Monday, January 26, 2015

One Brave Thing

Do one brave thing today. One. 

One day after Christmas I finally decided after being awake a while to sit up in bed and make my feet find the floor. Sitting there, folded over, and wondering how I was supposed to get up and take care of my kids. How I was supposed to get dressed. How I was supposed to make breakfast. And wondering if this is how my mom felt every day. Wondering if this is how I will feel for the rest of my every days.

I got up and made my kids breakfast. That was my brave thing that day. I got up though everything in me screamed for me to just go back to bed. Screamed that there was nothing worth doing, at least nothing that I could attempt to do that would be worthy of doing. Screamed that I just couldn’t fry the eggs or toast the bread. I made breakfast while everything in me screamed I couldn't.

So easy to get lost in the abyss, wondering further down to see what the well may find.

I’m not sure the words are in existence to express the despair I experienced, experience. The pull to be with the ones you love the most and that love you most contrasted with the unrelenting push to stay down. The longing to be enough mother, wife, friend and the fear that mistakes were made in making me mother, wife, friend. The fear that the children, husband, friends would find me lacking and leave me in my confused and restless state contrasted with the hope that they would love me the same, without judgment or fear.

Live. That's a brave thing to do. Alive. That's a brave thing to be.

I remember my mom making me breakfast and packing my lunchbox for school. I got nervous buying my lunch and she made the best ham and cheese sandwiches. Or celery smeared with cream cheese. And I would always find a napkin note in her tidy handwriting. She did brave things when she wanted to lay down and never get up again. And she drove me to school that year I was teased and bullied relentlessly. She was teaching me what brave does and I didn't know.

Today I got up and did my school work. I did my real job work. I did my fun job work. I switched the laundry from the washer to the dryer. I took mail to the post office. I fed my family dinner. I played at the park. 

I did all of that with a fist of stress clenching my chest. The anxiety burning an orb through my ribs. I did the things I thought impossible with a mean fist fighting me for breath. 

And it all started with one small-big brave thing: making breakfast and packing my mini diva’s lunch for school. 

There is light though it may seem far and fleeting.

Today I will do one brave thing. Join me? —we are braver together. And for the record: you are brave. You are significant. You are so strong and I am very proud of you my friend.


Three of the many who bring me back from the depths. I'm grateful. 

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Pearls

pearl /pərl/ noun
1. a hard, lustrous spherical mass, typically white or bluish-gray, formed within the shell of a pearl oyster or other bivalve mollusk and highly prized as a gem.
2.a precious thing; the finest example of something

Here we go now...


I love Fiona Apple. Especially her early years. Lyrics and music that mirrored my sense of deep ache and passion; that gave voice to my emotions. One particular song has a line that's been playing in my mental soundtrack for the past few months is from her album Tidal:

But he washed me shore
And he took my pearl
And left an empty
Shell of me.
Sullen Girl, Fiona Apple

This image is breathtaking and terrifying to me.

I wrote out that song from memory today and when I double checked the lyrics I was amazed at how well I remembered each line. I can't seem to remember my husband's favorite pizza rolls but I recall song lyrics. 

After I wrote out the lyrics I followed with my own line:

Oh precious girl. Don't you know your worth is not found in the pearl?

Oysters can make multiple pearls. Pearls cannot make oysters. Oysters are brilliant and fascinating creatures. Pearls are not creatures but things created.

Lovely and still terrifying.

While organizing my kids' play room to make space for the presents they will surely acquire during Christmas I cried. So sad and confused, lonely and afraid. Afraid of being rejected, abandoned, and judged.

And those fears are valid. I have been rejected by my father. Abandoned by my mother. And judged by ones who had the opportunity to shelter me. As much as I hate to admit it... I'm grieving that. In years past I've tried to push the emotions under the rug or shove them down or worse: deny that they were valid and real.

My pearls. You can't have them.

I would look at the pearls that were created by the hardships and pretend that those were good enough. Because aren't they pretty? If I can just make those outside of me see pretty then I am pretty, right? If I can make the illusion that I am heidiva and full of laughter then they won't see the pain, right? If I show them the pearl they won't bother to look at the wounded oyster, right?

Right. 

Now that is my safe zone. Not as pretty and not so terrifying.

Sadly and truthfully: I've been living my life with my oyster shell half open, mostly shut. I'll let you in far enough to see the pretty pearls, but not so much that you will see the whole shebang. You may give me more grit and then I will have to make yet another pearl... And I don't have anymore room for more pearls, you understand? 

What I'm deeply afraid of and resist: being forced open.

And the pearls are not enough for me. It's not enough to have the pearls: I want life and the living that comes with it. I need to breathe in the open in order to be able to live. And be unafraid to just be whether or not I have any pearls. Brave enough to just let go of the pearls and be an oyster. Brazen enough to live the life I am purposed to live whether or not I get any other pearls. Secure enough to let people see the real me, oyster and all, audibly, and out loud.

You see, an oyster will be an oyster, with or without pearls.

The grit will come. And I am learning to live the life of an oyster with her shell open; filtering out the grit and choosing which grains are worth the pearl. Bit by bit, painstakingly, slow to the point that I don't think I can go any slower, I'm learning. Maybe no one including myself sees the progress quite yet: that doesn't negate that I am doing the work in learning to trust that I am safe, sound, and enough.


Remember, no grit...no pearl. Here's what to do if your critics are making you feel like a loser. And when your creative flow is stopped up. Mondays. Pfft. You got this. #writing #creatives #creativeprocess

Beautiful, inside and out, without judgment.

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Exposed

 I dreamt tomorrow will have a prettier face. I dreamt tomorrow would have better things to say. . . 'Cos that day, never should have taken place. . .
Poe, "That Day"

Y'all. My chest feels split open wide. Exposed. Vulnerable. And I cried so hard last night that I nearly vomited. The grief, the injustice, the unadulterated pain, the earth shattering agony: it broke me. 

My glass tower broke. And here I am, unsure of how I will face tomorrow. I don't know how I can or will. I'm broken and it feels like I'm sitting in the middle of it all, picking up the pieces knowing I can't put it back together. 

I'm broken yet not missing any pieces. Broken and whole, simultaneously.

And I'm scared. Scared of being poked or prodded. Scared I will be further broken. Scared that someone will take a piece of me and not give it back.

I want to hide.

Instead I stand, exposed, vulnerable. Instead I stubbornly live with what feels like gaping wounds. I cry and I no longer hide the tears.

 
Oh, God. Are people going to know me, see inside me now?

My prayer used to be for God to hide me. That no longer fits me, who I am becoming. Hiding is not me living authentically as me.

I want to hide. But I need to run, free. Not underground, not running for cover, but running to live.

I'm finding my voice. 

And my memories are reappearing. Things I had forgotten so long ago I am now remembering more clearly. Things my mother told me didn't happen that way... they did happen that way.  

Light will still shine in forgotten places.

And I meekly tell my husband what I theorize to be the reasons I stopped speaking, stopped remembering, feebly giving voice to my emotions and experiences. He patiently listens.

Still everything in me screams to run for cover. To go lay in bed. To give up. To crumple and die (figuratively).

Instead I stay. I get out of bed. I give more than what I think I have to give. I stand up and live.

Through the gaping hole, not inside it, is where I belong.

Turn you to the strong hold, ye prisoners of hope. . .
Zechariah 9:12 KJV

In the midst of the pain and torment: God is good. In the midst of my questions, my angry interrogations of Him, He is good. He was good then, He is good now. 

My strong hold, my safe place: it's not in hiding any longer. It is living unashamed in the great wide open.

And I cling to that. Somehow, someway, in this broken world filled with broken people, God is good. I'm allowed to be me. And that gives me hope.

I live.

And I am alive. Alive to go through the motions if that's all I've got right now. And this is better than not living, not feeling, and not experiencing.

Living is not easy. I wish it were. But it is worth the work, worth the effort, worth the pain and tears. 

It's worth it for the days with prettier faces.

And if you are still hiding: it's okay. Keep hiding until you are safe to come out. You are brave to still be living and I am so proud of you. You are so strong and I so admire you.

Feel free to reach out to me at ladyscholarheidiva@gmail.com or in the comment section on this blog. I hope to hear from you.