I’ve never been a huge fan of magnetic poetry—in the throes
of postpartum frustration with my lack of time for writing or even adult
conversation, I even wrote a fairly bitter poem about those poor polarized word
fragments. Yet we have a set; the kids love it and even my math-minded husband
has fun with it. And still, I’ve always dug in my heels—the whole glory of this
insane English language lies in the plethora of words at our disposal. Why
limit yourself to a couple hundred options defined by a stranger?
Today, I looked at the unused words remaining on our fridge
and challenged myself. Can I express something I truly feel right now using
these few dozen scraps? As it turns out, I could. I did. See above.
That I chose those words, that I might—do?—believe them,
that they now will live, here and on my fridge, terrifies me. That they may be
true tantalizes me.
I feel like I’ve spent most of my life building something—a nest
perhaps. Tucking solid things in around me and mine, weaving tangible structures
for protection, support, and stability. And every time the weather has gotten
rough, every time life has shaken my tree or a storm battered my nest, I’ve
rebuilt. And over the years, each repair, each rebuild has grown more frantic
as I fix larger breaks, coming faster and faster, one after another.
The past two years have swept away my fantasies of fixing—both
in the modern sense of repairing and the older, photographic sense of making
permanent.
Two summers ago I learned that no one can afford elder care
and then spent a month consumed by the specter of breast cancer. Then Hurricane Irma
swept into our lives, tangibly destroying first-world assumptions of security that we had
thought we didn’t have. In one sense, Irma literally sent us from one nest to
another; after the hurricane, we decided to buy our forever home because…well,
life is short and unpredictable and now is all we have.
Then my siblings and I had to find eldercare, affordable or
not, and we moved my mom. Then my husband and I moved our family, then, before we caught our
breath, everything went wrong with our new house. For about three months, we
thought no one could repair our nest. I certainly could not. Yet time moved on,
we moved back in, and, tentatively, carefully, we moved forward.
Now…now we start to trust the shelter of our home again,
feeling secure enough to hang the last few pictures and re-cover a few remaining
cushions. Now life’s rhythm, though resting on a different—more fluid and yet,
perhaps, more lasting—foundation, has resumed. I have begun to pick up my head
and look around.
"a powerful healing year for you" |
I’m not much of a mystic, but I think we tend to notice the
astrology, numerology, and tarot offerings that we need to hear. So when I saw
this prediction for 2019, I latched onto it:
In August, past the midpoint of the year, it turns out that
this year might truly be a time of healing. A time after the wind rose, blowing
away so much that I sheltered in, so much that weighed on me, leaving me
shivering, uncertain how to move forward without a familiar enclosure.
A time when I might learn that the lightest life can also be
the deepest, the strongest, the richest, the warmest—the most of everything I
love.
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