Monday, November 10, 2014

Hungry

I've been listening to a podcast with Jon Gabriel and one of his successful coaching students.  She talks about being hungry... hungry for the emotional work she has had to do to be able to begin to finally feed and nurture herself and lose weight.

I have been realizing lately just how hungry I am.  I've done SO MUCH emotional work over the years.  Endless self-help books.  Years of therapy.  Years, now, of meditation and spiritual practice.  

I've dating anyone who would love me.  Dated anyone I thought maybe I could love.  I've spent the past three years, now, not really dating.  Last fall when a dear friend started emailing me regularly, deep in the throes of divorce pain, I thought, again, that maybe THIS was the thing I'd been waiting for my whole life.

That's even what he advertised.  And, at least he admits it, now, with some level of remorse for what he unintentionally did--which was to do exactly what so many had done before him.. make promises he actually couldn't, or didn't want to keep.

And I don't even have (much) regret.  What I have is really, just... sadness.  A lot of it.  My ex-husband and father-of-the-children, in a bizarre twist of life weirdness, has been taking meditation courses, and is now in what we call "core" where he is beginning to wake up to all the things he's been so, so sleepy with for all these years.  And I'm the one who is crying.  Crying about the divorce again (after 14 years).  Crying about the childhood stability that my children didn't have.  Crying about a near empty nest... about losing a key component of my identity that goes back half of my lifetime to this point.  Crying about not knowing what the next forty years could possibly look like since the first forty have been nothing like anything I'd planned.  

And as I continue to wake up to all the things I've been so, so sleepy with for all these years, I realize that this mad hunger I have had for so, so long... is not really what I thought I was hungering for.  I have lived an imagined life.  Not imaginary.  Imagined.  I have spent the majority of my 46 years saying that I'm a poet.  A dancer.  A gardener.  A camper.  A hiker.  A physical being.  But I never dance.  Or garden.  Or camp, anymore.  I haven't actually hiked for years and years.  I haven't gardened for so long that I've forgotten how to prepare soil, would have no time to get my hands dirty.  I can't even find time to clean up the dog poop in my yard.  I've been so, so tired.

I've survived.  I've made it through each week with a few pennies left between paychecks most weeks.  And I've learned and learned hard lessons.

It's true that I've developed some level of expertise in some areas.  People tell me now that I've got some wisdom, and that I'm a leader.  But I still clench my stomach each day as I drive to work--afraid, maybe, that someone will figure it out.  That I have no idea why I'm here on this planet, or what it is I am doing that makes my life meaningful.  Aside from feeding my children, which I continue to try to do, even though two have now grown up and moved out, I am not sure what good I am to the world.  And for some reason, it actually matters.

I'm a skeptic, hungry to know that the world has meaning.  I'm a healer without anyone to heal, having lost the belief that this world can be healed.  I'm a mom with only one child left at home, and a really huge (for one person) house, with old dogs who won't likely live much longer than my last child's final days of high school.  And then it's just me, plugging every extra cent into my nearly empty-at-this-point retirement account, and hoping someday to carve out a few thousand dollars to go see The David in Italy before I die. Me alone in the world, trolling around social media each evening, looking for some illusive connection to other human beings, looking for some online political discussion to crash.  

I'm hungry to get all my words out.  I guess, I'm hungry to write. I used to fill journals and journals with words, working out my emotions and my ideas on the pages.  I no longer believe that anyone will read them.  I doubt those old journals will ever be opened again.  God knows I don't want to re-read all that nonsense.  I've lived it already.  There's nothing I can do to bring back those old imaginings, really.  My kids are grown.  Those opportunities are gone.  What's left is whatever it is---but nothing I had planned, exactly.  It's a strange, strange place to be.

I want to dance I think.  I want to camp again, and hike.  I want to read books.  Not listen to books on audible.com.  I want to read them.  And I want to dig deep into the soil and find a way to heal it, to plant in it, to grow something that will produce a fruit with viable seeds.  

I am hungry for connection.  I am hungry for myself.