I haven’t written for a while because I had so little to
say. Life has me in a phase where things
change every day, me, who pride myself on continuity, living where I grew up,
with family and friends around, never quietly grounded but better and more
stable than now, it seems at times. And
at 55 I’m too old and weary sometimes to deal with the changes.
I am sure we all feel that way sometimes. Too old, too worn out. But what is the alternative? To quit?
And then what? Stagger through
the streets or just off one self? Worse
than old is the pain and grey, which come, and bring nothing. And sometimes the hanging in is so very
hard.
It got especially bad when everything I did brought some
attendant thoughts or feelings with it and I had to deal with those. So it’s not just a matter of running a errand
to the store; it’s a matter of attempting to accomplish each of the many small
tasks that lead up to that errand when each of those little tasks have many
thoughts and feelings, and coping with every one of those little thoughts and
feelings takes so much time, like an iceberg, when sometimes life is just about
buying gas for the car.
Life said something bitterly shocking too. This is the life I have, this is who I am,
regardless of who I thought I would be. All
I have to do is move within it, discerning God’s Will, taking Joy in the fact
that this is all something we don’t know, but a necessary step on our way to
eternal life. (Even though this may be
the crappy part of the ride. For some of
us and for some reason. That we don’t
know.) And I am made to do that as I am
now. Created in God’s Image, Just a damn different image than I thought. But the shocking truth of who that person is,
the shattering of my illusions about me, took time too this year.
All this was experienced while I tried to constantly move
ahead with life, somehow keep with the mundane and try to survive, no matter
what the state of confusion or clarity. Being
a spouse and a parent to four, and friends and responsibilities, trying to run my
law firm, starting a new clinic for those less fortunate, writing when I can,
walking the dogs and living, but publicly too; just Google me if you want
to know more.
My coping skills are changing too. What worked for me as a male doesn’t and can’t
work as a female. It’s having a thousand
things flying at you, and in the grayness sometimes, without being able to fend
them off; the old swords and shields are broken or can’t be used; the new ones
not discovered or if discovered not trusted yet…can I count on a smile and
weakness and humility to carry me when I never learned how to use them in many
years of guyness?
And then the advice of others, the voices real and imagined;
all of it lacking somehow, or judgmental, or both, but all of the voices
constantly, unremittingly, heard.
So in experiencing all that, I collapsed. It was about September or October, although I probably was starting to collapse
in August. I stopped blogging, not
because I had nothing to say but because I couldn’t say any of it. And the usual sources seemed so bland, so
normal in their turmoil, so timid in their conclusions. None of it helped all that much to make it
through the day.
But even a collapse for me meant I had to move, too many things to do out there. I started trying just to move
like a turtle almost, trying to minimize what I saw and absorbed from the
outside world, shut down the openness, try to just withdraw. But certain things demanded attention, and
even though I tried to walk away I can’t.
I finished the year learning something I learned a long
time ago when I drank too much too often.
The world isn’t changing for me just because I think it should, and just
because sometimes I sit staring at the wall or the field or the dogs for hours,
because the pain really is too much to cope with, to get up and walk away from. So this year, I will try to remember that
lesson. I will try to let the little
things control themselves, the work get done, and the voices be still. I will try to perform first the task of
cutting, of simplifying, of refusing to allow me to be carried away by me.
Happy New Year To All!
Happy, healthy new year, Julie!
ReplyDeleteA blessed New Year, Julie, to you and your family. Love, F
ReplyDeleteThank you for your honesty and for sharing, Julie. May it be a rewarding and beautiful year ahead. --Jesse
ReplyDelete