The Magic of Synchronicity & Four Things That Bring Me Pleasure and Joy

In the past month, I’ve had more than my fair share of Aha moments. These insights led me to make surprising connections. While coincidences can seem like mysterious, unexplainable events that happen out of the blue, it’s also true that we can manifest them and unveil meaningful connections in the world if we follow our curiosity and tune our focus. Something as simple as a colorful painting, a new artist, or a compelling quote that catches our attention can provide new perspectives and insights that enrich our understanding of the world by looking closer.

C and I dreamed of living in Manhattan soon after we’d retire while still young, mobile, and able to tolerate the city’s energy. Walking to theaters, restaurants, museums, parks, and shops is something we’ve come to love since living in Stockholm and London. The pandemic brought us to New York City sooner than we had planned. In our dream version, our lives and situation seemed generally rosy and steady. Instead, as they often do, life astounds, and rent costs rise to our great shock and eternal misery. So, while we can, we are trying to stop and smell the veritable roses, mindful of our innate hedonistic tendency to quickly move on to the next shiny thing.

This happens every time I visit MOMA: I brush past a painting to see the next, never gaining insight beyond the artist’s name and a few details on the title card, which I forget as soon as I approach the next painting. I grew frustrated and embarrassed by my carelessness as I stood before an image I had visited twice before, unable to recall a single detail about the artist or the piece. C was with me that afternoon, and I suggested we pick a painting we both like and learn as much as possible about the artist and the work, preferring to connect with one piece than scanning many and missing their significance.

Here is “The Moon” and a few things that brought me pleasure and joy this month.

  1. This 1928 painting titled “A Lua” (The Moon) by Tarsila de Aguiar do Amaral— considered the Picasso of her native Brazil, where she is simply known by first name—who wanted to be, in her own words, “the painter of her country,” caught my attention for its simplicity and suggestive similarity to the more famous Van Gogh “Starry Night.” I was delighted to see her story covered in CBS Sunday Morning. Reading about Tarsila, I learned she was good friends with Pablo Picasso, whom she met in Paris. This connection painted a lovely image of two talented artists philosophizing and encouraging each other in their work, a reminder of what can happen if we lift each other.
  1. After randomly selecting Patti Smith’s memoir, “M Train,” from the high pile of recommendations on my night table, I was floored to learn she’s the same Patti Smith considered the godmother of punk rock, who sang (and wrote with Bruce Springsteen) “Because the Night.” She is a gifted performer and arguably a more talented writer.

“I consider myself a writer.”  -Patti Smith

Soon after this discovery, serendipity would have Substack notify me about a recent podcast episode of The Active Voice featuring… Patti Smith! about her life of writing, her long friendships, and cancel culture. I loved the interview so much that I went in search of more Patti Smith, immediately regretting having missed her rock a performance in Brooklyn this past December for her 76th birthday.

But it was this moving 2016 performance at the Nobel Prize Award ceremony that made me fall a little more in love with her. If you scan forward to the 1 minute 10-second mark, you will witness a BEAUTIFUL EXCHANGE of vulnerability and grace and how trust can help us do what we think we cannot. Can you hear the impact to her singing? I can’t help but think how a child could benefit from such a response.

  1. Summer was always my preferred season. I favor tropical to bone-chilling, bathing suits to shin-length parkas, and the easy way I stroll through a summer night’s balmy breath. It surprised me when, three years ago in March, at the onset of the pandemic, my perspective of seasons changed. With the world unencumbered by human activity, I witnessed Spring as if for the first time. I was in London, unsure how long we’d be in lockdown when the buds first formed. I thought about the things I’d miss as the days grew warmer and brighter. Spring, I realized, is the precursor to all that blossoms. It leads us into Summer, a canvas upon which we paint our most pleasurable experiences and joyful moments. Fall gives us time to replenish and rest from the flurry of summer activities. Then, not long after, gifts are opened, and a new year begins.
The Enkindled Spring

This spring as it comes bursts up in bonfires green, 

Wild puffing of emerald trees, and flame-filled bushes, 

Thorn-blossom lifting in wreaths of smoke between 

Where the wood fumes up and the watery, flickering rushes.

I am amazed at this spring, this conflagration 

Of green fires lit on the soil of the earth, this blaze 

Of growing, and sparks that puff in wild gyration, 

Faces of people streaming across my gaze.

And I, what fountain of fire am I among 

This leaping combustion of spring? My spirit is tossed

About like a shadow buffeted in the throng

Of flames, a shadow that’s gone astray, and is lost.
–D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930)

Photo by Markus Spiske on Pexels.com
  1. “You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, ‘I have lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along.’ You must do the thing you think you cannot do.”
― Eleanor Roosevelt, You Learn by Living: Eleven Keys for a More Fulfilling Life

My biggest fear in life was public speaking. I did everything to avoid it, even finding a way to graduate college without taking the required course. Eventually, I needed to stand in front of an audience if I wanted people to know about Together for Latinas and the work we were doing to improve the lives of Latina youth of all gender expressions. This quote gave me the strength to set aside my ego and personal angst and do what I dreaded most.

And I come back to it every time I feel like giving up on my writing. As long as my values and intentions align, I know I can push through any doubt and fear.

What about you? Have you experienced synchronicity? What meaningful connections were revealed to you?

Thank you for taking the time to connect with me here. It brings me both pleasure and joy to be on this planet with you at the same time.

With love, 

xx

Nancy 

Road Trips and Four Things That Bring Me Pleasure & Joy

One of the benefits of a long road trip, other than admiring a scenic view and listening to a great podcast or playlist, is uninterrupted time with your travel partner to really dig into a discussion. On a recent drive upstate through the breathtaking Catskills, my husband C and I delved into a conversation about the difference between pleasure and joy when he asked how my writing was going.

(For those who may not know, I am working on a coming-of-age memoir that spans ten years of my traumatic experience growing up in a dysfunctional family battling unresolved issues from generational trauma. I struggled with self-worth and emotions of guilt and shame for feeling disconnected from my family and wanting to pursue a different path. In my journey to find a sense of belonging, I made unconventional choices against familial and cultural expectations for a world that wasn’t ready to receive me. After years of self-healing guided by intuition, relationships, and my love of learning, I discovered my purpose and identity.)

I was on a tight deadline and struggled to write that week. But for me, that’s often the case. In fact, I find little pleasure in the process. Eating pistachio gelato? Now, that brings me pleasure. Coming up with the right framework and words to describe something when my head buzzes with a million, often mediocre, ideas, making me freeze in self-doubt and want to give up, is not a physical feeling that brings me happiness. Writing came to me much later in life, and reading in earnest was something I found in my mid-twenties. I accept that I am learning and require an exorbitant amount of inspiration. So much so that I wonder if it’s the same for other writers. If so, why they would voluntarily do this for a living.

I am in awe of past and present writers who persevered and published their gifts to the world. I can’t be sure their process was pleasurable, but I imagine it brought them joy. It’s what I feel when I complete a scene, a chapter, or an article — joy, a state of mind that goes far beyond the momentary physical feeling of doing. I imagine I’ll feel it once the book is done, knowing that my words will be capsulated, alive for others to read long after I’m gone.

Pleasure and joy are worthwhile, and I want more of them. At least I want to recognize the difference when I’m experiencing one or the other, if for the purpose of magnifying it and stretching it, like taffy, as long as I can.

What about you? How would you define pleasure and joy? What examples come to mind?

Here are four things that brought me pleasure or joy this month. I hope they bring you feelings of happiness.

  1. This article from the incomparable Zadie Smith inspired this post and former discourse on the same topic. It’s well worth the read. You may never think of joy and pleasure the same.

The thing no one ever tells you about joy is that it has very little pleasure in it. And yet, if it hadn’t happened at all, at least once, how would we live?

Zadie Smith, JOY
  1. In my never-ending search for inspiration, I stumbled upon Joan Didion’s Why I Write. Such a pleasure to read.

Grammar is a piano I play by ear, since I seem to have been out of school the year the rules were mentioned. All I know about grammar is its infinite power. To shift the structure of a sentence alters the meaning of that sentence, as definitely and inflexibly as the position of a camera alters the meaning of the object photographed. Many people know about camera angles now, but not so many know about sentences. The arrangement of the words matters, and the arrangement you want can be found in the picture in your mind. The picture dictates the arrangement. The picture dictates whether this will be a sentence with or without clauses, a sentence that ends hard or a dying-fall sentence, long or short, active or passive. The picture tells you how to arrange the words and the arrangement of the words tells you, or tells me, what’s going on in the picture. Nota bene.*
It tells you.
You don’t tell it.
* “Note well.”

  1. I recently read the beautiful novel by Xiochilt Gonzales, Olga Dies Dreaming, a New York Times Bestseller and International Latino Book Award Finalist the Kirkus Review describes as a “tough-minded story of a sister and brother grappling with identity, family, and life goals in gentrifying Brooklyn.” In my quest to extend the pleasure of living in the world Xiochilt created, I searched Spotify to see if a playlist existed. It does, at least one inspired by the book, and it’s pretty good! Consider a playlist for a book you read and loved.
  1. La Brega is a beautifully produced and engaging podcast about the “stories of the Puerto Rican experience.” Episodes are done in both English and Spanish, which is terrific for those who want to brush up on their español. Tip: Listen at ¾ speed for your language learning pleasure! A second season was just released: The history of Puerto Rico in eight songs. The show’s producers will release a cover album of the songs this month! Connecting to and finding new ways to celebrate my culture brings me lasting joy.

“There’s no direct translation of “la brega” in English, but for Puerto Ricans, it’s a way of life. To bregar means to struggle, to hustle, to find a way to get by and get around an imbalance of power. It’s got a creative edge, a bit of swagger; as Puerto Rican scholar Arcadio Diaz has observed, it’s a word that belongs to the underdog. Hosted by New York-born Puerto Rican journalist Alana Casanova-Burgess, La Brega tells stories of an island and a people trying to cope with too many challenges, and who deserve and demand better. The series is created by a team of Puerto Rican journalists, producers, musicians, and artists from the island and diaspora; a co-production from WNYC Studios and Futuro Studios.”

Consider your next road trip a mobile garden to fertilize the marvelous world of imagination. Thank you for taking the time to connect with me here. It brings me both pleasure and joy to be in community with you.

With love, 

xx

Nancy 

pistachio gelato in Florence, Italy – a pleasure & a joy
working manuscript, 160 pages

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