Monday, September 28, 2015

The sun is settin' like molasses in the sky

The face I still make when I am angry
When I was younger, my mother was my world. She was the person I thought could do no wrong. I saw the drugs, the alcohol, and the absences for days at a time. I did not register them as faults but personality traits. They were who she was. They were not bad. Nothing she did was bad.

I had this rose-colored image of her that I wasn’t able to shake until around age twenty. For twenty years I watched and allowed my heart to be let down time and time again just waiting for the moment when I would finally have a mother. Like a puppy, waiting by the door I diligently sat craving her love and attention. If that was just part of who she was, why did I have to feel so empty on nights when she was gone? To say I have abandonment issues would be an understatement.

Last week, my mother was arrested. When my brother told me the news, I stared blankly for a moment. I did not ask why. My brain automatically assigned my feelings to resignation and lack of interest. Another flaw in her personality. But I felt my jaw clench momentarily with anger.
When I thought about my reaction later, after learning why it brought an incredible sense of sadness back to me. Sadness I thought was long ago buried. I know that it will never fully be buried. I know that I will never fully accept the fact that my mother is not a part of my life and hasn’t been for quite some time now.

Nevertheless every now and then when I smell fried eggs the child within me yearns to be seated at the counter with my mother, dipping toast into eggs over medium and watching the yolk, like lava envelope the plate. Like a flashbulb memory I can smell the stale smoke and day-old Tresor perfume. Suddenly I can feel myself smiling unknowingly and I long to pick up the phone and tell her about my day. It takes everything in me to shove those emotions back and remember why not having her in my life is better.


I am no longer that mousy blonde child whose eyes peered through the diamond shape window of my bedroom waiting for the head lights of my mother’s car to appear after her absence. Instead I am an adult, with an incredibly large hole inside of me, wondering how I will fill the void and find acceptance.


Waiting to find peace. 

You can only lose what you cling to. - Buddah

Thursday, August 06, 2015

Yes it's true, loneliness took me for a ride

I got a massage yesterday because my back has been bothering me a bit over the past week, and I remembered that when I was doing regular massages, my body hated me a little less. Anyway, this was my first time having a guy actually massage my back in a professional manner.

So let’s first talk about the anxiety I had about stripping down to my underwear and exposing my back in all its naked and fat roll glory to a man I didn’t really know. That’s really it. High anxiety and insecurity. But I did it, and the massage was amazing, painful, but amazing. Working through the stress knots in my shoulders and the tension in my lower back that was already sore was exactly what my back needed.

But then halfway through the massage he gently takes one arm out from under my head that I had propped myself up on, because my boobs will never allow me to actually use that horse shoe face holder they have. Anyway, he’s got my arm in his hands hanging down below the table and he gently slides his hands down until the tips of his fingers graze the lower palms of my hands near my wrist and I realize how much I miss human touch.

It has been so long since someone has held my hand, touched my face, felt someone’s arms around me. And I have to say of all the things to miss about being in a relationship, this is what I miss most.
I’m writing about it because I was almost taken back by his hands grazing mine that I almost burst in to tears on the spot. Thankfully he bumped the wall with his chair and caused me to laugh instead.

“How are you doing?”

“I’m okay.”

No, that's not true. I’m lonely.

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Thinking outloud

I love when I read a book that as a writer causes me to think about the little details in my life. It's refreshing because if you ask me how I am doing, I will give an automatic response of something along the lines of "Same ol same ol." or "Just working." But there is a lot more to my day that goes unrecognized when you just don't take the time to think about it.

Its simple things like turning the page of a book you are reading and slowly letting your mind devour the words on the next page. Its something you often overlook and don't think about but it truly is more than "same ol" stuff because you are enriching your mind and traveling away from your own space into another.

My days are consumed with work, reports, calls, discussions and issues. And then I get to go home and feel the albeit hot wind on my face, the sunlight on my skin and the knowledge that I am alive. I am able to greet my dog with love and watch her rejoice at my home coming. I'm able to feel the softness of my cat's fur as she rubs her face against my hand for affection and feel the love from these animals.

Life is busy. It's complicated. And finding a book that puts details into daily activities makes me remember to put the details back into my life and remember that I am alive. And I am somebody.

Also... I'm back - Ish.