Month: April 2013

  • Stupid People, and Others

    Some gazoonie is trying to make people believe the FBI was behind the bombing at the Boston Marathon.

    I read one idiot suggesting that the fact that “no one was puking” was PROOF that it was a government conspiracy.

    Wow. That sort of fails the logic test. Not just a little…a LOT.

    I’ve seen some horrific accidents. Hell…I’ve been in one.

    I am very tender stomached…I don’t watch slasher flicks…but I also used to work in a hospital ER. I’ve never once thrown up in public. I’ve never seen something so awful it made me hurl. Oh yeah, and I think conspiracy theorists are a bit out there.

    It occurred to me today that at the root of every lynch mob, there was an agent provocateur whispering things that whipped the crowd into a frenzy. We don’t give crazed mobs credit for being brilliant arbiters of justice…but when someone feeds their fears, and insecurities? Scary things happen. Innocent people die…for no cause. It’s not that a conspiracy is impossible…it’s just more unlikely. And the bigger a conspiracy, the less likely in this day and age that everyone will keep their yap shut…not when their 15 minutes of fame is on the line.

    So, I will wait to see what happens. I am not assuming the crazy mom of one of the suspected bombers has ANY idea what she’s talking about. She’s a MOTHER, and her “sweet child” is being charged with a horrific crime. Easier to believe that it’s a MASSIVE conspiracy than to accept that her DNA hatched a monster.

    I know governments screw up…sometimes with intention. But I can’t think of a single decent outcome for bombing the marathon—that would make it worth the risk, for the US. So…I’m ignoring the “False Flaggers, the tea baggers, and the Birthers…mostly because they are too stupid for words. A pity they have SO many of them…

     

  • Denial, Vaccines, and Dingleberries

    http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/baby-dies-whooping-cough-orange-co/nXXqP/

     

    The biggest problem (aside from dead, or dying children) that I have with the whole “anti-vaccine” crowd is their unique ability to ignore fact.

    Most are motivated by love.

    I get that.

    But the family of THIS baby decided that despite the MOUNDS of evidence debunking the whole “vaccines cause autism” theory,(which was spun by a UK doctor who developed a new vaccine to sell, and wanted to discredit the old one…and btw…he’s been stripped on his credentials to practice medicine in the UK.) they decided not to inoculate their child…who had died of pertussis.

    My home is located between to different churchyards. Both date back a bit…and if you go there, you will see a large number of TINY stones, some with initials carved on them…no date. Each stone marks a dead baby or child. Each family has a number of them…five…six…and from what I’ve read, they did not do that sort of thing for miscarriages…just babies who had survived childbirth.

    So a hundred years ago, SOMETHING killed a lot of small children.

    Something that no longer exists. These days, the medical death of a small child is a shocking rarity…not a sad reality of life. We no longer have to have 8 kids…so one or two will get to grow up.

    I wish I could take a live and let live attitude to all this…but that’s just it. I can’t. This isn’t a matter or politics…this is a matter of life and death. I’m not comfortable with the “anti-vac” groups leaving their kids unprotected. I am even LESS comfortable with the idea that by breaking the chain of inoculation, they are turning their children into walking petri dishes—that can spawn strains of childhood disease that we have no shots against. I don’t want my child, or her children dying because someone else refused to consider anything but their opinion.

     

    In 2011, Andrew Wakefield, leading proponent of one of the main controversies regarding a purported link between autism and vaccines was found to have falsified research data and was stripped of his medical license.[33]

     

    Get that? FALSIFIED research.

    There are a number of reasons for the increase in autism, from chemicals contaminants in food, air, water and soil, to artificial sweeteners. I don’t suggest I have an answer to that. I’ve read posts by the parents who are opposed to vaccines…and inevitably, they either quote something that is UTTER bullshit, or outright LIE to try to support their position. (One suggested that FDR contracted polio as a result of the vaccine…which didn’t come out until after he DIED. FDR had suffered from the aftereffect of polio for decades…but why deal with pesky facts?)

     

    So…I’m the first to enjoy a debate over conspiracy theories…but not where kids lives are concerned.

     

     

  • Letters To Lucille

    I didn’t believe in that weird voodoo crap. Not me, never. If I could touch it, it was real. And they say there are no atheists in foxholes—guess that much is true. But when there are sniper rounds parting your hair more often than a comb does, you get a lot more interested in the REAL—in the here and now.

    So when Stewie Shimes started writing letters to his girl—not just every day—but all the damned time, I thought he was nuts. He must have had 20 of them…ones he never mailed. He wrote others of course, that he DID mail. But he was always scratching away—love songs, poetry, some damned thing.

    One night we got word—the next day was going to be bad. Normally, the brass doesn’t share that sort of thing. After two years of combat, you get a way of knowing how the wind feels, or smells—and it tells you what’s coming. But that’s not voodoo anymore than knowing the smell of rain when you first get up, even when the sky isn’t saying a word.

    Now I need to tell you a word about Lucille. We all had sweethearts—some of us had more than one. Old Dexter had so many photos it looked like he was trying for a deck of cards. But for Stewie, there was only Lucille. When a man hands you a photo of his lady, you always say something nice—it’s required. That’s manners.

    But Lucille…whatever it was she had didn’t show up real well. She wasn’t ugly—but this was no dish. Stewie and I had been in the same regiment for two years. And late at night when sleep was scarce, we’d talk about our ladies…and mostly Stew would listen. You could see his eyes…this little smile he wore in them. One night Joe from Chicago noticed it.
    So he asked.

    “So Stewie—what’s the deal with Lucille? What makes her the one?”

    Stew sat up, and shifted. Then he leaned forward, and I watched his eyes as he began to speak softly.

    “My Lucy…is like that second you get in Summer, a minute before the clouds dump a ton of rain—you know it’s coming—and you’re glad it is, because it’s been stinking hot, and you need it.

    My Lucy is that first cold night in autumn—when you need more than a sheet, but it feels good to be covered up.

    Lucille is the place I go, where the world can’t follow. They come prettier—they may even come smarter—though I doubt it. But kinder? She has of a kind of stillness that makes you just happy to be alive. And when she laughs—you know she is laughing with you—never at you.

    She’s just…Lucille.”

    And I can’t speak for anyone else there, but I’ll bet you we all fell a little in love with the plain woman he carried so close to his heart, in that one minute. Stewie wasn’t a man with a hurry up crush, so he wouldn’t feel alone on the line. He had married for keeps. He was one who had fallen in love—to whom leaving his lady behind was a hardship.

    So when he started writing the extra letters, we didn’t say a word. Then came that night. Like I said, the brass didn’t make a point of telling us when we were headed for a sausage grinder. Bad for morale—but this time, they did. The mood was quiet. The men talked softly, and everyone prayed. And then Stewie cleared his throat. Such a small sound…but it got our attention.

    “Guys…I gotta talk to you.”

    Now he wasn’t a big one for talk…not unfriendly—just sort of quiet. He was a damned good soldier, and more than one of us owed him our lives. He had respect—and if he felt like talking—we let him.

    “Tomorrow will be bad. Real bad. And it’s time for me to do something I have been getting ready for. You can think I am crazy, that’s ok. But I need to ask you for a favor.”

    There was a murmur of assent. Stewie reached into his pack, and drew out a thick packet of letters. God—there must have been about fifty.

    “I want you to ask you to do something that will sound pretty damned strange—but hear me out. Anyone who doesn’t want to doesn’t have to. But it would mean a lot to me. These are letters for Lucille—ones she will need. After tomorrow—she will really need to read them…but not all at once. I want you each to take a few…and mail them with your own letters—but no more than one a week. When she’s gotten the last one—well by then I know she’ll be ok…”

    Nobody laughed. Nobody called him stupid. It seemed like a weird thing—but hey…sometimes you just went along. A dozen of us took Lucille’s letters…but Joe from Chicago tried to break the mood when he took his.

    “Tell you what Stewie—when this is all over, and we’re heading home, I’ll give these back—and you can give them to her yourself.”

    Stewie stopped a moment, and looked at him. Not sad. Just sort of thoughtful. Then he nodded, thanked us, and curled up in his blanket to sleep.

    The next day was Hell. Fire from everywhere—and our guys fell like flies. I stopped wondering if I would live, and thought instead of what would take me out. Mortar? Grenade?
    Or just one fast ping from a sniper round? Staying alive became the priority…and very suddenly in mid afternoon the hell just came to a halt.

    We found Stew last. He was sitting there, and I swear the look on his face…just like the night he explained Lucille to us. I won’t say I cried…and I won’t say that the import of those letters didn’t come crashing down on me—and every other man who accepted them the night before. Joe took it the worst—and when we mustered for dinner, we could hardly eat any of those rations.

    Those of us who accepted the letters sat together. You could call it a wake of sorts. One of the guys had a flask of brandy, and we all took a pull—for Stew, and his Lucille.

    “I’ll send the first.” I said…in five days.

    There was agreement.

    “And guys…we owe it to Stew…NOBODY goes down until the lady gets her last letter…you understand?”

    I did not sleep that night. Instead I watched the stars, and wondered if Lucille had felt him die in her heart. It seemed possible. Anything seemed possible. Not long after, I noticed that Joe took up letter writing. He wasn’t a big one for that before…but suddenly he started. His mother, I figured—maybe a girl. Joe never carried a photo—said he liked to be fancy free.

    For the next year, once a week, one of us would send a letter to Lucille. She never wrote back—and sometimes I wondered how it felt—to have them come from a man she knew had already died. But it made no difference. Your word is your word. I sent my last one three days before they announced the end of the War.

    We all sat around the fire that night—snipers weren’t much an issue by then, and the fire felt good. It was Dex who finally spoke…and made the small hairs dance on our heads.

    “Jesus…” he whispered.

    “What?” I asked.

    “Guys—we did it. We made it. And the whole platoon—cut to hamburger—but none of us—none of the ones with Lucille’s letters…none of us took a scratch.”

    And he was right. Joe said nothing—just stared into the fire. The war ended. We all promised to keep touch…but life intrudes. Forty years later, we had a reunion—the left overs of my platoon. We all traveled to Chicago, and stayed at the Drake. You won’t believe how the years fall away—but they did.

    We were all grandfathers—great grand fathers—and we brought our ladies—some the same ones who kept us alive during the war—with letters, and love, and simple belief.
    And I saw Joe again—looking younger than the rest of us—still had his hair, and teeth—the only thing missing was a look in his eyes—a hunger—almost a longing. Instead, he looked quietly content—slightly amused.

    “i want you to meet my lady.” he said…almost shy.

    “Fellas…this is Lucille…”

    We understood in that moment, why Stewie loved her—and why Joe, when he waited till the war’s end to deliver his last letter—could never forget her. I felt a pang of jealousy—not that I did not love my wife, of those many years—but that Joe had been smart enough to find her. We all hugged, and talked, and when the night ended, I asked for a toast—to a lady who kept us alive at the very edge of hell.

    She kept us living—and lived for those letters.

    To Stew…and his Lucille.

     

     

     

    (My entry in the Huff Post Over 50 Fiction competition…)

  • Lisa…LIVE and IN PERSON!

    http://masspoetry.org/massachusetts-poetry-festival-2013/

     

     

    So I live in this AMAZING state, where poetry actually is respected, and acknowledged. Note…their festival is THREE days long…not an afternoon.

    And I will be at a table in the small press section, hawking my wares on Saturday, May 4th.

    C’mon by and say hello!

     

    old pics 005

     

     

  • After The Hunt…Boston Sleeps

    I have to be honest.

    I am not feeling particularly charitable at the moment.

    I am not getting all torn up about the second bombing suspects “rights”, or the fact that he has been tried in the court of public opinion.

    I don’t care that people are implying that he might be innocent…or set up.

    I can count. I listened to the tape of the shootout in Watertown…hundreds of shots in two minutes.

    I’ve driven in the area where they had their 100 MPH chase…where the streets are tiny and crabbed, and homes are stacked like hotcakes.

    I am both shocked and grateful that so few died that night, in a neighborhood where people’s kids were sleeping.

    I am humbled and shaken by the fact that a region was paralyzed by two men.

     

    As I mentioned, I was hanging with my daughter…because that seemed to make more sense than anything else. I remembered thinking that it was weird…one suspect they shot…but the other one they missed completely? That didn’t add up. I said  to a few people I wondered if he was just holed up, wounded or dead.

    So I guess I was partially correct. (Not that there is a prize involved.)

    I did not have “skin” in this. But I have felt guilt about the nonsense of terrorism since 9-11. I brought a child into this world, betting on the better angels…and she is such an amazing person, that this sort of thing wounds her. I don’t care what you believe politically. I don’t care who you hate.  You don’t carry it across another country’s borders, and hope to make a “statement”. Americans in particular will KICK YOUR ASS.  Not because we are evil imperialists, but because we HAVE to. Too many bullies on the schoolyard think they can run the joint, if they can keep you scared.

    Yes, we get scared.

    But we also get PISSED. I watched an entire region willing to allow anything to catch those bastards. (And sorry…no apologies for assuming guilt here.) I watched government work together—to nail them, even if it took shutting down an entire city to do it. So spare me the father’s insistence that his “good” boys were set up. Don’t bother me with the whole Miranda rights bullshit in this case…NOT BUYING.

    No…it will not bring back the dead. It will not grant limbs and mobility to the newly crippled. But I think the message has been sent. We can’t stop you from doing something horrible, perhaps…but we will stop at NOTHING to find your ass if you do. You aren’t a hero. Your god will not love you for atrocity. And we the People?

    We will help those you wounded.

    We will mourn those you killed.

    And we will cheer-when they catch you.

    Good luck, you bastards.

  • So Boston is Locked Down…

    This is crazy…one suspected bomber down…one on the loose…

     

    Too close for comfort.

  • Desi’s Place

    So I spent the day with my daughter, checking out rooms and apartments for her.

    Despite my calm demeanor, this was a MAJOR deal.

    But some background first. Desi currently shares an on campus apartment. Since September, said apartment building has experienced a number of false alarms (fire), a flood over winter break, and one REAL fire…that made the evening news in Boston. Desi’s housing is one of the largest parts of her school bill each semester. When she began, we broke it down…65 dollars PER night. Yes, heat, AC, and power was included…but still. Pretty damned expensive. We got word last week that they were upping the tab. Now understand…Desi shares this apartment with five other girls. The new price? One thousand dollars A MONTH.

    That is a WTF moment.

    Now the apartments are closed during Winter and Spring break. But simple math tells you that the tab for 9 months is NINE THOUSAND dollars. It’s not a private school. So each year, the humble apartment nets 60K.  There are 77 apartments in her residence hall.  That’s $4,620,000 annually. Not counting summer use, or the OTHER buildings on campus. Her room is a single…and well…small is a word. (Tiny could also fit.) Due to a series of unfortunate events, Desi was not going to be able to have the same group of girls she’d hung with all year, and would have to start all over again, with a new batch. Being a Senior, she didn’t relish the idea. And being organized, she started looking around for other options.

    Now unless you live in a high rent major city, 9K annually is quite a chunk of change. She wasn’t looking for an apartment…just a furnished room nearby.

    She had two options. Both were FAR cheaper than her current digs…one was 750 a month, all inclusive…the other 625…same deal. Now mind you, that’s laundry on premises, power, heat, water, cable, and internet. She wanted kitchen privileges—not a nuker and a fridge. For the last year, she has been learning to cook. She manages a modest food budget, and is learning to do it all herself. We looked at two places. One was older…built in 1850. It was in ok (not great shape), and might have done in a pinch…but the landlady was…well…odd. While insisting she wanted the place filled by May 1, (which is two weeks) she still showed us the place that she continues to run an ad for. She also claimed to have “several interested parties”. Ummm…calling BULLSHIT. If she had any takers, the place would be filled…no need to still show it. Most people need more than two weeks to move…so she was full of it.

    And…she wouldn’t answer one question. “How many people actually LIVE here?” That’s a basic question. It should not have required much thought, or calculation.  Desi and I had been counting. As near as we could tell, at least five people were living there, each with a private room…but also sharing a TINY kitchen. She kept changing the subject. This bodes ill. She also insisted on an “at will” lease. (Month to month). There was NO parking…and when we visited, all the tenants were out. Either none of them had cars—or all of them did. Desi would have made six. The town tickets cars without stickers, and the street was quaint, but skinny. If you visit the North Shore, you will notice something interesting. Most towns have blue lights on poles with signs on them indicating that they are “snow emergency lights.” That means a NASTY snow storm. When we get hit by one, in most smaller towns, you are NOT allowed to park on the street. (Logical…the plows have to come through.) But that raises the question…where the HELL are you supposed to park? Desi goes to school in a LARGE college town, with a tourist industry. That’s a few thousand cars that need shelter from the storm. But Miss AT WILL sort of shrugged that off. We had plenty of snow this past season, so it’s not a question you can take a vague answer on.

    So much for the $625 apartment.

    A small editorial, if I may.

    Some people who rent rooms are out of their FUCKING MINDS. I know this from experience. I used Craig’s List to find my place…and the owners either demand ridiculous amounts or rent, (If you have 1100 a month, you can afford an apartment—not a “room”.) Or have some strange ideas about what the property is worth. Sometimes, they post pics that look like crime scenes…dirty, cluttered, and badly run down. They do weird shit like FORBID cooking. (They may allow you a small fridge and a microwave—but no cooking. One winner is a nudist who’s been looking for a tenant for the last 18 months. The rent’s cheap, but you have to be “comfortable” with his…ummm…shortcomings.

    One ad I remember was very nice looking…but was accompanied by a VERY detailed list of HOW you were expected to treat everything…i am not kidding…two pages single spaced. I’m pretty sure unevenly hung towels were a handing offense. NO thanks.

    I remember corresponding with one woman—who said defensively “Well, you’re going to be living in my house…I have to be sure you’re not crazy.” Fair enough. But if I am living in your house..how do I know that YOU are sane? The trust thing cuts both ways.

    Some demand credit checks, background checks, references…and THOUSANDS of dollars in security. Again…we’re talking a ROOM…not a condo on Beacon Hill. I understand that they want to be cautious. But I have no information on THEM. How do I know they are not in foreclosure? About to lose their home? Or worse…last year, a man in Salem was renting homes he didn’t OWN. They nailed him, but his victims lost thousand of dollars, and got nothing for their money.  So this was the world I was trying to help my daughter navigate.

    Desi is pretty easy going. She ignored the “420″ friendly ads. She doesn’t really care what people do…she’s not judging…but anyone stupid enough to put that in a public ad…well…they might not make the best kind of room mate.

    Now if you’re following the math. you’ll note that 9K can cover a 12 month lease—with money left over. A much nicer deal than a thousand a month. And as a plus, there is no “kick out” quotient. (On campus housing CLOSES for breaks. If you don’t want to leave, that’s too bad…you still have to.)

    Well boys and girls, the OTHER place was a find. Absolutely lovely…and the landlady wasn’t insane. That alone would have impressed me. Instead of a tiny shoebox, Desi was getting a room nearly three times as large—painted beautifully. There are hardwood floors, covered with soft space carpets, a king sized bed, instead of a twin. There is a large tv, flat screen, cable, internet—the kitchen…whimper…gorgeous. Laundry room in the basement—lots of bathrooms. The landlady was looking for a reasonable tenant, who would pay their rent, not mess up the house, and practice reasonable caution about safety.

    We offered references—but she was more interested in Desi and I. Apparently, the fact that we are close impressed her. Her current tenant is leaving in the summer. When would she need a deposit and a lease…and what kind of lease? She said she would appreciate us letting her know by JULY.

    Thank you, Universe.

    I think Desi will be happy there…and her landlady has no issue with visits. We ohhed over her pics of her children, and admired the cat.

    So…Desi has a new home.

    I’m coming to grips with my “new” daughter…so grown up now, and mature. The world is baffling…but it’s not a bad place for her…if she’s careful. And she will be!

     

     

  • In Praise Of The Blissed Out Buddhist

    @The Sutra Dude…this one’s for you!

     

    Yesterday, Sutra Dude did a blog on his introduction to Buddhism, and reading it, it rang a lot of bells…so I thought I would run with the topic.

    Xanga is a microcosm of the macrocosm…to a certain extent. But it only reflects a more affluent world, where people have net access, power to run computers, and oh yes, the leisure time to actually express your thoughts, and ideas. In the US alone, that means only 60 percent of our population. Forty percent—very nearly HALF do not. They still have lives, and opinions…but they are more or less ignored by our Face-booking, Twittering, Blogging population. When you have a community, it becomes easy to assume others think as you do…and we also tend to group with those who share our ideas and core beliefs. I am private about my views on spiritual matters. I get offended when someone decides to proselytize, because it is not something I am comfortable being shared with, anymore than I would invite someone to tell me all about their sex lives…in streaming details. Hey, if you feel the need to share, fine…it’s just not something I want to be included in, unless I specifically, and overtly request it. (Which I don’t.)

     

    But You become aware of people’s belief’s in subtle ways—even when they don’t get in your face.

    Now lest you take the wrong meaning from the title of this, I am deeply impressed by the “blissed out”. (And be aware…I am not a Buddhist…my comments are based on observation…I do not claim to be an expert.) Sutra Dude spoke about how he attended a gathering—and how it impacted on him. It was not a bolt from the blue, Paul at Tarsus conversion moment…it was more subtle. It’s taken him years to acquire his inner peace, but it began with one instance.

    The Blissed Out are not interested in converting anyone. They don’t have fortune cookie, t-shirt, or bumper sticker dogma to share, and they never claim to own the “one answer”, or the sole truth in the universe. When they find their center, they have the absolute gift of shutting out the world…and even tuning out their own thoughts to connect with…well…everything there is. Sounds confusing, I know. But I get it.

    Consider your “normal day”. You are bombarded with messages, media, emotions, impressions, all kinds of stimulus, internal and external, from the second you open your eyes.  The only time most people are not thinking on some level, or reacting to all of this is when they are sleeping. But you can’t go through a normal day without…noise? Static? All that STUFF. One of the hardest things to do is to turn it all off. When we try, thoughts keep popping into our heads. YIKES. Now normally I advocate thought…even deep thought. I am a HUGE fan of thinking. But…sometimes, you need to clear the decks, and increasingly, it is difficult to do so.

    The Blissed Out can. It’s not non-thought. It’s the ability (hard won) to actually step out, and away…not to escape, but to reach a place of better understanding…enlightenment, if you will. But there are no short cuts. There is no “10 Steps to Perfect Bliss”, or Being One for Dummies”. The Path is not the same for any two humans…and you can’t follow in anyone else’s footsteps. No one size fits all (or most). No map that actually points out the trail. It begins with Know Thyself. Two small words…but two such IMPOSSIBLE words. We grow up, try to improve, re-invent, re-package, and constantly are in the process of becoming someone new…a better us…which presumes that there is something WRONG with who we already are. Only we spend so much time trying to be someone else, that we have no real awareness of ourselves.

    Buddha would laugh…kindly.

    Being alone…without being lonely.

    Being with someone else, not because you need someone to complete you—but because they are something or someone that already feel like they are part of you. Not gaping holes…connections.

    The Blissed Out already have reached the place where the whole of everything is a gorgeous lattice—they see the connections, and recognize how great, and how tiny a thing each life is. They aren’t worried about “rewards” or punishments. Their behavior is not from fear of reprisal. They just flow…and it’s really stunning to watch the calm of them. They can embrace any human emotion…but they are choosy about which they will hold. Negative energy consumes too much of their lives, so they tend to step away from it. Some people wear their anger…their hurt, or their disappointments. They clutch the bad stuff to themselves like a teddy bear…afraid to let go.  

    The blissed out have learned to sift out the hubris. They are aware of what each emotion, each stimulus, each thing we allow into ourselves costs. And they accept only what they wish to let in.

    Sort of mind blowing, no? It’s all about awareness…choice, and the colossal act of “letting go”. Imagine NOT being the center of the universe for once…and discovering that in doing so, you are suddenly free…price beyond rubies!

    So for the skeptical, Buddhists are not perfect…but they are MUCH less likely to add to your angst than someone else, who assumes they know what you need on a Cosmic level. So Sutra Dude…am I close?

     

     

     

  • All The Information In The World…

    EXCEPT where there is very little information.

     

    I was doing some research last night on a topic, siblings and Aspergers. I’ve worked with a few, but I was curious to see if there was anything I was overlooking. So I tucked in with a copy of the Oasis System, and Tony Attwood, both highly regarded resources. And hit a brick wall. The Oasis book must have 800 pages…there were barely four references to siblings—each not even a paragraph. So I tried siblings and the handicapped, looking for something applicable. Same deal. A lot of online articles on that specific topic…but very little actual help. It’s like looking up something definitive on menopause, or diabetes. The only thing all three have in common is that they are highly individualized…and therefore have virtually no “tried and true” methods and techniques for coping.

    C’est la vie…but it’s frustrating indeed to be surrounded with millions (literally) of references on anything you could wish…and very little about what you NEED to know…

  • The Corner Of Joy & Bliss

    For the last two decades, I have not enjoyed weddings.

    For the last ten years, I found them downright painful. Some of it was because of my own situation, no doubt…but I finally figured out why the old ladies cry at weddings… and it was hard to look at them the same way again. (All weddings end in tears, one way or another. Either death will break the bond, or life will make it too darned hard to stay together…hence…tears.)  I talked to my husband last night. (I can’t call him my ex til the paperwork is filed and final. So…the uncomfortable word is “husband”.)

    HE had a lot to say.

    He said that he finally understands why I left.

    That he really LIKES the person I am becoming…how much she reminds him of the woman he fell in love with. How he admires my independence…and how much he REALLY wants me back…which left me speechless. I AM better than I was. I am stronger, and I am starting to heal…but the only way I got to this point was to completely upend and my life…and leave it. That would suggest that the life I left wasn’t good for me…the word “toxic” occurs. I sleep at night now. (Before I left, I barely got 4 hours a night). I’ve lost weight. I am not constantly on edge, or in tears over small things. I don’t feel old, used up, or broken anymore. I’ve learned to step back from the things that hurt, and look at them dispassionately. And in the process, I learned stuff I never really understood.

    1. You can love someone…but not live with them.

    2. You really can’t make someone happy.

    3. Some people have a capacity for Joy (note the capital?)others do not. They can coast on someone else’s for a while…but they can’t own yours…and they can’t find their own inside themselves.

    4. If someone says “I don’t know why I let you go.” RUN. They are being honest, but they will make the same mistake again…because they really don’t know. It’s hard enough to be given up for a reason…but like they said in the movie Willow “I was your moon, your stars, your velvet night…and IT WENT AWAY?”

    5. When you reach the point that you are just slow killing other, someone has to be the grown up…and leave.  (And don’t insult me with that quitter nonsense. I put 30 YEARS into my primary relationship. I tried. I made myself into shapes and forms I still can’t understand…but eventually understood I was working alone.) The reason marriage counseling fails is because it’s too damned HARD to change, and by the time most couples have serious issues, they are set in stone. They are hard wired to each others buttons…and so angry about their own needs that they can’t get back to a simpler place.

    6. I love my husband. I probably always will. But I am not the solution to his problems. I’m not the answer to his pain. Telling me he can’t be happy without me was terrifying to hear…because he’d never really been happy with me. He liked my company for a while. But after a time, he started finding things to dislike. If I did a hundred things, he was angry about the 101′st thing…that I hadn’t done. If I did something well, he had “constructive criticism” about the way I could do it better next time. At some point, my life became an endless gauntlet…a race I  could not win. It was “Fight or flight”, and I was too tired for the battle.

     

    While we were talking, he said “we” a lot…but by the end it was mostly “I”. His needs. His feelings. I’ve had six months of introspection since I fled NJ. I realize what I did wrong myself…and I know I “meant well”…but I had my own part of sinking this ship. I accept that, and own my flaws. But I didn’t miss the point that when I left, i got BETTER. I’m not afraid of trying anymore. The only thing that really scares me is the thought of returning to a life that was slowly choking the life out of me. My life is not “perfect” now…but there is much to be said for being able to sleep. There is a beauty in waking up, and not cringing…or worse, pretending to be asleep until you hear the door close…just so you won’t have to face anger, or disdain.

     

    I did not stop being a “married woman” when I left in September.

    I stopped being married, when the thought of staying made me cry harder, than the thought of a life alone.