Monday, July 5, 2010

Matching words for words


There are long-awaited joys and eagerly anticipated treasures.  I like the thrill of the waiting, the excitement as I cross off calendar dates, inching closer to the prize. I am a fan of the knowing.  I delight in paper chains and use treats as motivation to endure shallow days.

But there is something about unexpected blessings that whisk my breath away, climbing upon my shoulders with the weight of gold.  There is an unparalleled gift of the surprise, powerful above all to veer a day into a course on fulfillment.  Just as the piece of sky that falls on a sunny day can crumble routine in a flash, such is the force of a kindness that I never saw coming.

I spent the evening huddled around my puppy as she shook and cowered, certain that firework bullets would be invading her couch as any moment.  Tail tucked and burrowed under my legs, I couldn’t explain the concept of celebration or point out the pretty lights during the five hours that neighbors had fun on July 4th.  I gave too many treats, shut the windows and turned up the tv volume, hoping to convey safety with soft pats and noise. By midnight, the sparks had ended and I turned on the computer for one last email glimpse before bed and there it was – the unexpected jewel.

As a writer, I write to help myself, composing lessons of healing that I need to hear, stringing phrases of hope that guide me to my own wholeness.  As I writer, I speak my truth explore my heart as a destination.  I write for clarity and balance.  I write to uncover my voice and study my soul. But there is a secret wish lingering behind the page, the unspoken dream that my words might touch others, leaving a mark of honesty upon their journey. 

As a writer, there is no sweeter blessing than hearing that my words made a difference to someone else, that they struck a meaningful chord or touched hidden joys. The jewel awaiting me last night appeared in my inbox, a note forwarded by an editor who had published one of my articles: “this is for you... it's not often articles make such an impact... so take pleasure in this!” I sat back after finishing this reader’s letter, awestruck with her message and grateful for her kindness. To hear that my article “had a profound effect” and that it “went a long way toward healing my heart and...her words broke through somehow and ‘made sense’ to me” sang with healing for my own self, patching insecurities and doubts with her affirmations.  It was an unexpected pot after a bumpy rainbow, reminding me of how powerful words can be and how we can never know the ripples originating with simple strands of letters.

There are days when the joy seems too much, celebrations where I try to save some for later, becoming overwhelmed with too much gladness to truly appreciate.  There are days where blessings pour forth and everything appears shiny; days when laughter spills over sharp edges and friends flow through hours.  There are holidays and birthdays, graduations and special occasions.  There are ‘firsts’ and honorable mentions, sunshine arriving at the doorstep, bows tied with ribbons of fulfillment. These are usually the times I have anticipated, preparing myself for the happiness as I try to stockpile it in corners of my soul for the dry months.  Anticipation can also backfire, building up a moment until nothing in reality could possibly fulfill its shoes.  But still, I value the excitement of promised bliss, needing the carrot at the end of stick to trudge on. 

However, at the end of a long day, yawning in the dark beside a worn-out puppy, I anticipate nothing.  So the email explaining that my words worked “a miracle” in her life floats above all joys. This sense of contentment is unfamiliar, a knowing that something is right in my world and that I am finally finding my footing. Maybe I’ll run out of articles to write or will never earn enough to pay my rent.  Maybe I’ll be uninspired next month or bow under shades of misery and pessimism.  Maybe the sunshine will cease and rosy glasses uninspiring.  Maybe.  But for tonight, the words of a reader have brought me peace.  Just as my words touched her, her comments unwrapped trinkets of satisfaction and purpose, lending hope to my evening and delight through my veins. 

As I planner, I like to know.  As a compulsive list-maker and organizer, I prefer tidy schedules detailing joy with asterisks. But today I am grateful for the gifts of surprise. 

Today I am blessed by the unexpected.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Land of the Free


I walked around this ‘land of the free’ and peered through my bars.  I lingered over easy laughter and shuffled back to my cell.  I dragged my chains along, artfully hidden as I attempted to live a life bound by prison guards. I noted the wide skies and open hopes of visitors, listened to courtyard chatter of spontaneous trips and carefree goals; fine for them, but after decades of time served, it became easier to wish small, dream in baby steps. I was resigned.  I had been released too many times, only wind up right back on the same cell block, having missed the familiar safety and structure. I applied for parole again and again, craving escape the second I returned, never managing to remember parts that rubbed soft skin raw as I romanticized prison days akin to summer camp.

After a while, it was easier just to settle in and accept my lot.  I was giving up.  I had become one of those names met with rolled eyes, ‘a lost cause’, a ‘lifer’, and in the world of self-imposed prisons, there is a hierarchy where ‘lifers’ reign.  Rather than a jailhouse for criminals, I did the rounds: hospitals, locked units, and treatment centers scattered around the country.  For the most part, front doors were unlocked and participation was voluntary.

As my own jailer, it was up to me.  I had three choices. I could flee from help, snuggling into sickness as I waved my white flag and escaped in the night. I could turn my back on health, escaping my cell but sealing my own miserable prison eternally shut.  I could stay, decorate my cell, adapt to new routines and changing rules, and know only an institutional life. Or I could try the key in my pocket. The key that didn’t unlock hospital wings or start get-away cars. When you create your own prison, locked cells and confiscated shoelaces are irrelevant.  If you are the first to volunteer, line up to sign the lease and don’t know that there’s life outside of the prison, then it’s not the judge that decrees your fate

Sentences were handed down by a locked soul, and fear that handcuffs hope.  If you start to believe that there’s nothing better, that joy isn’t an option for you, the delusions cross over into reality.  I convinced myself that I was just as happy as you were, waving good-bye after prescribed visits and stacking one more brick around my heart for protection.  I believed that this was as good as it gets, and fell prey to my lies that I didn’t care, didn’t dream, and was perfectly content.  I defended my victim title, pointing fingers and listing excuses for why my name once again appeared on the cell block roster. 

But the truth was I carried my freedom key wherever I went, a touchstone of optimism despite claims of defeat.  I memorized its edges just in case I ever wanted to use it, just in case it was true that my laughter still existed, and was just dusty from a lack of use. After decades of self-imposed incarceration, worn out from bars and locks, I began to ponder life outside.  I began to test my freedom key, small bites of joy as I glanced over my shoulder, not straying too far from the guards.

 I unlocked my arms and reached for friendship.  I twisted the knob of rigidity and stretched my boundaries, slowly, inch by inch.  I made copies of my key, sharing with family and friends for the moments when I misplace my keychain, along with my motivation and courage. I unchained my determination, struggling to scrape off the stubbornness that had coated it for years. I learned to unfasten worry, to manage rather than fall prey, to reach out rather than slip down quicksand.  I unbolted the door, and inhaled freedom. 

Still, I was unaccustomed to the strength of the sun, requiring monitoring and guidance in order to develop a thicker skin.  I still am tentative, testing out dreams only after I check for the safety net.  I sometimes find myself in old locked cells, although at least now I know the escape route lies somewhere within me. Sometimes I forget my motivation on the kitchen table, or let my hope slip between couch cushions.  Sometimes I stand behind familiar bars, content with the familiar, even if it is concrete walls. 

But today I get to live in the land of the free.  Today I join the ranks of the living, liberated from rusty chains and paralyzing fears.  Today I know how to laugh until my stomach hurts, and the blessing of daydreaming.  I get to have carefree moments, and samples of balance.  I sip hopes and educate myself on how to dream big.  I am released to love, and can find gratitude in the breeze of silence. I am free to make decisions and stumble over failures; free to dare and explore, and free to learn the language of my soul. I am free to romp in parks, eat ice cream for dinner, and trip over old baggage.  Mostly, I am free to make my choices and opt for thriving over surviving. 

Today I get to live in the land of the free.
Happy Independence Day, Lauren.