Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Letting a Little Light into the Dark

I am sorry, again, my gentle readers, for being Absent. It is springtime, and it is May -- historically always a difficult month, for it has always encompassed the end of the school year which is notoriously complex, and it is also the anniversary of the Unmooring -- and I am, unsurprisingly, at a loss. There is a Void, and I don't know what is missing, so I don't know what I need to do to fill it. 

I'll be going to a college reunion soon, and I have mixed feelings about that; for college, though formative and transformative, was also lonely and complex, and I never know quite what emotions I will have about revisiting the place and the time. I am quite fond of my alma mater; but the me that I was then, still struggles with the experience. (A classic case of it's not you, it's me.) 

I used to be a warm, loving, open person. But as time has gone by, all the ways I have been able to express myself have slowly disappeared, as the people have... moved on: my children have grown up and left home; Beloved Husband is often busy with his own personal projects and hobbies; Cherished Friend is at a distance; the members of my family of origin are all a plane ride away; I no longer have any local friends. I don't even have an elderly chihuahua -- just aloof rabbits who eschew even a few pats. Somehow, I have ended up with no one nearby to bestow extra kindness or tenderness, or for whom to do the little things I used to enjoy doing. I feel alone, and in the Dark.

I have a resource that I need to use: I am lucky that my lovely mother-in-law is here, a bright star in a cloudy sky. She is one in a billion, the kind of person I can only hope to be. And I should let go of the sadness I feel at the distance of all my other people, and drive the half-hour cross town to spend more time with her. She has been endlessly kind to me since the day we first met; it's an honor to be in her orbit. She is so filled with light, though, that I am having trouble letting her into the dark place where I have found myself. 

I've built a hardened shell around my heart. One day at a time, one step at a time, perhaps I can soften myself again, if I sit in the light for a little while. 

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Bun Orbit

He's like a little moon, at a distance from his beloved giant planet, ever watchful. 


Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Guardian of the Sink

Courtesy of Offspring the Third.

MEOW MEOW.


Thursday, May 2, 2024

Much of a Muchness

 Herself speaks.

The other day I had a weird little flashback to a birthday party I attended when I was in grade school. There had been outside activities, and the birthday girl's mom had invited all of us inside for cake and opening of the gifts. When we'd entered the living room, she pointed out some knickknack that she thought the party-goers would like to see. I remember plopping myself down on the couch next to the end table where the knickknack stood, so I could take a closer look; I did not reach out to touch the knickknack, but merely sat in the position nearest to it on the couch. The hostess promptly reached out to me, and repositioned me to sit farther back on the couch, away from the knickknack. 

It was... a moment. 

She was not overly aggressive, I don't think, nor did she verbally scold me. Nevertheless, she made it clear that my physical action, and my body, were too much and not where they belonged somehow. 

Perhaps I remember that moment because it was the earliest awakening of self-consciousness of my physical presence in front of other people. 

I was too much for her. I made her uncomfortable, for herself and the safety of her knickknack. I needed to sit back, make my movements less, make myself smaller. 

One of the many lessons I failed at, in being a dainty young girl. 

-----

Here I am, some fifty years later. Half a century of trying to stifle my natural inclination to be ebullient, enthusiastic. Making myself figuratively (and attempting, fruitlessly, to be literally) smaller.

And, similarly, decades of tamping down inherent feelings of kindness/friendliness, lest they be misinterpreted. We all know how it goes -- when a young woman is warm or affectionate, she must be promiscuous; when a middle-aged and overweight woman is warm or affectionate, she's pathetic/attention-seeking/disgusting. 

I have come to the conclusion that I am angry that Life has tried to squeeze my spirit into a tiny, acceptable box.  

Be small! Be quiet! Don't sit too close! Don't be too loud! Don't take up too much space! Don't be too nice! Don't be too kind! Don't love too much! 

On the other hand, though: there's safety in the box. 

One is less likely to get one's heart trampled if it's safely in the box instead of out there in the world, offering kindness to people who consume it without reciprocation. Or if one's heart is in the box instead of exuberantly enjoying a moment in way that causes Life to notice and to threaten to snatch back that molecule of happiness. 

Still.

All things considered: I would like to be Louder. To be More, not Less. To love harder, not restrainedly. 

Where do I begin?