quar

On Choice

I forgot the sun rises before 9am. Im not sure if it was my IBS or the poison oak rash burning my thigh that woke me up at 4am but it was certainly my thoughts that kept me awake this morning. The sexiest way to start, I know. The cats encouraged me to stay in bed as long as possible, so I read the rest of Swing Time and a Patreon post from fellow trauma survivor, comedian friend, Emma Arnold. The two pieces, together, coalesced with my thoughts- the needing of rest, the having of time. The cats. The end of an empty life.

Each time my fantasies about life, in the most general terms (career, kids) detours, I get a little closer to laughing at myself. This nauseating process of indecision has plagued me almost to the point of comic exasperation. Yesterday I interviewed, no wait, excuse me, I had a “discovery conversation” with a company that sells, mostly life insurance and ironically, a sense of security. “Are you ready to start your career as a financial advisor?” Um… its May, I haven’t done my taxes, am currently on unemployment and this is the most money I’ve made my entire “career,” so yeah, 5 out of 5, very interested!

It is not for lack of opportunity or inspiration that I have ended up in this life eddy, approaching 35 with a blog and paddle board to show for it. My long time, older and much wiser friend Nancy and I talk about children. She is one of the only people bold enough to ask me about how I feel about having them, a kind of intimacy in conversation I only realize I crave when she calls. Nancy has two daughters, each have two children of their own and she is in love with all of them.

She’s brought this one moment up many times in this conversation. “I’ll never forget when I first asked you about children, you said, ‘I don’t know if I could share my body like that.’” I think that moment stuck with me in part because her reaction to it was so strong, maybe she sucked her breath in or paused, startled or stopped the constant motion she is in when bustling around the kitchen. Somehow she manages to impreganate the smallest moments between activities and logistics with meaningful converation. I think it also stuck with me because sometimes what comes out of my mouth when I talk to her, or to any rare soul who really listens, can shock me in its raw honesty. Like I turn around to see who said that, like I didn’t know I had it in me, or didn’t even know I thought that or felt that until I heard myself say it in a voice that comes out so much more confident than the one in my head.

I initially interpreted her reaction to that statement as a shock. That it was an unnatural thing to say and I felt shame about it for a long time. I didn’t understand what I said, I didn’t know why the idea of a living being inside of me, seemed so foreign.  I imagined everyone else seemed to feel that for women, having children was the most natural, primal thing your body could do so the fact that it didn’t feel right meant there was something wrong with me.

When I was with my former partner, we visited Nancy. She could see he loved me, unconditionally, told me that, asked me again about children while we drank cold white wine on her back porch and he made us blackened fish tacos. She said she’d come help me take care of the baby, “I love babies,” she said with a giddiness I felt too when I held one. That offer made the idea almost bearable and deliciously tempting. A mother, to teach me to be a mother? What a heartbreaking illusion. I didn’t have anything honest or clear to say then, I was just coming to terms with my inability to securely attach in any relationship, and was far away from being able to make my own decisions.

A break up, a couple years and a one new partner later, she brought it up again. You’d think the idea, that having children was the best possible thing, would have cemented in her mind after watching the birth of a couple more grandchildren but Nancy surprised me. She wasn’t stuck on the idea, she was turning it over, looking at it from a different angle. “Do you remember when you said…” I told her she wouldn’t let me forget. She talked about someone else she knew, who didn’t want children, who had had some trauma in her childhood but whose partner really wanted children and now she was pregnant and coming around to the idea. I told her what I relief I’d felt when Sam, within 12 hours of arriving back in the state for the season, made clear that he didn’t want children in a process that felt like vetting. That he found it fundamentally and immediately important that we agree, less go our separate way, gave me some relief. I told him it was complicated, said I didn’t know if I wanted children or not but that I didn’t think I could handle the experience, mentally or physically. I cried and lamented the premature loss of the fundamental and awesome right of motherhood, as a woman while he held me and seemed to accept that as good enough.

Nancy said it was refreshing to see so many women in my generation making the choice. That what was important was that it was a choice. That it was our choice. That statement is the one that sticks with me now, replaces the previous one about the shadows in my body. I flashed back on the feeling of relief I’d had when Sam made clear his terms. I thought then that it was because I felt suddenly relieved of the burden of having children but now I think maybe it was the relief of having to make the choice.

I can’t imagine selling life insurance as a career. It would mean asking potential clients, multiple times per day, “Is there anyone in your life you would like to be taken care of after you pass?” And when they say yes, faking the ability to relate. If someone asked me that, I’d say no. Just the cats. I don’t mind the idea of being a spinster cat lady, but I don’t want to end up one. I have to choose it. What’s important is to choose a life you can bear. The narrator in Swing Time had no children. The two women whose lives she lived through, her employer and her friend, each had many and the book ends with a simple image of her friend and her friends children dancing on a balcony while she stares up, empty from a place below.

Tiger King Times

I guess I know now, what it takes. It took 4 weeks of quarantine to get to this. It was 6:30pm last night, no blog written. I wanted to go to bed, devoid of any short-term will to live. Thats when I started watching the Tiger King. I watched it for 4 hours, until my head hurt from trying to wrap it around so many levels pure, crystal crack cocaine, whatever I don’t do drugs, psychosis. I slept fitfully, afraid to sleep fully because of…. well tigers obviously.

When this all started I was so smug. I was like, “this is what we all need to realize our shit, you know really do the self-work, to be better as a society.” Of coarse abstractly I believed that that included me. But I possess the remarkable ability to disassociate and feel absolutely nothing for long periods of time, especially when shit is at its worst. Its why its been tough for me to relate to people through this. Like “oh chaos and complete uncertainty, welcome to my world. Look at this cool trick I can do! Bye!” Its why I haven’t felt much about this whole thing, except relief. Relief to have complete freedom to be completely alone, which is where I feel safest. And it really wasn’t until I had that, for a solid month, that I realized, again, like I do over and over, just how unsafe I feel all the time.

I react to chaos and uncertainty by shutting everyone and everything out. It is habitual, automatic and I don’t even realize I am doing it. It is not just to protect myself but also to protect the people around me, and maybe in an effort to preserve our relationships which is also in an effort to self-protect. It is very easy for me to get scared or hurt, to put it all in a box and, like the Tiger King, strap it to the body of someone I blame and blow it up. I’ve done it a lot.

Its hard to write about this stuff. Its hard to keep my butt in the chair and not get up for another cup of coffee. It tempts me to pour bourbon into my mug and smoke until I am completely out of my mind. Its uncomfortable at best; my organs squirm when I stop pretending everything is ok.

In the back of my mind, when this is happening, when I am disassociating, somewhere deep down, I know something is not right. Ill feel insecure, void of memory, unable to make decisions or plans. I can’t hear my comedy voice. That was the big cue for me, this time. I began to miss comedy and I couldn’t hear my voice. How is it that could so quickly abandoned the thing I love to do the most? This is why I am terrified to have children.

In the Tiger King, the least scary things are the tigers. They just sort of lurk in the background, a sad, hungry reminder of what happens when you try to contain something so magnanimous. The people who own the tigers, all of them, are bat shit crazy and fucking terrifying- tigers in a cage themselves. I can relate to the need to create your own world, where you feel powerful and in control, even if it is an illusion. Shit I have two cats couped up here and sometimes they act unpredictably. But seeing myself in the tiger king or the other psychos is just a product of our collective condition. Honestly after watching that show for four hours, the conclusion I came to was- “yup, thats just the result of a lot of unprocessed trauma.”

The good news is, after writing this, in recognizing it, and connecting with another childhood trauma survivor turned comic, I feel like I am breathing again. She reminded me of what my therapist has said before and something I forget, or I try to forget- this is something I am always going to have to manage. When I remember, it makes me sad and mad all over again, and completely disappointed in the world we live in, in which I feel pressured to pretend like everything is ok. Because if I try to talk about this with anyone else, they just stare at me blankly. They don’t get it, and they don’t believe it and it makes it worse, forces it back. There really is no middle ground, besides this maybe. I don’t know how to help people understand, does it even matter. Am I the one I ma trying to convince that this is real? Am I the one who needs to believe?

I remember how to breathe, take it moment by moment. I remember that there is egg salad in the fridge, cat liter to be scooped, the sun, the birds, the cats. Oh yeah and more Tiger King.

I can't remember how to begin

I had a funny thought this morning, and I was like, “I’ll start with that today.” But I didn’t write it down and now it has left and I don’t know where to start. There are plenty of ideas written on my white board, but I am stuck on what I can’t remember so… I’ll divert to cats.

A couple of weeks ago my man came to visit. He has a manual transmission drill with speeds like the clutch on a car and a level of followthrough so high it is dizzyingly sexy. Anyone who really knows me, knows that I have had the dream of giving my cats a way to circumnavigate the apartment without touching the ground in a series of cat walks. This is supposed to dramatically improve their quality of life; it increases exercise, territory and vertical safe space. They would be made from things I had procured over the years at thrift stores and yard sales.

I had been carrying around this one small wooden shelf unit for years. It fit perfectly in the kitchen of my first solo apartment, a one bedroom “hallway” style unit of affordable public housing with very thin walls. In the winter, I could see the frozen Lake Champlain from my kitchen sink. That apartment sat in the little lakeside neighborhood I spent my most formative years in Vermont and where y cats Fabs, the formally feral, and Scratchy were both born. It was in that apartment that Fabs and I both found our way from hiding under beds and hissing at anyone who came to close, unless they were feeding us, to friends. And it happened right there on that kitchen floor, in the presence of that wooden shelf.

When I moved from Vermont to Idaho with my now former boyfriend, I sold or gave away most of my stuff. His furniture held more monetary value and he had a lot of it, so we sent his stuff ahead with the movers and mine went to a woman named Gigi. She looked older than she was and had just moved into a drug recovery/ retirement housing unit. She was the only person to stop by the yard sale I thought would be a good idea to hold in December, in… Vermont. She only had a few dollars and was interested in my trashcan. It was a fancy composting trashcan I had, yes paid way too much for and I too her if it didn’t sell, I’d give her a call. Once it become apparent that not even my friends were coming to my yard sale, that I was going to have to donate all my stuff anyways, we loaded everything up and basically furnished her whole place. That felt right and like I was a part of a miracle but it didn’t stop there. Once we arrived in Boise, I continued to let things go that I still regret. Chief among them was the car I called Wifey, cause, “Every woman needs a wife.” It was the first car I’d owned in 7 years- a Mazda 3, used, one-owner, black, still under powertrain warrantee, manual transmission. I’d taken a bus to the dealership and haggled them down 10% on the price. I was proud of how hard I’d worked to get to the place where I could buy that car but he had two of his own, both paid off and better in the snow. It made sense at the time to sell Wifey but it hurt. That was because I didn’t think that anything I brought to the relationship had value and that showed in the way I let just about everything go in an attempt to fit in. But somethings I just couldn’t and even though that shelf sat for years in damp garage spaces and was in terrible shape last spring, I knew that once I found my place, I’d find a place for it.

Somehow my dream of cat walks and my attachment to that shelf came together to produce the vision. Once I had that, I just needed the help executing it. Projects of this scale overwhelm me but luckily my sexy skydiving, firefighting, lover rolled through town in the van he built out and the cats and I have never been happier.

In part seven of my current read, titled “Don’t you ever get bored?” Louise writes, “There is something so smug about people who say with horror and umbrage at the very suggestion, ‘Who me? With my rich mine of inner resources? Me? With all my rare memories and rich philosophy?’ I hate people like that… But be that it may, the answer is no. We’re almost never bored.” I admit, I can edge on the umbrage here, as last week’s posts about bread baking and overcoming childhood trauma may have belied. Also, I have so many more grand dreams and half-baked visions which amount to a never ending list of unfinished home projects, akin to cat walks. Things like: curtains, blankets made out of old t-shirts, a stage for home shows and I’d really like to sand and paint my bar stools. Plus it ill be time to plant flowers on my patio. I mean it goes and on so that I could say confidently I could spend months in quarantine and not get bored. I mean to execute two of those things alone I have to learn to sew for heaven sake. Boredom is different than loneness though…. I think that was what I was going to write about today but ugh, I still can’t remember how it starts. Maybe tomorrow.

Fabs on the Sky Bridge

Fabs on the Sky Bridge