Archive for » 2009 «

Grief is a troubling disease.  There are no words for it.  It only seems to be.  Its source only seems to exist, like the dream I had last night.  The raping only felt real.  The suffering was—is only grounded in an unconscious thought or a memory, perhaps, but even that only seems to exist.  Memory is only what we make it.  It’s never grounded in reality.  Much like dreams, in fact.

Much like this depression—ungrounded, unconscious, only what I make it.

But that isn’t true either.  It’s grounded in me.  Its limbs grow limbs in my unconscious.  And it isn’t what I make it.  I wouldn’t make this.  I couldn’t even conceive of this if I weren’t suffering from it from daybreak to dawn.

And all I want is a little rest.  Can you believe it?  I’ve always said I’m a simple girl with simple needs.  I just never really understood how basic my desires really are.

Our desires.  They’re as fragmented as ourselves, but one thing I’m certain of is I’m not alone in my efforts to cure this affliction.  I’m certainly not among the more progressed, either.

Instead, I’m like a child longing for home.  Except, there is no home.  There never was.

Only this nausea deep within my stomach, driving all my guts and heart up my throat.  I’ve always been like this—hoping for happiness, lonely amidst the crowd.  Pathetic, I think, sometimes.  Though apparently not as dramatic as I’ve been accused of being.  “Grieving is a troubling disease,” I began by stating.  I should know better than to minimize this to a mere “trouble” or to empower this thing by calling it a “disease.”

I should know better.  I should know a lot of things.  At the very least, that feels apparent.

I wrote this days ago.  I don’t know why I never posted it.  It’s something to think about, that.

Sam has been suggesting I write about something else every once in a while, just to get away for a little, to lighten my mood when it gets too dark for too long.  I know I should have other topics to talk about.  I used to write poetry.  What happened to that?

I haven’t passionately created anything out of words since I first started college.  I used to think it was the busy schedule.  But now, with a 9-to-5, it isn’t that.  My hands don’t seem to connect to anything other than this awful burden of memories.

Again, I find myself given a worthwhile suggestion, but the path to fulfillment is left to me to determine.  I’m left wondering if I should start another blog, one where only those ideas I have that are untouched by depression or darkness go.  Then again, by doing that I’m fragmenting myself further.  I would also subtly project the untrue message, rape survivors don’t have thoughts concerning anything other than their mental anguish and social difficulties.  As I don’t wish to commit either of these sins against myself and others, the idea for a new blog is joining murder and coveting.

So, that officially does away with my only idea.  Obviously, I won’t stop thinking about how I can diversify my writing, but if you have any prompts, criticisms, suggestions, or otherwise, feel free to volunteer them to me now.  I’m a desperate woman.

Sam: in whose arms I only ever feel safe, when he’s holding me tightly, and my face is in his shirt, breathing in the faint scent of vanilla dryer sheets and Corduroy’s aftershave and Yardley’s cucumber soap.

Otherwise, I need to close my eyes, remember there are walls and doors and locks and panes to keep the bad men out.

As I lay petrified, shaking in his arms last night, I heard him say words I can’t believe. “You’re safe.”  I repeated them like a Catholic prayer, under my breath.

I’m safe. I’m safe. I’m safe.

As I keep drafting resolutions here and in my journals, I can’t help asking myself, as I have so many times throughout my short years, what is it about this act, those moments while you’re struggling against them, and after, when you can’t anymore, that has put my safety and self-worth into so much doubt?  What did it take away, and what can I get back?  What can I reclaim?  And what do I need to learn to live with?  What do I still cry after so many years?  Why does it feel like it just happened?  What is this?  Why is that?

And a big question:

HOW DO I MAKE IT ALL STOP?

I know better than to think there’s an old me they destroyed and a new me that’s not as good as the old me.  I know better than to think the rapes were something I did to myself or that there’s something about me that made them do those things to me.  I know better—now.

But what happens after you realize all those things, but you’re still not okay?  Do you just work harder, faster, more efficiently?  Do you try to control more elements of your life to make sure you feel safe, protected, certain at all times?  To make sure no one ever victimizes you again?

Or do you let loose?  Do you accept your lack of control in this life and embrace yourself with understanding and kindness?  But this time, you don’t force it upon yourself.  You keep encouraging reminders all around you in the form of friends, family, and maybe not a few notes-to-self.  It’s what Buddhism suggests I do.  It’s what Sam and everyone I know tells me to do: be kind to yourself.  Be compassionate to yourself, above all others.  It seems so simple, so easy to put into action.

But I can only try.  Like I always do, I try the new thing.  I try the simple yet overwhelming suggestions I just don’t know if I’ll be able to accomplish, but I’ll try if it means stopping this pain and keeping back the hysteria.

Then again, maybe that’s the point of mettā, the loving kindness we show ourselves and others.  Maybe that’s the point everyone’s been trying to make to me, but I haven’t gotten it: stop trying, and just do.  Just live.  Just breathe.  Just love myself with the same kindness and patience I show others.

Right.  Okay.  I can do that.  I can do anything if I just—

And there it is, the problem: how do I go about this?  Is it a day by day thing?  Is it a minute by minute effort, the kind that’s usually more exhausting than effective?  My cultures are really good at extremism like commercialism, drinking, and arguing.  But loving?  Patience for my limitations?  How does one go about that?

Here’s the best question of all: how do you go about that?  Or don’t you?