Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Coiled Like a Spring

The days are busy. So, so busy. One day it was summer and now the morning darkness and chilly air tells me winter is closing in. What happened...

On the one hand, I'm better when I'm busy. Distraction takes the edge off and so I'm intensely grateful for the buzz-buzz-buzz of the academic year. Importantly, I feel like *I* have a purpose in the world when I'm immersed in my profession. In the classroom, I am uniquely me, trying my hardest to help others on their paths. Each day I get to share my appreciation for the beauty of data and logic, I dust off my proverbial pom-poms and become a cheerleader of young people who are distracted, disillusioned, and depressed. I make fun of myself to see them smile and I see them feel proud when they participate and are correct. When teaching, I am not worrying about my children or ruminating on my husband's fate, nor wondering if the best of life is already behind me and what the hell is the point anymore anyway. No, when teaching I am my authentic self. Just maybe the effort I put in could make some small difference to someone. This is good.

But, holy smokes, it is hectic. I am not sleeping enough or eating well enough. Multi-multi-multi-tasking is a challenge that I face day after day. I set alarms on my phone to remember zoom meetings with students, phone calls with brain tumor friends, bills, library books needing return, cooking plans. No stretch of time is too short to get something done, no location too odd to borrow wifi from. Still, I'm merely mortal even though I frequently deny my limits. The wax will be warming, nay, outright melting, and even though I feel it dripping off my wings, I fly closer to the sun instead of sensibly dropping altitude. The inevitable plummet is as painful as it is predictable.

Much has happened that is not solely my experience and therefore not fit to share, and so I have felt muted for months. I wonder if I would have stopped sharing no matter the circumstances. As time goes on, the world definitely doesn't understand that you don't stop missing an important person after a year or two or three goes by. It's not "complicated" or "prolonged" grief if you cry sometimes or express longing, it's the price you pay for deep connection. There is no room for nuance in this society, and now there's a mental health diagnosis for people who aren't "over" their loss after one short year. The armchair therapists are everywhere and quick to reference something they heard on public radio. 

My experience is mine. I am more protective now because I do feel judged. I sense that I am seen as unhealthy or unworthy since I am still single.

I don't care, f off world.

My particular suburban, utopian community has absolutely no idea what having a young dead husband is like. My experience is uniquely mine, my Chris still more precious than anything even though he is not alive. I don't choose to share as freely because people understand less and less what we had, how special he was, the emptiness of a life without him, and the ridiculous challenge of raising children alone. Yet, the tension of wanting to be seen as "normal" and a "valuable" or "high-quality" person is always there just under the surface, tightly coiled like a spring.

I guess I do care. A lot...

The problem is that I do not have a way to release the energy trapped in that spring. There is distraction, but that is not an outlet; it is only a disguise. Instead, I carry that tension day in and out, hour by hour, actively or subconsciously working to suppress it. Every now and then the thought of a heart attack or stroke crosses my mind, for how long can I do this? I worry that I will drop dead from stress and struggle, and then what would become of our children...

Try as I might, I cannot find a way to let it all simply rest.

Chris was my delight, my refuge, my peace, and he treasured me. With him, I needed nothing else to be happy; just spending a few simple minutes together was my idea of perfection. Now, this world does not hold real respite for me. He was my home, my delight, my solace, my one, and he is gone. 

I am tough as nails, I am strong as steel, I am incredibly capable, and I care a lot for others. I am a high quality single person. I know all of these things to be true. But, I am not peaceful without him. I do not know how to be truly, deeply happy without him.

That spring is coiled oh so tightly.

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