Just a bit over a year ago, this was the entry in my private journal:
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every
day is a drudgery waiting for something in me to completely give up and die by
organ failure or overdosing pills i want it over. im tired of keeping it up.
i'm tired i can’t sleep. my mind is a blank white room with no windows
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I
thought I could never emerge from under that depression. Everything that I had
attached to my meaning of self had been stripped away. I had nothing to give. I
felt my personality had truly died, I was just an endless cavern of need, and the world felt like a constant flashbang: stunned and wide-eyed ringing but out of focus and I couldn't shake it.
Who I was poured out from under me like a bowl of sand.
And
now, I can look back. I am actually looking back on that time when I couldn't
see a future, as in, I am past it. I really am in total shock that I have somehow existed this long,
and through all that has happened. What has actually happened is a mystery to
most people that I know, save for a precious few; and even then, I'm still the
only one in this body. I have written off and on throughout this thing: some of
it made public through this blog, and many short ramblings of days when a few
depressive words was all I could muster. But there is so much that went
undocumented, and so much that I don't even remember (that may be for the best,
honestly). I am astonished to find myself on the other side of these almost two
years. And for that, I can only attest to the raw human spirit. I basically feel like a witness to this. I've discovered, after the fact: something in me, perhaps inherently--and it is not something that I feel I have cultivated
with any real energy. Usually my energy depleted by just existing every day,
and the little animal of my soul nosed around in the dark, so hungry. I had my
plans, of course. Cultivate an inner universe. Let everything happen to you. I
tried my best, but most of the time it felt like I was dragging my lump of a
frail body behind me, aimless and stumbling. But that human spirit emerged,
like the runt of the pack: weak but determined.
And I even find myself on the other side of the last couple
months, in some ways worse for wear. Thanks, winter of the soul. But my mind is
continually changing; striving (I hope) towards enlightenment, or peace, or
something.
So far the answer lies in what I have come to understand of
the world: there is no perfection. There is no one goal, no one place where we
all gather and do the peace dance forever and ever amen. There is no one right
choice and one wrong choice. I am learning that life is not a linear groove
drawn in the ground, stretching out in front of you. It's not clean, either, Bekah. It's so goddamn messy, and you bumble along until you find something that you
can hold on to for a while. And then you let it go. Or it lets go of you.
I'm not trying to be fatalistic. But there's something about who we are throughout our lives, void of whatever we are holding on to, or whatever is holding on to us. Human imagination: the raw human spirit that can think beyond the hole you're in. It's one step to conjure the million possibilities. The next step is choosing and doing. As
far as I can see, the next rung on this ladder out of here is human agency: the capacity to act in the world. I believe it has the most to do
with who we are, on a basic level, even
more than what you actually "do". I’m interested in the person who is making
these things happen. It’s something independent of who you know, what you have,
what projects you are involved in, what you do for work. True freedom is being
able to be who you are, where you are. And maybe if I can find that freedom, it
will allow me to make a difference, somewhere somehow in a small way. When I
think about what I am actually “accomplishing” in “the world” right now, I
start to feel bad about myself. I don’t have a job, it’s been months since I’ve
had a real creative project, I'm sick a lot, my body is a shitball, I don’t see people that
often, I don’t go on vacations, I don’t have a
career I don’t have a house I don’t have a boyfriend I don’t have a dog I don’t
have a wittle bundle of joy I don’t have a five year plan, and my room is a
mess. I’m not saving people. The
causes for which I feel deeply are plugging along without me. I don’t have a
field, I don’t have a plow.
But
I am sensing, over everything else, the importance of being an authentic human
being on this hilarious rock flying through a dark universe. And that feels more real and enduring than any other one thing.
My
not having most of that list above doesn’t bother me too much. It's not my goal in life to get married and have babies. For some people, that may be their
most prized wish, and I am not hating on that at all. I find what ends up bothering me the
most is the missing out on things that I wish that I was apart of. I
want to do things that matter, I want to make art that reminds people they are
human. I want to be a part of the movement to start saving this planet. I want
to have a garden, I want to be flexible and strong. I want to feel beautiful. I
want to be happy.
But
none of those things will make me happy. Maybe the act of moving towards them
will. Putting in the time and the energy. But maybe being a true human all the
way through my life will. Finding the something in me that carries through
all these hard things, that endures through jobs, hard conversations, relationships, health problems, trauma. Simplifying the society-made and
self-perpetuated pressure on me to be something, and focusing on being Someone.
Sometimes
people ask me how I am different now, and I have been asking myself that too.
Now, on the almost other-side of cancer as a young person, how has it changed
me? Well, I feel a sense of my self that wasn’t completely present before cancer.
It’s hard to make that sound anything but corny, but I really mean it.
I’ve
spent a long time referring to pre- and post-cancer Bekah as different people,
mostly because the difference is depressing and I long for the old me. Sometimes in my mind I see this dichotomy: Pre-cancer
Bekah was strong and flexible multi-tasking never-sick I-don't-need-you-to-lift-that-for-me dancing-and-cartwheeling girl. Post-cancer Bekah
is flabby boney blotchy-skinned less-spunky rubber-band-muscled
somewhat-bald can’t-stand-for-more-than-an-hour lonely chemo-brained sad girl. But I
have been trying to stop doing that, because ultimately, it’s detrimental to
progress. So I'm practicing autonomy from the ‘I used to be’s. Those comparisons suck.
They paint a picture of two different people: one better than the other, but
I’m still the same person. And it ignores the things that have grown: my
ability to handle being alone, my deeper understanding of human trauma and how
we deal with it, my personal coping mechanisms and skills, my
ability to slow down, and how I relate to people and the dynamics of
relationships. I have learned that everyone, no matter what age, is still learning
something. And again, it sounds super corny, but I have gained an understanding of myself that I didn’t have before; a baseline calm has emerged. I have a sense of who I am that endures through my whole life, regardless of good times or hardship. And I carry all that's happened to me, but it isn't all of who I am. It’s not a perfect
picture, I’m not a superhero gandhi. But I feel like my interactions with the
world have shifted: I see myself differently, and I see the world differently.
I am more in tune with myself and I feel more peaceful, in general. I can look back, and forward, and I see this
whole thing more clearly--even the fact that I can’t see it all. I feel like I
understand the point, more than I did. At least, today. This doesn’t mean I don’t get agitated,
because I do. I get both rightfully and wrongfully agitated: at love and injustice and
at dirty dishes and bad hair days. I’m still a human. No, I’m more of a human now, I think. I am
more human.
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Everyone should be born into this world happy
and loving everything.
But in truth it rarely works that way.
For myself, I have spent my life clamoring toward it.
Halleluiah, anyway I’m not where I started!
and loving everything.
But in truth it rarely works that way.
For myself, I have spent my life clamoring toward it.
Halleluiah, anyway I’m not where I started!
And have you too been trudging like that, sometimes
almost forgetting how wondrous the world is
and how miraculously kind some people can be?
And have you too decided that probably nothing important
is ever easy?
Not, say, for the first sixty years.
almost forgetting how wondrous the world is
and how miraculously kind some people can be?
And have you too decided that probably nothing important
is ever easy?
Not, say, for the first sixty years.
Halleluiah, I’m sixty now, and even a little more,
and some days I feel I have wings.
-mary oliver
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