May 2007 Archives

hi. (updated)

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editor's note: some of that just didn't deliver the way I wanted it to. it sounded... just not right. so I fixed some of it, and now it's different, and it says different things. why am I typing this, when I am quite sure no one reads it anymore? or do I know, really, somewhere, that a bunch of people do? like the last time I thought that, and I got an email from a random girl about cancer and eating peanut butter and it amazed me. so, yeah. so I'm going to stop talking now.

***

6:30, Monday evening. I just made a great dinner, proving that practice makes... well, better, at least. I found a great pair of dresses at Target the other day.

So I'm going to Target, kind of annoyed. Some days I embrace simplicity and broke-ness and having less and wanting less, because there's a freedom in it. It's hard, but it's so much easier most days. And the other day was not one of those days, going to Target, pissed off. Pissed off that I had to go buy a dress at a big-box store. Like going to Wal-Mart, only not as gross. Long story short, I found so many cute dresses that I couldn't decide. I looked good. I wanted to buy five of them. I settled on two.

Point being (if I have one) that I get so much proof. It's practically relentless. And I doubt, and second guess, and push things away, and convince myself that it's all just a coincidence. And it's not. I mean, I suppose some things have to be a coincidence, but most of it is not coincidence.

I'm on a roller coaster somewhere between fairly rational and wanting to jump out a window. I can be cruising right along, minding my business, feeling like the work I'm putting in to not being an asshole is actually starting to help. When I don't hate you, I don't hate me, and I only hate you when I hate myself on some level anyways. And then I get my head split open with a bat, and I crumble to a heap on the floor (or, in the car, like Saturday) and in those moments, it is an absolute and utter truth that I can not go on for one more second. That it's just too hard, that missing my mother hurts too much, and that someone is going to have to physically come and pick me up because I'm immobilized. And I crawl upstairs, and take a long shower, and functionality returns, and the eventually my head stops screaming and I can sit and be present.

But that dull ache, the noise, it never completely goes away. For a long time, as I stayed sober, it got quieter... and when it wasn't quiet, it was because I was doing something to aggravate... something. Whatever the issue du jour was. And as I keep staying sober, I learn that there's not noise because you're Bad or Wrong or Messing Things Up or whatever. That sometimes, it all just hurts. A lot. And that life is hard, not because I'm pissed off about having to go to Target to get a dress for a wedding, but because it's just - well, on that day, that's what was hard. And Saturday, missing my parents was hard. And today, I had an alright day, and I worked hard, and I did my job well. But - it's not always necessarily something that has to get fixed, because I always want to Do Something About How I Feel. I heard an old guy once speak at a meeting and he was all, I don't know why everyone feels like they have to go around taking their emotional temperature all the time. Just go do whatever it is you need to do, and shut up already. And then, it offended me. And now, sometimes, it's right on.

Yeah. So - right. So I don't have to fix stuff, because a lot of the time, it's not anything I have to be better at or try harder at and if I was only doing more or working harder or praying more or saying less then everything would be alright. It's another extension of "if X happens (boyfriend, job, etc.) then everything will be fine" except this kind has better intentions. But still. It still doesn't work.

I had no idea what I was going to write about, but I just knew I needed to. Funny what comes out sometimes, I wasn't even thinking about all of that - or maybe I was. Obviously, I was.

Funny how we have little to no perspective on what's happening to us or around us or in us sometimes. Kristin talking about writing... I mean, for me, she is writing. Like, Kristin = writing, not, Kristin is writing something right now. I learned to go to my notebook (well, then it was a yellow legal pad, stolen from a box in the supply room at Cyber Research or something) by watching her, and less-ly by watching Kristy. But Kristin was more consistently pure about it, it was like Kristy needed it to be a show sometimes. In fairness to her, not all the time, Kristy did write some brilliant stuff and a lot of it was just like the rest of us did it, with inkstains on her pillow because she fell asleep before she could write it all down. And I saw that happening, and I remember Kristin's picture, on that boat in the sun, and how perfect that moment was, all frozen and complete, even though it really wasn't at all, or maybe that day it actually was. And I had to write - I had to. Crappy stuff and stupid loveletters to asshole boys and I started to question everything I did and every step I took. I couldn't stop comparing myself to everyone around me. I'm not in a band, I don't stand for much, I don't have a glass cabinet full of notebooks, and I haven't been consistent, if anything I've been consistent with being inconsistent. I look at it now, and I think that maybe this is just how I am - somewhere between fucking up and succeeding. Not bad, and I'm not wrong. And It's not always that I have to try harder or do better. Sometimes I should work a little more, and sometimes I should just accept things and go easy on myself.

It's only taken about sixteen years of writing (sometimes) to not have to constantly judge how I feel by how everyone else seems. I only do it some of the time now. And it's taken the entire seven years I've been sober to just begin to learn to not beat the shit out of myself constantly. But it's so strange to me, to have someone that epitomizes (sp?) everything that writing is and means and everything that being true to yourself is all about could struggle with - well, with being that, or not knowing that. It's bizarre, and so familiar, all at once. Sometimes, I wish someone could just show me myself, and go, here. This is what the world sees, in the big way, not in the one particular person you're talking to way. And here are your strengths, and this means this, and that isn't about that so stop telling yourself _________ because it's just not true. And these things over here, yes, keep doing all of that, because it's honest and right. I want Kristin and Donna to follow me around all day just to help me get through... all of it. To help me tune the station in a little bit better. I guess that might sound strange, but it's true.

So when will I truly have that perspective on myself? Or can I not have it, simply because I can't detach from looking at me or what I have going on? I don't know. Am I'm happy with steady improvement, with working on the things that need work and letting the other stuff just go the way it goes? Right now, I guess. Definitely not all the time. More accurately, not feeling like I'm good enough doesn't paralyze every fiber of my being like it used to, it's better some days, and still just the same some days. And even as I type this, doubt creeps in and I'm quite sure if I sat here and wrote about this same stuff at this same time tomorrow, that I might be on the other end of the stick. That it's just that I'm not trying hard enough. But I could still say it's not crippling anymore. And if for it to be more not crippling takes another decade or two, then I guess that that's just how it's going to go.

I have no idea why I just felt compelled to write all of that. I should go, before I decide not to post this because it's stupid and nobody wants to read it, anyways.

Bon courage,

Victoria

It's Monday. In two days,

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It's Monday. In two days, I will have been sober for seven years, and in thirty days, I will have been quit smoking (is that grammatically correct? I don't think it is) for three years. Oh, and in twelve days, I'll celebrate my thirty-first birthday. Looking back on my blog entries and life patterns, I can now say that the end of winter is usually the hardest part, and that most transformations take place soon thereafter. (Including quitting drinking, which was the first thing I put down, a year before I got sober, a year and a month to the day). February is horrifying. Then things light up through spring. Maybe that's what happens to everyone? I don't know.

I need health insurance. I need to seperate from my mortgage job completely, because I don't want to do it anymore, and as a result am doing a bad job. There's nothing wrong with that, it's pretty commendable and leap-of-faith-y of me, but it will leave me without insurance. Right now, I'm paying out of pocket about $350 a month, plus copays (including $100 for brand-name Wellbutrin, because the generic they replaced Buproprion with is junk). That's like, $4000 a year plus. I think I'll get COBRA if I quit, which is good for a year and a half... it's just not working for me anymore. The mortgage job, that is. I think if this new gig doesn't work out, that I'd rather get some job at Yale with benefits and pensions and whatnot, instead of doing sales. Fuck sales. Seriously.

The new gig being Catering Manager for Koffee. I love using capitals for that, although it's probalby not technically necessary. I got over the hump of current payscale not affording me much in the way of owning a home and popping out babies, but since that's not happening right now, I'm not going to worry about it. And the potential to go from base to that plus a percentage of regular customers' orders is valid, real, and attainable. It's not sales to me, even though it technically may be - I'd be taking all that marketing and people skills experience and using it to go out to people in the community, to promote something I believe in, for people I believe in. I mean, Duncan (who owns the place) is basically sustaining this whole little mini-community of people, and makes decisions around that. I mean, he's not going to blow his business or anything, but the main purpose is about being good and doing what's right.

So, I think this is going to work. I don't think I have to worry about insurance, being that COBRA is probably cheaper than what I pay now. So that's that, I guess. And the other thing about it all is that good, honest, hard work is... well, working. Getting up early, working hard, paying dues, earning my keep. It's good for the soul, as far as I can tell.

I'd love to be smoking right now.

I found out today that my mom knew she was dying after that last surgery she had. I've since written about it, when she went in for surgery, and there was more there than they had seen on the x-rays and scans and stuff, so they couldn't operate on it. And they were going to put her on some other stuff, and go back in in six months or whatever to operate. And I wrote about how none of us put it together then that it meant that the current chemo wasn't working, and it wasn't different, it was getting worse. Apparently, she had talked to my aunt on my dad's side then and told her about it, only the truth of it was that they told her there was nothing left to do. And when she was getting loopy in the emergency room, saying snippets of conversations with other doctors, she wasn't going crazy. How there was a spot on her lung or something, and then later in a dream-like state in her hospital room, when she said that someone had said they were sorry because there wasn't anything they could do - it was coming out. The truth.

I suppose the truth is that my mother, until the very end of her life, took care of everyone else. I used to think it was some kind of escape mechanism, that she was neglecting self, over-mothering, being a caretaker, and all that sort of stuff. But I've been pondering it since, and especially with getting this news today - I think it's just who she was (is?) and that it's not a fault at all. She was selfless, down to the bottoms of her feet. It's who she was, it's what she did. And she did it to the very last day.

It's just such drastic information that I don't quite know where to put it. It's comforting and disturbing all at once. I cried, and then I did some laundry, and now I'm just kind of sitting here. Writing. Turning things over in my head, like cards. One at a time. Thoughtless, but totally aware. My head is turning inside out. St. Elmo's Fire is on, and everyone is drinking liquor and smoking cigarettes all over the place. And I've been walking to work and replacing my lightbulbs - baby steps. I'm doing what I can, whatever that means on any given day.

V.