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March 14, 2006
Emotional Housekeeping
Here was my horoscope for today:
Your emotions are stretched as far as they can go and your thoughts are running helter-skelter all over the map. Still, you hold on to your enthusiasm, even if you haven't reached your destination. However, there is no payoff in being overly self-critical. Even if the possibilities are overwhelming, cautiously set another round of goals.
Darn tootin'.
Clara Jane's back home from her visit to Tornado Alley. I have never in my life been so happy to see her, except for that time, when I was in labor for 32 hours and she was whisked off to NICU for, oh, six hours, without me. While I was nervous on Sunday, the full force of it hit me once she was back. I've forced myself to stay busy tonight to spare her from being smothered by the sudden overprotectiveness that has come over me.
I'm still doing some emotional housekeeping, and I'm sure I will be for awhile. Today I caught myself getting worked up regarding some people I'm not fond of. Ridiculous! If I'm not fond of these people, and there isn't something binding me to them - bloodlines or a paycheck, for instance - then why the hell am I wasting my time on them? No more.
I got conked on the head with a big light bulb the other day: I make friends easily, but I suck at keeping them. At first the thought depressed me, but now, not so much. Maybe it's because my adult life has been in constant upheaval. Or not, because really, show me a 33-year-old who hasn't been in upheaval for roughly 15 years. There aren't many.
Maybe I'm not willing or able to make myself vulnerable enough to build the kind of bond that lasts. Or maybe I make friends with poeople who don't have that skill.
Maybe I'm just an asshole.
Whatever the reason, I catch myself getting annoyed with people and then with myself, but the annoyance goes away rather quickly. There's an upside to all of this that's making it a lot better: it's bringing me closer to B. and Clara Jane. Maybe I've spent all this time trying desperately to cultivate friendships so I can have emotional connections, support, and all that other chick lit crap, when really, I've already got it right under my roof.
I'm also realizing that I've got that connection and support - cheesy as this is going to sound - within myself. You're going to laugh when I tell you this, because it sounds so silly, but buying that damn iPod was one of the smartest things I've ever done.
I know I've mentioned before that, when I was a kid, I spent hours and hours sitting on our front porch swing with my Walkman and a huge stack of cassette tapes. I could sit on that swing, zoned, lost in my music, for days if they'd let me. If the weather was bad, I'd sit on the edge of my bed, unconsciously bouncing to the beat. I was always getting in trouble for wearing out mattresses and banging the porch swing into the side of the house. I couldn't help it; I'd get so lost in what I was listening to that I would be completely ignorant to what I was doing outside of my headphones.
B. and I spent last Saturday night in a hotel downtown. We sat on the cushy king-size bed and played hand after hand of 3-13 while we watched the lightening and rain from the 15th floor. Around 11 PM, B. went on a wild goose chase for a pizza (don't ask), leaving me in the room with my iPod for half an hour. I set it to shuffle, and the first song to play was the nine-plus-minute live version of Bruce Springsteen's Rosalita (Come Out Tonight). Oh, how the side of my parents' house suffered because of that song! I haven't heard it in years, but it was always one of my favorite Springsteen songs when I was heavily into my headphones.
By the time the second verse started I was bouncing on the bed, my cheeks hurting from the smile on my face while I gently bounced along. By the time I got to the line about papa saying he knows that I don't have any money, there were tears in my eyes. I felt like I'd come home.
So this is what it feels like to be me. I'd forgotten.
It felt great, returning to this piece of myself that had been gone for so long. I didn't realize I had lost it; I thought that piece of me lived on with my general music geekitude, but I was wrong. That's only a tiny part of it.
As great and whole as I felt in those moments, it was nothing compared to the horrible crash that happened later that night. I didn't expect the frailty that would come with it, not until I found myself in that big hotel bed at 3 AM, sobbing with such a force that my eyes remained swollen well into Monday. I'm still not sure what brought it on, whether it was for the lost innocence or the found innocence. It felt like grief, like I'd lost something, although I'm not sure what. I think maybe I was grieving because I'm once again changing and in upheaval. Even though I know I need to leave things and people behind and I know it's for the best, it's still hard to admit that things didn't work the way I'd hoped, that I failed, that people I loved failed, and that I'm once again entering unchartered territory.
Even though the terrain is new, Bruce will still be with me. But this time, so will B. and Clara Jane, and for the first time in my life, I'm sure I'll do just fine.
Posted by Robin at March 14, 2006 10:53 PM
Comments
Maybe your iPod and my iPod could have a play date someday. We could have coffee and they could play quietly in a corner of the coffeeshop or sumthin' like that.
Posted by: m at March 15, 2006 12:13 AM
Poppy--Help! Shoot an email to the address above. Hotmail has gone nuts over the last week, and I can't access my acct from work. Don't know if my last email ever made it to you or not.
Posted by: robert at March 15, 2006 10:23 AM
BTW, major, MAJOR thoughts about this post, which clearly was downloaded from my own brain this past weekend (via a song on your mix cd, he said cryptically). I still have these sessions you describe, generally involving bad but fevered dancing in my garage or studio, and the 41yo Bob and his 17yo predecessor meet in the ether for just a minute, high-five, and then saunter off back to parts unknown. Bruce is a major catalyst of this, particularly "No Surrender." I honestly don't think I've ever--EVER--made it thru that song (provided it was played loud enough) without getting a lump in my throat.
Next Sunday, I'll be in my studio alone, adding another year to my embarassing, 15-year-old ritual, which involves me, a Corona w/lime, and the songs "Yer Birthday" (beatles), "Happy Birthday" (concrete blonde), and "Happy Birthday to Me" (cracker).
Posted by: robert at March 15, 2006 10:44 AM
Ach. I have had moments like you've described in the past. I especially get those feelings sometimes after a visit home. I sort of regress into who I was before marriage, because the wife me is so disassociated from the pre-wife me, onacounta the fact that my husband doesn't share any of my history of "home." Anyway, I sometimes get sad when I get knocked over the head with a chunk o' nostalgia, cause I know I'll never get that old life back. My friends are no longer there; my family has changed; the landscape has changed... Since the hurricane, it is particularly painful to go home because now... I truly CAN'T go home again. Home is gone.
Posted by: Julie at March 15, 2006 11:34 AM
Glad you're back, Poppy. I thought maybe a stray tornado got you. I can relate so much to this post. The feelings of utter joy when you remember who you were/are and then the crushing grief knowing that you can't go back (and probably really not wanting to). But it's fantastic that you figuring it out step-by-step and having B & Clara Jane to support you. And Beatrice, of course. :-)
Posted by: carrster at March 15, 2006 12:02 PM
I think you and I are both venturing out into uncharted territory these days. Scary but damn it's rewarding.
Posted by: Dixie at March 15, 2006 05:02 PM
I'm glad that CJ is home safe and sound with her mama.
Your post described so well the experience of putting the music on, alone, and... letting it take you back. I did that recently for like two hours while Claire and Mike were off in Chicago and I was home alone, because I never ever get to listen to music when they're there.
I know exactly what that bonding-with-your-former-self-through-music-that-you-have-always-loved thing feels like. It's like joy and recognition and a feeling of rightness coupled with painful melancholy and a sense of loss, all rolled into one. It's like it makes you miss yourself. The self that you don't always have time to connect with, but also the self that you used to be and aren't anymore AND the self that you will always be but have trouble plugging into on a regular basis, the self that you should never forget about but do forget most of the time anyway... It's intense. THAT's what made you cry.
Posted by: Stace at March 15, 2006 05:51 PM
Wow. Strong writing, and a post I absolutely can relate to. Sometimes the power of the music takes you back to a place where you're so happy -- but then you crash later from the sheer power of the emotions and memories.
And like you, I make friends easily but struggle with keeping them over time and distance. I think sometimes it's because I am emotionally strong in ways (able to self-sustain), and fragile in others (scared of rejection.)
I am glad Clara Jane made it home safe and sound. I know you are too.
Posted by: Nancy at March 15, 2006 06:56 PM




