be replicated, that her journey was hers alone?

We All Must Walk Our Own Path

I now realize that Liz’s book is her truth, not my truth. I don’t know her. I know me. What I love in her is what I love about the possibility within me, projected onto a canvas I can paint myself. While her book inspired me on many levels, Liz Gilbert is just another Pinkie, just a person trying to find her way, live her truth, and be authentic to who she really is. Is that worthy of respect and admiration? Absolutely. Is she an unbelievable writer with a courageous spirit? You betcha. Is it fair to put her on some pedestal that separates her from the rest of us? No way. She is just another woman, struggling to find her truth. And she has never claimed to be anything else.

Gurus Are Human Too

Lately, some of you have written me gushing letters that feed my ego and validate the 300-year-old spinster within me (long story- read this). Your sweet words touch me deeply, and I so appreciate the validation. But meeting Liz Gilbert tonight reminds me that those we admire are not so different from ourselves. We all have flaws, make mistakes, feel wounded, struggle for balance, and look to others for guidance. No guru is without his or her personal side. As much as we wish to deify those we admire, even Amma, when I met her, was making snide faces, clearly expressing signals to her followers, as I knelt in front of her and observed her for hours.

Liz Gilbert was no different. I felt like she went out of her way to prove this to us. She doesn’t want us to project onto her traits that are not hers. She wants to be seen as the real person she is. She laughs at a question about South Park’s “Eat, Pray, Queef,” and drops the F-word often. She offers no advice meant to be sage and laughs at herself. And yet, you walk away feeling inspired. Why? It’s not that Liz is really your best friend. It’s not even that she speaks guru words you’re inclined to write in your notebook. (Although I couldn’t resist writing down this quote. When someone asked her how writing a bestseller changed her life, she admitted that making money blessed her by reducing her anxiety and giving her the gift of helping others at will. But she also said, “Money is like tofu. It’s just an energy source that absorbs the flavor of however you use it.” We all laughed, and I scribbled. Guru wisdom, indeed.) It’s something else – something intangible – about her presence. Her energy is frenetic, funny, loving, and little bit world-weary. And yet, you walk away feeling uplifted.

lizlissa1 sm

How Owning Pink Shines the Light On the Possibility Within YOU

I won’t even begin to suggest that Owning Pink might inspire you on par with Eat, Pray, Love. But I will suggest that if you find nuggets of wisdom from our community that resonate with you, offered up by me, the Mojo Mentors, or you wise Pinkies, remember that no one of us is any wiser or smarter or more healthy than the rest. We are all on paths of our own, seeking awakening and committing to a life of joy and inner peace, just like Liz Gilbert. May I invite you to let the Pink light shine on the the possibility within each of you? It is your canvas to paint, your life to craft, your path to walk. How do you want to walk it, Pinkies? What beauty did Eat, Pray, Love or Owning Pink help you discover within you?

Walking the path in parallel with you all,

Lissa

Mojo Monday: Finding Your Balance

Monday, August 10th, 2009

balanced

Good morning Pinkies!

Joy here, manning Owning Pink headquarters while Lissa is Owning her Body by pole dancing in Malibu (oh yes. don’t worry, you’ll be reading about it very soon!). For Mojo Monday, I wanted explore a topic that’s been coming up a lot for me (and from what I’ve noticed, many pinkies) lately: balance.

Tipping, Stumbling, and Going to Extremes

I’ve always been resistant to the concept of balance. I’m not sure why. Perhaps my nature as a Sagittarius predisposes me toward extremes. Also, come to think of it, I’ve always had inner ear things going on and the balance beam was never my best event in gymnastics. I’ve fallen down more than one flight of stairs in my three decades on the planet. Hells, I’ve succumbed to gravity by doing nothing more than standing on a street corner. It’s like my whole being has always shied away from the idea of being balanced.

One major area I’ve recently uncovered is the concept of inhabiting my body. Being grounded. Taking up space. Having a say. Owning my beingness. I’ve never done these things. For a long time I was hugely unimpressed by the idea of “having both feet on the ground” – both literally and figuratively. I know this sounds strange. Like, how can you be human and not acknowledge your own humanity? However, I’ve spent much of my life doing (or not doing) just that. I’ve ceded, gotten out of the way, let people in (way in), followed along in betrayal to myself, been steamrolled and snowplowed and knocked over. I found the idea of being “grounded” silly – why spend time connecting to the earth when you could be dancing with the stars?

P1060197Getting Both Feet on the Ground

But energy healing work and reading and growth and lessons and life have brought me to the understanding that being grounded (rooted; balanced; present) is kind of the coolest thing you can do as a human. Sure, we are divine beings, but we are very much of this earth as well. That’s the greatest thing about us. Animals aren’t both. Angels and spirit beings aren’t both. Only we are. It’s our exclusive privilege to be of the senses – to see, hear, feel, taste, and smell; to walk and dance and hug and eat and breathe. At the same time, we are inhabited by spirit. We know that we are bigger than just our bodies – the truth of this is revealed every time we cry, or laugh, or love, or create. We are spirits having a human experience (isn’t that cool? My apologies once again for failing to recall who-all utters these jaw-dropping gems).  Whether we experience this through religion or nature or spirituality or direct communication from the beyond, we each possess this knowing, and this gift.

Anyway, I’m learning that groundedness is balance. If you have roots shooting out of your feet and into the center of the planet, it becomes a lot less possible to stumble. Not only that – food tastes better, colors are brighter, conversations are more intriguing. Things are far less scary when we bring our whole selves to the table. There is no greater strength than being present in both spirit and body – to be in touch with all parts of ourselves, to know what feels good (and, possibly more importantly, to know what feels wrong), to understand our wants and desires, and to show up fully in each moment.

balance2Mojo Monday Exercise: Finding Balance

Whether you’re struggling with having both feet on the ground, or if you feel as though you could do with recognizing your own divinity from time to time, here  is an exercise for all you out there in Pinkdom who are seeking a little more balance between body and spirit.

Balance Meditation

1. Find a quiet space and about 15 minutes. Sit in a chair with your feet flat on the floor. Close your eyes.

2. Take a few deep, settling breaths. When you are ready, imagine a grounding cord extending from your first chakra (a.k.a. the root chakra, genital region, undercarriage) down into the core of the planet. This cord can be made of anything that feels right to you — a simple beam of energy; a rope; a waterfall; a funnel; a twizzler. Connect the cord firmly to both ends. Feel it actually pulling you down, fastening you to the planet and pulling your spirit down into your body. Sit for a few moments noting how this feels. Is it a new sensation? Or is this how you spend most of your time?

3. Then, through the bottoms of your feet, invite some earth energy up into your body. Feel it traveling through your feet, calves, knees, thighs, all the way into your root chakra and back down the grounding cord. Keep this cycle moving.

4. Now, reach as far out into the universe as your imagination will take you. From there, grab some energy from the beyond, and invite it into your body through your crown chakra (slightly aft of the top of your head). Whirl it around your crown, and then bring it down your spine and down the grounding cord.

5. To ensure that both energies are running through your body, create a mixture of the two where they meet in your root chakra, and run that mixture up the front of your body. Let it run down your arms, out your hands, and out the top of your head, filling your aura. Spend a few moments being conscious of how it is to simultaneously experience the energy of the earth and the universe.

6. Slowly return to your breath, and when you are ready, open your eyes. Throughout the day, be conscious of your groundedness, as well as the energy that is flowing in you from out in the universe. Take note of how you feel, both physically and emotionally. Do you notice differences in every day interactions, behaviors, and outlook?

7. Reflect on areas of your life where you could use a bit more balance. How might you bring what you learned from this exercise to those experiences?

8. Tell us! We in the Pink Posse would love to know how you have achieved balance in any area of your life … what do you do, how do you act, what changes have you made to feel more even and whole in your every day existence? Leave a comment or start a blog or discussion on the Pink Posse page and let us know.

Pink both on earth and in heaven,

Joy

Every Pinkie Should Have …

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Hey Pinkies,

We came upon this piece in the form of an e-mail touting it as a poem from Maya Angelou. We did some digging and quickly discovered that the Maya Angelou part of the story is myth (a myth that makes it more likely that we’d carefully read and soak in the words, but a myth nonetheless). It was  actually written by very wise, very Pink author Pamela Redmond Satran, whom we are delighted to discover. Whatever its origin, we couldn’t resist passing along this prolific piece of Pink guidance. Just mentally insert “Pinkie” where “Woman” appears in each section, and we’ve got our Owning Pink anthem for the day.

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE …
enough money within her control to move out
and rent a place of her own,
even if she never wants to or needs to… blackbra

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE …..
something perfect to wear if the employer,
or date of her dreams wants to see her in an hour…

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ..
a youth she’s content to leave behind….

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE …
a past juicy enough that she’s looking forward to
retelling it in her old age….

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE …..
a set of screwdrivers, a cordless drill, and a black lace bra…
pink-drill-kit-1

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE …..
one friend who always makes her laugh… and one who lets her cry….

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ….
a good piece of furniture not previously owned by anyone else in her family…

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE …
eight matching plates, wine glasses with stems,
and a recipe for a meal,
that will make her guests feel honored…. vinea_stemware

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE…
a feeling of control over her destiny…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
how to fall in love without losing herself..

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
how to quit a job,
break up with a lover,
and confront a friend without
ruining the friendship…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
when to try harder… and WHEN TO WALK AWAY…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
that she can’t change the length of her calves,
the width of her hips, or the nature of her parents…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
that her childhood may not have been perfect…but it’s over….
alone

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
what she would and wouldn’t do for love or more…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
how to live alone… even if she doesn’t like it…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
whom she can trust,
whom she can’t,
and why she shouldn’t take it personally….

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
where to go…
be it to her best friend’s kitchen table..
or a charming Inn in the woods…
when her soul needs soothing…

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW…
What she can and can’t accomplish in a day…
a month…and a year…

girlfriends

Anything to add, Pinkies? What are the lessons you’ve learned; the wisdom that’s taken you through the decades? What was the Pinkest piece of advice you got from your grandma? Your mentor? What’s the biggest thing you’ve learned all on your own? What item or mantra can you not live without?

Love to the collective Pink Posse (that’s you!),

Lissa & Joy

Be Compassionate With Yourself

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009
compassion

A moment of reflection with Kuan Yin, Chinese goddess of compassion

Are you your own worst enemy?  Is it possible that you’re the person holding yourself back from reclaiming your own health, creativity, spirituality, femininity, sexuality, peace, or mojo?  How many times do you stop yourself from doing something you want to do because you convince yourself that you’re too small?  That you’re not smart enough, wealthy enough, strong enough, young enough, healthy enough, pretty enough, creative enough…but enough already.  You are enough, just as you are. Right here and now.

We loving, peaceful creatures of the world preach the tenets of non-violence to others.  We tell our children that war is not the answer.  We abhor the murders and rapes and abuse that happens in the world.  And yet, are we applying these same tenets in reference to ourselves?  (I see you all bowing your heads out there, sheepishly.  I know this, because I am doing it too, peering out from beneath my bangs, hoping no one notices that I’m preaching, but I’m a total hypocrite, since I like to beat myself up as much as the next girl.)  What if we declare a moratorium on beating ourselves up today?  Let’s make today National Be Compassionate With Yourself Day.  How ‘bout it?  You Pinkies on board?

Here are a few words on this subject from my guru, Dr. Joanne Perron, an OB/GYN, yoga instructor, and Pink Mentor/Goddess:

I think that the ability to change negative thought patterns requires awareness of one’s intent.  To get there, you must be brutally, but compassionately, honest.  You have to deal with the wounds face on to get true healing, right?  Debriding a life. (It’s doctor lingo for scraping away all the dead tissue). You examine the zits and tits and shits, and then you debride some more until the PINK healthy tissue shines back.

Being aware of your truth happens when you quell the chattering monkey mind.  Everybody gets to mindfulness and awareness differently.  For me, it’s through yoga and meditation.  For others, it may be making art, walking in the forest, or playing the guitar. Mindfulness is a moment-by-moment practice and requires discipline.  Sure, it’s easy to follow the minutiae in your head.  Your ego loves that.  But it takes a concerted, persistent discipline to be mindful.  And it takes the same to stay compassionate.  We are born compassionate, but trained to be judgmental.  Awareness and mindfulness can retrain a person to be compassionate.

Yoga talks about the principle of ahimsa, or non-harming, and I think most people understand it with regard to other people.  Getting them to understand how they look at themselves is more difficult.  Women are better at reading the pain of others than they are at tapping into their own.  Again, it comes back to training yourself to be mindful and aware.  What does a thought or action feel like, and what effect might it have?  For example, do I eat this piece of chocolate for its sensual taste, or do I eat it because I’m lonely?  Do I listen to gossip because it’s fun or because it makes me feel better about myself?  When someone cuts me off in traffic, can I find compassion in my heart that allows me, instead of getting pissed off, to wonder about what that driver might be feeling that made him or her choose to cut me off?  When I interpret someone’s action as annoying or hurtful, can I check my normally reactive ego and think that maybe the other person’s intention wasn’t about me at all?  Maybe it’s more about their own necrotic scar tissue that needs to be debrided.

This is how we begin to show compassion for ourselves.  We seek our truth, become mindful and aware, and then love ourselves because of, or in spite of, the truth.

Wow. See why this woman is my guru?  Are you being compassionate with yourself lately? Here’s what I propose.  Today, pay attention to every negative thing you tell yourself.  Keep your journal with you, and jot down every evil thought you fling at yourself- the I am ugly, I am stupid, I am fat, I have no self control, I am lazy, I am worthless, I am weak thoughts.  Write down the “I’ll never be able to do that because…” thoughts.  Take note of the “Maybe other people might but I can’t” thoughts.  Try to replace them with blessings and affirmations. How can you practice the principle of ahimsa, or non-harming, towards yourself?  How can you start Owning the Truth?

Please, share your stories.  How have your negative thoughts inhibited your Pink growth?  What have you done to demonstrate compassion for yourself?  What might you be able to do if you start showing yourself a little compassion?  Give yourself a break, Pinkies, starting today.

With gentleness,
Lissa

Mojo Mondays: Break a Rule

Monday, June 15th, 2009

lissawall-smallRight before I launched the Owning Pink website, when I was up to my ears in stress, deadlines, chaos, and fear, I got an email from my guru, Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen, who wrote Kitchen Table Wisdom. She barely knows who I am, but I had emailed her about an art show I am having at Commonweal, where she works, and she wrote me back and said, “You Go Girl!” Mind you, the woman is this wise-sagey seventy-something year old saint. When you’re in her presence, every word that comes out of her mouth is something you want to write down and remember forever. So the words You Go Girl seemed, at once, completely out of character and exactly what I needed to hear at that very moment, as if she has ESP in addition to being God’s gift to Mother Earth.

I was so excited to receive this playful validation from my guru that I told my husband I wanted to write it on the wall. Now mind you, the wall of my home office is white and pristine. And the house is rented- not ours to deface. But my cutie-pie husband said, “So write it!” I looked around, wide-eyed, to see if he could possibly mean what I thought I meant. He pointed to the clean slate white wall and repeated, “Write it.” In a moment of glee, I grabbed one of my daughter Siena’s magic markers and started doodling away. It felt so GOOD!

I wrote to my friend Joy, who was about to quit her practical day job to jump off a cliff and come launch Owning Pink with me, to tell her I had just written on the wall with a magic marker. She wrote back, “Wait!! Writing on the walls is inappropriate and ultimately might not be a cost effective solution!! AAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHA. I fucking love this. You may have created a monster Liss. =)” (Really. Her exact email, copied and pasted.)

Joy posting on the Owning Pink office wall

Joy posting on the Owning Pink office wall

It got me thinking. We all follow so many rules every day. Turn your blinker on when you’re going left. Don’t leave your underwear on the floor. Try not to murder anybody. Avoid writing the word “Fuck” on the internet. Don’t write on walls. Of course we have rules. Otherwise, there would be anarchy. But every now and again, you gotta break a few rules to get your mojo back.

So here’s today’s exercise. What you will need depends on what rule you’re going to break.

Step 1: Think about all the rules racing through the back of your mind like a ticker tape. Then stop the tape and inspect them for a minute.

Step 2: Check out the tape for any rule you can break without hurting anyone or endangering your health, your career, your financial security, or your valuable relationships. What’s the worst thing that can happen if I draw graffiti on the wall? We’ll have to repaint the wall when we move out. Or even worse, we’ll lose our security deposit. So what?

Step 3: Break the fucking rule! (But don’t tell anyone I told you to do it). Maybe you’ve always wanted to get a tattoo but the rule is that nice girls don’t get tattoos. Who cares? Get a tattoo! Maybe the rule is you grunt politely during sex because only bad girls moan. So moan your heart out, baby! Maybe the rule is that you should only go from A to B. But sometimes A 1/2 is so awesome. I went on a first date once where we got in a car and kept turning left. I would close my eyes and yell, “LEFT!” when the mood hit me, and my date, the driver, would yank the steering wheel left. We ended up on a set of rickety bleachers cheering for a Little League team. Rules, schmules. Just do it! Now go!

What are you still doing here? Did you engage in some safe rule-breaking, baby? If so, dish! Tell us your story. You might inspire someone else to break an age-old rule that no longer serves them. And you might inspire me to write more on my wall. 

Crazy rule-breaking love,
Lissalissawall2-small

PS. Just realized the writing is just too damn straight. Need to go write upside down, backwards, and sideways, just to break some more rules!