It’s been over a year since
I’ve written here, and a lot has happened.
I’ve moved to Oakland to live alone, spent the past nine months teaching
middle school (which, in this internet age, has made me much more squirrelly
about my online presence and what I say here), and continued to work on a book
that feels ever more like chopped-up pieces of squirming earthworm in my hands
– perhaps they can be fitted back together but every time I try to start I
just want to throw up.
To those
of you who do still read this (and the author) blog: thank you. It’s nice to know I still have friends out
there in the ether where my most painful thoughts exist like silt at the bottom
of a river, swirling madly in the current and settling only on the rarest of
calm days.
Perhaps most relevant is
this: last time I wrote, I mentioned a new boyfriend. Well, he’s still around, and not so new
anymore. We celebrated a year this
January and we’re planning to move in together at the end of the summer, which
is simultaneously surreal and wonderful and terrifying. The last time I lived with someone I wound up
staying with him for seven years, planning the next thirty, getting engaged,
and then having my heart rot from the inside out over the course of three
months until it was a putrid, useless thing.
The new partner has helped me discover – after I cut away most of
the dead meat with the help of a very good therapist – that there was some
living flesh still in there, and he has helped me encourage regrowth. He’s patient and kind and a truly
extraordinary person.
But it’s feelings like those
that paralyze me with fear; I wrote about someone else like that not so long
ago. Once upon a time, almost exactly
ten years ago now, I met a different young man who made me feel safe and wanted
and supported, and I fell in love with him, and I followed him to another
country and wrote a book that partly exalted his love. And then he destroyed me. Is it any wonder that the stronger my
feelings grow for this new man, the more afraid I am for my emotional safety?
The difference, of course, is
that I know my strength now. If my
boyfriend were to break my heart – and I don’t believe he ever could do
what my ex did, if only because he’s far too self-aware and communicative
– but if he did, I know I would survive it. I would be able to bear the pain without
wishing for death, because I would know that there is life after
heartbreak. I might have understood that
logically before, but now that I’ve experienced it, I believe it. Not that knowing I’d survive makes me any
less afraid of the destruction itself.
As for this blog, I’m not
sure how much more I have to say about my body, despite the fact that I set
this blog up for that precise purpose – I seem to have leveled out and
mellowed a bit, and dating has, if nothing else, made it clear to me that there
are plenty of decent, attractive men who will be disappointed if I stop them
from seeing me naked. So I may be
posting less and less often, although I will likely still come here to write
about emotions that feel too…raw and unpolished for my author site.
Comments
Going through terrible times definitely makes us stronger and more aware of ourselves, our own capabilities and ultimately, worth.
I love your writing Anne, the way you word things, and keeping it 'real'.
I wish you every happiness with your not so new partner : )
Sheridan