10/12/10

A writer

At what point does one realize that they are a writer? 

Over this past week, as I have been more actively posting, this question has been turning over in my mind. I write. It's always been something I do, something I've loved, even something I've been addicted to. But where in lies the separation between writing, and being a writer?

On one of my pages today, my dear sister-in-law posted an Anais Nin quote: "The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say".  She said it made her think of me. 


"Other people think of me as a writer?" I wondered to myself. Insert here every negative thing you could ever think to yourself about why they shouldn't and "why you are not a writer" -- both from myself, and even from others I know.  

All day long at work, all I could think about was what I would write tonight. Throughout the day, little things inspired me, prompted me ... but I also felt an obligation to attempt to get the story of the journey to the current time. I would push away the more creative impulses and focus instead on what to say in the planned post. 

Even as I got home tonight, I'd step into a room, something would capture my eye or spark in my mind, and I  would think "Oh! I should write about that!" But by the time I got to the computer itself, the other story needed another chapter. I felt emotionless and kind of disconnected and unfocused as I composed it, just praying that somehow the words would skip their way into that pretty little city called "Touching". Yeah, I read it once I finished, and I think it made it about 1/4 of the way to "Touching" and then pooped out. 

There are days when you live something so intensely, so continuously, that actually having to think about what its like to be in that moment can be completely exhausting. You live trying to be outside of it so that it doesn't consume you, and then you write, trying to tell the world the story of your heart and your body, and you separate from it, just so you don't collapse. And suddenly, the story is empty and has instead become a narrative, a boring documentary instead of a lively commentary. 

I think the hardest part for me is trying to relay the "way that it happened" ... when all I can really think about at the moment is about how upset I still am that I cried yesterday during an ultrasound (seriously??? who does that??) because it hurt so bad, and about how hard I tried not to scream during the biopsy. I'm not used to feeling or expressing weakness in front of many - it is something that only the rare few that I trust get to see, and here I was, not only crying, but crying in full nekkid glory. Sigh. 

I started writing again to release my story and here I can't stand to write it. 

A writer reaches people with the words that they paint, the worlds they build and the characters that they make into reality. The pulse of their language drives into hearts, souls, and minds -- and creates change. They touch many and capture their readers to the point of hunger for the next words. This is the goal and dream of most writers, and few ever achieve it. 

My goal, instead, is to express myself. To pour everything onto this blank screen and feel every moment. To never write something that my heart isn't in, and to stay true to my muses and inspiration, no matter what form they take in that day. To me, some days I may be a writer, and other days I may be just someone who writes. 

Journey, pt. 2

Note: In continuation. I will try to get as far as I can. Again, this might be disjointed and a little messy. Please comment if you have any questions. You can find post 1 here.


There really was more to that night than just "opening up". Here I was, sitting in the car with one of the most important people in my life and I was bawling my eyes out. Breaths were more like desperate ragged gasps for air between random tangents related only to the fleeting feelings of that moment, nothing connected, and everything grasping.


All that kept surfacing again and again was how alone I was, and my fear that this could be the last ... everything. That the last time I loved and was loved, could be the last. I felt as though I was locked into a horrible dream where karma was the evil judge, and every past sin was laid before me and shouting "this is why"! I was a mess, and even after he left, I sat in the parking lot at work and cried. 


Once I felt my tears had dried enough, I began my drive home, and my phone calls. It was time to let everyone know. I had crossed the line now from my secret to my battle. 


***


I made conscious decisions based on many factors on who to call and when. I saved those who would be most fragile or had enough other things going on themselves for last.  My grandparents, brother, and best friend were all at the end of the list ...  I hated to think of causing them worry or raining on the joy and happiness in their own lives. To me, it really wasn't as important to create a support circle as it was to protect them. 


There were surprises among the calls, people who were full of information, people who had a million questions, people who were uncharacteristically supportive ... and a few others who had no idea what to say, and haven't tried since. I quickly became tired of the words "I'm sorry" ... as they felt almost like a cop-out, something to say when you don't want to say what you're really thinking. I also didn't want pity, I just wanted them to know.  Even from the beginning, it was never about how bad I could feel about what was happening, but what could I do to change it. 


The doctors and I began talking about what to do, how to fight, what tactics and measures to use. Surgery was always a given, but as I am a single mom, the timing was dependent on when I could actually afford to take time off of work, and still maintain our already fragile financial life. Thankfully, my employer is family-centric, and there is a paid vacation scheduled around the Thanksgiving holiday that would allow me enough time to heal without a huge impact on our checkbook. It was 9 weeks away when we scheduled. The question now was, what would we do between now and then?


Now keep in mind, I don't have insurance. I have no idea how I can pay for my medication, treatments, the surgery, and still keep our little family afloat. Thankfully, when I was discussing all of the options and choices with my cousin, she was wise enough to tell me that health can't wait, but medical bills can. 


I started to research. I heard this over and over again from friends and loved ones as I talked to them about what I would do. Clinical trials, hormone therapies, chemo ... so many foreign words to learn and things to make decisions about. I am usually a very decisive person, and I could not make up my mind. My process was more one of elimination based on comfort level than one based on actual facts, at least at first. This meant clinical trials were a no-go, and, well, chemo wasn't exactly ranking high either. Sure, its track record was amazing, but there was just something about losing my hair that sent me into a collapsed mess of tears every time. I opted for hormone-suppressants. 


At first, I was comfortable with my choice. I had already been having hot flashes, mood swings and night sweats. Only - those all now got worse, along with a couple of other side effects I hadn't bargained for.  About as fast as I started it, I decided I had made the wrong decision ... but of course, I had to wait to talk to the doctor.


***


... again, to be continued. Sorry!









10/11/10

The beginning of a Journey (pt. 1)

Note: This might be disjointed and a little messy. It's all fairly fresh and yet jumbled even in my mind. Please comment if you have any questions. 

A few weeks ago I started a new journey. I guess, to be more correct, I started on the journey several months ago, I've just become skilled at ignoring my body and warning signs. And putting off doctor appointments.

Anyways, I digress. Early in September of this year I finally went to the doctor. Something was wrong, and not just the "I think I'm getting sick" kind of wrong, more like a "wow, there is something serious going on here" kind of wrong. If you know me though, I talked myself out of every possible scenario and had convinced myself it was nothing. Even joked that maybe I was pregnant.

Of course, as of January 2007, that would be impossible.

I went in, they drew blood, they did tests, they cut pieces, they scheduled more tests. They did exams, asked questions, looked at history. After the first few rounds of tests that were followed by letters and phone calls of "Everything looks normal for x and x and x" was when I started to realize that something actually was seriously wrong. And there were a few tests that I still hadn't heard the results on.

A little history: Years ago, it seems like lifetimes now, although it was not really quite that long, I had tests and procedures and such. I took hormones, and pills and had things removed and frozen. I had always just assumed that if the "Big C" ever came to get me, it would get me in the same place. It's fairly common, and I expected it.

After I had my youngest, I did the routine post delivery check up. Things looked fine, in fact, more normal than they ever had, so I felt confident. Headaches that started shortly thereafter, the night sweats, the hot flashes, things late or missing - well, maybe it was normal. I didn't really know anyone who had had a tubal before, how was I to know what I could expect?

Things changed over time though, got more intense. I never scheduled another yearly appointment again, even in spite of all of this. Instead, I'd text my best friend if things weirded me out. "Whats this mean?" became the opener of many conversations.

And again, I have found the little path that leads away from my point. Eventually, after much prodding and cajoling and hard hitting attempts to convince me, I ended up at the doctor that September afternoon. Then, it was time to wait.

***

A couple of weeks passed. If you've ever had a test done and you had to wait for the results, you know what it feels like. You jump a little everytime the phone rings, you count down the days til they expected to have them back. When the phone finally does ring and you see THAT NUMBER, you actually hesitate and take a huge breath that you're afraid to exhale for fear of everything crashing down. And you haven't even answered the phone.

I was at work when "the call" came. Not just the "you have results" call. The voicemail left was closer to "you need to call us as soon as you get this." When I got to a phone to return the message, I was never more glad that I had shut myself in my bosses office and she was gone for the day. There is nothing like hearing that your results are back, but that you'll need to make an appointment to discuss them, and we have openings tomorrow, Friday afternoon, if you're able ...

I don't know which emotion hit first, it was something between angry at myself, scared for the girls, and worried about my friends and family. I don't think I cried for an entire week -- nor did I talk to anyone about it. There was nothing to talk about. Yet.

Friday afternoon, under the guise of running an errand, I left work early and went to my doctor's office. There is never a more alone feeling than knowing you're about to hear something so very possibly life changing that you'll wish you had someone by your side just to hold you up. But I didn't have anyone. I was alone in receiving this, just as I would be alone in the fight of it. It is my body that is sick, my mind that has to go through the thoughts, the pain and the sadness and joy of it, so it was only fitting that it was only me who would hear what came next. Fear has never suited me well, and I wasn't about to let it start.

I do feel bad for doctors. I cannot imagine having to tell someone who's children you've delivered, whom you've come to know and joke with and laugh with, that they are sick. I can understand the stammering, the sideways glances, the moments taken to recollect thoughts and choose words. I am also grateful that this friendship is one that I share with my doctor ... I don't know that it would have been easier to have just been "another chart" when I was told.

When he came in, he was more serious than normal. His expression soft, and yet clouded, he started, and didn't mince words. "We think you have cancer."

Now, you remember, I always expected this. From the moment of that first biopsy years before, it had been something I had planned for. I was calm and calculated in my response, enough that I think I surprised him. I had him fooled, but of course, I was a spinning spiral of confusion and fear and the sickening realization that no matter how much you think you expect something, that when it actually happens, you feel like an entire convoy of Mack trucks decided to drive over you and back a few times.

I have family members and friends that recommend taking notes at every appointment. I keep meaning to bring something, but I suppose for me, writing something makes it real, and I don't know that I am ready for all of the numbers and the language to be a part of my reality yet. Because of this, I came away from that appointment firmly believing that I had cervical cancer. Wake up call to me by the next visit.

When I went in again to discuss the ultrasound results, it was obvious, quickly, that I was wrong. I had endometrial (uterine) cancer, and it had spread to my cervix. This was when the first jolt of fear hit me. This was not a part of what I expected at all.

That week, I was noticeably snappy. I was irritable and emotional, the latter of which is not normal for me. I would cry over silly things, oversensitive in my reactions to jokes and normal interactions. Finally, one night, I broke down to another of my closest friends. It was the first time I actually let the fear and sadness and worry of it all overtake me.

... this is all I can emotionally and physically handle tonight, so it is to be continued ...

10/10/10

My mind (or, the loss of creativity)

It's come to my thoughts lately, that for years, I protected what I cherished most. My mind.

Even through painful and debilitating bouts of depression, I hesitated and often refrained from treatment so as to not scar or impair my ability to do what I love most, writing. And somehow, in the gaining control over the depression by avoiding that which causes it, I have also encapsulated every essence of what made me creative. I have become dull.

My fear of words has surfaced in the trying-to-find-myself period that we are currently in (more commonly referred to as fall). This is usually a time of re-build, re-focus, re-invention and creativity for me, and this year,  I'm just not feeling it. I have found that when I try to tap into these words - the way that colors and pictures and emotions could pour themselves into a line filled by rises and falls, how curves and paths of language used to dance and skip along the page for me - that I am instead trying to pull them weakly from behind the bars I have guarded them in with. This is so unnatural to me, this fear of expression. Why am I so afraid?

I suppose that in a way I am afraid of the emotions hidden beneath. In the last year I have cried more, laughed more, lost more and found more than I ever have in my life thus far. And yet, with most things, I feel nothing. I have surface attachment to things, even to people. I feel love as though it is a butterfly fluttering its wings softly against my skin but it never finds a place to land and take a few seconds respite. It flits near and far from me, depending on who or what is happening in my realm in that moment, and only in that moment. I feel sad moments much the same, tears one moment, numbness the next, as though I have no right to cry.

I suppose that I also feel that I am "too busy" to take the time anymore, to write, or to feel. It's exhausting, this task of creating ones soul on a page, all of the thoughts and emotions messy and the words taking on meanings and lives of their own ... knowing that likely no one but your own mind can understand, but praying that someone will, all the same. You give  birth to these words, this language, and then you set it free and watch it flounder in a world where everyone speaks French and it is fluent only in Greek.

I know most of my fear lies in reaching out to the emotions that writing requires. It means giving up control over the depression side of things and allowing the good, the bad, and the ugly to rear its wonderful impossible head again, and then trying to clean up the aftermath. I have seen those days, the darkness that causes shadows even in the bright sun, the tears that run rivers over lined paper, causing the blue ink to run like veins on marred skin. Un-caging these animals means letting all of them loose, for where you free one, you must free them all.

I fear the intensity that becomes me when I write. I no longer see the world as it is, but I create it as I want it to be. It wreaks havoc and instability into my life, causing chaos and the screeching cries for change that I don't know that I am young enough for, not to mention capable of,  following anymore. I have children, a job, responsibility that I have enough problems shouldering without the distraction of the dance of language.

Yet tonight, here I sit. I am writing. It beckons me, the words taunt me, daring me to pull them one by one, little by little and to let them breathe. It feels empowering somehow, freeing, and also has the feeling of playing with an entire case of zippo lighters while standing next to a gasoline tanker.

It makes me wonder just how often I can do this. How much can I write and feel and yet maintain control over the beast of depression? How much of my mind and my soul and my words can I bring to life before they take on a life of their own that smothers the one I need to have? Is the one that I think I need merely a misconception of perspective?

I suppose I feel that I am not at a point in my life, within my friends, that I can be the creative one. I have been overshadowed by artistic talent with vision that humbles me and intimidates my desire to put anything to paper, for how can I ever measure up to such a view. I am afraid of my words not being good enough... but good enough for whom? Is the fear that I feel enough to bind the words forever?

I know this -- without this part of me living and breathing, it kills the rest. I long for nights with a keyboard and a blank screen, begging me for patterns and texture, asking me to create it, to build it and make it everything in my mind - almost as much as I fear it. Maybe I haven't stopped protecting it after all.

9/6/10

Reality

It's funny when you know something, deep down, and yet every time it comes to the surface you push it away. Almost as though, if you will it away enough, its not real.

Love is a strange thing. It can allow you to fully give yourself over and over again without thought to receiving anything in return, without needing or wanting. It can be very fulfilling, and yet so empty and void of everything at the same time.

I am torn. Between two places, one person. Do I continue to love and sacrifice absolutely everything that I need and want, and live with things as they are, because I can never expect anything more - or do I suck it up and find away to get away because I do want more, and it would never be what I truly want?

There are so many ways in which I pride myself in not needing the "fluff". I don't need (or even want) someone around all the time, who has all the same interests, etc etc. That being said, I am a girl, first and foremost and there is just some "fluff" I can't live without.

I love touch. Hand holding, arms around me, cuddling up on the couch, random kisses, amazing hugs ... I need it. It's calming, peaceful, and makes me feel like someone knows I exist. I am a hopeless romantic -- I love the little things. Thoughtful things. Voicemails of songs that mean something, things that make my life easier, little ways that someone could show me that they know me, they see me, and that they thought of me.

While I've come to accept that at this point, these things are impossible ... it pains me to hear others notice it as well. Commenting on the non-chalance of what we have, the casual intimacy that is anything but intimate. I can count on one hand the number of time I have felt my hand in yours. This isn't who I am, and its not what I want.

I hear you talk about beautiful women, women that you're not afraid to say "wow" to. And never once have I felt beautiful to you. Never do you tell me what you're thinking ... as though you're afraid of the way I would react.

I cry a lot anymore. I am learning that love is not enough. Where that was once what I thought I needed, I know now it's not. Even friendship - you are my best friend - is not enough. We truly have nothing. And it is the reality of that that saddens me most. These are the thoughts that overwhelm me in silence, that haunt me in idleness, and that paralyze me of feeling. I want so badly to shut it off, to disconnect it ... but we pretend, day in and day out, that we have a connection. Instead, we have become an obligation to each other, a prison... we are trapped within this warped perception. Neither of us know how to define it and I challenge that maybe there is nothing to define. I can't stand this thought, this implication of illusion but I can't shake it's authenticity.

When we were together last, I almost asked why. I talked myself out of the question because not only did I not want to know your answer, but I knew you'd never give it. I also didn't truly know why I'd answer myself.
I don't understand this dynamic, why it has changed me. Why I don't do exactly as I would want to do, or say what I would want to say. All I know -- it's because I am afraid of you.

You are not good for me. There is nothing more I need or want that you would give me at this point. I know that I should not settle for less than what I can live with, and yet I find myself willing to, because of my love for you. I am no better than the naivety that I so hate in other girls. The desperation of a sickening love that has consumed them enough to forget themselves. And I have forgotten me.

I am a girl, who needs to be needed. I need to be wanted, appreciated, complimented, and touched. I shouldn't feel bad for these things, and yet I do. My guilt is heavy, and I feel as though this is my karma, my worth come back to haunt me.

I have become broken. Before, where I was cracked ... I am now laid open, bare. I have wounds that have nothing to heal with, as though caused by acid or poison. My confidence in who I was, what I could do, what I would become or have, or even want has become nothing more than days full of hope for the hopeless.

I know that you could be all of these things - you would do all of these things - if you wanted to. You have before - and you will again -- although not with me. But if you can't do these things with me, then you need to do nothing with me. You've become the cancer to my heart and soul that I cannot treat with medicine. The only answer is removal.

I know that I have pushed you away before, only to draw you back closer. I am weak - and I need you to be strong. I need you to use your walls, your reality, and what you want -- and keep me out. I need you to push me away and keep me there. For my own health and safety. I can't do it alone. I will never be able to.

I cannot blame you for this. You knew, just as you've always known. You questioned, you doubted, you stood on the fence and teetered back and forth, something blaring "no" to you, loudly and clearly ... you tried to tell me and I couldn't listen. Love seems to not only be blind, but deaf as well.

We have everything, and yet, I've found that everything is also nothing. And it can never will be anything when only one side wants it to be ... that is the reality.

(posted without edits or proofreading)

7/3/10

You know who you are...

I want to be able to walk away from you, clean, whole, and happy. And yet I can't.

There is something about you - about us - in whatever capacity "us" is - that I'm not free of it yet. There is too much to learn, too much to see. I'm learning that what I thought of as a relationship is apparently far more shallow than what I should have thought.

Things I never knew I wanted, I have in our friendship.

There are times I wrack my brain about why I love you so damn much - why I can't imagine my life without you in it. I've tried to convince myself that I only want you because you don't want me...

I love the way you see the world. The details you catch that others overlook. I remember seeing the world with that depth years ago. The lines, the color, the ways things connect, the flow of life. The way the world breathes. You can make anything out of everything.

I love the way you make me laugh and smile. The way you never want to leave me in a situation where I could be upset. When I'm stressed, you remind me of all the light things in life, and the joys of it. Just as your place has become my haven, so have you. You are my peace and my solitude ... in a perfect balance. There is no one else I would rather be near when I don't want to be near anyone at all.

I love your uninhibited passion when you're creating - whether its music, photography, sculptures, or a new idea or thought. I love that you think in a way that isn't concrete.  That everything can be something different and that you greet each thing with an amazing childlike wonder. Just watching you makes me want to pull you close and kiss you until it takes my breath away.

I love the way you talk of how you were with other girls before ... I envy them. I wonder what it feels like, to be wanted by you, to be loved by you. I ache for that, to know that feeling ... I can't imagine ever wanting to let it go - I don't even have the words to describe how it would feel to me. Surreal, magical, complete.  For myself, I get glimpses of it - every time you kiss me, or when you touch my skin ... never before have I felt an entire world melt away, and with you, it does. I am no where but with you. Always before, it's perfect, intense, uninhibited, full of meaning ... and then again, we become nothing. I fight myself from running up to you when I see you and pulling you to me, every time. I talk myself out of spontaneous kisses, even when I feel like I need to. How can you encompass so much of what I love yet be so much of what I hate?

I hate that you know that I love you, and yet you still call. You still text. You come with me when I go out, we make plans, you dance with me at the bar, you capture my eyes with your own, the way you hug me... I can see the sorrow in your eyes. I hate the way you were in front my exes, with the girls, when we were alone in the wilderness ... you were mine, you were ours ... and yet you're not. It should tell me you have no concern for my feelings, that we're stuck in this sadistic cycle because we currently have no escape. Yet, I can see you're confused as well ... you don't understand why you don't feel ... almost as though you should. If I worked elsewhere, we would grow apart, and the pain would end of trying to hope as the hopeless romantic I am, that someday you'd grow to see me as something else, something more.

I hate that you won't tell me "not ever". I know you tell me again and again there is nothing there, but then the dance of it all continues, and you say and do things that friends just wouldn't do. You're so bent, it seems, on not cutting off your options that you'll hurt me again and again in the process. Who does that to a friend?

You play the act of pretending to care - remembering just enough to matter. I know its a game ... I once had this perfected, scientific. I could draw others to me like a bug to a lamp - enticing, captivating, and deadly to them. The joy in the game was receiving love ... the point of it all. I would do all the right things, say the right things, even if it meant hurting them in the end. I didn't consider the feeling of them, the reality of who they were. I ruined so many, and now I am in turn being ruined. In the end, all that mattered was that I could be the "perfect girl"... and now I am the pawn, the one tossed aside... only shown attentions and affections when its risked that I may stop showing them to you.

And I know, when someone better comes along, when you see her and something sparks within you - when you find the one you don't have to work at it with (such a stupid conundrum that is, since when have we ever had to work at anything) ... that this will stop, that I will become a fleeting memory. I hate you for that.

But I love knowing that right now, before she comes along, that if I just need to hear your voice, you will answer if I call. I can count on plans with you, time with you ... and try to enjoy what I have, even if it will never be what I want. And you know, you're all I want. We have it balanced so well, its so set and yet dynamic ... it's so hard to see an amazing relationship that truly isn't one.

I love that we can spend days without talking, and pick up where we left off. I love that we don't need to constantly be around each other -- that I can miss you and still feel OK. I love that there is no worry, no concern, just complete trust and pure enjoyment when I am around you.

I love the little things you do, absentminded expressions ... the way you sigh, the way you laugh - you have different ones, you know, for different things. I know them, I anticipate them. I smile even now at the thought of it - knowing just how you'll look when someone says something, the way you smirk in response... it's my familiar.

I love that you take the time to know me, to talk with me. In a world where so many see only parts of people, and never delve into anything more, you explore who I am, what makes me tick. I love that we can sit on the phone for hours, barely speaking, just being a part of each others evening.

I love when you play piano for me. Nothing brings me more joy than that. I'm honored that you let me inside that intimate part of your world. It makes me feel special, important. The way you show me new things you're working on, the ideas you have. Seeing you sitting there, playing, all of your feelings into the keys and the flow of the sound speaking for you ... it's one of the most beautiful things.

I love that you teach me. You show me things, tell me things I have never known. Especially when you teach me pieces of your arts, glimpses behind your eyes - it's pathetic that it makes me love you even more. I have so much admiration for you, my respect for you is beyond measure.

I hate how I have tried to hate you and can't. Why shouldn't I hate someone who drags this on?

I hate that the brightest part of my days is seeing you mid-morning, smiling that brilliant grin, your eyes twinkling with mischief and anticipation of the day ahead (its there, even if you are dreading something, you live and breathe hope and optimism, it pours out of your eyes).

I love the glances we share that communicate so much - a conversation unspoken even about the littlest things - often unintentional but there all the same.

I love the way you secretly brush my arm or against my back, as though to simply say "I see you" ... it means so much to be visible. Something even just so slight improves my mood by millions.

I love the way you call me out - you pull no punches and allow me nothing to be insignificant - you know my patterns, my habits, how I will react to something. You know what my looks mean, you embarrass me easily, and yet it makes me smile. As much as I act as though I hate it, it means so much to me.

I know that you know what I wish for. And you know that I know it won't happen. I see the conflict, the apology behind your eyes. I have spent many nights awake, trying to remember how to be in unrequited love, and still live.

It sounds silly, but when he passed, I didn't know what to do. My anchor and compass in this world, my closest friend and the man I loved more than life itself was gone. The man everyone assumed I would be with for the rest of my life and yet was star crossed ... I didn't understand his passing. If not him...

And again, I have an anchor, a compass. Someone who can ground me and set me on the straight sights, and doesn't even know it.

Slowly, I began to see you. I fought against you for a long time - reassuring the guy I was dating that there could never, would never be anything. You weren't my type. I didn't want to like you, I was content respecting you and your talent. And I didn't date people I work with.

But you amazed me, I'd never met anyone like you. You met me head on, effortlessly, it seemed. You understood my humor right away, you knew me quickly. You intrigued me as you were contradictory to yourself in so many ways. I had to know you, to touch you, to kiss you, even if just to feel that energy.

I wasn't worried about falling for you - I had more than enough walls up that would keep that from happening.

Now that I know you, I see how ridiculous it was for me to think that. You are the master of destruction, and your forte is in vulnerability. I have come to realize that I now fight so hard for control because you've completely demolished the only part of me I had control over - the ability to keep someone else out. You scare me because you have all of me. I'm completely unobstructed from your view. No one knows me as you do. And you would expect me to not have fallen for you?

You fit everything I'd wanted - hardworking, family oriented, sweet, independent, sarcastic, funny, free, creative, confident ... you truly see the world, something I had always prided myself on.

You have an easy confidence, an optimism that is contagious. At first, you simply reminded me of him, even to the way he carried himself... and then you surprised me. Changing around every turn, intriguing me. So different from him and yet so similar. You keep me interested, which is no easy feat, as I am so quickly bored.

You know some of this, of course, but you will never know the depths of this, the colors it paints with, the dance or the intensity of it, because it isn't yours to know.

Sometimes life throws us into a situation we don't understand, and we have to learn the lesson that even in as much as we seek the answers, we may not yet be ready for them.

I can no more force you to love me as anyone could force me to love them. I am old enough to know that you can't help who you love, nor can you force yourself to feel something when it just isn't there. Sometimes I wonder if you stick around trying to make yourself feel or trying to figure out why you don't.

Love is beautiful, painful, blind, rich, aching, enlightening, and far deeper that I could have ever known without you. It is far more intricate, complex, and confusing.

If I learned anything amongst my hatred of you and my love for you, that is it.  You have shown me that I am able to love patiently, kindly, selflessly and unconditionally. And I will always love you.