Archive for » September, 2009 «

Yesterday’s post, unedited. All apologies. Life kept me from posting it:

Today was my “get back in touch with people” day, known for the sake of this post as Reaching Out Day.

Several months back, it occurred to me that I spend more time in my head than most. With that in mind, I started taking a day every few weeks to get in touch with friends via text or a phone call or even email. I once had the bad habit of ostracizing good people by never making time for them. Since I started doing my bimonthly–admittedly, sometimes they’re just monthly—reaching out days, I’ve established much stronger relationships. In fact, the friends I have now, while we may grow apart or move apart or just plain part, as so often happens, I’m glad I know them. I’m glad I’ve given them the opportunity to contribute to my life and my personality.

Leopard Fur kills me with his humor, his brilliance, his charm, and his fashion sense. I admire him as I would a statue; I love him as I would a partner. We look at one another and know, the loud posturing and the overachieving is a protective mask between us and the world. At once, it’s an expletive aimed at those who would keep us from feeling good about ourselves.

Nyte: my Asian angel. She’s as fragile as a porcelain doll. She doesn’t know yet how fierce she can be. She’s afraid of it. What the Asian culture has done to her is very much what the Hispanic culture tried to do to me, except it did it in two different ways. Our cultures demand duality. Perhaps that’s so for men as much as it’s so for women. I won’t minimize their struggle. But speaking as a woman observing another, I can safely say, the externalization of our duties yields demands that no human can expect themselves to be able to meet. We are the doting and loving wife: sexy, prudent, and forgiving. We are the mother: a disciplinarian, a caretaker, a chef, and a maid. We are the daughter: loyal and traditional. And we are the workaholic: sharp and personable and relentless. We’re so busy, we never think of ourselves.

That’s the point: we never think of ourselves. We submit to every system, internalize it so deeply, we convince ourselves it’s what we want. And maybe it is. My boyfriend invited a coworker to our house for dinner. I was ecstatic when they complimented my cooking. Watching them eat my food gave me as much satisfaction as hearing my boss praise me or being complimented on my fashion sense. I floated with glee.

There’s nothing wrong with deriving satisfaction from a clean home or a good meal you made yourself. The point is, you can’t do it for anyone else. You have to do it—and be honest with yourself about your intentions—because you’ll derive pleasure from the act. If you do it to please your husband or boyfriend, isn’t it then just telling him, “your pleasures are more important than mine”?

To this point, when I told a friend that my boyfriend was in a bad mood about my friendship with someone, they instantly asked me who I would choose if the ultimatum was put to me. I laughed as I read the text. “No,” I wrote. “He knows better than that. His choices are his. My choices are mine. And if he forces the choice on me, the choice will be put back to him.”

Thereafter, we wondered why women feel compelled to choose boyfriends over friends. We decided all reasons derived from a matter with their self-esteem.

Now, I’ll be the first to admit, I suffer from low self-esteem. You can read it all over this site, for crying out loud.

But I’ve done a great thing for myself, something a lot of people, much less women in unhealthy relationships where ultimatums would ever be seriously offer, don’t have: a support system.

Reaching Out Day is more than just getting out of my head, or reminding my friends I’m alive and well, or even just about returning increasingly harassing yet loving phone calls. More importantly, Reaching Out Day is my way of getting in touch with myself, the parts of me that aren’t in my relationship. True, the polyamorist lifestyle allows for a lot more of that than the conventional lifestyle normally does, but this is different. This isn’t carnal. This is friendship. This is connecting with others, and thereby myself. It’s exactly what my culture never wanted me to do. Unfortunately, Nyte is stuck right now And as I’ve learned, what’s good for me is good for my relationship.

Here’s to healthy growth.

Salud.

4:15 PM. I’m supposed to get out of work at 4:30, but it had been a long day, and I had cut my lunch short to get more work done. I justified it, and packed my stuff.

I got on the elevator at the fifth floor. As it moved down, I started thinking ahead to what I had to do between now and home, home and sleep, sleep and the morning, and what needed to be done tomorrow.

I was thrown back into awareness. The elevator had stopped too soon. I looked up at the numbers. The 4 was highlighted. I looked down at the doors, and, I realize in retrospect, I held my breath.

A large, squat man in a maintenance jumpsuit stood on the other side of the door. He walked into the cabin, and he pressed 3 on the console on the other side of the elevator. I went from scared to furious in nanoseconds. I thought, he couldn’t take the stairs? Maybe he has a bad knee. You shouldn’t judge. You don’t know his problems. Et cetera, et cetera, scolding myself.

While I was busy turning the anger in on myself, he moved toward me. I instantly woke from my daze, looked up, and stepped back. My breath was stuck in my throat. He stopped less than eighteen inches from me—too close in an otherwise empty elevator, and definitely too close for someone who had been five feet from me a second earlier.

The movement shifted from his feet to his arm. My eyes followed him. He pressed the console’s Open Rear Door button. The elevator door behind me opened, and he stepped toward it. As he did, I accidentally caught his eye. I noticed the gauze eye patch beneath his glasses, over his eye, as he walked away. I noticed the tired gait and the harmlessness of his spirit—for the first time. But I still looked over at the console on the opposite side of the elevator. He was at least being fresh, using the button as an excuse to get near me?

No. There no Open Read Door button on the other console.

New guilt washed over me. I realized he took the elevator because it’s the easiest way to get to the guts of the building. I realized he’d stretched the two feet between where he stopped and the console on my side so not to break my personal space. I realized I had been scared for no reason. I realized I was a wreck.

But I didn’t let myself think on it. When he disappeared, so did my memory of him. I couldn’t think on him and the fear he had arisen. Much easier to think about the car ride home, Sam, dinner.

Until I was in the community laundry room this evening. It was raining outside, so the room was empty. I had to turn on the lights before walking in. I scanned the room before I moved into it.

As I loaded one of the washers, the door squeaked open. Inside my head, I jumped up and screamed. On the outside, I looked up at a tall body builder carrying five loads of laundry in his right arm. He smiled, and said, “hey,” as one does to a neighbor. I smiled back, mumbled a “hey,” and focused on getting the machine loaded as quickly as possible. I didn’t stop for the bone white shirt amidst the dark clothes. I closed the hatch, loaded my quarters, set it to cold, hoped the white shirt wouldn’t get ruined in cold water, and I left the room without another word. I grabbed nothing but my detergent and my breath on the way out.

I’m not mad at myself. I don’t know what triggered this realization. Maybe because I didn’t picture Andy. Maybe nothing. But as I walked out of that room, as I thought of how alone I was, as I thought of what could have happened, as I thought of how I hated Sam hadn’t been there, how I hate that Sam could’t always be there, how I hate being so fragile, how I hate the lack of security, how I hate, how I—

I knew then. My reaction today wasn’t about trauma. My reaction was about being a woman.

I’m debating whether I should have written The Mental Healing Starter’s Guide, and if I should continue to council those who ask for my advice. All I think is, who am I to tell you what you should be doing? How conceited of me. Who am I to help anyone? After all, the most important lesson of all in the healing process: no one can help you but you.

Of course, you need support. You need help. Everyone needs help. We’re human. That was something I had to come to grips with as I overachieved my way into the hospital again and again. But I know that lesson well, now.

So why did I answer your question? Why do I always answer your questions, give you advice, suggest what you should be doing, tell you what you will be doing if you don’t change your ways—soon? I like to point things out that are emblematic of a person’s larger approach to life, but it’s wrong of me. I listen to you tell me you’re okay, and I say, so definitively, “No. You’re not. Look at this thing you do, and those words you chose to use, and your body language.” The audacity! True: I do know. I see it. I see that you’re not well, and you’re not even fooling yourself. You haven’t told me, but I know from your shoulders and the way you talk of men, you’ve been traumatized. I hear it in your jokes. I feel it when you smile. I know you weren’t kidding when you told me you had secrets, even though you laughed as you said it. I see you. I know you. You’re kind of like me. But that doesn’t mean I should tell you. If you don’t already know it, you’re probably not ready.

I can’t force self-awareness.