Sunday, June 17, 2012

Dear Atlanta

Dear Atlanta,

Wikipedia tells me that you are nicknamed "city in a forest" and at 36%, your tree coverage is the most of any major US city. This makes me happy. Mostly because trees are the lungs of the earth and I love getting a blissful oxygen rain whenever I sit under them. Wikipedia also says you have the third-largest concentration of Fortune-500 companies in the country. This is pretty impressive, for sure. But I must admit, it's a bit intimidating for a small school teacher like me. I'm just hoping that somewhere in the midst of all your trees and Fortune-500 companies, you have a little place for me.

Yours Truly,
Leah


Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Waiting

The days pass with the kind of aching slowness that makes me doubt mankind's true understanding of Earth's rate of revolution in space.

Why does it feel like I am always waiting?

For the end of the work day. For Friday afternoon happy hour. For that phone call. For something to change. 

Do the changes happen deep inside me, on a scale so small and slowly moving that I cannot perceive them? I try so hard to change and grow and get better every day. I so try. But sometimes I swear it feels like my shoes and hands are glued to a treadmill and someone thought it would be funny to unplug it and watch me struggle.
....

I just want my heart to feel alive again.


Monday, April 16, 2012

The Night I Say Goodbye to You



I watch you walk away.
Your scent still lingers on my skin
And I linger in the parking lot,
feeling frail and tired from
all the trembling in my insides.

A sliver of moon hangs
low and red in the night sky,
a sharpened sickle, mischevious,
and slick with blood.

I look down
and wouldn't be surprised
to see a stream
flowing out from my own chest.

It happened so fast.

I don't feel the pain yet.
But I know it is on it's way.

For now I just sit and stare,
Amazed at both the love we share
and the damage done.

"Is this the end?" I ask the moon.
The tears (and better judgment)
behind my eyes scream
"Of course it is, you idiot!"

But the hope beating,
bleeding,
in my chest whispers,
"Wait and see."

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The problem with memories

It is singular how soon we lose the impression of what ceases to be constantly before us. A year impairs, a luster obliterates. There is little distinct left without an effort of memory, then indeed the lights are rekindled for a moment - but who can be sure that the Imagination is not the torch-bearer? ~Lord Byron
 
Recently, memories of my honeymoon have haunted me. I have been waking up in the middle of the night, wracking my brain to recall every detail of my few days in Hawai'i with my new husband. This honeymoon was ten years ago.

I have bits and pieces. Small details like the smell of my lotion, the color of the bedspread, the feel of the rental car. I can remember general events. Like how we went snorkeling one day, how we shopped in a street market another day, and toured a pineapple plantation on another. But the real details, the parts that I wish I could remember clearly, are the exact same parts that will forever remain foggy in my mind.

If you had asked me to recall these details just a year or so into our marriage, I would have smiled broadly and not hesitated to brag about our trip. How excited we both were. How the plane ride seemed to last an eternity, how John had done such an amazing job planning our activities and finding our condo. I would have painted you a picture of two blissful newlyweds, giddy with young love and oblivious to most of the world around us. (And it is at this very moment that I remember one tiny fragment of a memory. Goosebumps form on my arms as it hits me for the first time in years. There was a pool in the center of an open courtyard in our building. One afternoon we were coming back from a day of adventures around the island, laughing and hanging onto each other as only a happy couple can. We were poking fun at each other and John threatened to pick me up and throw me in the pool. I feigned a look of shock but then dared him to try, quickly darting away from his grasp. And although I was fast, he was faster, and he caught me quickly, laughed as he swept me off my feet, and proceeded to hurl both himself and me into the pool. We rose to the surface fully clothed and even more hysterical than we were before we jumped in.)

Yet, if you asked me to recall what I remembered from our honeymoon a year after our divorce, a much different picture would have emerged from my mind. The demise of our relationship and the bitter ending in the courtroom would have somehow leaked into my honeymoon memories, staining even the fondest of recollections. I would have told you about how I felt a sting of disappointment when all I really wanted to do was stay in bed with my new husband, but that all he wanted was to get out and adventure around the island. I would have told you how I hated the feeling of tension between us in even trying to order dinner out at a restaurant. Was I dressed well enough for him? Did I order the right food so he would feel I had appropriately impressed the waitress and the patrons sitting around us? I would have easily remembered the bitterness I felt when he was almost too embarassed to pull off the road for me to take pictures of the tropical countryside because he was worried about what other people would think. I would have told you that all the signs of our failure as husband and wife were all there, all along.
 
Or were they?

As I have been plagued by questions these last few nights, the wisdom of the daylight has brought me just one conclusion: that we only truly remember the moment we live in right now. Once this moment is gone from us, our perception of the past begins to shift and change as time passes, as our emotions ebb and flow, and as we allow others to impart their own bias on the memory.

I was convinced the other night that perhaps if I just made a phone call to my estranged ex-husband, I could ask him about his own perception of these memories that have been haunting me. Surely he could shed some light on what really happened. But no, this is not really a solution. Because just as I have shifted and changed in my own understanding of what happened to us and to our marriage, so has he.

So, in reality, asking the question, "What *really* happened?" (as if just one version of the truth exists, apart from either one of his or my experiences) is completely useless. The "truth" of the marriage, the "truth" of our divorce, and the "truth" behind why it ended lies not in me or him, but instead, somewhere in between. A place in the past that neither of us will ever be able to accurately conjure from our memories. And not through some fault of his or my own. But simply through the nature of time.

The idea that the experience of our marriage (from it's inception when I was just fourteen to it's demise almost twelve years later) lies safely dormant in the catacombs of the past is actually more healing to me than anything else. No one's interpretation or recollection or explanations (including my own) can ever truly affect it. It is in the past. Tucked away. Perfectly preserved. Truth and all. What matters now is... well, now. This moment.

And this moment, I am strong. I am happy. And I am grateful. For my past, for my experiences, and for my ever-changing memories.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

On having a big heart

The tendency is to hold back. To conserve. As if the love inside is limited in supply. As if one day I'll wake up and find my heart emptied of all it's love, without warning.

But it's really not like that. My love is an ever-renewing resource.

Moving to Memphis has shown me that. When I first moved here I was broken and tired. Scared that I wouldn't have the momentum I needed (or the motivation) to reach out to another new group of friends. I left behind some amazing people in Wilmington. People in whom I had invested. I could call them at three in the morning and they would know just what to say to rescue me from whatever emotional sand trap I had found myself in. People who had watched me and encouraged me to transform from a depressed divorcee who was recovering from a twelve-year relationship in which she had never really asked herself what *she* wanted, to a spunky, adventurous and independent woman who knew exactly what she wanted for herself.

That doesn't come around every day, I would tell myself. People who love you like that? Those are few and far between. Right?

So upon my arrival in Memphis, my motto was to tread lightly. "You probably won't find anyone as good as you already had," I told myself. Because who is *really* that lucky? To have *that* many amazing people in their life? Not possible. "Besides," I told myself, "You need to save your love for the really important people you haven't met yet."

But as I got settled in my little pink apartment on the third floor, I couldn't keep my heart buried. I knew I wanted another strong woman to connect with. I knew I *needed* another strong woman to connect with. So, I imagined her. I closed my eyes and pictured her. She would be a lot like me, and she would be able to know my heart because hers was just like mine.

Maybe her name was Lindsey. (The name my parents almost gave me when I was born.) That sounded like a good name.

I wondered how many Lindseys there were in Memphis. (My Facebook search yielded several thousand.)

And then I found her. She was smiling in her profile picture, and I saw something familiar in her eyes. So I messaged her. And the rest is history.


The whole story of Lindsey and I is really a testament to having an open heart. Lindsey, along with several of the other beautiful, strong women I've met here in Memphis have all taught me that. In fact, I wouldn't have this absolutely amazing network of friends that I do have if I hadn't opened up my heart and loved on some strangers long enough to make them my friends!

Keep opening up your heart. It will absolutely surprise you with it's capacity to reach out and love others.

My heart has been broken. Numerous times. I went through a painful divorce that I was pretty sure had shattered my heart into a thousand pieces. I lost friends over it, and then lost other friends over various disappointing circumstances later. I have started over more times than I care to admit. Each time, my heart feels raw and vulnerable and completely disoriented. And don't get me wrong. There is definitely value in isolating yourself for a time while you heal and to get your feet back underneath you. But I have found that my heart never completely recovers until I swallow my fear and step back out into the world to love again. It feels so counter-intuitive in the beginning. It feels like it's never going to work. All this putting-yourself-out-there isn't going to amount anything.

But then something magical happens. You start to love. And it feels good. And you start to realize it matters less about how much others return your love, and more about letting your own heart gush all over everything and everyone around you.

Having a big heart is a beautiful thing.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Anger

No, I will not send you naked pictures of myself. You may be newly single and bored, but I'm sorry. I won't do it.

No, I don't want to meet you for cupcakes in the middle of the day so your fiance won't suspect anything. And no, I'm not going to wait around for you to finally work up the nerve to tell her you're not happy in your relationship.

No, I don't want to listen to you brag about your asshole tendencies.

No, I am not impressed by your fan club. And unless you are actually *doing* something worthwhile with your life, I don't want to sit and chat about all the amazing reasons why you *could* but just aren't quite there yet.

We all have flaws. I know this. I will be the first to admit mine. I lost my first marriage because of them.

But sometimes, life is about growing up. And learning lessons. Lessons like how not to use others simply because you're lonely or bored or horny. Or how you really need to be emotionally available in your heart to make the next relationship work. Or how being mad at the world doesn't help anyone at all, and that self-destructive behavior is completely selfish and unproductive. Or how talking about things is useless if you never actually get out and do them.

Grrr...


Sunday, January 29, 2012

Getting Off Track

This sappy self-help book I’m reading called Mars and Venus Starting Over (yes, I’m lame and reading sappy self-help books) makes the argument that as long as you have unresolved issues in your heart over a past breakup, you will continue to attract the same kind of mate. The kind that is not right for you. You will continue to force yourself to replay the same situations over and over, albeit with different people, until you finally face the underlying problem inside your own heart. 

So, here I am. Just having recognized the problem inside my own heart, I said goodbye to yet another man who wasn’t right for me. Because I refuse to keep playing out the same mistakes again and again. Call me a heartbreaker. Or a pessimistic fool. Or a selfish bitch. (Of which I’ve been called all three at one time or another.) I have been walking in circles around a track, holding onto the same worn out patterns of behavior, unwilling to look myself in a mirror.

(On a side note, I suddenly understand why people often hold onto things that aren’t necessarily good for them. Because in the very least, they are familiar. The track, regardless of how small and dirty it is, is also the most safe path to take. Because you always know where it leads. Getting off that track may seem exciting at first, because of the countless possibilities that exist outside of it, but ultimately, fear creeps in. Too many options are terrifying. Standing out in the open, arms empty, with no idea where to go next, and suddenly the idea of that old familiar track doesn’t seem so bad.)

The funny thing is, when I finally started looking at myself in a mirror, I wasn’t as disappointed as I thought I would be. In fact, with each passing day, I was more and more proud of the woman standing in front of me. I was learning to be kind to her. To forgive her for each time she'd get back on that old, worn out track. As much as I knew how much of a mistake it was for her to get back on, I also knew that she needed that time to gather her strength a bit more. And she needed to keep loving. Even if it was a man who wasn’t right for her, she needed to keep loving him. To remember what loving feels like. To remember why we love others. To let her heart get bigger and stronger. And, in a weird way, I think that man needed her a while longer for the very same reasons.  

An even funnier thing is that my worst fear, of standing off the track, isn't nearly as scary as I thought it would be. I'm not really ready to take off running in a particular direction, but for the first time in a long time, I'm happy to be standing here, in my own skin, and proud of it.

For now, standing here, off track, is the best place for me to be.