Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Catching up with Myself.

The summer before last, I sat on the floor of the living room. We sat on the floor because there was no furniture. I wasn't alone, my friends were there. They were telling me what was wrong with me, sort of like an intervention, but without any intention of helping me back up. I nodded and agreed, admitting to my character flaws. When it was over, nobody felt better. When it was over, I was still broken inside. I became determined never to own up to my weaknesses again, so when I found out that I was pregnant in November, I held my head high and stood by my decision. 

It was easy because I had nothing to loose. Through bouts of morning sickness, I sat in bed and finished an orchestral arrangement of "Songbird." School was easy. I had made friends, lost them, made them back, and then lost them again. I had spent the summer next to a cooling pond, drinking white wine, and not furnishing my living room. The house was cold, the windows unsealed, and with the attic door open for Reuben to get up and down, it never seemed to warm up. I had hedged my bets on superficial relationships (big surprise), and found myself abandoned there, cleaning up the mess after shows and scrubbing burned beans off the bottom of my pots and pans. There were the teenagers I took in to make myself feel important (or charitable). They slept on the spare mattress, and ate my food until I had learned my lesson and turned them away. 

The next semester started strong. I took a credit-overload, worked part-time, and had an internship at the Special Events Department of Spartanburg. There was more changing then the size of my belly. I had made myself invisible to cloak any residual doubts. I focused only on my studies, and figuring out how to give birth to a child. When I graduated, you couldn't see the size of me under my robe. I left college with one friend, a saxophonist. He was black and used to buy me lunch in the dining hall. The last time I saw him was while I was finishing out my internship, managing the stage I had booked at the street festival. He told me he wasn't going back to school the following year. 

In my last two months of pregnancy, I worked hard at Earth Fare and got ready for the baby to come.  I surrounded myself with other young moms, and put together the nursery furniture. 

He came a week and three days past my due date. I had him out of the hospital at a birthing center. Labor was long, but peaceful, and he was here after pushing for an hour. A beautiful, 9 lb boy. He slept in between Cooper and I that night. He slept the whole night through. For a while, I rode the high of having a new person in my life. I learned how to breastfeed, and carried him a sling. I through myself into being his mother, but like other things I've thrown myself into, I faltered.

Nursing is a time to do nothing, and my thoughts have begun to catch up to me. It's been a year now since I've gone to get a drink, gone to a show, or met a new person. I don't do anything I used to love, and it's wearing on me (as well as Cooper). I understand now why you should wait to have children, no matter how ready you are physically. I love Phineas, but I feel empty and lonely inside. I really have broken everything that I've touched. Phineas is my punishment, but also my chance to start anew. I'm just having trouble letting go of the past. It creeps into my dreams and sinks into the bottom of my chest. I'm replaying scenarios over and over again. Swimming in a blue sea of regret. That time in my life is over, so why can't I say goodbye? 


Friday, February 17, 2012

fat jokes

When I laugh, my eyes water. Sometimes I laugh so hard at the little things that I walk away crying. Even at 18, I was still melodramatic. I just thought I had grown up. I hope Phinn never reads any of this. The same way I hope he never meets his Uncle Reuben (or inherits any of his genes). I let some people down, burned down bridges at each crossroads, made excuses, made pathetic apologies where I owned up to the way I had behaved, and became ashamed, instead of proud and happy.

I'd rather live in a cloud of misconception; meaning, I would rather not know what anyone thought of me. The more I've gotten used to introversion (and Southern Living), the stronger my sense of self has become. I don't feel like I'm experimenting anymore. I'm going to be Phinn's mom. We're going to read with eachother, make silly faces, and discover things in our own backyard. We're going to grow heirloom tomatoes, and pet the dogs at the humane society.

I held on to Lowell for way too long. I took off at what seemed to be the end of my life: a melodramatic 19 year-old. I smile when I think of people, and experiences we had, but I'm done trying to maintain relationships, defend my decisions, or justify them to myself. Maybe I'll go back someday.


Friday, January 6, 2012

It's not a recurring nightmare

It's a dream about the same person again again, a symbol of what could have been, if I wasn't pregnant, if I was going home in May, if I was starting a new school year next fall. My subconscious is not on board with me during the day time, and it makes a point to tell me at night. No matter who I smile at and tell I'm excited, my world has turned upside down and I'm looking for new ways to find joy (ways that hide my shame).