As I watch
my ninth graders stumble through the pitfalls of being – well – themselves, I
often think about, and in all honesty, pass judgment on, their parents. There
are a handful of students with parents who I know care because I have interacted
with them myself, even if they sometimes care in ways that confuse me. There’s
an even greater handful whose parents I know not the least bit about and so all
the evidence I have is the student himself. (Do not ask me about the small, but
infuriating, minority of parents who I have interacted with and know do not care; that is for another blog post
that is likely to someday get me in a lot of trouble). Though, of course, I
know it’s unfair to assume that the child is the mirror image of his parents’
parenting abilities, what I do know is that the child is a close reflection.
This is not the first time I will admit that my own upbringing has left me very
little room to fail and that any credit I take for any successes, great or
small, in my own life, should be given back tenfold to my parents and my
sister, without whom I would be a wretched semblance of myself or nothing at
all.
Which is
why I have been thinking lately about my core. You may already know that I was
22 when I had my first midlife crisis. But what I am only coming to find out
this year is that I had this crisis some four years premature of actually
growing up, which is quote phenomenal, but has led to no end of trouble.
Because
this year, the great, wide world, through the key hole of little Sacramento,
has come knocking on my door – which has only very recently become only very
partially my own actual door – and informed me that I have been welcomed (to
use the term loosely) into the land of the adult, where employment (and
unemployment), responsibility (particularly financially speaking), bills, and
taking care of my own damn self are now very much my personal concern. I read a
sign on Pinterest that said, “My friend told me I was delusional. I almost fell
right off my unicorn.” My core, this past two years, but particularly these
past few months, has been severely shaken, and I can tell you – as an avid
unicorn rider - that it certainly does
feel like falling off.
Now, if I’m
being really honest, I blame my parents. You could say for giving me the
unicorn to begin with. There’s a line in an Alabama song that goes, “leaving
home was the hardest thing we ever faced.” That has certainly been my
experience. Because as I sit, even here, even now, in this dear apartment,
surrounded by things I cherish, given to or instilled in me by people I cherish
still more, I still find, amidst all this bounty and blessing, that I am
struggling horribly with extricating my own core from the beautiful,
sustaining, joyful tapestry of family and home that I have left behind. And
lately, as my core finally begins to acknowledge that I am here and not there, and all that here and there implies, it finds
itself (I find myself) bare and fragile and a little (and sometimes a lot)
wobbly. Very, very wobbly.
So I’m
working on strengthening my core. (Lord knows one of them needs some
attention!) On figuring out how to reweave myself into the tapestry in a way
that fits right now, today, here. So that I feel warm again, without feeling as
though I am constantly grieving for the past. So that I feel me again, even when I can’t be
surrounded by all the things that fit me best.
-R.E.A.
Dear Roya,
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm sure the events of the past week have reduced your cores' strengths to the pits of hades... but if it helps at all, this blog post basically sums up my feelings of late too, so at least you helped your little old (homesick) sister out :) I miss you... sometimes (most of the time) growing up seems to suck. Anyway, thanks for the laughs, the good cry, and once again, the realization that what I feel CAN actually be put into exact words (by the one and only, you). Our unicorns need a play date. Big time. How about right after Christmas???