Thursday, January 31, 2013

heart's swing


“Heart’s swing. O so securely fastened
to what invisible bough? Who, who gave you that push,
so that you swung me up into the leaves?
How close I was to the fruit, delectable. But not-to-remain
is this moment’s essence. Only the closeness….”
            -- excerpt from an unnamed poem by Rainer Maria Rilke


It’s like walking a tightrope—trying to will my body to maintain balance, focus, and the exhilaration of keeping momentum atop such an un-sturdy foundation. I hoped I would be strong enough to never come down from the high I felt in New Mexico, on all those southwestern highways, throughout those blessed six weeks of rehabilitation, rejuvenation, and exploration. I wanted that serenity I achieved to be long-lasting. But my heart’s swing keeps plunging back toward the hard dirt of earth; swooping upward; then plunging again.

The first day back at work was deadening; I felt taken captive—the dial of my intellect set back to pause, the peacefulness of my mind sent a-flurry. But my heart did, metaphorically, keep beating. It ached with sadness, not wanting to return to the same old routine; yet it also pulsed with hopefulness—certain that it could swing itself back to those heights—at least at times, if not with permanency.

On day four, optimism fell from the sky as well. I spent hours conducting an investigation—minute by minute unfolding layers of an unbelievable and dreadful story. My favorite new staff member, someone whom I and the rest of my team found impressively inspiring, proved to be a crook. He’d been taking money from us for months, lying expertly through both tears and a dazzling smile. He’d opened up to me to blind me, I understood now. He’d breached my trust in a dramatic way, and he’d self-sabotaged, forcing me to fire someone I otherwise thought was outstanding at his job. For both I was unfathomably angry. He’d also introduced me to a new level of worry, as it had to be some serious desperation that would cause a person to steal from children, which is what stealing from my particular employer really is. Thus he’d also generated for me a consuming anxiety. And he’d added his full-time job to my already overloaded plate. My second week back proved to be one of the most exhausting of my work life.

Week three began on a gorgeous Sunday, the temperature in the 60s, the sun crisp in the air, me and a friend happy to hike the foothills for hours, idle our time away at the high point, my heart’s swing frozen momentarily at the peak of its arch as I found zen again overlooking the ocean and bay, the city and east bay, the hovering prowess of Mt. Diablo. I arrived home feeling well again—only to get a phone call, one of life’s most dreaded phone calls. My mom was nearly crying, letting me know that Grandpa was declining quickly and would not last but a few more days. He’d gotten pneumonia and shingles three weeks earlier, and now he was surviving on morphine. The nurse said he’d stopped eating. My grandmother said he would die that night.

He waited until the morning, until his three living children had all arrived. At the nurse’s ushering, they and my grandmother left the room for a short walk; when they returned, he’d ceased breathing. My mother saw a dead body for the first time in her life. My mother, always daddy’s little girl, saw the dead body of her father and wished with all her might to not have to let him go.

I arrived the next evening. I missed all the story-telling and half of my relatives, and I left my grandmother after just a three-day visit. But oh did my heart rebound during those few days with her, this old lady who has shown me the most unconditional love of my life. This magical old lady who shooed me out the door after a not-long-enough visit because she was excited for what I had to do the next day, and the one after that.

The first day back from my grandmother’s I went to the doctor—the infertility specialist—and I got started on the process of becoming a single mom. Right now I’m in the process of getting loads of tests done to make sure my body can nurture a child; right now is a time of patience, and of unpredictability, yet it feels undeniably certain. I am going to be a mother, one way or another. This is no longer something I’m going to do; it’s something I am actively working on. My heart’s swing has flung itself back toward the sky.

The second day back I went to dim sum with two people who once interviewed me for my dream job—and who spent five hours that day trying to woo me into considering it again. Right now I’m in the phase of waiting and seeing; I told them I was absolutely interested, and now they’re going to the mat for me, proposing the idea to their fellow board members. Right now is a time of patience, and of unpredictability, yet it feels undeniably hopeful. I may get to have my dream job; even if I don’t, there are two people out there who think I’m phenomenal and are dying to have me run their show. My heart’s swing has flung itself further upward, now trying to grasp onto a cloud.

It’s most likely that the swing will fall again; most likely that I will drop from the tight rope at least some of the times I tread across it. But I am grateful for all this heart swing activity. I am grateful to have back the emotional life without which I had feared I had learned to live.


Monday, January 7, 2013

the hardest drive

3.7 miles. Nothing compared to the 300- and 400-mile days I drove all over New Mexico. But this morning I took what I honestly think was the hardest drive of my life—the brief journey back to a job I just can't get excited to return to. Tears filled my eyes as soon as I turned off my street and onto the main road through town. After flipping from radio station to radio station, I switched to a CD by a band, Dehlia Low, that, along with The Be Good Tanyas, sang the soundtrack to my southwestern journey. I thought hearing that music would bolster my energy; all it did was bring my heart down. Driving from one side of MP to the other does not an expedition make. Returning to a job that offers me the same experiences month in and month out leads to nothing like adventure. There would be no flutters of awe in my heart on this day—just the hum drum feeling of doing the same thing over again for the thousandth (literally) time.

I drove home listening to track 5 -- a song called "Ravens and Crows." Got out of the car, came into the house, scrolled through my iphone camera until I found some of the videos I made driving New Mexico highways with the phone held up to the window and Dehlia Low playing in the car. Picked back up in the same song and listened as I watched the ramshackle houses and barren boughs of winter trees sweep past my car window. As I watched mountains rise and fall back into broad valleys. As I felt my heart at once vacant and whole.

I might just move there one day!

Sunday, January 6, 2013

soul journey


“The Broken Ground” by Wendell Berry

The opening out and out
body yielding body:
the breaking
through which the new
comes, perching
above its shadow
on the piling up
darkened broken old
husks of itself:
but opening to flower
opening to fruit opening
to the sweet marrow
of the seed—
                        taken
from what was, from
what could have been.
What is left
is what is.

The breaking through which the new comes. Berry knew that when it comes to wellness of spirit, you can’t get to a new place by just closing your eyes in the old one and willing it to be different. To move from one state of mind to another is metamorphosis. That kind of change requires something to crack open, something else to push forth. A bud won’t blossom without breaking its form. That kind of growth is painful; it’s delicate and difficult and who knows how long it will hold. But the act of it is also illuminating. The rising above those husks of previous selves gives one a new vantage point, the heart a new pace of beat. What is left is what is. Hallelujah for what is left still being of (beautiful) substance—for not being a void!

I went to New Mexico a bundle of exhaustion and stress. I’d worked six frantic 75-hour weeks in order to be able to leave. And that kind of time commitment was just the icing on a job that had been dominating my life for more than three years. I was taking a pause from a keen mixture of love and hate—feeling on the one hand so proud of the work we do (of my role in it, of the dedication of our staff, of the kids we serve) and on the other so miserable over being miserable for so long. I thrive on diving deep into lots of different interests; I never felt worn out when I worked 40-hour weeks, had multiple regular evening volunteer gigs, wrote often, and took photography classes in addition to being my social butterfly self. But diving shallowly into millions of pieces and parts of one thing has been draining the heck out of me. That’s because the reward is missing—the bounty of insights gained through deep focus or deep application of my skills, the strength of personal bonds formed when dedicating my time to a few kids rather than to hundreds and hundreds and in theory. And as though having an all-consuming job that doesn’t give much back to me wasn’t causing enough stress, there was the part of me that knew I’d spent my life savings on graduate school to be able to give this new career a try and was disappointed in myself for not finding it rewarding enough to want to stay in. What could be more rewarding than knowing that thousands of children growing up in really tough situations have a supportive, nurturing, and I hope life-changing place to be after school and in the summer, when they are most at risk of finding detrimental paths to follow instead? But the thing is, a body includes a heart and a mind, and if my job gives me only distant connection to the heart’s rewards of the work, it gives me almost no opportunity to reward the mind.

I went to New Mexico thinking I needed to do two things: first, to reignite the creative side of my brain, believing that submerging myself in creative writing for days on end would give me the deep focus and the sense of craftsmanship that I’ve craved throughout the time I’ve held my current job; and second, to unwind, let go of stress, feel well and happy again—for I am too much of an optimist to spend so many mornings waking up dreading the day; I wanted to return to feeling joyful about the life I live.

In week two in Albuquerque, I began to see that those goals might not be quite right. If one thing has frustrated me more than any other over the past three years, it’s been spending so much of my time on one thing. Thus the prospect of spending most of my time off writing came to feel like the wrong approach. To regain a sense of balance, I needed to put multiple things into play. In addition, I was utterly worn out; to revive creativity, I needed more than just to will it back. I needed new inputs to stimulate it. So I wrote, and I read book after book that had been piling up on my coffee table, and I read news articles and education articles and the Huffington Post, and I researched jobs and applied for a handful, and I drove many hundreds of miles to see stunning scenery and take thousands of photographs and listen to fantastic music for being on the open road and feel my heart fill with the sensation of soaring, and I watched movies, and I researched soup recipes, and I slept—ten hours a night for the first month. That’s where I realized that the unwinding part would take some serious work too. I had sleep to catch up on, stress to expel, and liveliness to rediscover. I lived like a hermit for four weeks, seeing almost no one, and it felt good, because I needed to nurse and nurture myself back from true depletion.

In week two, I also dug my hole deeper. I hit a wall with my writing, and through doing so I came to acknowledge that I’d severely hit a wall in general. I had, for three years, been living a life that did not make me happy, and though in the first few months of the job I’d allowed in depression, I had, for multiple years now, been actively working to put an end to the situation. But nothing was coming of it. I’m sure I’ve applied to at least fifteen jobs per year since getting this one, but I’ve never been offered a new one. In week two in Albuquerque, I felt squarely stuck. Don’t want the job I have, can’t find the one I want. I felt at a loss for what I should do next.

Remarkably, in acknowledging that—in first writing it in a blog post and then announcing it to my dear friend Jenny, who has been with me through so many soul journeys over the past 15 years, and then announcing it each morning to myself—in acknowledging it, I found that though at a loss I wasn’t exactly lost. I was in a place of not being there yet but not being nowhere. I was in a finding place. A place where everything is cleared away, like an attic that’s been emptied of its contents. Emptied of what has been and filled with an air of what could be. Husks cleared away so a bud has space to grow.

On week four, on the phone with my mom, in attempting to answer her question of what I had gone to New Mexico to find, I discovered that perhaps the answer lay in an entirely different garden than the one I’d been trying to make grow.

My mom asked me that question and my response had nothing to do with my career. It had nothing to do with leaving the life I’m in. It had only to do with pursuing the thing that I care most about bringing into being.

For years, I’ve said that I feel I don’t have to get married—that I’ll only do that if I find someone really worth marrying for me—but I do have to be a mother. It’s the one thing that I don’t want to live life without doing. Without being. Nine months ago, when I turned 35 and looked in a metaphorical mirror to accept the facts that the biological clock is ticking and if I want to have a baby I may have to do so on my own, I panicked. I was sure that I couldn’t be a single mom with the job I have now, that I couldn’t afford to have a baby in the Bay Area, that I couldn’t succeed at raising it without a sort of help that I would have none of here. To become a single mom would require moving back east to be near family, to live somewhere more affordable. It would require leaving the part of the country I have loved living in best. It felt like it would also mean giving up on love. Those thoughts broke my heart, and they scared the heck out of me at the same time. When, last May, I went to the doctor to learn what the process of having a baby on my own would be like, at the end of the conversation, I asked for a deadline, which she wouldn’t give me. I asked again—by what age do I have to start trying if I have any chance of doing this biologically? She said simply, “You start trying when you’re ready.” I knew at that moment that I was not ready.

On the phone with my mom, in week four of my New Mexican hermitage, having given it no previous thought on the trip and having read just three pages of a memoir a friend lent me about a woman who did something similar, I announced that I was, in fact, ready. It had been a terrifying thing to consider sooner because of all the changes it would require, and I—stressed, unhappy, and exhausted—hadn’t had the energy to clear my head to think about it. But after a few weeks of recuperation and loving living somewhere else and moving past feeling lost just because I was at a loss, it was like I had tilled the soil of my garden, and I had laid down seed, and now a little sprig of life was breaking ground. Over the next few years—as I know it will take significant time for my infertile ovaries to allow me to become pregnant or an adoption agency to allow me to take home a dear little one—I feel sure that a bud will rise from the green stem of the plant, and as it opens into a flower, I will undertake the hardest journey yet of my life. For now, all I can do is open all the doors to making that happen. In three weeks I will meet with a fertility specialist. After that, I will begin to learn about adoption. As I get those balls rolling, I will also look for new jobs in the Bay Area and also in Washington, where my mom lives, and Jenny lives, and other family members and dear old friends live too. And as I do what it takes for my body to yield a new body, or my heart to yield a new heart, I will be a different being than I have been, and in my metamorphosis I think I will continue to feel something that blossomed during weeks five and six of my journey, as I drove almost 2000 miles of southwestern highway, seeing and climbing on and making art from so many marvelous new places and creations. That thing I would call serenity.




Wednesday, December 19, 2012

crush


crush (n):
- according to Miriam Webster: "an intense and usually passing infatuation"
- according to Urban Dictionary: "a burning desire to be with someone who you find very attractive and extremely special"

Of the two definitions, I’m in the second one’s camp. I’ve never understood why crushes should be fleeting; to me, there’s nothing necessarily temporal about the feeling they embody of being smitten based on a shallow depth of interaction.

I got my long-standing crush on the state I’m now in the second or third time I visited. My first trip, my parents purport, was when I was four; I remember so much from that epic cross-country road trip (Anasazi ruins in Arizona; big horn sheep, bison, and Old Faithful in Yellowstone; coyotes and gold-mining in California; Canon Beach in Oregon; a Redwood forest; banana slugs in a backyard in Seattle) but nothing specific to New Mexico. The next time I came I was 16; to celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniversary, my grandparents decided to bring all their children and grandchildren to Durango, Colorado to spend one July week on a dude ranch (which felt a lot like summer camp for grown-ups and very unlike my grandparents, but we had a good time and my grandparents still enjoy wearing the “fifty years of fission and fusion” t-shirts my aunt made for the event). My mom decided that we should fly into Santa Fe and drive to the ranch so we could see a bit of the place where my grandparents began their marriage. We drove to Los Alamos straight away and visited Bandelier National Monument, which we enjoyed until we reached our next stop—its much more impressive Colorado counterpart, Mesa Verde. I don’t remember whether that short touchdown in New Mexico was enough to breed a crush, but two years later, my next visit certainly was.

I had just graduated from high school and was mentally preparing to head off to college. First, though, I had the immense pleasure of taking one last outing with the outdoor education program that my high school required all freshmen to participate in and that, after loving it myself as a ninth grader, I was thrilled to work for as an instructor over the next three years of high school. Each six-week session, I ran a group of 12 freshmen through trust-building games, low and high ropes courses, caving, bouldering, hiking, and camping. Periodically, the director whisked the small group of instructors away on staff training trips. My first one—a weekend trip to a different part of north Georgia than the one we took freshmen to—had been earlier that year, and my co-instructor and childhood friend Hayden and I had gotten to do all the planning for it. We’d had a great time packing supplies and managing the sophomore instructors who came—and were thus pumped at the opportunity to spend more than a week with them in New Mexico just after we’d graduated. The group of us drove there in two vans, with me somehow managing to be the only girl in mine, which means I suffered a lot of taunting when I had to go to the bathroom every two hours on our three-day camp-and-drive; but it was loving taunting, and I had a van-full of favorite guys by the time we finally arrived in Santa Fe and drove up to 8,000 feet to start a backpacking trip through the Pecos Wilderness in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. The hike was phenomenal; for six days, we saw no other humans—only the mountain goats on whose trails we trekked, elk, marmots, and a herd of big horn sheep. We hiked through incredibly varied flora, from alpine-like meadows to conifer forests to the rugged rock of North Truchas Peak, whose small summit we stood on and stared out, learning what it means to be at 13,100 feet. This was in 1995; 53 years earlier, my grandparents had stood in that same spot as 23-and-24-year-old scientists taking a break from their work on the Manhattan Project. From the view I had there, the journey I’d taken to reach it, I deeply understood why they had grown so fond of this state.

The last few days of that trip included a quick visit to Taos (where I’m writing this now) to raft down the Rio Grande—which was slow-flowing and gentle enough that all of us, nine days dirty, immediately rolled out of the rafts and floated downstream in hopes of getting clean—and the return trip. Along the way we passed through the low-rider capital of the state, near which we saw a Fiesta Parade that plays a seminal role in this novella I’ve been trying to sort out. Those encounters were brief, but they intrigued me. A definite crush began to flourish. So when I decided, seven years ago, to quit my job in Boston and move to San Francisco without one, I knew I had to take my time in getting there; I knew I hadn’t yet seen enough of the Southwest, New Mexico in particular. This time I drove to Albuquerque, where I saw Petroglyph National Monument; and to Santa Fe, where I saw the marvelous little Georgia O’Keeffe museum; and to Chaco Canyon, which honestly you need to see for yourself, or at least read my novella to experience :); and past Shiprock; and on into Utah, this country’s other most stunning geography. And by the time my three days in this state were done, I can tell you, my side of the romance was full-fledged.

To honor it, I began building more New Mexico-based scenes into the novella; my character began to really live here. So did a little part of my heart. I still didn’t know this place well; until last month I was still in crush with it: my heart absolutely certain, my brain not knowing—or caring—whether it was right.

It feels good to be smitten—to know that it’s not only in movies that people are swept off their feet. It feels daydreamy to find your feelings of fondness getting grounded in something deep. Crushes make the heart feel good; they make it remember to beat. That they grow substantive is a rare but delicious treat. 

Saturday, December 15, 2012

independence (a meditation)


Friends often tell me that the reason I’m still single is that I’m too picky; and I always argue because I think I’m not. I know a number of guys who fit what I’m looking for, and I actually think I have a pretty reasonable list of hopes for someone I’m with. (Picture traits such as warmth, passion, optimism, a love of learning, playfulness, a fondness for having time alone and time with others, and confidence/inner strength.) Underlying my desire for a number of those characteristics is my utter belief in independence—a quality of my own that I both cherish and think may be the real culprit in my unlucky relationship with love.

I’ve been alone for just over three weeks now, and I’m only mildly surprised to find that I’m not feeling at all lonely (whereas I had been feeling lonely at home prior to this trip). Throughout this sabbatical I’ve realized just how keenly I needed time off—and time to myself. I am someone who fundamentally believes that I can’t connect with others until I feel whole and well all by myself. Over the past three years, with this crazy job that leaves me totally worn out, I’ve tended to make fewer social plans because I honestly haven’t had a lot to say. I haven’t had enough going on in my own life to feel I could contribute much to anyone else. Now I’m getting to refill myself—with things to say, to think, to love. I’m following the rule I set for myself when I decided to move to California: “Don’t just live a little, live a lot.” My three years in San Francisco were full of rich living—but my three years since grad school were not. Now that I’m back on task, I’m writing, I’m devouring books and articles I’ve been meaning to read, I’m seeing gorgeous landscapes and listening to new music and just indulging my brain and my senses with a flood of inputs. I have an incredible inquisitiveness that thrives on seeing new places and ways of life and considering ideas and gaining insights. And I have an independence that can make those things, done alone, feel like enough.

I drove to Abiquiu (AB-ih-cue), New Mexico earlier this week to see the landscape that Georgia O’Keeffe loved so dearly when she lived and painted there. You should have seen the scenery; I found myself smiling repeatedly on the drive. It reminded me of one of the pivotal scenes in this work of fiction I’m trying to figure out; the character has just visited Chaco Canyon (a remote and stunning canyon whose floors and low walls are lined with Ancestral Puebloan (formerly known as Anasazi) great houses) and leaves like this: “In the evening, Sarah made her way back slowly. She wanted to hold on to the quietness she had felt in the canyon. She loved the feeling of smiling with no one there to watch it. Of gasping in awe with no one there to second it. She liked taking in so much of her surroundings and having the space in which to process it all. Sometimes she needed a day to herself, with no human interaction, to hear her own heart beat; to sort out her thoughts. Sometimes she needed to take a journey to find out where she had already been.” I wrote that a long time ago, but right now, I’m living it myself. On my drive to Abiquiu, I said aloud things like “this is life at its finest” and just plain “holy shit.” (The colors in that area’s landscape are vibrant, varied—astonishing to look at.) And saying them made my smile widen; I feel whole and well again. I feel I’ve come back to life.

I’ve taken this trip on my own because of a vow I made twenty years ago. I made it to myself. I was fifteen years old, starting my sophomore year and also keeping an eye on my mom. Having just gotten divorced, she was depressed and also terrified. My parents had waited longer than they should have—years longer—to get a divorce because, quite simply, having two households would have cost too much. My dad was a professor; he didn’t make a lot to start with, and what he did have he spent on the cost of tuition for my brother and me at an elite private school (worth the struggle, in my parents’ minds, given the very low caliber of the Atlanta Public Schools). After spending my childhood working as a potter, by my early teens my mom was solidly getting work in the field of public education reform—but on a consulting basis, which meant her income wasn’t assured. Within a year she would get a permanent position and the money worries would diminish; but in the meantime, as I watched her feel anxious and distressed, and I saw both parents sink into depression at being alone, I made a promise to myself that I hope to always keep.

Always be able to support yourself and make yourself happy. That’s what I said. That’s what I committed to at age fifteen—despite growing up in a time and place where other mothers looked down on mine for both working and getting divorced.

At that age, I had already been given a lot of independence, so I knew something about finding your own happiness. Starting in fourth grade, I came home from school alone. My brother would be at football practice until six and my parents would be at work until then, too. The house usually filled back up with people by seven; until then, it was left to me and my cats—and the puppy I was given at age 10 to keep me company. Until I started playing sports in sixth grade, I would get home at 3, watch the soap opera Santa Barbara (to which I was turned on by my up-the-street neighbor and former after-school babysitter), and then still have three hours to myself. During that time I always walked my dog around the neighborhood—which took 15 to 45 minutes, depending on my route. The rest of the time I spent reading novels and, come junior high, poetry; writing stories and poems of my own; playing cards (I could beat anyone at double solitaire at that age); talking to friends on the phone; writing letters (to which I was very dedicated, writing weekly to my cousin and an adored friend in the town where my grandparents live); and doing homework, though often I saved some of it until my mom was home and did it in the kitchen while she cooked dinner.

In addition to all that time to myself, in both houses we lived in, I also had open space around me, and I spent a lot of time out in it. At the first house, I usually went exploring with my neighbor or my brother in tow; most of our focus was on the areas around the fast-flowing creek a few hundred yards behind our houses. At the house we moved to when I was seven and that I lived in until I went to college, I would take long walks down the often dry creek bed in the woods behind our house and look at the plants and climb up the hill to the cave dug by teenagers and filled with dating-related graffiti and then sneak through the fence above it and into the baseball park that my brother played games at before heading back home by the road. In the summers, I’d go even farther—heading to the park a mile away to see who was in the swimming pool or to watch a horseback riding class or game of tennis or to hear sound check for a concert in the outdoor amphitheater there. And for a few blessed weeks each summer I’d roam even farther afield yet, flying up to Rhode Island, where I traversed not just the four acres of land on which my grandparents live but the coastline, my bare feet completely at home hugging the flat faces of rocks pelted, at certain hours of day, by sea water and clung to by barnacles, mussels, and seaweed as well as by me. Sometimes during my wanderings I thought; sometimes I just felt; sometimes I found a large stone seat and read a book to the tune of waves crashing. Sometimes I sat by the water for hours. And felt ecstatic. As a teenager, I remember explicitly not getting into drinking or drugs because I knew the high that being in nature could give and thought it too precious to compare anything to.

Back then I had a favorite motto, which I placed on the bumper sticker of my brother’s car as soon as he left for college and it was a year away from becoming mine. The background was a deep cobalt blue, and the writing—interspersed among stars—said in white letters “Follow your bliss.” The day I found it, I was with one of my best friends, who bought one that we thought made a good partner for mine: “Enjoy being.” We gained such wisdoms out in the woods, in both the outdoor program at our high school for which we were both instructors and in the semester we both spent living on a farm in Maine, and by the sea, and by the pool behind her house, and in the car as we drove from place to place talking. When either outdoors or with friends like her I was a happy kid—despite the fact that I was also nursing the broken heart that results from living through too many years of a bad marriage.

I enjoyed a lot of time and space to myself growing up; but I was also gregarious. I was involved in just about everything in high school and had plenty of close friendships from which I derived tremendous joy as well. Back then I don’t think my independence got the best of me—it just made me be at my best. A few years later, I think, the balance changed.

As a teenager and college student I bought into all you see in the media about love—thought I’d be happier yet if I had someone to love and be loved by. I’d never had much luck with dating, having had a lot of guy friends but only a boyfriend (ok, two at once! oh my) in ninth grade. In college I had crush after crush but nothing but friendship came of those interests either. Then I met the guy I thought was going to change it all. For two years, I spent tons of time with him and thought it was leading to forever. But he was in a weird headspace in regard to dating and so we never did get there. The first time I decided our closeness wasn’t good for me, I spent six weeks not talking to him—until his best friend begged me to “take him back,” saying that he was moping and depressed and wouldn’t do anything since I’d “left.” Boy did that relationship-like talk give me hope. So we reunited, and another three years had to pass with no dating but all kinds of closeness before I realized that I was trying to derive way too much of my happiness from him. You see, I’m definitely a romantic—painfully so. I’d let that part of my nature win out over the self-sustainer. For five years I’d let myself believe something that for many other people is true: that being close to a certain person was essential to my happiness. And when it proved instead to be essential to my unhappiness, well, I boarded up the windows of my heart and tucked into the basement to ride out the storm. And there I reminded myself that I had learned this lesson before, through my parents. And from then on, in a mode of serious self-protection, I repeatedly told myself that it was my own responsibility to make myself happy, not anyone else’s. And the combination of a belief in independence and a wound as deep as the one I was trying to heal, it seems clear to me now, led me to a place of finding happiness where I knew I could create it and mitigating risk where I knew the outcomes wouldn’t all be up to me. I managed my own expectations, committing to the idea that I would marry someone only if I found someone I really wanted to marry. But it’s taken all these years for me to realize that when you set a boundary like that on your heart—when, in essence, you turn your focus away from finding “true love” because you stop thinking it’s a priority—and when you couple that with a strength at finding joy on your own, maybe it becomes easy to turn too far away from center. You run your odds down, leaving the only chance for love to develop to serendipity. And while it does happen that way sometimes, most of the time—you see at the end of a year when you were invited to nine weddings, seven of which blossomed from online dating—it results from more concerted effort. And while I’ve joined every online dating site of repute in the past ten years and gone on a lot of dates in the seven years I’ve lived in the Bay Area—showing that I am open to dating and actively trying—I think maybe my heart wasn’t fully available to it. I think my ability to thrive independently much of the time made me forget about the thick walls I put up to heal a wound years ago—and thus let me leave them up too long.

I never meant my promise to suggest that no one else could influence my well being or happiness. I just wanted to have a certain amount of all that in place on my own first. To not rely on external sources of it. Consider them a wonderful bonus, yes; consider them necessary for living, not a chance. I still believe it’s the right approach to provide for one self in many ways. But I’m here in New Mexico right now because I cherish the idea of being happy all around—both on my own and then, because of that, with someone else. I have been watching that joy unfold for years now with others; having never had a model of it at home, I now see it every time I visit my brother or spend time with certain friends. Having never had a model of it at home, it was hard to navigate toward it. I think I steered myself a little off course. But if you could see me with my nieces and nephew, or with the kids I serve at work, or even in certain friendships, you would understand what I now understand, which is that for me to fully thrive I need to be giving outward. I love to love. I know how to take good care of myself; I’ve proven that. Now I want to find another independent and loving soul and take care of him too, and be taken care of by him. (And make babies, but we all already know that I want that!)

I wrote earlier that I came out here to refill myself with things to say, to think, to love. I will come home full to the brim, as a dear friend would say, so if I should come across my potential mate, I will be ready to let down the walls and love away.