After debating
between Brokeback Mountain and Call me By your Name, two movies I have never
seen, I decided on the older one, knowing it was heartbreaking, and despite the
feeling I already knew what the movie would be.
I finished it and
immediately had to look up on the last line. Then I looked up more, and now I
have been reading for at least half an hour till I stumbled upon the movie
poster watermarked with "(2005)" and I realized that this movie came
out, not during the college years when I was gracefully sheltered from the
world, but in the midst of high school. I realized that when it came out I
wanted to see it, but it also terrified me. It was not a celebration for me
then. I did not think to myself how good it feels to be represented, but
instead, how fearful I am that this is spotlighted for all to see. I wanted to
see it then because I thought it would show me images that lusting teenage eyes
wanted to see. It is strange to see it now and imagine that 16 or 17 year old
watching this movie and trying to make sense of it. He was so controlled then.
What would it have been to him to see the pain of not being able to talk about
your feelings, to watch someone else suppress them, to watch them be embraced?
What would this all have meant to that teenage boy?
What does it mean to
this 30yr old man now? To see the time pass and dream of a life spent together
with another? To see the loneliness that feels so present in his own life,
displayed on the screen? What if you let go and lived a life you loved?
---Looking back on
last night's entry---
I have been feeling
this loneliness all morning.
I don't know where
to begin with it. I thought I would sit down here and all the words would begin
to flow out as they have been racing through my head all morning. But they
suddenly feel stoppered. Not gone. Just held back.
Every time I begin
with a thought, it seems too small.
I am so lonely
Athena. I am so cut off.
--Break of Time--
Athena! My dear and
close friend, Athena, Athena!
I went to reread
your message that I have yet to respond to. The one that ends "I wrap
myself in darkness. It shimmers." I wanted to write to you here, in this
space that we hold for one another, and I, for the first time, read your letter
from February.
Athena! Athena!
Athena!
What a gift you are
to me. What a moment of miracle to find this waiting for me.
There is such a
great relief and comfort in reading your words for I feel them too.
I look back on the
last 5 years since moving to Colorado and taking this job. "There has been
so much that has happened since then, but nothing that's changed the
circumstances of my life." I am exhausted from the change and demoralized
by the lack of accomplishment.
Again, but with
different words than those ones: I am tired of the churning and movement, only
to discover then that I am still empty for all the effort.
A moment last night,
while thinking of the boy that was me in high school and what he dreamed of,
what my friends then dreamed of, would we ever have imagined ourselves where we
are now? No. As a child I believed the future was a matter of effort and what I
could make of it. That it was somehow a store and I could pick out what I
wanted. It feels no more like a piece of land to build upon and I have only the
resources at hand, or a canvas, already partially painted, and I have a limited
mixture of paints from which to construct. If I am to paint with these colors,
I must acquiesce to their to limitations. I cannot paint a traditional sunset
without some shade of red or orange. I may be able to craft it from another
genre or the sunset just at twilight when it is blue, purple, but it is at a
different time. "Same friendships, same loneliness when I feel the reality
of how far away my closest friends live."
The people and
friends I am surrounded by are not the ones I thought I would be with.
Yesterday I sat in a meeting with people I knew and had working relationships
with and all I wanted to do was to be left alone. I texted this to my best
friend Z yesterday, "I'm at an all day work meeting and it's lunch and I
don't feel like talking with anyone. I'm tired. Texting you instead. " and
a little later "It's not that I don't want to talk to anyone, it's that I
don't really like any of the people around me in my life. I'm suppose to have
dinner with my parents tonight and it sounds exhausting."
I've stopped going
to work. I haven't spent even a half day in the office in 2 weeks (granted one
was Spring Break so I don't know that it was noticed). Spending time with my
parents is tiring and draining. I don't want just a vacation with good friends,
I want my good friends to be my weeknights and lunch dates.
"For the most
part I don't know what I want. I can't even really picture a dream job, because
right now I'm just so freaking burnt out and in survival mode." I didn't
get the job with Outward Bound and those I've told have asked me "Have you
started job searching again?" For What?! I pull up job boards and see only
new places to be stuck. I look at degrees programs (Law Degree) and I see
opportunities for failure and little excitement. "I'm afraid
to want things. That doesn't stop the wanting at all, of course,
it just means that I keep submerging it and pushing it away. I hide it and I
hide from it. Will writing it out help or just make things more raw?" --
The only thing I can think to do is to write it out. That maybe writing is the
thing that will accumulate to change?
There is a
counseling method (Solution Oriented I believe) that asks clients to think of a
time when they didn't feel or experience the problem and to focus on why was
that? There is a relief when there is a large change, like when I moved. It
persists for a little while, acts as a guard against those things that may go
awry. The moment that most clearly sticks out is when a friend asked me
"What would your life look like if you stayed here instead of moving
somewhere else?" I was shocked in the moment to discover how different I
felt when I started appreciating my life as it stood now and the potential
instead of viewing them as lacking. I think there is a cliché that tells us to
'stop wanting and appreciate what we have.' That is not helpful. This felt more
like holding close the things I had, the paints at my disposal and rather than
lamenting what colors they are not, meditating on them, what images can they
become? What do the tools I'm holding give me? (For instance, there is a piano
in my house. I paid for an app to teach me. There is a change to be had there).
It would seem that
the changes of youth are more momentous, marked and milestoned. Semesters,
graduations, major birthdays. I wonder if, on the whole, the changes of
adulthood are of the incremental kind? They are not marked, but practiced? I
find myself least in my loneliness when I write to this journal. When I am in
great despair, I write to myself in a way to process. I shared it recently with
a friend and she told me "*Augustine, you have such a way with words. That
you can take this things… these abstracts and problems and you know how to put
them into logic ways to deal with them. (Hand motions of fingers meshing) You
find ways of talking about them and finding another way of dealing with them." Last night at dinner with my mom,
she told me that one of her coworkers complimented me to her about a meeting
she recently had with me. She told my mom "He is so well-spoken. He thinks
of things from a perspective I would never consider."
An author, if only I
could remember who, once complimented for having chosen writing responded
"I did not choose to write, it chose me." I wonder more with age if I
have been chosen, and if need only to turn myself over to it. Not necessarily as
a career, but as a practice, discipline, and ritual.
A woke up this
morning, not sure what to do with this day. I had the notion that I might write
a great deal. To you, in response to books, in letters to friends with cards
that I brought with me.
I leave you now in
this letter, not having resolved the fears and loneliness with a sound argument
or comforting story, but, maybe, with a commitment. To write into the unknown
and let myself discover who I become.
Love,
My thoughts as I am re-reading this (I almost cried the first time):
ReplyDelete1. Oh man, definitely see Call Me By Your Name, it’s beautiful. The age difference squicks me, but in my mind I’m just pretending Elio is 20.
2. “It was not a celebration for me then.” <-That’s when I started tearing up before. <3 I wish that I could go back in time and huge 16-17 year old you. I can’t. But I can hug extra tightly my own LGBTQ teens, to help them embrace themselves and at least to let them know that they will always have someone to embrace them.
3. “What does it mean to this 30yr old man now? To see the time pass and dream of a life spent together with another? To see the loneliness that feels so present in his own life, displayed on the screen? What if you let go and lived a life you loved?” I feel this. It’s in a different way, so I don’t mean to minimize or ignore the specifics, but just in an, “I’m extending feelings and empathy in your direction. You’re not alone, I’m virtually ‘sitting’ with you.”
4. “This space that we hold for one another”—I love that description of this blog. And our friendship. :) You are a gift for me too.
5. “I am tired of the churning and movement, only to discover then that I am still empty for all the effort.” <—YES. I’m sorry that you feel this too.
6. “If I am to paint with these colors, I must acquiesce to their to limitations. I cannot paint a traditional sunset without some shade of red or orange. I may be able to craft it from another genre or the sunset just at twilight when it is blue, purple, but it is at a different time.” This is such a beautiful metaphor. I think of this often, because I love to mentally entertain the thought of multiverses. Yet I still think that there are some constraints. That there are some things that an Amy, in any universe, simply could not ever be, at least not while remaining an Amy. I believe there are choices and an infinite number of possibilities…but, mathematically, there are infinities of different sizes. The set of whole numbers is infinite, but the set of “real” numbers is infinite in a more expansive way—in the set of real numbers, there is an infinity between 0 and 1, 1 and 2, etc. We live in something more akin to the whole numbers. Infinite [to some extent] possibilities ultimately, if you take all the different choices and paths…but there are still limitations. Still colors that may not be in our particular paint-sets.
7. “I want my good friends to be my weeknights and lunch dates.” Yes. So much this.
8. I need to write it out more. The trouble for me with the Solution Oriented method is that I can’t remember a time when the problem didn’t exist. That’s the hard part. I feel as lost as I did 5 years ago, as lost as I did 10 years ago…I don’t regret or loathe my life. It’s not what I expected it to be by this point…and it’s hard to put my fingers on all the nuances of how and why that is. Maybe that’s why I need to do the writing.
9. Yes, please write to me more. And write books. I love your writing. I need to get back into it more myself. I love thinking about writing things and planning them all out in my head…but I feel so drained after grading and dealing with words that. I don’t know. I just need something different.