nine lives.
Most days I hold it
together well. Some days I set fires, I put holes in things. The storms come in
and just as quickly they are gone, those days are always the days I don’t want
to look at myself in the eyes. My shame stands taller than me and I let that mindset
run long and deep. The visions cut through my reality like a flowing river. First,
they trickle in, then they fill an area. Once the water is pooling over, why
not? Why not open the damn and let it go?
Soon I’m surrounded by
a raging river that would rather cut a mountain in half than ever think to
climb it. Everything stuck in gravity’s pull, reaching lower points after each
turn.
I was face to face with a mountain and I took a descending
path, I can surprise even myself.
There is an art to it, avoidance, and there’s a trick to
denial.
I sought what would kill me, but I couldn’t admit it. Not ever.
I would string along narratives. Connect broken pieces to resemble a whole.
Avoidance and denial stemmed from seeds I planted many years
ago in my thoughts. I tucked them away and as I was busy aging, so too were
those seeds growing.
The shame, anger, abuse, leftover childhood standoffs
unfulfilled. I sought out the stage for these shadows to be showcased but I was
never fulfilled being an actor of that sort. A child in an adult body. Seeing
my children’s eyes on me, that woke me up but I'd stepped off the cliff, I was already gone. Forever.
No coming back.
My actions, my past, my lowest point. I carried them all. Every
morning I woke and I ignored all of it.
Until it killed me.
I made it to my thirties. I had no wits about me unless I
was numb, being sarcastic, feeling aggressive or feeding the fuel source for my
all-powerful ego—the ego that wasn't carrying the weight, one hundred pounds, a
few bucks and some change. My ego wasn't raising my children. My ego was in a
neurotic loop, constantly saving face. When I hit my bottom that face shattered.
Life as I knew it was over.
It’s scary at the bottom. A person could get there having
burned every bridge, having severed every tie. Even scarier, a person might get
there surrounded by support but still feel isolated.
I knew one night when I was playing with my kids, that I had
died.
We made up a miniature game of baseball. We play it in my
front yard after I come home from work.
After two games I finally connected with the ball. The
excitement was sweet. I was smelling the roses. I hit a home-run. I knew I’d died
because I was in heaven.
Gradual movement. A nice forward momentum. Sometimes getting
snagged on thorns. Other times, cheering with my kids, happy to finally add a
mark next to my name written on my house with a blue piece of chalk. My name,
touching their names, an ode to my existence. I’m here now.
I can’t say how far away I am from the place where I shattered,
felt scattered, was unsure, became isolated, was dependent, the place where I
had support. The place where I died. The place where I was born. But if we have
nine lives, I have seven left.
This time I am grateful. So grateful.
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