life as i know it

"...everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt." -Sylvia Plath

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

becoming a doctor

The air is thick with the scent of microwaved popcorn and Ramen noodles. The night’s arrival can be seen through the expansive windows, offering a majestic view of the golden leaves swirling above gentle ripples in the water below. A hand gingerly touches the pane of glass, appearing for a moment to will itself into the world of beauty beyond these halls. Against the window, the chill of the late autumn air can be felt, leaving fingertips icy and withdrawn.

The lounge is a melting pot of cultures seeking momentary escape in the commonalities of comrades. Immersed in the thick cushions of purple couches, books lay awry, forgotten for a moment in the laughter that fills the air. But soon, reality beckons once again.

The faces tell stories of exhaustion and determination, swollen eyes and pale faces recounting the expansive stretch of time that has elapsed since the last full night’s sleep. Frustration builds, but the fight is far from over. The night has only just begun.

Eyes meet across the weathered table, and we remember that we are living our dream.

Friday, November 25, 2005

i see it, and yet...

I just returned from spending the Thanksgiving holidays with my mom’s family. Nine people squeezed into a creaky, old farmhouse hidden in the depths of rural Georgia. The thick air breathed of a complicated mixture of animosity and excitement, sadness and relief, fear and love. And though I had promised myself to remain an observer to the dysfunctional dynamics that have always existed within this family, I rather found myself struggling with my inner urges to scream and cry, my desperate need to reconcile the battling polarities of love and hate that have lay dormant within me for so long now.

Though I was overcome with internal emotions, I did my best to hold them at bay, and continued to remind myself….observe. And so I did. But observation does not negate feelings. And so the results of my observations were more disheartening than I could have imagined.

My grandmamma, barely weighing in at 100 pounds, frail and weak, with no more energy left after 61 years of fighting with my grandfather. Her shriveled skin was covered with bruises from the hard linoleum where she has fallen and laid on too many occasions. Her skin so cold and sensitive to even the most loving of touches, left a sadness deep within me. As I blanketed her skin in lotion and rubbed her hands within mine, I could see the pain and desperation in her eyes. I could see the surrender; she has given up and she is ready to go. And yet we are not ready.

My mama, with a strength far greater than she knows and her nurturing spirit. I watched her as she dressed my grandmamma, my mama’s loving touch bringing moments of forgotten happiness to her own mama. Her generosity, her care, her concern for others pushing her own fears and sadness to a place of hiding, her primary focus on bringing peace to a family that has never known such serenity. As I talked with her about her life, I could feel her courage and was mesmerized with admiration and respect for this woman who has grown from the depths of hell and has risen to a pillar of strength and love. As she talked, I listened, and was overcome with love for my mama. I could see her strength. And yet we are not so strong.

My aunt, adorned in her eccentric ways, the foundation of my own creative spirit, bringing laughter and memories of times filled with excitement and happiness. She also, bound by an inner strength. She has always been my kindred spirit and laying in her arms again, I felt that same strength and comfort she has brought in some of my darkest hours. But in her eyes, I could see her pain, her fears, the grieving process already beginning for her. And I felt helpless with the realization that I could not provide such strength and comfort to her. I could see her pain. And yet we cannot ease the pain.

My grandfather, the origin of dysfunction and despair that has lived far too many years within these three women. His cruel and uncaring nature, his hatred of himself illuminating itself through his words of criticism and heartlessness. For so many years, I have made myself forget the cruelty and devastation he wreaked upon my grandmamma and mama and aunt. But this time, I could not forget. I looked at him and saw the reason for the pain that each of them feel. I saw a man who has no remorse for the internal and external bruises he has left, a man that is relieved by the fear he invokes in others, a man that I have tried to love, and yet cannot. I could see the brutality of his soul. And yet we cannot understand or overcome such brutality.

And so I arrived home today, brimming with emotions that have been deeply buried within me for the past few days. I arrived home with feelings of sadness and anger, feelings of admiration and love. I arrived home wishing I had more time to hold my grandmamma’s hands, more time to listen to my mama’s stories, and more time to lay in my aunt’s arms. I arrived home wishing that I would never have to see the ugly face of brutality again.

But despite it all, I arrived home.

Monday, November 21, 2005

beautiful soul

Three a.m., icy wind whips open
a borrowed coat while
black heels dance on frosted cement
crystallized sculptures birthed
in the morning of newness.
The world stops
time and people vanish as
I am pulled
by touch or some magical magnetism
into the enigma of you
and this early morning beauty.
Mirrored image arises
in a puddle of icy blackness
painting the newness
and intoxication of
your beautiful soul.

Monday, November 14, 2005

creativity vs. technicality

I have loved to write for as long as I can remember. Poetry, journal entries, random fragmented thoughts and philosophical analyses…this has always been an outlet for me, the one thing that can bring me sanity and peace in the midst of chaos. So in my present predicament, I am finding myself struggling to hold on to that passion for writing, to refrain from the cynicism and bitterness that is threatening to take hold.
Doctoral school seems to have that cynical and bitter influence on so many people in so many facets of life. Writing is the facet in which I have found my current struggle here. It’s not that I mind writing the papers. On the contrary, I often enjoy the actual writing. It’s the rules and limitations and technicalities that are battling it out with the creativity inside of me. And it is really only one class that leaves me with this disheartened view of writing. A class in which every paper I write is composed of a detailed analysis and interpretation of numbers and percentages, in which every paper must adhere to strict guidelines regarding the proper format and the proper organization and the proper interpretation. And I have difficulty with this. I have difficulty looking at numbers in the first place, much less trying to give meaning to them. I have difficulty finding something worthwhile to say about a person based on percentages. And I especially have difficulty understanding why in the hell this class is called “Cognitive Assessment”. The word cognitive itself implies thinking. And the resulting creations (papers) of this class are much more a demonstration of meeting someone’s expectations than they are about thinking. And though I understand that the assessments I am doing for this class are actually aimed at analyzing another person’s thinking process, the irony still does not sit well within me.
So as I write these technical papers that will be read by doctors and lawyers and school officials, I find myself hoping that my creativity will not become lost amidst the statistics. My creativity is one of the integral aspects of myself that drove me to the field of clinical psychology in the first place. If I lose it in the process of becoming a doctor, then I will never be the doctor I have always dreamed of being.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Bittersweet Beginnings

Sometimes I find myself stuck in what feels to be an impenetrable state of incompatibility. The available paths lead in opposite directions, and neither is without its shortcomings. The journey down either path will present me with both laughter and tears, though the nature of their origins will differ drastically. Oftentimes, I have found myself overcome with anxiety during these times, the incessant worry further building the impenetrability of that moment. Though lately I have come to an awareness that it is all only a facet of the ever-growing circle of life.
Each path will have its soaring highs and disturbing lows. Without the bad, we can never know the power or magnitude of the good. Though opposites, the yin and yang journey together across either path, creating an ultimate balance of harmony and growth.
And so I know that the disturbing lows I have encountered are merely a milestone of the journey. These stepping stones are integral; without them, it would not be possible to soar.
I have a choice now, one that has been building for months, a choice between two paths, each which may lead me on a complex journey of laughter and tears. However, one path requires more courage, more strength, more risk, and more faith. And that is the choice I choose now to take. That is the path that offers more opportunities to soar and less possibilities of despair. It is a journey of continuation, a journey of growing, a journey of learning and finding the balance of harmony. But it is also a journey that began years ago, a journey that has reached a plateau, and yet a journey that I believe can reach those soaring heights. A journey that must now begin anew. The pains can not be forgotten or the disappointments erased, but these stepping stones can provide the foundation for a better tomorrow. The yin and the yang may journey together, but they must each be aware that one cannot, and should not, exist without the other.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

death and life

Blind emotion lends a helpless hand
offering superficial comfort in a lost reality.
Sensing tragedy’s dreadful approach
the air becomes icy, the sky darkens.
The arrival of fear’s calling at four a.m.
awakens the blood coursing through tightened veins
enlivens the numbed fingertips
mobilizes the paralyzed limbs.
Life imitated in the throes of death.

Awareness lends a helping hand
offering truth and peace in infinity’s blur.
Knowing tragedy has already arrived
the air becomes warmer, the sky brightens.
The closure of farewell’s bidding at four p.m.
calms the shaken nerves of a body wearing exhaustion
soothes the aching heart
relieves the rigid muscles.
Death realized in the throes of life.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

wake up calls

I’m not a morning person. I’ve never been a morning person. It’s only when the darkness settles that I become enlivened. And yet there is one thing that has always made my mornings brighter. There is one thing that can put a smile on my face at 7 or 8 or 9 a.m., times that I cannot fathom why the rest of the world is yet awake.
Those phone calls may not seem like much, probably more a chore than anything else, an obligation done out of fear that I will once again sleep through my alarms and miss some big important event. But those phone calls are so much more to me than that. It’s the one constancy amidst the chaos of my days. It’s my daily reminder of the inherent goodness in people and the tremendous impact that the love and kindness of one person can have on some many others. It’s the renewed faith that I can, and will, make a difference in someone’s life.
Each morning, the incessant beeping of multiple alarms is interrupted by an obnoxious ringing of the phone. But once I have sleepily reached across the bed and silenced the ringing, I am greeted by a voice of familiarity and love. The “fact or crap” questions of the day that I always get wrong, the silly jokes that are so ridiculous they actually make me laugh, the lectures on the healing effects of water and bread….all seemingly trivial things, yet such an integral part of my daily life. On the rare occasions when I am not awakened by a phone call, I feel some tiny emptiness that is carried with me throughout the day.
Until the next morning, the phone rings, and I am again reminded of how blessed I am to be daddy’s little girl.

how do we know

How do we know
when the time has come to let go?
Hope and faith can carry us
all a long distance,
but just how far
can they carry us?
When does the time come
when it is no longer okay
to call just to say hello?
Or to call just to say
“I love you”?
When do we let
the past fade away?
When do we decide
that the ashes of our past
can never be rekindled?
How do we let go
of the experiences
and the people
that have helped mold us
into who we are today?
Is it giving up
or is it letting go?
How do we know?

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

chosen paths

I often wonder what my life would be like now had I chosen a different path. There are so many times in life when the road forks, when I’ve found myself caught in that stress-inducing conundrum of deciding which journey was ultimately the one I was meant to travel. But the reality is that we can never undoubtedly know which path is the “right” one. We never know God’s exact “plan” for us in that moment. Fate’s voice is never quite loud enough for us to hear which direction we are predetermined to take. And the even greater reality is that maybe, quite possibly, there is no predetermined path or plan for us in that exact moment. Maybe the details of the journey are undetermined and unknown. Maybe it is only the end result of that journey that is known by some greater power.
If you think about relationships, many people believe that each person has one other person in this world with whom they were meant to spend their lives. Yet, even if this is true, does it necessarily mean that the exact time and place in which you meet that person has already been determined? Is the way you meet that person a predetermined milestone in your journey, or is the more integral piece of the journey found as an eighty-year-old man comforts his dying wife?
Regardless of whether or not the steps of our journeys are already known by some greater power than us, it still leaves me wondering where I would now be had I chosen a different path. Though it is impossible to ever know who or where I would now be, the stories I’ve concocted in my head are endless. And the reality is that I know, despite all the unknowns, that I am exactly who I’m meant to be.

**The following story is true, though the speculations are completely hypothetical of how my life might now be, had I chosen a different path.**

It was a Tuesday afternoon in March in the town where I was born and raised. I cannot recall whether the sun was shining, though it shouldn’t have been even if it was. My recollections present an overcast day, gray and slightly chilling despite the beginnings of a southern Spring. But it could have been that the grayness was only an internal condition of the day. Regardless, that day in mid-March produced a torrential downpour that would continue for months.
The morning was spent with my fiancé, deliberating on the details of our upcoming June wedding and meeting with the preacher who was set to perform the ceremony. The invitations had arrived, simplistic in their design, much like my soon-to-be husband. The dress was hanging in my mother’s house, the heavy satin and crystals bringing reality to any little girl’s fantasy. The guest list had been made and the reception plans were in progress. The church where I was baptized as an infant was reserved for an afternoon in late Spring that was to mark the beginning of my life with this man I adored. The bridesmaids had been fitted for their pale blue strapless gowns with adorning daisies. I walked into the pastor’s office that morning, a perfectly delicate diamond ring on my left hand and the love of my life by my side. Yet despite the fact that absolutely nothing was wrong, something was not right.
Sitting across from the preacher that morning, I listened to him speak of the commitment and the dedication involved in marriage. I heard him speak of temptations that would inevitably come to each of us. I heard him talk of the “ups and downs” that all marriages encounter. And I listened intently as he spoke of love. I knew I loved the man sitting next to me; I knew that more definitely than I knew just about anything in my life. But I also knew that something about what this pastor was telling us did not fit with the relationship that had evolved over the past two years.
The events following that meeting with the pastor have become a blur in my mind now. I vaguely remember a casual lunch at my parent’s house. But mostly I remember the confusion and the fear that was overwhelming me inside. I remember not knowing what to say to my fiancé or my parents or anyone. I remember wanting nothing more than to be able to run away from all the terrifying battles that were taking place in my head and my heart. I remember wishing that for once, I could ignore the doubts and just continue on with my “happily ever after”. But I’ve never been one that could ignore anything for long. I’ve never been one to suppress my feelings or do something that I felt was wrong. And on that day in March, I knew that if I didn’t stop the fairytale, it would be wrong.
In my beloved old black Rodeo in a mall parking lot was where my life changed forever. In the midst of the tears, I told him of my doubts and fears. I told him of my uncertainties, and also of those things of which I was certain. I told him that I knew I loved him, that I always had and I always would. But I also told him that I didn’t know if that love was enough. He was my family, he would always be my family. But was he meant to be my husband?
As I drove away that afternoon, my bags packed and my destination unknown, I left behind the only future I had ever imagined. That week I said good-bye. Good-bye to him and to our future together.
So every now and then, I find myself wondering where would I be now had I not said good-bye.
Suppose that day in March, I had not verbalized my fears and doubts. Suppose we had continued to finalize the plans for our honeymoon. Suppose that on that Saturday afternoon in June, my father had walked me down the aisle in my beautiful satin gown, kissed my cheek, and led me into the arms of the man I loved. Suppose the vows were said, the veil was raised, and he had kissed me tenderly and lovingly as he had done so many times before. Suppose we had been pronounced man and wife.
Instead of taking a job in my hometown, we would have moved together into an apartment in Atlanta, both working long hours with mediocre pay. His dreams of managing bands and becoming an integral person in the music industry would have faded behind the demands of a new family. My dependency on him would have continued to grow, causing increasingly frequent problems in the rituals of our daily lives. He would return home from work each evening, cook his famous dinner concoctions, and I would lie awake in bed each night long after he had fallen asleep. My insomnia would not be filled with all the thoughts of things I wish we could do or all the places I wish we could go, because my fears would be far too encompassing to imagine such life adventures. Nevertheless, we would continue day by day, loving each other and suppressing our wonders (conscious or unconscious) of what else the world might offer.
Neither of us would have ever learned the true value and beauty of independence. Neither of us would have worked so adamantly at fulfilling our passions and dreams in life. Neither of us would have pursued the self-exploration and internal growth that has led us to become the people we are today.
So because of that fateful day in March when my world and the direction of my life was forever altered, I have come only to a greater knowledge and appreciation of life and love. And the certainties that existed on that afternoon are certainties that I continue to hold today. This amazing man, who was once destined to be my partner in life, is still a part of my family and a part of my heart. And I still believe that when my heart tells me something isn’t right, I cannot ignore it and continue on in doubt. If I could, I would not be who I am.