Posts Tagged ‘life’
Life, Death, and Human Fragility
“Because I could not stop for Death,
He kindly stopped for me.
The Carriage held but just ourselves
And Immortality”
Emily Dickinson
This past week I have been exhausted by things as simple as walking, sitting, and just plain healing. It has been a frustrating process segwaying back into work only to come home every night too tired to even think let alone write. I find myself daily contemplating my own fragility, the tender care I have to give to this soft human soul casing. I have been eating as healthfully as I ever have, trying to give my body the rest it requests from me, and becoming a regular acupuncture patient at a local Doctor of Oriental Medicine’s office who specializes in endometriosis. With each day I feel more solid, more complete, more functionally human by all those standards we judge ourselves–mobility, brain function ability, and functionality in the workplace.
And then the other day I find my thoughts meandering, after a particularly vivid and grotesque depiction by a client of experiencing the death of a loved one, how I have never seen death. I have heard it in the therapy room in story after vivid story but I had never seen it, watched life leaving another human being and staring that moment of mortality in the eye. Figuratively that is what I do all day, stare life and death and morbid recollections of others in the eye, but literally, palpably, I had never had to experience it. I wondered what that was like and how I would react given that confrontation.
Last night I was given my chance to see–morbidly, grotesquely, painfully, and in a shock inducing way by the side of a road in a small town on a quiet Saturday night.
I saw life leave a human being in a haze of squealing tires, smoking brakes, mangled bicycle, limbs flying, life leaving, wife screaming. I will not talk any further about the incident itself, but I will say it was more than I ever could have imagined in death and more than I would ever have wanted to be a part of.
I found myself last night unable to sleep, unable to process, unable to eat, unable to both think about it and think about anything else. The shrill screams of a soon to be grieving widow echoing in my ear and the sight of ground pooled with blood and brokeness repeating in my mind.
I found myself waking today with those same thoughts reverberating through my conciousness and aching in my soul in mourning for so many lives that were touched by one moment in time and one small blip on the timeline of human existence that I will never forget. In a minute a woman lost her husband, a man lost his life, another faced with charges of vehicular homicide in front of them, and a crowd of people–”witnesses” both in legal and philosophical senses–who will carry the memory and fragmented moments with them forever of the sight and sound and brutality of watching such a death occur.
I also found myself reevaluating my own reality. Life, such a fleeting and fragile experience, that gives us no promise of tomorrow or no foresight to know how many tomorrows we have to live. Living for today, loving like now is forever, and making choices as if they really matter has really become alive in me in a way like never before. That woman who lost her husband was my age, could have been me, and that thought makes me rethink my whole world view in a way I never could have imagined–reframing what is important and what is urgent in my own life.
All the clients and the years of hearing about the carnage of life and death in an instant of pain and screaming and blood is something I have heard often, heard daily, and my empathy was something I thought covered the weight and circumference of such an experience. Now knowing what it means to be witness to that moment when a life goes out in this world in such a graphic fury of motion and gruesomeness I find myself knowing my client’s experience in a new and personal way. It is something I never wished for but an element of human experience I now share with them.
I feel life today in a different way–both tainted with pain and sadness and simultaneously made furiously bright and real and scorching with urgency like never before. I love my husband more profoundly. I feel the sunlight on my face with more appreciation. I want to do the things I feared for no valid reason at all because I should–because it’s time and there is no guarantee of time to come. I want to care for my body in the ways I know how because all we can control is our actions in this world and try to have reverence and preservation of the life we live, the body we have, the good things we do in the world, and the things that we can do for others today.
Live in the now. Love the ones you love as much as you can. Be sincere in your endeavors and only endeavor in those things that are sincere. Be your best you today and be grateful for every today that you have.
“Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die today.”
James Dean
Full of Sound and Fury: A Survivor's Tale
“What is truer than truth? Answer: The story.”
Old Jewish Saying and repeated by Isabelle Allende in her TED talk.
There is a lot of my life from 18 to 20 years of age that I just don’t remember. Most of it in fact. In retrospect and following therapeutic training I know that to be a form of trauma related repression. I just hit overload and shut down. I remained on autopilot for two very self-destructive years during which my rampant PTSD symptomotology took a front seat and my conscious self was somewhere locked in the trunk.
I built a shell around myself so I could block out anything hurtful or scary at a moment’s notice by shutting down, but in truth the shell was a mirage of my own making–because instead of feeling nothing I felt everything–I was so sensitive I was raw. I shut down constantly and in that I lost a lot of my current day perception of what happened when and many details are lost altogether.
I would block out and black out (technically known as dissociation) and not really be sure what happened after: it was like watching a blurry movie of myself from a short distance–sound was dulled, images were faded, it was often like living a half life. It helped me survive but not live. I was nothing but shell with nerves exposed underneath.
I was raped for the first time somewhere between 18 and 19 (again time is not so clear during that period). The second time, by another perpetrator, was somewhere between 19 and 20. I no longer blame myself for the second rape, but I know professionally that my downward slide following the first incident made me more vulnerable to another assault and my autopilot living added to that vulnerability. Following the second assault I could no longer regulate any part of myself: I was up and then down, I was isolative and then explosive, I was spiraling and dizzy and petrified of the world.
Escape, escape, escape. That was all I did. Long before I fled New Jersey I had fled myself–the Teresa from before my assaults was somewhere deep inside and the shell grew so thick and heavy that I could no longer remember what came before it. I was hiding inside myself and from myself. I was locking my memories so far down that I choked on them.
My trauma clients often reference the visual of a “box” or a “closet” where everything painful and traumatic is crammed in and locked away and when it accidentally opens you push it back in with all the strength you have–that is definitely an apt description.
When you are stuck inside your trauma all that seeps out is your traumatized symptoms and all the unhealthy and unpleasant behaviors that follow, all you can see is survival. You want to make it to tomorrow without snapping and that is the only goal. You cannot live. You cannot love. You cannot think about moving forward. You are locked in the “box” you created living under the illusion that you have somehow contained the collateral damage.
From 18 to 20 I was in the thick of it all. When I moved to Colorado at twenty I thought I was making a big step and a change that would change my brain and free my body. The only thing that really changed was scenery.
I loved the mountains that rose as if heaven bound. I loved the clear, crisp air and views of horses running wildly in fields, but inside my mind–when I paused too long or closed my eyes–there I was, still in my box, still petrified, still clinging to my shell.
I woke one day.
I woke in a loud clap of thunder and a moment full of sound and fury and everything I had been avoiding. I was sitting in a class on Front Range Community College Campus in Fort Collins. I had decided to go back to school and finish up that bachelors degree I had abandoned during the period of my first rape—part of me thought, since nothing else had worked, if I could just pick up where I left off I could erase the past that had taken me so far from anything resembling a future. I was sitting in some Sex Ed type class and tapping out my boredom with my pen. It was one of those banal required courses in the degree curriculum and my anticipation was learning something akin to high school health class. Then it happened.
The teacher began discussing sexual assault and sex crime “victims” (can I mention I still hate the word victim and all the implied vulnerability and helplessness it imbued in it). He spoke about acquaintance rape and the incidence of sexual assaults in college aged women.
After that I don’t know what he said because all I knew was that I felt dizzy and nauseous and my extremities went numb. I couldn’t breathe. It was only by the time I reached the bathroom, leaning over the toilet bowl with my knees on the floor and my hands shaking and pale, that I realized I had, had a panic attack.
That was the moment I woke up.
I realized this trauma thing I had tried to avoid was real. The rape was real. My state of frozen-in-symptoms-rampant-PTSD was real (although I could not identify it diagnostically at the time I knew it was trauma). And most of all I realized with a great oomph of panic attack finality that I could not avoid any of this thing inside of me anymore—not even in a benign antiseptic classroom environment. I realized I didn’t want to spend my life wondering when I would have to fall onto a bathroom floor again. So I went home that day, looked up a Sex Trauma Therapist, and, still somewhat skeptical and grudgingly, I went to the appointment.
The night after my first session with that therapist I had the worst nightmare I have ever had.
It is for that reason that even before I knew much about the therapeutic process, early in my graduate school internships, I would forewarn my trauma clients about a potential “outbreak” of sorts in their PTSD following their first session. Opening the box held tight and controlled for so long can create a sort of allergic initial response. Your mind is a clever thing that often has a mind of its own when it comes to trauma—it has been protecting you for so long from your own memories and emotions it becomes startled by an opening up of all that was hidden. Before I knew enough as the trauma therapist, the trauma survivor in me knew to warn my clients of this occurrence. Since then, the trauma therapist in me learned and now understands the many onion-like layers of “why”.
I woke from my nightmare shaking with the vision of a shadowy figure moving in front of me through my bedroom.
All I could feel was the moment following my first rape. I was lying in the wet grass on the earthen floor of a park in New Jersey, afraid to breathe. I was nauseous and numb and my hair was wet with dew. My insides were shaking but my body was frozen and my fists were clenched. I could hear the frogs and the crickets and see the dirt path that led out but I couldn’t get there. I could smell his breath and see his smirk and hear his mocking voice saying words I’ll never forget, “You’re not going to tell people I raped you or something, right?”
I closed and opened my eyes and I was back in my apartment, in Colorado, 4 years after that night in the grass. Tears were on my cheeks and sweat was covering my body. I began to tremble and cry as if I were purging all the memories of those nights I had held from my conscious memory for so long. My eyes adjusted to the dark and the shadow faded from view. I steadied myself against the large oak posts of my bed.
I jolted up, turned all the lights on in my apartment, and spent the rest of that night on my bathroom floor.
I knew something cataclysmic had occurred. I felt like these ghosts that had been following me had to be exorcised out of my mind and out of my internal closet before I could start fresh. Something about the palpable nature of that nightmare made me believe that was the door to my locked closet swinging open and something new opening up inside of me–something alive.
I have had nightmares since that night, but never one like that again. I have never had to sleep on the bathroom floor or see shadows that weren’t there hovering over my bed. I never went back to that park distilled in my mind or had to find myself lying in the grass without warning.
I never had to go back to that park, until I wanted to, and then I did.
I was in graduate school when I went back. I had come so far and I felt so unburdened from so much of my traumatic past. My life was no longer governed by rampant symptoms, but rather by the course of my chosen path: A life path that had taken me through an undergraduate degree in English with a Minor in Women’s Studies. I had explored all my man-rage via feminist courses, empowered myself in my womanhood, and come out a very healthful, non-raging feminist at the end.
I had written out my story, written both my stories actually, and realized after I finished that much of the details didn’t matter. I realized that I was the story—the testament to my own survival and I didn’t have to write every painful minute of rape I could recall to prove that to myself.
I had found my way into graduate school for a Masters in Clinical Social Work. I fully immersed in the coursework and quickly found my focus and passion—traumatology and trauma therapy.
I had found a way to master my pain and give my experience a meaningful purpose. I had found that my empathy and understanding of trauma as a survivor, without all my own symptoms to bleed all over myself and others, brought me to a place of usefulness in the field. I understood trauma from the inside, from the belly of the beast.
This combined with my intellectual and academic capacity to absorb all the psychology, biology, and behavioral aspects of the disorder made me both trained and intuitive, simultaneously, when it came to working with traumatized persons. I was passionate about the work and I knew it was going to form my life’s professional pursuits.
I had begun to live. I had begun to love life. But I had not yet begun to love anyone else, at least not a man. And every time I was in South Orange, New Jersey I always drove every way I could to avoid going past that park. The park where so many things began and so many more things ended.
And I had one of those moments of epiphany where I knew I had to go back. I didn’t want to remain afraid of anything—not even one solitary park in a small town in New Jersey.
Of all the things that had gone from my memory in a blaze of anguish, like what time of year it was when the assault happened—was it Spring or was it Fall? Or what year was it—was I 18 or 19 when it happened?–I remembered the park.
I remember how he parked his car on the slight slope on the side of the hill. I remember walking on the dirt trail that wove through the brush into the open field. I remember the tall grasses tickling my ankles and the sounds of night turning into early morning.
So I went back.
I walked down the dirt path and felt the grass on my legs. I walked into the clearing to see not a dark early dawn, but a bright sunny afternoon. The sun hit my face and grass tickled between my sandals. I walked into the field to approximately the spot where he had put his blanket down for us to sit on.
I sat in the grass and then I lay down. I looked up into the sun and heard the sound of cars pulling up. I heard a child and her mother laughing. I smiled and I breathed in the grass scented air. My hands touched the earthen floor and I felt the soft tickle of wildflowers under my fingertips. I made a fist and pulled a few up from the soil. I pulled them to my nose and breathed in and then breathed in deeper. The air and scent of flowers filled my lungs and I smiled. I could breathe again. In that grass where I lost my breath years before, I could breathe again.
I may not have returned to who I was before that night, we are always changed by our experiences, but I found something there in the grass that I had lost. A piece of softness and bliss that I thought I could never retrieve.
I felt a freedom in my own breath as I let go of one last strand of that petrified fear—I opened the box and let it all go. I let the park go and I walked out the way I came—into the sunlight and into my future.
(Below) Photo of me as a child, breathing in the scent of park grasses and enjoying the bliss of wildflowers.
Although the world is full of suffering,
it is also full of the overcoming of it.
Helen Keller
Singing In The Rain: 48 Hours In Retrospect
Metaphorically–Singing in the rain, metaphorically. No one, trust me no one wants to see me sing, not even in the rain. I save that glorious pleasure for solo car rides and loud showers.
The intent of this post is to talk about, from a very personal perspective, trying to find the silver lining, see the bright side, look at the glass half full, and any other kitschy association to taking our unexpected roadblocks as opportunities to carve out new trails. I am trying very hard to keep that mindset and, surprisingly, I find the more I search for the better the more “better” appears.
In the 48 plus hours since writing my bright and spirited “The Year of the Dog” post many things have happened and many subsequent decisions have been made–the initiator to all being that my husband and I found out that his guarantee transfer that had lingered in “on hold” for a month had fallen through due to beurocratic blah blah blah. That left us wondering, “What next?” This is what we came up with:
1) My husband is going to continue working in New Jersey through November 6th and try to get a few more checks worth of money in before we, potentially, become a house no longer divided in half but one with a household income divided in half. He will then move to Florida and actively look for whatever job possible, hopefully in his area of passion which is substance abuse counseling, but anything to bring some income in to supplement my salary. He will also be returning, to my great pleasure, to school to obtain his Masters in Social Work starting next Fall 2010.
2) I will, to my great displeasure, have to postpone my Yoga Teacher Training by two months and begin the next series of trainings in mid January. I will be a single doggie mama with three pups at home and cannot in good conscience (without ending up on Animal Planet Cops or feeling like I should) leave them home from dawn till past dusk so I can pursue my holistic dreams.
3) On a completely different note I have decided it may be necessary to look into Doggie Ritalin. I am beginning to wonder if there can be a genetic marker in a certain breed for ADHD–if so Jack Russell is that breed. My little Gracie is an unstoppable, unflappable, unending spring (literally, she bounces straight in the air like a spring) of energy and, possibly, psychosis. O.k., so I may not be feeding her handfuls of puppy prescriptions anytime soon, but I may have to invest in some kind of doggie treadmill–if there is such a thing. I think the only thing my Jack Russell birthday puppy has taught me about thirty is that thirty may be too old for a Jack Russell puppy. But we will forge forward, my family of dysfunctional fur-babies and I: Guinness the Neurotic, Gaia the Narcissist, and Gracie the Psychotically Hyper.
A 48 HOUR RETROSPECTIVE…
Going backwards in time to 48 hours ago I was not sure what to do or what to think about our sudden family perdicament. Part of me wanted to cry, part wanted to scream, part wanted to just give up. Fortunately none of those were a dominant enough part of me to reak unproductive havoc although each part of me had its moment in the last couple of days.
I thought about a thirtieth birthday in a real limbo and spent alone 1200 miles away from my husband and in a state of uncertainty about more than the number 30. I thought about the potential pressures of getting all the bills paid and the scary prospect of not succeeding. I thought of aspirations of sitting in a dimly lit room, breathing, learning, and meditating daily falling away as were my plans and hopes for all things related to this October.
Money & Meditation: two completely converse distractions.
So, I thought, how could I feel so hopeful Monday and in such desperation by Tuesday. I realized the only piece I could affect between the two was not the money or the postponed meditation but my perspective, perception, and state of mind. All these strengths I have been building on the past month or so on this blog finally came to an application head–I needed full forces aligned to find the light in the storm, the brighter side, the inspiration to sing even in the rain.
I thought about how my husband’s job falling through had gave him the final push necessary to actively pursue his masters degree–a very good thing. I thought about how having the next two months to get our lives in order, the household in order, and actually have some time with my husband when he gets down here in a month was perhaps a bit of a blessing. I thought about how much all of these trials of reality have brought my marital relationship to its strongest place and taught my husband and I an immense amount about ourselves individually, the other partner, and us collectively. I thought that while I don’t know how I feel about the phrase, “Everything happens for a reason,” that I do believe more and more, “We can find reason and purpose in everything that happens.”
So I find myself 48 hours later in somewhat of the same state of mind as I was originally. It took me a roller coaster of thoughts and emotions to get here and an immense amount of support, some unexpectedly beautiful, from friends, family, and coworkers, old and new. And most important, the mutual support of my husband and I, for each other as well look at each other partner’s respective difficulties within this predicament.
And to give a little bit of melodic sound (if not actual singing) to the storm, my husband called last night saying that he was able to find a dirt cheap flight for Thursday, October 15. So I guess I will not have to resort to party hats for the fur-kids and dogfood cake for my birthday after all–yes, I contemplated it.
But more than that I realized how touched I was by my husband’s gesture towards me, our relationship, and to the importance of a birthday not spent alone. I found myself, last night, on the other end of the phone crying tears not of self-pity or anger but of gratitude–no one was more surprised than I at how much it meant to me to have him give such a gift to me and to our relationship.
Those tears were like an emotional prize I had won for getting to where I had without the pitying tears.
Tonight I sit, while somewhat emotionally exhausted, quite bright again. Not Jack Russell psychotically bright, but optimistic. And looking forward without trepidation…and counting down the days until I have a two parent team for this dog-full household.
The pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; the optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.
Winston Churchill











