And just like that, it’s over.
All the twinkle lights and
farmed trees in their red
buckets of sugar-water,
windowsills with garland and
Doctor Who marathons
opposite Jimmy Stewart on the
old movie channel.
I’m sleeping until noon until
next year whether it
brings happiness or the
drab kind of weather that
requires gin and a therapist.
The truth is we never know
what’s coming. All we have
is this moment, this one
breath for our senses to
collect all their data on
the now, regardless of
circumstance, and find
their own reasons to
choose love.
Tag / love
Impossible Soup, Part V
I don’t want to make you wait for part V so I’m posting both parts together. Even so, I must admit I’ve been avoiding writing the end of this story, but it’s real and true and needs to be finished.
Jason, Linda and Michaela left for school in Nebraska, in the summer of 2007. It was a long way, but we were planning to road trip out there as soon as we got a new car that would serve us more safely as we crossed the mountains.
I wasn’t particularly good at getting on the phone. I never have been, actually. They were well acquainted with this fact, though, and Facebook helped a bit. No matter, they were embedded in our hearts as family and we ached for their presence. We deeply grieved their leaving, but knowing they were enjoying their new life, doing things that they loved, was comforting.
Every time we heard from them Jason was ecstatically happy to be back in the world of theater. He wanted to teach because he was the kind of person who wants to share. He wanted to pass along his passion for the stage and help those younger than himself to find their own ways and discover their valuable places in life. He was a giver.
In October of 2009 I woke up to a text message from Jason. It was something about the hospital and ominous tests, but I couldn’t associate it with my vibrant, magnetic brother. I decided it must have to do with another friend. All day though, that text kept interrupting my other thoughts. By evening the air was ominous. Something in me knew that the ground under my feet was shifting. By 9:00 we knew that Jason had been admitted to the hospital in severe pain, and we were waiting for test results.
I spoke with him in the hospital the next day. “I didn’t want to be a wimp if all I had were hemerroids,” he said, and I scolded him and laughed. We talked about the schools where he’d already sent his Curriculum Vita, looking for a teaching job. I was supportive and enthusiastic until he got to one in a city I rather loathe. I was silent for a moment and he roared with his big Jason laugh. We agreed to hope for a different place to go.
Test results started coming in and I got over my phone aversion quickly. I had to know what was happening. The news wasn’t good and we asked if and when they’d like us to arrive in Nebraska to visit. Thanksgiving, we decided, would be a good time. It needed to be soon. Jason had stage four rectal cancer, and a bunch of us started getting back together on Fridays to pray, while Jason was on speakerphone. We took up a collection to get them a juicer, and I started trying to find funny gifts I could send to try to lighten their spirits. Jason got a colostomy. He actually begged for it after a few horrific times in the bathroom. He went to start treatments in New York City, where they had the best specialists. His wonderful family joined him there. His brother, Matt, helped him travel.
The treatments started and he went home to Nebraska. He moved down to the basement because he was so nauseated he couldn’t stand to be jostled in bed. He felt sidelined and alone a lot, despite all the love so many tried to give. His Mom moved in to help for a while.
He was gray when we got there. He tried to hide his suffering but I grew up with someone in chronic pain. I know what it looks like. The spark had gone out of his eyes. I discovered that all I wanted was to be near him then, to soak up his presence as though I could keep it with me in a jar forever. We were still talking as though there was hope, but something in me knew. I just knew he was leaving, but hadn’t yet boarded the train.
We helped with his furnishings in the basement so he could be a little more comfortable and then we had to come home to work. Only a few weeks later, on 01/11/10, he did board the train and left us behind, bereft and longing. And yet, we couldn’t help but notice the exact date of his departure as one final message of hope. Jason was forever seeing repeated digits on the clock. They’d come to be a kind of language between him and God. They were reminders to him that he was right where he should be. I can’t tell you how often I see repeated numbers now, or how I sense his presence in those moments.
I flew to Nebraska immediately with a friend, and Keith followed a couple days later. If there was one good thing to come out of it all, I became connected with Jason’s warm and loving family. We all clung together for days as though we were on a life raft. It didn’t seem possible that a man full of more life than anyone else on earth would be gone at the age of 37. It was immutably wrong. Yet, it was true.
Here’s the thing. I don’t have any clear lesson to give about God here. I know Jason had a clear and shining faith and I believe he is with God now. He’s doing wonderful things, leading theatrical productions and writing musicals. What I want to avoid though, is even a hint that God allowed it all to happen for a reason, so Jason and all of us would grow and be better people. If that’s true, well, I’m not investing in that God. That’s the mad scientist God I grew up with, and whoever invented that guy can have him back. So I guess I lied. There is a lesson, at least about the God I believe in, after all. It’s a broken planet. There are many, many things that happen here that are fundamentally and excruciatingly wrong. God is with us in that. He teaches us how to love each other so we can survive and have life again, later. He groans with us and collects our tears. He takes us home, in the end. I don’t know why he doesn’t intervene more except for the whole “free will” bit, but I refuse to accept that it’s because we’re in a crucible he designed so we’d be perfect, like some crazy Aryan family. If he is love, that is not okay with me. I can’t reject God altogether, either. He was Jason’s God, and Jason knew stuff. I’ve experienced things of my own. I believe God sent us Jason and his family so I could have my first brother, be seen, hugged, accepted, and nursed in some sense, into accepting life. Jason would be heart-broken if I were to lose all those precious gifts because he’d simply had to shift dimensions. He’d want me to love more, to accept love more, to continue to open my heart to God and health and living my life as deeply as I possibly can, and I try each day to honor that.
Jason was right about one thing. He wasn’t the last brother I would have. I have at least two more, to date. I grew up without much family, and things were messed up with Keith’s family and me, too. Jason opened the door to having adopted family. I can share my life and figure out who the safe people are. And I can look over again at the clock, see 11:11, and know Jason is well, and near.
Impossible Soup Part, IV
One day when we were standing together at church Jason looked me in the eye and said, “I’m not the last brother you’re going to have.” He had that serious look when he said it. And he had the gift of knowing seemingly impossible things, so I believed him even though it made me sad. He’d let us know that he was applying to MFA programs in theater all across the country, and we knew he’d be snatched up if there was anyone smart left in the world. Our time with them living close by was drawing to an end, and I didn’t like it one bit. I couldn’t help but be happy for him, though. He’d sacrificed so much, and his heart so obviously yearned to be involved with work on the stage. Keith and I were both thrilled and heart-broken.
We knew already, I think, that the Friday Friends as such could not survive without them. They were the glue. Jason naturally ran interference between a couple people who cared about each other but weren’t really compatible. Linda was the planner. She gave our little troupe of eccentrics stability and just enough structure so that group events actually happened. They both had a gift for building bridges between people who wouldn’t otherwise get along.
Before they left we celebrated our tenth wedding anniversary. Keith had vowed to himself that it would be a big deal, because our honeymoon had completely and totally sucked. I’ll leave that for another post. Just think band camp, Wisconsin, car problems, emotional meltdown, canned fruit and Precious Moments figurines. It was all kinds of bad at epic proportions. Anyway, the up side is that Keith splurged on our tenth. Keith’s Dad had been a spy (yes, really) and I claim he inherited the spy gene. He’s profoundly gifted at sneakiness, in the best possible sense.
He created our anniversary as an event that would unfold for me bit by bit. Dinner at a nice restaurant was first and he made sure there were flowers waiting at the table. When it was time for dessert he managed to subtly steer me toward a different cafe. When we went inside he spoke to the hostess and we were magically whisked to the front of the line. As soon as I went through the doorway I saw, sitting there as though they didn’t live 2000 miles away, my childhood pastor and his lovely wife. I think I may have squealed. These were people with whom my family had spent holidays. Tom had married us ten years earlier and had proven himself trustworthy and kind in immeasurable ways. They’d known me since I was eight years old and my heart was already full with the grand surprise when they said they were going to visit Barbara’s brother the next day and would love for us to come along. I was over the moon.
The next day Keith ran off on some mysterious errand and returned with a friend’s red, Mustang convertible. Then off we went in style, but strangely, when we finally got to Barbara’s brother we only stayed for five minutes and left again. It was somewhat surprising since they lived so far apart, but none of my business. I happily tagged along until I finally realized we weren’t in fact headed toward home. We actually had arrived at the ferry to Orcas Island. The four of us were going to spend the night at one of my favorite places on earth, in a lovely little inn overlooking the east island bay! Heaven! I don’t think I’d ever been so happy. I was happy on our wedding day, of course, but I was too nervous to be what you’d call “giddy.”
After breakfast the following morning we went back to our rooms and Keith pulled out a dress of mine that he’d packed with his things, along with the shoes I’d worn to our wedding. I’d been purging our 600 sq. ft. condo earlier but he’d snagged them out of the bag to Goodwill. Now here they were, transformed by an artist friend to match my dress. It says something about my commitment to yoga pants that he still had to convince me to dress up. I did finally consent and he took me out, across the street to the adorable white clapboard church I’d fallen in love with when we’d been to the island before. And then I recognized it. My pastor’s deep baritone came rumbling a hymn out over the lawn and my knees began to tremble. I made it up the steps and through the front doors, and there were most of my dearest friends, all gathered together to celebrate the two of us as we renewed our vows. There was a full reception following, complete with a professional video message Keith had made to tell our story.
Yes. It was the most romantic thing ever and I felt surrounded by love. Most people wait until later, maybe the 25th anniversary, for a splurge like that. Most couples haven’t overcome all that Keith and I have. Keith also said he felt a certain urgency about it. Jason and Linda were still with us and the Friday Friends were still intact. We didn’t know how much we’d need the memory of that special time, but we did know that life is short. We’ve always wanted to live in the now, and not wait to do everything we dream of at a much later date. So in that time, with all those precious friends, we knew we’d done something important. It wasn’t just fun and romantic, although it was both. It was an alter of sorts in both our lives. We could look back and be reminded of the many great gifts we’d been given.
Impossible Soup, Part I
A while ago I mentioned that I grew up as a fundamentalist evangelical. I did, in fact, but I want to say first that the pastor of my church was a man of great integrity, humility, intelligence and faith. He’s even come forward and admitted his previously held views about women in the church were wrong. It takes a lot of courage to admit something like that and move in a different direction. While there are beliefs that I’ve since questioned, revised or discarded, he has remained a true friend and someone for whom I have great respect and affection. I want to make that clear.
When I look back on what was truly damaging to me during that time, for the most part it had nothing to do with the actual teachings in my church. There was a strong emphasis on grace and unconditional love. There are a lot of people who came out of that environment as strong, confident individuals who could think for themselves. I think what made the atmosphere so toxic for me was that what I heard and how I saw those teachings lived out at home were completely different, even though the language was the same. Both the church and my family talked about grace and unconditional love, but at the same time my parents and I were living in constant judgment and what I’d call Christian perfectionism. When I made mistakes, affection was revoked. God began to appear to be an irritable, insatiable scientist attempting to perfect his creations. He put us through tests and torment to make us better people. He dealt with us as though we were rats in a maze. Later, when I was grown and married and going to a different church, I wasn’t emotionally capable of having children. The looks and comments people threw my way gave the distinct impression that I was not just a rat, but a diseased one. I was an outsider rat who made all the others feel weird about themselves, or me, or both. In retrospect I’m sure there were people who didn’t look at me that way, but they weren’t in my immediate Christian circles.
Now, just for clarity, I do not actually view Christians as rodents. I suppose at the time I generally viewed all humanity as trapped in a sort of puzzle box, looking for a way out so we could prove we were smart enough to do it. I didn’t think we actually were smart enough to succeed, so the whole thing seemed pointless. Let’s just say it was a melancholy time for me.
I also don’t know why I never dumped the idea of God altogether. I’ve certainly considered it. Who wants to worship a mad scientist? Well, okay, Neil Patrick Harris as Dr. Horrible does deserve a second look, but even he (as the title would suggest) turns quasi-bad in the end. My only solid explanation for why my faith hasn’t died has to do with the people who’ve been in my life, mostly since 2001. In August of 2001, my husband and I moved away from the mid-south, home to some of the most radically conservative groups in the country, to Seattle, Washington. Seattle is home to the opposite. I have to admit, I felt I’d come home for the first time. When people asked if I had kids and I said “no,” and they followed by asking if we were planning on kids only to receive an “I don’t think so,” they didn’t look at me like I’d grown an extra head. They generally said something like, “Cool,” and looked nonchalant. Simply not having to face that constant judgment was an incredible gift. Beauty is also something that helps my heart connect with divinity in a non-judgmental way, so it didn’t hurt matters that Seattle is absolutely stunning. The city has mountains on both sides and water everywhere, enormous trees, and wild ferns in the abundant forests. The fact that the average temperature in the summer is 75 was pretty great too, especially after all those miserable summers of lawn-mowing in my youth. Seattle was my Mecca.
It wasn’t without its challenges, though. My husband and I both had hard times with work. I landed a position in a hospitality firm where the work was fun, but the atmosphere was brutal. Take a whip to me and I do not get stronger, I get lacerated. I was working in this kind of environment when I developed generalized anxiety disorder, acid reflux, and IBS. I’ve since gotten professional help and done my own research, and there is a complex form of PTSD that appears to apply to people like me. Children who grow up in unpredictable environments of emotional abuse*, grow up with a lot of the same symptoms as those who grow up in war zones. The world is perceived as a profoundly dangerous place and there’s no escaping the sense of imminent doom. Perhaps (as in my case) the person learns how to keep up a facade of professionalism in certain, known environments, but can’t contain all the physical symptoms such as shaking hands or the need to keep a giant bottle of antacid at the front of the desk drawer. Then there’s the oppressive fear of having one’s brokenness discovered. Something can sometimes act as a trigger to a full panic attack and knowing that this can happen leads to increased anxiety. Eventually a person can wind up at a faculty dinner staring at an otherwise harmless bowl of tomato soup knowing it’s physically impossible to get the soup successfully transferred from the bowl to the mouth without looking like an alcoholic coming down from a three month binge.
I believe the seeds for all of these issues were planted a long time before we moved to Seattle. It’s just that moving to Seattle and working for a brutal employer brought a dormant condition into a full-blown crisis. I developed insomnia due to the anxiety. My heart raced as though I were being chased by wild dogs, every single, absolutely otherwise normal day.
Nights were the worst.
“What do you want from me?!” I’d yell into the dark, pounding my fists against a pillow. “I’m sorry! I repent! Whatever I’m doing wrong just tell me and I’ll stop doing it!!!” I knew I “should” have peace. The Bible promises the peace that passes all understanding, and if I didn’t have it, it was obviously my fault. I didn’t get help or go to the doctor for five years. I lived with it, if you could call that living, because if a person had Jesus s/he wasn’t supposed to need therapy.
This is the point at which some amazing people came into my life and loved me. I can’t explain why that happened then and not before, but it did. And these people happened to believe in a God who seemed better and kinder than the one I’d experienced. This is what kept me then, and what has continued to keep me from abandoning my faith altogether. Being surrounded by truly loving people who weren’t freaked out when I felt (and actually was) absolutely mental, was a miracle. It doesn’t happen for everyone. People slip through the cracks all the time. I don’t know why I was the recipient of such kindness, but I’m everlastingly grateful. On more occasions than one, kindness has saved my life.
This has deeply affected who I want to be for other people. If I err in life, I want it to be on the side of compassion. My grandfather would’ve curled his lip and called me a bleeding-heart liberal, but all politics aside, I really don’t have a problem with having a bleeding heart as long as I’m not bleeding out. I want to be emotionally and mentally healthy so I have resources from which I can give. I never want to be the person who excludes someone else because s/he’s different, or lives in different ways, or loves in different ways. I know I’ll fail sometimes, but so help me God, I never want to look at another person as though s/he’s grown another head just because something about him or her is beyond my understanding. I don’t want to look that way if I do understand and just don’t agree. I don’t think agreement is a pre-requisite to kindness and love, and I don’t think it’s my job to go around correcting people. For one thing, I can hardly navigate my own life without adding ill-advised attempts to figure out other people’s lives or even my own bookkeeping. If God is any good at his job at all, he can take care of directing other people while he’s out there finding me a good accountant. There are plenty of people trying to impose their beliefs on other people, with extraordinarily damaging and sometimes horrific consequences. What I don’t see enough of is the kind of love that can see beyond the surface to the value of another person’s heart. We’re all in this together. I want to act like it.
*Too often we view abusers as evil beasts who intend to harm others in horrible, violent ways. My own experience is different from this. My parents meant well. Their parents meant well. If you follow my lineage back you can find generation upon generation of abusive behavior, on both sides of the family. We’re taught how to behave as children, and if we don’t have the courage or resources to confront our past, learn, grow, break down, and heal, we just keep the cycle of abuse flowing. The catch is that just because someone doesn’t intend to abuse you, doesn’t mean they don’t do it.
Circular Thinking
You say this and then
feel that which makes
me this that then
does that. My this
is brave when you
say that, I fall my
feel when you do
there. Where I go
down you flash your
these my darling
pair I feel you leaving.
You say stay I feel my
going with my feet
still solid weeping.
Loving you feels you
are saying, then I do
and lay the weaving.
You are you and I
feel me and then do
choose to be and free
the you in you, the me
in me, which feels like
death and life and
breathing. When we do
and feel and are who we
are made to be, believing
I can break the pattern
strong and walk toward
you and me apart, together
loving, honest saying you
do this and I feel that
which leads to us
and brings us back.
