This
particular column and I have been dancing partners for many months. We have
tangoed and waltzed together and I dare say met each other on painful ballet
tippy toes.
This
column is precious to me because it’s the closing number on what has been a
very powerful ocean of personal experience in 2012.
I keep a
daily diary and I’ve done so for decades. At the end of each year before I
close off my journal to start a new one, I revisit the 12-month period and
re-acquaint myself with myself. I also look back at my year’s worth of column
writing for the same reason.
It’s all
about reflection.
On
January 1st, 2012 I had written the following sentence in my diary.
“Change is coming and I am okay with my changes. I am still learning to sail my
ship.”
I went back a bit further in my old columns and perused the
one that bid farewell to 2011 and welcomed 2012.
My sentences smacked of magical thinking. All that talk about
staying open to change. Wow, what I didn’t know then.
By the time January 27, 2012 had rolled around,
some eight days after the suicide of Dr. Jon Fistler, my diary entry read, “It is all I can do not to fall down
weeping and disappear into the earth.”
There
were times in the early months of 2012 when I thought I was going to suffocate
and drown in that ocean of grief. Regret and remorse were more than happy to
keep me company.
I wanted to give in to the belief that, “the future was no
longer a kingdom of possibility and wonder, but a yoke of obligation, and only
the unattainable past offered a hospitable place to live.”
But I
didn’t give in and I didn’t disappear and I didn’t drown. A very wise counselor
told me I deserved to be happy.
A very wise doctor told me I was allowed to
feel anything but remorse. I believed them both right from the get go, and I’ve
worked my way forward ever since—sometimes inching along, sometimes leaping,
sometimes stumbling, but forward—and I will not be moved from the journey. I
made a conscious choice about the “how” of my living.
And I
think grief counseling saved my life. Grief wears many different hats and this
is a case in favor of “The More You Know.”
Treating grief honorably and with
understanding means a whole lot less anger and despair in our lives. And for
sure there’s a whole lot less regret, and regret is an appalling waste of
energy (to paraphrase Katherine Mansfield.)
One of
the greatest personal challenges I have had since January is to practice paying
forward in action those six little words I once wrote about.
It is far from
easy, but therein lies the lesson, because I very much want to be there for
you, too, when you need to talk. I strive to keep my “mouth closed, ears open,
presence available.” I think by
far it’s the greatest gift a true friend can give another.
When I
read through my 2012 diary and columns and see how my life has been lived since
that brutally cold winter’s day, there is no doubt in my mind that I am the
luckiest girl I know.
I have
been given new horizons to sail on and I am so very grateful to be standing on
the crest of 2013 and be able to say I love my life.
And so as I repeat some of
what I wrote in the final column of 2011, this time it means so much more to me
when I say;
My dear readers stand on the horizon of 2013 and look back at
what you’ve seen and done and learned, and what you’ve lived through, cried
through, laughed through and shared, and then grant yourself peace and go
forward.
The Four Noble Truths encourage us to show up, pay attention,
and tell the truth or keep noble silence, and stay wide open to change.
Stay
wide open.
Moving
forward through the intersections of life is risky. Look both ways and go.
4 comments:
Well said, Beth.
It must be hard to express all you have been through. Well said.
Thanks for saying that so well. Reflects many of our feelings, I think. I'm glad for you, that you are feeling better.
“People live through such pain only once. Pain comes again—but it finds a tougher surface.”
― Willa Cather, The Song of the Lark
I am reminded of this quote when reading your blog entry
Don
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