Joe Zippo Throws a Party

Some thoughts on the benefit show last night for Joe Zippo

Mood music:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbr2PxWUMLM&fs=1&hl=en_US]

The best part of the night was meeting Joe’s parents. It was an honor, really. You can really see Joe’s personality and heart in them.

It was great to see so many old friends. I saw Christian Campagna for the first time since we worked at Rockit Records. We’ve kept in touch through Facebook, but it’s not the same as seeing people in person.

It’s always great to see Greg Walsh. I’ve always been blown away by the guy’s energy.

He’s been a drummer in multiple bands, most notably Pop Gun, he’s been an editor at The Boston Business Journal for years (we met when we were both working for The Swampscott Reporter), and he has a very busy family life. As if all that and three kids weren’t enough, he even started taking in foster kids at one point. Seeing Pop Gun play live was my way of capturing some of that energy in a bottle — and making some age jabs at the man.

It was a nice surprise seeing one of my oldest friends, Mike Trans. It’s hard to believe I’ve known the guy for 21 years now. I think we pretty much owned the North Shore Community College smoking room on the Lynn Campus back then.

The benefit show was crawling with people I remember from Salem State. Many of them look pretty much the same as they did back then.

Why write about a benefit concert in a blog about overcoming addiction and OCD? Simple:

In the late 1990s when I was isolating myself and doing everything I possibly could to destroy myself with junk, I lost touch with people I shouldn’t have lost touch with. It happens. That’s life. But it reminds me of some of the things I lost in those years where I struggled most.

It also reminded me of the healing power of friendship. Friends have helped me along and still do, and when I see people like Mike, I’m reminded of that. Not much has changed between us. The second I see his face I start lobbing insults at him. He returns them in rapid succession. That’s something I call New England affection: When you like people, you make fun of them.

Another lesson from last night: Even in death, the people who make an impact on us continue to do so in death. 

Sean Marley does it to me all the time. Some of my deepest friendships today, he made possible. Joe made a lot of friendships possible, too, and proof of that was abundant last night.

I have only one regret from last night: Not getting to see Matt Affannato. He was Sean’s brother-in-law for the two or so years Sean was married to his sister, Joy. He was always a great kid full of positive energy.

He left me a Facebook message last night asking if I’d still be there around 9:30 so we could catch up. I didn’t get to see him, which is a bummer because the last time I saw him we were sitting next to each other at Sean’s funeral.

Sorry ’bout that, Matt. We’ll have to catch up soon.

Depression and Being Gay

One of the big debates that has always irked me is about whether homosexuals are born that way or if they just wake up one morning and decide to be that way.

Having a gay sister, aunt and cousin-in-law, I have something to say about that.

I’m sure there are a few people who decide to give it a try as a lifestyle choice. That’s their business. But every gay person I’ve ever met didn’t just wake up on day and decide they were going to be gay. They had some serious internal struggles that brought them to the brink.

There was drug abuse. In my sister’s case, severe depression.

When she was a kid she badly wanted the whole fairytale family existence. She wanted THE wedding, THE husband and kids. She might tell the story differently, but I think the worst of her depression hit upon realizing she wasn’t that kind of person.

My cousin dove into years of serious drug and alcohol use.

Whatever the motives, I can tell you this: Only when they came out of the closet were they able to move forward and start living full, productive lives. Only then did the worst of the depression start to lift.

I don’t think a person who goes through that kind of hell just wakes up one day and decides they are going to be gay.

It’s in them at an early age, they try to keep the feelings at bay and become “normal” people. Hiding from your true self always comes with a price. 

I think some of the priests who went on to sexually abuse parishioners entered the priesthood in the first place to escape who they were. A life of celibacy would surely do the trick, right?

Wrong.

This has always been a sensitive subject for me. I’m a devout Catholic and there are people in the church who like to go on about the sin of homosexuality. It always makes me think of the people I know who are gay.

I’m not sure what else to say about the matter, except that I choose to love people based on WHO they are, not WHAT they are.

Having experienced depression myself, I don’t wish it on anyone.

My faith tells me we have to accept people for who they are, even if we don’t get it. I can like the individual even if I don’t like their sins. Hell, I’m the last one on this planet who is in a position to judge someone else’s sins.

I have enough of my own to contend with.

Rock It For Joe Zippo

Rarely do I use this blog for an announcement like this, but Joe Zippo was a special guy and he’s worth the exception.

Tomorrow is the Joe (Kelley) Zippo Memorial Show in Salem, Mass. I usually avoid Salem this time of year because of all the touristy Halloween mania. But for him I’m going in. So should you.

Mood music:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JpMt_YqVbhw&fs=1&hl=en_US]

All of the show’s proceeds will go towards Joe’s headstone and plot.

Details:

Time
Saturday, October 16 · 5:00pm – 11:00pm

Location St.John’s cafeteria

32 St. Peter St. (across from Salem Cinema – the place with the giant BINGO sign).)
Salem, MA

I never played in a band with Joe and we fell out of touch in recent years. But I’ll always appreciate the friendship he extended to me at Salem State.

I’m looking forward to seeing some old friends. I hope you are among them.

IPB Image

Dysfunctional Love Songs

I’ve had love on my mind this week. Some of that comes from the Cursillo weekend I just experienced. Some of it might be that I’ve been letting myself love other people in ways I never thought I could. 

That doesn’t make people any easier to love. Truth is, some of the people I love the most make me want to push my head through a glass door. In keeping with the advice of a good friend, I choose to put the fun in dysfunction. These songs are the soundtrack.

For the family member who brings you down, even when they don’t mean to:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPfkK7bcyfE&fs=1&hl=en_US]

For the friend who helps you pick up the pieces while driving you insane at the same time:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjto02iDNZA&fs=1&hl=en_US]

For the family member who insists on covering the living room furniture in plastic:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0YECbEz6ws&fs=1&hl=en_US]

For the people in your life who bring you closer to God:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGBNa0L41Zc&fs=1&hl=en_US]

For the significant other who sticks around even though you push ’em to the brink:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blfrmZfVH74&fs=1&hl=en_US]

Looking for Grace

In church we hear the word Grace a lot. But it’s taken me a long time to get what it really means. I’m still working on that. But here’s what I got so far.

Mood music:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puGGaFdyx5g&fs=1&hl=en_US]

I like to think of Grace as the treasures I don’t deserve. I have many of those.

If you want to get technical about it, Grace is a gift from God, freely given. It’s a gift people refuse to accept every day.

When I was holing myself off in my room, weaving angry thoughts about the world around me, I refused the gift.

When I was busy hating myself and those around me for all the bad things that happened to me earlier in life, I refused the gift.

When I went looking for solace in a binge, I refused the gift.

When I swaggered around high on myself, thinking I was better than those around me, I refused the gift.

ACCEPTING THE GIFT

When I finally hit the lowest of lows, my pride crumbled and I started accepting the gift without realizing it.

When I started going to therapists and actually started acting on what I learned from them, I accepted the gift.

When I took a leap of Faith and gave Prozac a try, I accepted the gift.

When I started letting family and friends help me instead of trying to go it alone, I accepted the gift.

When I decided to finally do something about the food addiction and entered the doors of OA, I accepted the gift.

When I started sponsoring people in the 12-Step program — something I really didn’t want to do at first, I accepted the gift. 

When I started approaching my work as something to do well for the sake of the people who read it and not for the sake of being seen as the golden boy in the eyes of my bosses, I accepted the gift.

God works on me through the people around me — my wife and kids, our friends, people I work with and people in Program. When I really learned to love these people instead of seeing them as a barrier to my freedom — freedom to destroy myself slowly, to be specific — I accepted the gift.

Do I live in a complete state of Grace? I highly doubt it. But I’m trying to get a little closer every day.

Do it for the Kids

When I was a kid my parents were always trying to get me to join different organizations: The Jewish Community Center off of Shirley Ave. in Revere, Camp Menorah, etc. I rebelled against all of it. Now here Erin and I are, pushing Sean and Duncan into the Cub Scouts.

Mood music:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zt7exeJblR0&fs=1&hl=en_US]

My parents were right to push these things on me. I was in the fourth grade and they had just gotten divorced. It was a bitter, hate-filled, fight-infested divorce. They just wanted there to be someplace we could go to take our minds off the pain and focus on something positive.

The counselors at these places tried their best to make it happen. But I was a punk and treated them all with contempt. I especially hated Camp Menorah (my much younger sister, Shira, loved it there and was a counselor when she got older.). I didn’t get along with anyone and I felt they were robbing me of the freedom to roam the streets of the Point of Pines. The home neighborhood was safe enough and was surrounded by the ocean. I just wanted to hide in the tall grass behind Gibson Park.

Looking back, I feel bad for being such a rotten kid to these people.

Fast forward 30 years. Sean and Duncan are now old enough for the Cub Scouts, and we pretty much made them join. The dynamic is much different. We’re not trying to keep them from home to shield them from pain. We just see it as a great character-building opportunity. Besides, a lot of their friends are Cub Scouts.

Their grandfather paid for their uniforms (Thanks, Dad) and off they went. Duncan is loving it. I think Sean is, too, but he’s trying hard not to admit it.

Last night I took Sean to his den meeting and just sat there taking it all in.

The den leader, Mr. Connor, does a great job with them. He’s patient but doesn’t take any crap. To my amusement, the kids sent a lot of crap his way. The focus last night was on why we have laws. Asked what happens when we break a law, one kid shouted, “We get sent to Juvie!”

Each kid drew a poster that symbolized people obeying the laws. Sean drew a guy paying his taxes. The taxpayer tosses money at the monster-like tax collector, who is covered in dollar bills. The taxpayer also had a gun in one hand. Sean said he just wanted to do something funny. I clearly have my parental work cut out for me. 

I bring this up because it’s funny to me that we are doing this stuff with our children, because I was never that type of guy. I do give most of the credit to Erin, who pushed the scouts more vigorously than I did. I don’t call her my better half for nothing.

As a kid, my father pushed such activities more than my mother did. He was all about us building up a work ethic and a sense of responsibility. He didn’t succeed with me back then. But it would appear he did succeed in the end. It just took an extra 30 years for me to get it.

Now the lesson is used to mold our children into better people than we used to be.

Since all parents strive to raise children that are better than they were and have more than they did, I’m chalking this up as a win.

OCD Awareness Week

UPDATE: If you’ve struggled with OCD, you should listen to Radio Boston at 3 p.m. People will be calling in to share their personal experiences. You can call 1-800-423-TALK or tweet @radioboston #OCDawareness!

Given all the sharing I’ve done on my struggles with OCD, it would be downright criminal of me not to spread the word that it’s OCD Awareness Week.

International OCD Foundation (IODCF)

The International OCD Foundation has done a lot of stellar work to break down the dumb stigmas around this condition and it has all kinds of things planned for this week. For those who suffer, check out the following information. I think you WILL get something out of it:

OCD Awareness Week | October 11-17, 2010

What

The International OCD Foundation and its affiliates from across the country will come together to educate their communities and the public as a whole about obsessive compulsive disorder and its treatments. Learn from the nation’s leading experts about how they work with those who suffer daily from the debilitating disorder. Have the opportunity to hear testimonials from patients both recovering and just beginning treatment and learn about the different treatments and therapies that help people hold jobs, balance relationships with family and friends, and lead more typical and productive lives.

Why

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is an all-consuming, debilitating disorder that affects up to 4 million people in the United States. The disorder also affects millions more: family, friends and caregivers of those with OCD suffer along side their loved ones.

OCD Awareness Week is presented by the International OCD Foundation as a vehicle for support, advocacy and education to help end the stigma surrounding OCD and encourage sufferers to identify the disorder and / or seek treatment. The national Foundation has enlisted the support of its Affiliates nationwide to join in this education effort.

How to help:

For A Brother and Sister

Two very dear friends of mine are in crisis. I’m not saying who they are because it’s no one’s business. But I’ll tell you what: I’ve had a lot of friends come and go in my life. Two of the closest friends died on me. It took a long, long time before I was willing to even consider getting close to anyone ever again outside my family.

These two managed to break into my hardened heart and soften it. Their friendship is among those that have helped me heal along the way. Now they are in pain, and it makes me heartsick.

So I thought I’d take a moment and ask you all to keep these two in your prayers.

Thanks.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QOFQIhLUgk&fs=1&hl=en_US]

Love Hurts, Love Stings, Love Endures

Yesterday I remembered something the priest said during his Homily at our wedding: “You marry the person you think you know, and spend the rest of your lives really getting to know each other.” Another priest at another wedding eight years later told the bride and groom: “Your job is to get each other into Heaven.”

Mood music:

[spotify:track:6iCCvEH7xhkcsFTXnLVLIK]

Sometimes you get to know each other and you don’t like what you see. Then things fall apart. Two family members I care a lot about are going through that very experience. Sometimes, it happens. Hell, Al and Tipper Gore split after 40 years of marriage. Nobody saw that coming.

It all makes me think of my own marriage and how lucky I am. But it hasn’t always been easy. I’ve learned that marriage is a lot of work, and it always will be. And it’s always a two-way street.

A deacon friend of mine once described helping out your husband or wife as “dying of self.” On the surface that doesn’t sound pleasant, but it’s actually a fabulous thing: It means taking on extra burden — chores around the house, for instance — so your spouse can get a break.

That’s something I’ve always done to the point of obsession: Clean the house, making the kids’ lunches and all those things husbands supposedly don’t do (though I’m told I’ve become more of a slob since starting my recovery). The problem is that I always thought that was enough.

To this day I can be an emotionally closed-off person. I probably get it from my father. He’s one of the most loving guys I know, but he has always had a tough time showing his emotion. I’ve seen him cry once in the last 40 years: when my brother died. I’m sure he’s done it other times, especially when my sister was having her troubles. But I only saw that one time.

I’ve also never been good at talking back during an argument with Erin.

Erin and I have a  strong marriage. I’d say it’s getting stronger by the day. My love for her is, anyway. But like every married couple, we argue sometimes about all the typical things: Money, how to parent the kids, etc. When it’s a routine day, I often keep my feelings to myself, and fail to SHOW her my feelings on a daily basis. Then, when we argue, I shut down and sit there like a stone as she tells me everything I’ve done wrong in the last day, week, or month.

A therapist once told me I needed to argue back. Not yelling back. Not name calling. Just calmly pointing out my own feelings and side of things. The first time I did it, I think Erin was really taken aback. That was scary. I was always afraid if I did that she’d leave me. That was never a danger, but I can be stupid sometimes. I think I’ve gotten a lot better at this stuff, but I know I still put that wall up at times. Putting up a wall can be a bitch for any relationship, because sooner or later bad feelings will race at that wall like a drunk behind the wheel of a Porsche and slam right into it. Some bricks in the wall crack and come loose, but by then it can be too late. The relationship is totaled.

I’ve come to realize this will always be a danger we have to watch for. It’s a danger in any marriage. Carol and Mike Brady never really existed. If they did, they could have used a few good fights. They wouldn’t have wasted so much time sitting up in bed reading boring books.

This shit is so complicated. But this much I do know:

I’m not the same guy Erin married. She’s not the same woman, either. Much to my father-in-law’s chagrin, she’s become a lot more liberal in her political views.

If I were the same man I was back then — imprisoned by an OCD-fueled haze of fear, insecurity, self-loathing and self-destructive behavior — I’d either be dead or divorced. I had to change for this thing to work. The thing is, I wanted it to work badly enough that I started doing what I had to do in that cold, dark autumn of 2004, when all the cracks in my soul began spilling blood all over everyone around me.

I’m better now. But to say I still have a long way to go is an understatement. I still keep that wall in my closet next to the other skeletons, and sometimes I bring it out for some more trouble.

But as much as love can hurt, I’m going to do what I must to make it endure.

Random Thought on Leadership

I’ve been thinking a lot about leadership these past few days. I’ve known some good ones and some bad ones.

Observation:

When you’re all about loving people and helping them along, that’s leadership.

When you’re all about power and getting people to do your bidding, that’s middle management.

I’ve been a middle manager. I’ve met some who are the salt of the Earth. But I sucked at it.

Most of the time, it’s lonely in the middle.