Monday, October 19, 2009

Fear and Reprieve

When I was in high school, I played basketball. Lots and lots of basketball. It was hell. In elementary school and junior high school it had been great -- and egotistical though it may sound, I hadn't been three-quarters bad -- but in high school it all went away. My stomach still sinks when I think about it and, shoulders shrugging, I'd still like to know what went wrong. Somewhere inside I still feel bummed. I had these plans, see. These plans to go to college on a real scholarship, to make the varsity my sophomore year, to be the point guard, to play.

But it didn't turn out like that. Lots of my life feels that way when I think of it. I watched a lot of the movie that came out at Christmas a few years ago, The Polar Express, with tears in my eyes, because I understood what the little boy meant when he said, "Christmas just doesn't work out for me." I feel that way. Life just doesn't work out for me.

Starting, I suppose, with basketball. I guess the problem must have been me (am I not supposed to say that?), maybe I wasn't so good anymore (it seems like I was, though). Perhaps the chemistry with the first coach, who left after my sophomore year to be an assistant at a big college, was a little bit off? Certainly I had no chemistry with the coach who came after her, who made me feel terrible about me and who I still bitterly wage war with, deep in my heart, far back in the lost places of my young girl's mind.

Some wounds seem like they shouldn't matter as much as they do. For me it's this basketball thing, but only in part. Only in part because I'm starting to think that life doesn't work out all that well for anyone. We all seem so sure it's working out well for the other guy, but the more I talk to him, the more he keeps telling me how great I seem to have it, or if not me, then you. I'd be a pretty sad sack of potatoes if I thought I hoed this row alone. It'd also be a pretty good farmer's market if basketball were my only potato, or if that one coach were my only foe. But I've blundered more than that, and in my mind I've got my finger in quite a few faces. Plus, let's don't forget I'm battling some actual, tangible enemies. Endometriosis, I'm talking to you.

Back to basketball. I remember there was one game when that coach came down extra-hard on me. Told me on the way to the locker room at half-time that he couldn't see any reason why he should let me play anymore. We were playing one of the less-than teams in our league, and we were not playing them very well. But I was trying as hard as I could. I've never been the sort of person who responded well to more pressure. I never, ever need more pressure. Looking back, that was part of the chemistry disconnect. If I ever would have thought for one second that he really believed I could do it, I'm sure we both would have been surprised by the results. But I always knew that he expected me to fail. It was a crushing burden to bear.

I really have no idea what happened in that game, if we won or if we lost or how much I played in the second half. But something happened that night for which I will always be grateful. I got home and it was winter in Idaho, and I put on my sweats, and my headphones with my old Walkman tapeplayer, and I went out to run. It was a black, black night. I don't know if my parents were home or if they even knew I left. I just remember that I went out to run.

I ran so hard, and for so long, and I remember that there was a point at which -- for just a moment -- I didn't feel scared. I didn't care. I didn't feel the pressure. I knew it didn't matter. I just ran. I lived in the same house for nearly every day of my childhood, and so every one of those streets was familiar. It was dark, but I wasn't lost. I realized that night that I know how to be alone without being lonely. I realized that things can be so hard, but you can still be there. That's it. You're still there.

For just a few minutes I was with me and I wasn't scared.

There are so many reasons to be afraid. It is good to be afraid. It means you understand what you're up against. But it is good to know that you can be counted down and out; you can, in fact, be utterly powerless, and still find your way in a cold, black night. Nothing got better after that run, not for a long, long time. But that run was still a good thing.

It is good to be afraid. Good, too, are moments of reprieve, even when they come in the dark.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Both at Once

Haven't posted in awhile. Can't say why. Just haven't quite been up to it. Things get hard. Words fail. Finally I write.

I've been talking to my husband a lot lately about how life can be "both at once," both good and bad, yin and yang, shitty and wonderful, and realizing that it's a really hard concept to wrap your mind around. I guess I'm lucky because it's not so hard for me. I laugh as I write that because I wonder if I've had so much shitty that I've always been scrounging around for the good, like little Charlie in the Chocolate Factory, insisting against all of the odds that, goddamnit, I will find the golden wrapper, I will, I will, I will... Even when there's no reason to believe it's possible, I'm somehow sure that if I just hang in long there enough, Grandpa will get outta that bed and come with me to the rivers of milky-sugary-wonderfully-chocolaty-brown. What's so great about that story, of course, is that when Charlie does find the golden wrapper, he finds it because first he finds the money -- the money to buy the chocolate bar. And where does he find that money? In the gutter.

The beginning of the trip to the chocolate factory started in the gutter. That's from the book. Nerdy kids like me always got the real story out of the book. I think in the movie he might get the chocolate bar at his birthday party. His family had saved and scrounged to get it for him. But in the real story, in -- gasp! -- the book -- he gets the money in the gutter. And he goes in the store, and he buys the candy, and he opens the bar, and he sees the golden wrapper, and pandemonium breaks loose, and he has to flee for his life. Poor little pauper Charlie goes from gutter to glory just like that. Both at once.

And then in the end Willy Wonka gives him the factory. The whole damn thing.

What do we get? I get this endo on my liver that doesn't go away, even after that awful surgery that left me living on the line between what felt possible and impossible for months. I got some other stuff that I don't write about but that busts me down to my knees way worse than any ol' abnormal growths on my abdominal organs. I got insecurities that I can't even deal with. I got questions that don't got answers. I got this loneliness deep inside that wells up in my throat and makes me think that a person has never felt more vapid than me. I got mistakes, regrets, losses, painful losses. I got things I understand that I wish I never learned.

But I got this boy who keeps coming home everyday. He drives me crazy, you know. He does. When I tell him that it's both at once, that we're just like Charlie, he tells me that all I see are daisies. It's absurd. Nobody, and I mean nobody, but that guy thinks I'm an optimist. I do like those daisies, though. They're part of the both at once, and so is he. I'm running better and faster everyday. I'm learning not to let my heart beat so hard and so fast, and that makes everything better. I'm writing again. I'm reading more. The world is full of books and, holy shit, it's so much better than filling my eyes up with all of that TV. Music, glorious music. My few friends who showed up when I was in the hospital, showed up when I came home, showed up a month later when it still hurt, showed up last week when I felt discouraged again. October baseball.

Fall, sweet fall, when summer heat fades away.

Both at once.

In the academic life, especially in the social sciences, we talk about the Enlightenment, and those white dudes who wrote about Progress, and the forward march of society, and how gosh darnit things are getting better all the time. And after we learn about that, we learn about how to critique that, and it's fun. We ask the simple question: When we speak of this progress, about whom are we speaking? Who's reaping the benefit? In academic circles the answer usually is those same white, property-owning dudes who seem to see everything getting better all the time. But I suspect that at the end of the day even their hearts break. I know plenty of them who've gotten sad a time or two. (Plenty of non-sequiturs could get launched here, that would take me off track, that even I could launch at myself. Let's don't.) We don't live on number lines where we walk forward for a bit and then get thrown back because we've been cheated. This is not a game of input output. God knows we try so hard. I try so hard. I get so angry because it isn't enough.

It isn't enough, because we're just little people in a really big world, and the really big world is smarter and faster and slyer than us all. The world fucking cheats, too. Denying that just makes you annoying. It's doubly annoying if you're not a cheater. However.

We live both at once.

It's true that some people seem like they have a lot more glory than gutter. Lucky bastards. Hard not to hope they trip.

Hey, what can I say? I'm still struggling with both at once and feeling safe and realizing that I can't always do more than I'm doing.