I feel it. I name it. I let it go.
So it might surprise you that one quarter through that first margarita we started fighting. We don't fight often these days, and when we do it's usually quite civil. This was an old-style fight with incredulous looks and just-caught nastiness. Each of us thought the other was clueless, wasn't listening, was going off on some crazy tangent. Ultimately, we pulled it back together, reached a deeper understanding, but for fifteen tense minutes, I fought the urge to run out of the restaurant into the cold rain. I fought the urge to be by myself and pretend that it was better this way, to live without risk, to be warmed only by my own intellect and senses.
Yes, here they are again.
My parents after their wedding, June 1969,
staring off into the misty future. It's too
late now ...
Earlier that day, my mother
and I had been talking about trust and
infidelity. I explained how how I learned
some time ago that to trust in others blindly
is foolish because no one is perfect. Other
people can let you down, not out of cruelty,
but because they are human and bound to make
mistakes. If you expect perfection or total
fidelity, you may end up very disappointed,
so why not keep an open mind about it? Not to
expect to be let down, but to not let
yourself get crushed if it happens?
The words had come out with more vitriol and
less clarity than I felt. I sounded angry,
specifically with my husband, and Mom asked
me if he knew I was so angry. Strange. I
didn't feel angry. But there Mr. Trinkle and
I were in Fonda a few hours later, raising
our voices. For the last half of the fight,
I'd been dabbing at my eyes with the corner
of my cloth napkin, trying to hold back the
tears. It felt like I'd been willing them not
to fall for weeks, maybe months, while I kept
the rest of life together. When it was over,
when we reached détente,
the tears came out, along with
the sudden understanding that this whole
thing was all about my
mother. Or maybe it wasn't that
simple. It was also all about my
father. And let's not forget to
point a finger at the dissertation and the
feelings it stirred up in its death throes.
That thing was once used as a wedge, a
separator, an agent of my perceived
rejection. The diss is dead and buried now.
It hadn't been an issue for years. What could
I hold against a corpse?
Here is my mother, more present than I ever
remember. There is no demanding, angry Kevin,
no Baltimore petty criminal heroin addict
boyfriend, no personal life drama to get in
the way. When Mr. Trinkle and I left the East
Coast, the addict was the center of her life.
Interacting with her then felt like a
continual rejection, an extension of the
loneliness of childhood, though I see now
that that the rejection has never been
personal. In the past two and a half years,
she's changed her life. The addict is now on
the periphery, no longer the center of her
world. There is no drama. She is here, flawed
but available. I have just enough safe space
for the anger to emerge. It's wordless, this
anger, and scared, too, rage coupled with
fear. I know she is capable of turning on me,
of causing great pain, of making me wish I
never existed. Or at least that's how it used
to be.
Here is my husband, present and loving. The
days of avoidance by dissertation are long
over, but I remember them, remember how
neatly our neuroses fit together, his
reluctance dovetailing with my grasping need
for absolute acceptance, with the tests and
the tantrums, the nastiness and tossed
objects. We have a history, a time when I
felt very rejected, unloveable, and even
though we've talked the hell out of it, there
are still those tight corners in our
relationship that remind me.
Combine my mother's visit with the completion
of the dissertation and those deep feelings
of unworthiness rise up. They poke and prod.
I want to run out in the rain and be alone
forever. I want to ball up my fists and
shadowbox in the cold attic. I want to be
invisible, the observer who cannot be
observed. An old self-protective voice
whispers if you let them get too
close, they could destroy you. Keep your
distance. But this is not the only
way to see things. I have choices.
Now the struggle to be present, to be in the
moment, is mine. If I don't give all of
myself over, if I hold back, I don't risk
absolute rejection. It used to be that I
would test the ones who loved me, would stamp
my feet and pepper every fight with threats
to leave. These days I hide under a carapace
of calm. I hold it together and when I do
break, I tend to downplay my vulnerability. I
maintain a friendly facade, a protective
attitude. Intimacy equals risk. Oh, it's easy
with you, reader. We have geographical
distance and thick words to separate us. The
pull of the everyday, the undertow of the
mundane, doesn't come between us. We can
pretend for a few minutes that we are
intimates, reach an understanding without
touch, and then return to our real lives
unscathed.
Already all of this is changing for me. By
the time my thoughts get to you, I'm working
them out, naming the feelings, articulating
them so I can put them away. One of the
reasons this blog was so important to my
recovery process (I call it a recovery
process because I don’t know what else to
call it) is because it gave me a place to
name my fears, to articulate my ugliness in a
relatively risk-free environment. Still,
there are risks. When I find out that someone
I know in real life or from my past has read
the blog, I feel a panicked thrill – they
know! (Depending on how far they've read, of
course. They may know very little.) And then
my stomach sinks and I feel a different sort
of panic. I'm afraid of being judged for the
things I've done, for those I've scraped up
along the way. But I also worry that they
will read and think: She deserved it. They
will wonder about the intrinsic evil in me,
about the horrible things I must have done to
cause my family to abandon me. Rationally, I
know this is crazy. Emotionally, it makes my
heart ache.
I feel it. I name it. I let it go. But it
isn't easy.



