Sunday, December 17, 2006

Waking up

Two days ago, I fell asleep echoing into slumber, "I am going to stop avoiding myself". I made a decision. I am going to give myself the permission to continue on my path once more. It is too tiring attempting to go against the grain of my energy. To resist one's own nature is to deny one's existence.

Yesterday it was as if the sun peeked out and directed its rays straight on me. I felt warm again. I felt embraceable again. Without missing a beat, the men who once inhabited my world fell right back into it, marched back into my life. They called after me. They sent me lures, pulling me back toward them. They gave me that sunshine all over again. Time has a way of being. Just being. And as such, it does no right, and commits no foul. We linger through it, hoping to accept that same massive harmony, hoping that in some way by living in it, we can absorb a tiny bit of that self-acceptance and thereby understand how to exist, by just being.

I have halted the inertia of what draws out my personal beauty. I have laid a hand in order to guide my path, toward some unknown goal that I believed to be right. I had dressed my face with side-blinders, in order to achieve a type of success that I thought would lead me in a righteous direction. I kept my head bent, eyes focused on the road just ahead of my toes, unaware that in the process of my own discipline, I had spun around, and was merely pivoting around my heels.

I thrive on creativity. I am nourished by it. I am not whole without it. Creativity and passion are one and the same. And what comes with that passion, from that passion, behind that passion, is a force undeniably rooted in my sexual energy. By avoiding that solid connection to the earth, I had successfully severed my bloodline. Hopelessly following someone else's path, I had lost the path I was carving. This is not me.

Today, an accidental happening occurred. Unwittingly, I dialed an old friend's number. Wrong number. Yet, in reality, how very right it was to have heard his voice on the line. He, and all his bountiful, wondrous poetry of love. I sometimes believe he is my guiding star. That momentary collapse of our energy-bodies was something of a miracle. When we were in the same room together, it was as though the force of our passions was too much for a room to handle, forcing the walls to buck and quake. As though when we shared breath, what came out was pure white light. Together, we <i>multiplied</i> existence. This friend was a man who elicited the greatest out of me. In his eyes I could see vast proportions of potential. His potential. My potential. The world's potential. In our shared electricity, I understood beauty.

These, and others, are the types of signals I had forgotten how to receive. In my furious attempt at holding on to something precious, I had squeezed the beauty out of it. I held onto it so hard that when I opened my hand to see it, it had transformed into something other than what I had remembered. I forgot to let it be. And I realize this is how I must be. The squeezing has begun to make me sick. And I must let life be. I can not attempt to hold on to something I can not own. That something that I can not own... is my husband's acceptance of who I am.

I can feel my heart beginning to warm again.

5 comments:

Chris said...

I'm glad you have found your sense of self again and that it has brought you such relief. I hope it continues and spreads throughout for you.

Anonymous said...

So, here's the thing. Is part of this the idea that your H doesn't want you to do it and has said as much? Would it have such appeal and draw for you if he thought it was OK? Through my lens, if the answer to that question were no, that feels a little pathological. I guess the part of your story that I can't identify with is your unwillingness to take his expressly stated boundaries into account, without engaging in actual dialogue about it and coming to a joint conclusion on what's best - finding a way to get what you want, or setting (each other) free.

At the same time, you're swinging together, which puts you automatically into different relationship territory than me, so maybe my thoughts don't have so much value to you...

Anonymous said...

Acceptance. Wow. Sometimes you just gotta put it out there.

El Cuervo said...

and you are back! good, your heart deserves to be happy again!

anonym said...

thank you, chris, wild one and el cuervo, for your generous support. It's really amazing how much mental anxiety can affect your physical being. even more, it's a wonder how much you can change with just a shift in vision.

posterboy -- I understand your confusion here, and there really are no black and white answers. There is no question that my H and I would be terribly unhappy without the presence of one another in each of our lives. So the idea of "setting each other free" is one that perhaps seems like a decent solution, but in all honesty, it is one that holds only temporary significance. You see, it is in my love for H, that I find freedom.

"would it have such appeal and draw for you if he thought it was OK?" I can tell you, I have been in this position before. It was okay with one of my past lovers for me to see others, and trust me, the appeal was there, the passion was there, the whole package was there. I can say with conviction that if my H thought it was okay, or could live with it, I would continue doing these things I do. So why don't I engage in actual dialogue with him to get what I want?

This is the trickiest subject of all. By bringing him in to my chaotic world of agitation, I would then be overstepping his expressly stated boundaries. If I know that he would be devastated by my truths (which is something I must assume), that his fragile ego would erupt at just the implication of my nature, then the only reason I would be bringing any of it up would be to free myself of the burden that I have brought unto myself. This move would be the most selfish of all, for it would only be in my interest to "get that load off my chest". I am already aware that H has absolutely zero interest in pursuing an extra-marital affair. So why in the world would I want to disrupt what we have going? For "the sake of honesty"? No. This is some abstract notion of how relationships should be. When in actuality, some grease to hide the marring does make the commitment a bit easier to swallow. And for the sake of honesty, at what expense are you willing to forgo? Would you be willing to give up trust, or love for that matter? Because with this type of honesty, both of those go out the window, damned fast.