191 // 365

The summer is more than half over now, but instead of letting the looming end depress me, I’m feeling a sense of pride this time. This summer has been my summer. Nothing particularly big has happened. On the surface, my life looks nearly the same as it did in the spring, but something is different, something unseen, in me. Life suddenly feels deeper, wider, and more real. I’ve changed. I continue to change into myself.

I’ve been reading again. It’s been my goal for a while to read more from Kazuo Ishiguro, so I picked up Klara and the Sun. I made time to delve into Octavia Butler’s amazing work by starting with Parable of the Sower and its sequel Parable of the Talents. Most recently, I finished Pageboy by Elliot Page, which has opened me up in ways I imagine will take several posts to get through. Before the summer is over, I’m determined to read Spare from Prince Harry and finally find my way through Yan Lianke’s The Explosion Chronicles.

I started working out intensely. For years I’ve wanted to simply “get healthier”. I managed in half starts and half-assed attempts because it’s hard, but for reasons having less to do with health anymore and more and more every day to do with gender expression it’s become a goal to find a body I can feel more comfortable in. I’m grateful to have friends who, for entirely different reasons, are on the same path to push me in the most loving and hilarious ways.

My online life is being restructured. Blogging has come in starts and stops over the last few years but as I resettle into myself and reacquaint myself with my passions and possibilities, I find myself wanting to begin again. I’d hoped to turn this place into a sort of commonplace book with my own words mixed with words from others that have inspired me. Turns out I hate that. So, with the slow and agonizing death of Twitter and my reluctance to learn a new platform—it’s back to Tumblr I go.

In addition, I’m falling in love with the platform Are.na. Most of what I post there ends up on Tumblr and vice versa, but Are.na allows me room to think, to connect, and to explore in more methodical ways. It’s where I would like my ideas to begin, to germinate, and to grow before I bring them here.

Writing-wise things are going…okay. Near the end of 2022, I was offered a chance to write for the We’re Not Really Strangers community. I worked on both the expanded Self Love game, helped develop the Anxiety edition, and submitted questions, reminders, and threads for their social media platforms. It’s been as much fun as it has been stressful, with moments of exhilarating pride and cutting self-doubt.

Recently though my work with them has reduced, which, even though I’m sad about it, might just the blessing I need. Writing for someone else made me realize (remember) how much I want to write for myself, in my own voice. I want to break the rules. I want to be wordy and confrontational. I want to write from where I am, where I have been, from what hurt me. I want to say things that might make people want to turn away.

Personally, I am so happy it scares me. My marriage is as solid as ever. My friendships are deepening. My identity is a place I finally feel safe to explore fully. My day job continues to fulfill me and I have the best team of coworkers anyone could ask for. I’m always waiting for the other shoe to drop. For some great pain to come and tear my life and my heart apart. Life always swings back. The universe corrects. Still, and so, I am taking in all the love I can get and finding new ways to give it now that I am surrounded by so many people who will allow me to.

That doesn’t mean I don’t have problems. That doesn’t me I don’t have a long way to grow still. Some things I’m working on now are: setting boundaries, making time to do things that are just for me, and continuing to cope with what I now know is anxiety, ADHD, and quite possibly CPTSD. How I’ve managed to keep my ulcerative colitis from flaring again is a miracle I can’t explain and how I’ve coped through family crisis after family crisis is a testament to the chaos I’ve learned to live with and the strength it took me to do so.

This post went on longer than I wanted it to as they tend to when I attempt to return. I want to end here bybeing honest, with myself most of all. No promises are being made here. No expectations are being set, only intentions, only expressions.

I want to write again, but I admit I don’t always know how I can. Turning these ideas, fragments, mere sparks into posts is a task I have not mastered yet. What I give myself here is permission. I am allowed to write anything I want, in whatever form, for whatever length, and as often and as not as feels right for me. It only has to be mine.

192// Still Turning

The world is still turning. I’m here and not, here and not. I’ve been off doing other things, but this space is never far from my thoughts. Fatigue, and worry, and heat, and overwhelm have kept me from it, and though I am here now, I make no promises for tomorrow or after.

Still, starting again is always a good sign. Being at this desk, typing, and even feeling the faint stirrings of old ideas and passions in the back of my mind is a sign that I’m feeling better. I’m feeling more myself. I’m mentally and physically stable enough to move outside of the present into memories and hopes.

For a short week this was certainly one of the longest in recent months. I was happy to be back at my usual location but coming off of a week spent away from work and coworkers and then returning to small talk, mask wearing, and expectation was jarring. I have another break coming up next week and after I think I’ll avoid taking time off for a long while. The seesawing between strict social distancing and this “new normal” are hard of the psyche.

And this new normal? It isn’t even agreed upon or settled yet, not by far! Every day new decisions are made and every day new anxieties are triggered. I’m dreading the start of the school year, but I’m also eager for it to begin. It’s going to be hard to find a way to stay safe and to keep both the kids and my coworkers safe too, but I’m ready to stop talking about it, fretting over it, speculating about it. I’m ready to get started!

Good things are happening too. I’m growing and learning how to delegate, how to teach, how to mentor others in my new position. I’m also confronting my flaws, bad habits, and toxic traits and working toward making space for others. I’ve spent so long fighting to be seen and heard that I have forgotten how to relinquish space to others. I no longer have to be the center to be secure or respected.

My health is improving with a new medicine and meal plan that includes hours of intermittent fasting to give my system a rest and plenty of time spent in a state of so little movement and stress that I am reminded of the “rest cure” prescribed to “nervous women” around the turn of the 2th century. It’s helping though and slowly, as I can, I’m returning to my workout routine and personal pursuits.

The world is still more shifting sand than solid stone out there. There is chaos, conflict, and change happening everywhere at every moment and it’s so scary but so exciting too. I’m happy to be alive now, though the old grief of knowing there is so much I won’t get to live through is stronger than ever.

They say living in the present helps relieve death anxiety, but for me paying attention to the present only ever highlights the time ticking away. Luckily, I’ve long since learned to sit with this—and many other—uncomfortable truths.