All static and desire
You're blue in the face from navel gaze
You set yourself on fire
You strip down and lay yourself out
I know you can't fake it
But are you tired and naked?
Are you tired and naked?
Yeah, I'd sooner chew my leg off
Than be trapped in this
How easy you think of all of this as bittersweet me
R.E.M., Bittersweet Me (1996)
So this happened today, among other
things. It's bittersweet. Bittersweet me. This is what I wanted, right? To sell
the house and move on? Now that it's actually happening, it's tough. Damn
tough. In the scheme of life, it's not all that awful. Relationships end.
Houses sell. Possessions are divided. We move on. I'm not a Syrian refugee, or
an Iranian refugee, or a Sudanese refugee, or a climate change refugee, or any
one of the other people fleeing violence, tyranny, famine, extreme poverty,
lack of natural resources.
I should recognize my privilege in the
world and stop complaining. But that's not productive. One of the first rules
of caretakers is that you must take care of yourself. When the plane is
crashing, you put your oxygen mask on before your child's. Emergency responders
treat their burns before they rush back into the fire.
When your life is a meteor about to crash
and explode into a thousand shards, causing mass environmental change, you
don't stop to say, "Gee, someone else is in a worse position in life than
me right now" and let it crash on you. You run. Or you freeze in a panic
of terror, knowing unthinkable change is happening faster than you can plan
your next move.
That's a long way of saying "Relationships are hard"... sometimes. Is
there an effortless relationship? I think it's impossible but then I
think of my Potatoface friend who, after almost a decade, consoles me with hope
that it's possible for things to be simple - providing we acquaint ourselves with a complementary
personality. Of course I know other people who get along swimmingly. They don't
have the knock down fights where voices escalate above the din of a world gone
mad. They don't reach into the depths of unutterable slurs, slinging curses
from room to room. They don't re-write the history of how you got from there to
here, and everything in between.
But I have a difficult passion. I'd like
to blame it on being an Aries. As much as I try to wrangle it into
submission, the passion often overtakes sensibility. One minute, there's calm
among chaos but faster than the tattoo needle scars your skin forever, my
passion awakens. Sometimes this is great. At work, I love projects that I love.
I will stand up for my municipalities and their leaders even when I'm doubtful. When that fiery email
refuting a narrow perspective is sent two minutes too soon, it's not great.
This passion makes relationships tricky.
The same passion that instigated this
life change is needling between utter sadness, hope for future change, and the
acceptance that nothing - absolutely nothing - is permanent. When the fog of
this bittersweet passion separates, a theater curtain pulled back for the
opening act, I am hopeful I'll see the myriad lessons learned. I already sense
myself correcting past mistakes as I move forward. Simultaneously, I recognize
when I take us down a narrow rabbit hole of circular logic. I knew one of these
days that the for sale sign would go up. The reality is quite different. How I
handle this is how I learn from this.
So, what's the lesson learned? There's a for sale sign up in front of my house. It wasn't
there when I left this morning. But there it stands, taunting
me with my passion's failure. I know this is the
right step to take; the caretaking I need to do is for myself. The
suffering around the world is no less important, no less noble, but if I'm not
taking care of myself, I'm no use to anyone else.
Still, it's bittersweet. The end to a
dream we failed to realize together, accepting a plan not communicated,
diminished hopes set in a bar too high to cross. One step forward in the
direction towards "moving on". The potential that letting go of
the house is letting go of our interconnected lives.
I'm tired. My emotions are naked, laid
bare and stretched out in front of me. My foot has been in my mouth too many
times. Chewing off my leg to spite my solar plexus - my energy source. And us?
Both blue in the face. No one's happy. No one's an innocent anymore. Mud slung
ceiling to wall to floor. This isn't easy for anyone. But here we are.
Bittersweetness surrounds us, taking shape in the form of a for sale sign.
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