Friday, November 5, 2010

Taking the Easy Way Out

"Anything worth having is worth working for." "No pain, no gain." "Blood, sweat and tears."

All of these sayings once resonated with me. Something about how I was raised, or how I am programed, lead me to believe that things have to be hard. Something lead to me to believe that success can and will only come at great personal sacrifice. There is something about blood, sweat and tears that sounds so very deserving, so noble, so honorable.

It has only recently occurred to me that things don't always have to be hard. It has only recently occurred to me that one can ride the flow of the energy and opportunities present in life, rather than fight against them.

Funny thing. I remember about 10 years ago I had this revelation that I had just been going with the flow of life, but not in a relaxed purposeful way. I saw myself as a leaf floating down a stream. I just took the path of least resistance. Which lead to living as a heterosexual female, getting married, having kids, leading women's bible studies, etc. Then, when the dynamic with my ex husband reached a level of dysfunction that I could no longer justify keeping my children in such a household, I begin to gather the strength to push back.

It was at this point that I first admitted my attraction to, and feelings for women. It was at this point, I walked away from being a wife. It wasn't until much later that I would walk away from being a woman, daughter, sister and girlfriend.

So, the pendulum swung. From taking the path of least resistance, to fighting with every breath, kicking down doors, generally leaving destruction in my wake and carrying forward scars and wounds from all the battles. And now, I realize I have battled hard and long enough. I have found safe ground. I have sanctuary here. I can work steadily towards my future, allowing myself to take detours when necessary, stop for breaks when I need them and store up health and well being so that when the need arises to bust through the barricades, rather than take the detour, I can do so.

It's funny how after years of fighting, I just kinda got in the habit of being in defensive posture. I got to where I PUT myself in stressful situations, because it was familiar and comfortable. I made it hard... but maybe that was all just training so my fightin' muscles would be ready for the big one of the last year and a half.

It is something people tried to tell me, "Just relax!"

But I honestly didn't know how. I had submitted to having no control. Then, I realized I could take control and I tried to take ALL the control. Now, I realize there is a middle ground. I can control myself. And that's about it. So, now I plan to do what I can to put myself in the best possible position to learn and grow and LIVE. Everything else, well, that's really not my problem, not my business and not mine to carry. (NOT as easy to do as to say...I will blog more about figuring out how to do this in regards to my transition and gender).

Funny how people always say how brave I am to transition. But as it turns out, this has been one of the least painful times in my life. And who knew you could just go along livin' and laughin' and takin' it as it comes? Who knew the hardest thing I'd ever had to do would prove to be the "easy" way out?

Monday, July 5, 2010

Let Freedom Ring

So, I have had my kids here with me for summer visitation for the last few weeks. I have absolutely loved spending time with them. It is interesting, though, how watching each of them enter puberty, I have such strange and contrasting emotions.

My son is 13 now and is taller than me. His body is growing both in size and strength. I am jealous of his opportunity to swim and hang around without a shirt on. I found myself feeling jealous of his body. I felt jealous of him once before, when I took him to football camp last summer. Seeing him get to have all the things I always wanted when I was his age, all the things I was told I couldn't have or experience, is a strange thing to sort through. It feels, somehow, wrong to be jealous of my kid and his "normal" life. I feel angry sometimes that I wasn't given that chance. I feel angry that now, at 35, my body will never be the lean and naturally muscular body of a young man. I skipped right to middle aged. :(

On a side note, I will say that one of my concerns was whether or not I'd be able to keep up with cisguys in sports and recreational settings. Last weekend we were down at the pool and a water volleyball game broke out. I am happy to say, I did just fine. I easily kept up with the cisguys that were there and even managed to be one of the better players. That felt good. Affirming. Right.

But, I digress. My daughter is also here this summer. She is 12. And while here, she has entered her journey into "woman-hood". It was strange, understandable and a little painful that when she discovered her first cycle had begun, she went to my girlfriend. Now, my GF is awesome. And she handled it beautifully. She took her to the store and explained all the options and products, etc. I have to say I was a bit relieved not to have to navigate that but also, I felt a little sad. I felt like this was proof that I had lost some measure of the "mother-daughter" connection. BUT is also meant that she sees me as a man. BUT... not quite her Dad. Such a strange landscape.

And the exact opposite emotions that I had about my son's coming of age bubbled to the surface. For many transguys, puberty is the hardest part... it's the undeniable moment when you know you cannot get out of being a girl. Your body is rebelling against your heart and mind. And there is nothing you can do to stop it.

I spent the better part of my adolescents in deep depression. Though I didn't even know that is what it was. There was a close brush with death/suicide. There were endless nights of tears and pent up anger. There was a deep confusion and frustration. I couldn't figure out why I was felt so misunderstood, so alone, so "wrong".

It has given me a lot to think about. It has given me a lot to deal with.

And a lot to be grateful for... in that my own kids seem to fall pretty well within the "normal" range as far as gender is concerned. And though they have to fight the battle of having a transparent... at least they will never have to feel what I have felt... at least they are in the right bodies and able to embrace who they are every moment of the day. At least they know that. At least they are free.

And finding freedom is what coming of age is all about. I should know.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Soaring

So, my relationship with my new (2 months now) girlfriend is going really well. And with both of us in our mid-thirties, it is necessary for us to continue to ask the questions about long term compatibility. This brings up conversations about what we want for our lives including marriage, family, kids, etc.

Now, I already have two kids who are now 12 and 13 years old. They do not live with me. I divorced their Dad when they were 6 months and 2, mainly because the dynamic there was unhealthy and abusive. I simply could not raise my kids in that environment. The kids lived with me until I decided to go to law school when their father challenged me for custody, and in a small, conservative county on the outskirts of Austin, won. He was remarried and I was at that point presenting as a single lesbian who was about to move out of state and start law school. The court decided that even absent any assertion of abuse or neglect (which is supposed to be the standard) to overturn custody.

Now, this was an extremely painful time in my life. It felt like some guy with absolutely no knowledge of me or my parenting skills, or the abuse involved in the relationship in the first place and the potential damaging situation my kids might be in looked at me and said, "You are not good enough. He, the one with little education, a temper and malice is a better choice than you." I spent two years and my life savings trying to fight for my kids. Mostly never wanting them to wonder if I wanted them, cared about them, or tried to keep them out of what I saw as a harmful situation.

The years spent dealing with that forced me to confront layers of grief, guilt and fear. Learning to live with the reality of NOT tucking your kids in every night, not knowing what they eat in a day, not having the privilege of looking into their eyes to check in on their souls everyday... it's a really hard thing to do.

But in the meantime, I was afforded the opportunity and time to look into my own eyes. And that made me realize there was a lot of sadness there. I knew that I had been a good parent to my kids. I know I started them out in life right. They are well grounded and happy kids, despite all the weird stuff they have been through.

I felt, and sometimes still feel guilty, that their lives are not "normal" because I am not "normal." I was numb for so much of their younger years. Just trying to do what I knew I had to do everyday when I woke up... to feed them, teach them, pray with them... but I was dead inside. I did it out of love... sheer will to put one foot in front of the other, to cook one more healthy meal, to coach one more team, do one more load of laundry, read one more bedtime story, fake one more smile.

And I have mostly tucked that guilt away. I have thought in the abstract about having more kids, being a dad. I want to be a husband and father, to have the chance at the life I tried from the other side that crashed and burned and never quite fit, though I had no idea why. But now, now that there is someone to actually picture having this future with... someone who wants to be my wife and the mother of my children, new layers of fear, guilt and confusion come peaking out from their respective holding places.

I am so much more alive now. So much more present. I hate that I wasn't here sooner for my kids I already have. I know I did the best I could. But will being able to feel a new child only make the fact that I wasn't emotionally present for them so much more obvious? Do they know? Do they or will they feel cheated? Will they understand? Can they forgive me?

I am trying to work through the process of giving myself permission to be happy. Truly, bone deep happy. Not only today (which I am getting pretty good at) but also to allow myself to hope and dream for tomorrow. To know that a bright future does not have to drown out the past. I want to be free to move forward, to love with all my heart and live with all my life, to bring the positive parts of the past forward into today and tomorrow while leaving the pain behind.

But unfolding ones wings can be painful. And those first flights can be treacherous. Believing in love, in forgiveness, in forever, in myself...I hear that flying is much easier when you glide in the currents of the wind rather than trying to fight it. I guess it's time to find out for myself. It's time to soar.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Missing Her

I recently celebrated my manniversary. It has been just over a year since I was hit upside the head by this brick of revelation. Every now and then I stumble across an old picture of A (the pre-transition me). And it always seems strange to me. She is familiar, like an old friend. But there is a touch of sadness there in that she is gone. I look back at photos of me/her with my kids, at the White House with family and it seems like there is a separation. It feels like a whole other life, a whole other person. It's very hard to explain.

I feel no regret or remorse. I have not second guessed this decision for one single moment since I made it. The thought of going back is completely intolerable. But, I will say, I miss her. I morn her in many ways. That persona served me well. I was able to accomplish so much ... from having kids to a teaching career to law school.


And it is interesting navigating the world primarily stealth. You lose connections. For example, when woman are talking about child birth or some such inherently female experience, I still find myself wanting to chime in. Then, I just kinda laugh at myself and keep my mouth shut. Unless they are in the know... at which time I share pretty openly.

The simple fact is, transpoeple are a group unto themselves.

I didn't have the inherently male experiences through adolescence that cis guys had. And in part, I am grateful for that because I think society makes it really hard for guys to be balanced and in touch with all facets of themselves. But where does that leave me? I was a male mentally, emotionally, psychologically... but having the physical experiences of a female. Such a conundrum.

And sometimes a very lonely place.

So, I try to process the separation and loss as I would any other. I talk to her sometimes, journal about it and now blogging about it. I am not sad, overall. I am not lonely, overall. But I am learning how to let myself feel the full range of emotions that come with actually moving through things which means unexplained aches and tears sometimes... but I try to let 'em flow... let 'em wash over old wounds and let their salt sting...knowing it will promote healing.

Heal on.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Do Overs

So, today is Easter. It is the Christian holiday that celebrates the resurrection of Christ. New Beginnings. It is Spring time in Texas and all the wildflowers are in full bloom.

Religious icons and plants are not the only things enjoying renewal. I am too. It is funny how everything seems new to me. I feel emotions I have never felt before, see colors more brightly, everything is alive, fresh and new.

This new feeling of life and joy can bring on an on slaught of emotions. Of course it is positive but at times I am also sad (and even a bit angry) that I have gone so long without it.

The most obvious example is with my kids. B is here this weekend and I have so enjoyed our time together. He makes me laugh all the time. We wrestle and play and horse around. And I think about when he was little and how very numb I was. I remember a time when he was about 2 years old. He did something adoreable that should have made me swoon with parental oozy love. But it didn't. I remember being aware that it was cute and knowing I should have wanted to scoop him up and smother him with kisses. But I didn't have it in me. That is when I knew there was something very wrong with where I was emotionally. I had no idea if it was post partum depression (R was a few months old) or what. I just knew it didn't feel like it should.

I faught to be present with my kids. Knowing that they needed me and that those years would be gone forever. I think, all things considered, I did a pretty good job of navigating all that. But being here now, being safe and healthy enough emotionally now to adore them, makes me both want to celebrate and cherish each moment and mourn the loss of all that time. And it makes me hope beyond hope that I might get a second chance to have a family.

I have written before about how I am a good old boy who wants the girl next door and the traditional family, etc. I wondered, and frankly was very cynical, about the possibility that I would ever find someone to build such a life with.

Well, funny thing. I have heard all the saying all my life about when you stop looking, you will find it. When you let you, you will get it, etc. Everybody kept telling me that when I was happy with where I was, when I accepted it, then it would free up energy in the universe for things to shift for me.

Now, I am a business owner of a start up firm. I am founding partner and half owner with a friend and colleague of mine. We are up and running and I have everything I ever wanted in a career. And to add to that... I also have met someone and am completely elated with her. We have the kind of synergy that I never thought possible. We have mutual admiration and adoration for one another. We have the spark. We laugh constantly and dream big together.

So, in just about every area, I am gettin what feels like a do over. A chance to begin again. To build a solid foundation on solid ground. I have been afaid to reach for the stars or dream in the clouds because I was not grounded. It is too scary when you don't have a touchstone. It feels out of control and like destruction and disappointment are certain. But now...now it just feels like flying. And I know I am safe and will survive whatever comes my way because this time, I have me to rely on.

And I am enough.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Giving me Grief

It has been a month since I posted. What a month. I have been through some very drastic experiences. I have uncovered years of familial grief. I have had revelations about the fact that I am here as my own entity. And what I mean by that is that I have always felt like an accident, an after though, plan B.

Without going too much into family stuff that is not all my own to divulge to the public at large, I will leave it at that fact that my mother had a baby boy between my older sister and myself. He died at a couple of days old. My family doesn't really do grief...everyone just soldiers on. So, in my whole life, we only spoke of this child (who was always and only referred to as "the baby") a handful of times. I remember when I when I found out about this whole thing. I was in middle school. It was April. My mom was really depressed. I was confused by this because it was so much more intense than usual. My older sister blurted out to me in impatience and seemingly disgust, "Don't you know?!?! This is when The Baby died!" I remember being like, "What?" Now, this may have been mentioned to me before this point, but I think this is the time at which, for some reason, I first really KNEW of what happened. But I didn't have details. I am sure I had heard passing references to The Baby and I am sure I knew it was a boy...but I remember this specific instance for some reason.

So, as I wondered down the shadowy, twisted path of transition, I wondered if his death had something to do with my situation. I knew that it made it hard for me to feel like being male was legitimate...it made it seem like some sort of psychological twist, that I was somehow trying to fill his shoes or something. My parents tried pretty hard after that to make sure I knew that they loved me as a girl and didn't wish they had him instead, didn't miss having a son. But with my particular situation, feeling like a son- a boy, their efforts just confused me and somehow (completely unintentionally) invalidated who I was inside.

Eventually, I just figured maybe I was his soul, reincarnated in the "wrong" body. I heard about how they didn't think my mom could or should have more kids and how she was supposed to have a hysterectomy as soon as she was "recovered". But in the meantime, she got pregnant with me...which sometimes made me feel like a miracle, sometimes an accident.

I have been going to an amazing therapist regularly for over 2 years now. We do mostly cognitive, talk therapy but last month we tried this remapping thing that involves using acupressure points to release cellular memory of certain frequencies and emotions. After one of these sessions, I had this incredible experience of revelation and release... and it finally occurred to me. I am not him.

I am me.

This air I breath is mine, not borrowed or stolen. This life I am living is not a substitute or stand in. It is mine to live as I see fit, to use completely or squander, no excuses.

The baby is a separate person who deserves to be acknowledged and mourned. I am a separate person who deserves my own space in the universe. I started asking my mom a lot of stuff about him. We agreed that it feels more "right" to think of our family as a unit of 5 and us siblings as a unit of 3. It is hard to explain the effect this all had on me. But it was nice to finally be able to compartmentalize some of these emotions. And to finally realize who I am in my own right.

Sadly, a few weeks after this lesson in grief and mourning, I lost a very dear friend of mine ("N") unexpectedly. Actually, the lesbian I met at my neighbor's game night and mentioned in my blog several months back. She was so incredibly supportive of my transition and really saw me as a guy. We connected so well, it is hard to lose someone like that. Then, I was asked to be a pallbearer at her funeral. Her family resisted her sexuality, actually buried her in a pink coffin (NOT what she would have wanted). Her mom even talked to me about how she really didn't think her daughter was a lesbian. I bit my tongue out of respect. Her mom has no idea I am trans. So, not only was it emotional for me to be filling a "male" roll, an honor to be asked by her family to be one of the last people to carry their daughter to her final resting place, but I was also representing a part of N's identity that otherwise would have gone unacknowledged. I could just see N smiling at me.

I am not sure what I believe about the afterlife entirely, but I'd like to think I have two souls on my side somehow. There was more than a small measure of comfort in thinking about her meeting my brother. And them picking up where we left off.

As it turns out... grief is a gift. It allows you to keep loving the one you lost, instead of going numb and just putting the emotions on ice. It allows the memories to soak in, somehow. It allows you to hold on tighter, even while letting go. "Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted." Now I get it.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Man in the Middle

Several people have recently asked for the link to this blog and that got me to rereading my entries. It is interesting to go back and read how I was feeling 7 weeks in, 3 months in, or even just last week. The danger of putting all this in writing is that it is there, in black and white. I cannot say I didn't say that or waffle at all about my experiences. They are there.

I could go back and delete entries, but where is the authenticity in that? This whole blog is about my journey. I am aware that if someone sat down and read the whole thing as it is today in one sitting, it would seem that I am full of contradictions. I am not sure that is all that far from the truth.

I guess there is always the pendulum effect. I particularly notice this when it comes to my discussions about who I am attracted to, etc. And I noticed I have not updated on the changes that have occurred for me in this area.

Let me say that I think my initial aversion to lesbians and bi women came partially from my last break up. And my relationship before that. Both of these women said that they were ok with men, hated labels, etc. But one of them occasionally said in a very mean and chastising way, "You are such a man!" This was said with disgust and disdain. Then, the other one got all freaked out at the dynamic shift. She was okay with being with a guy sexually but had never been with a guy in a relationship and once I transitioned, she didn't like it much. (There was more to it than that but me being a guy was central to our parting ways).

So, with these experiences in mind, as well as my own initial fears of anything that didn't bolster my masculinity, I set out on the path certain I would not want to be with anyone other than a purely heterosexual woman.

However, a couple of months ago, I was at a neighbors game night and had the privilege of meeting a woman that I connected with instantly. We talked for hours and have stayed in touch since then. This caught me off guard because I found myself wrestling with whether or not I'd like to date her or was attracted to her. These questions brought me to really think about what is important to me in a life partner/girlfriend/spouse.

And it occurred to me that what is important is the connection. What is important is basic compatibility. I am happy to say (see last post) that I am finally secure enough in my own masculinity that I do not need or want or exclusively seek a fem straight chick to fill that space.

And, more likely than not, I will find understanding and connection with someone who has had to really think through some similar issues for themselves. I know I am attracted to the female body, the feminine energy. And as long as whomever I am with sees me as a man, understands me as a person, then I will not make the mistake of prejudging or limiting myself or her.

I will work to stop the pendulum swing from extreme to extreme and learn to be comfortable as the man in the middle. Open to the Universe and whatever it has for me.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The Gift of Travel

As I traverse this long road... from one little black box sitting inconspicuously beside the innocent word "female" to it's mirror image marked "male"... it occurs to me that this act of traveling, this journey, is a gift.

When you take a trip, you inevitably have to decide what to take with you and what you can do without. And with airlines charging more for baggage -thank you Southwest for being an exception to this metaphor- you start to think a little more carefully about those extra, just-in-case items.

The same has been true for me. I have things that I do, experiences, memories, thought patterns that come from the female box. Things that very few bio guys would ever have been allowed, by society or in some cases nature, to experience. An extreme example would be child birth. I have experienced the good and the bad of giving energy, blood, nutrients, life to another on the most basic, primal level. No cis-male* will ever be able to know that.(*a non-trans male, one who was born biologically and is psychologically male. I feel this term is more accurate than bio-male in that a man like me, on hormones is actually closer, biologically/chemically to male than female not to mention post surgical implications)

On another level there are things I learned and was allowed to embrace by society as female that I likely would have missed out on as male. For example, I learned how to distinguish my emotions and have words for them. Society often tells men and boys that aggression and anger are the only acceptable emotions... add the fact that testosterone does make the fight or flight response so immediate and drastic... and it is no wonder cis-males have a hard time with emotions.

And then there are these little things like cooking and hosting parties and like bubble baths. It took me a little while to admit, post transition that I still like a hot bubble bath, with candles and a nice glass of wine. It felt like that was "too girly" and somehow meant I wasn't actually trans. It was so scary to think about the implications of my bubble bath. [If you haven't seen the Friends episode where Chandler discovers a love of bubble baths, you must! All I need now is a battle ship to take in the tub with me.]

But seriously?!?!? The IMPLICATIONS of a bubble bath?

What in the world are we doing here people? Why do we allow that little box to tell us so much about ourselves? When did we decide that that little box got to tell us how we felt about bubble baths or flowers or football or being the President or being aggressive professionally or sexually?

Is it because it is easier? It is that it is simply easier, when the expectations don't generally clash with your essence, to just go along with them than it is to actually dig deep enough to figure out who YOU are? What YOU want? I mean you say something to yourself like, "I am a girl so that means: I like to shop, pink, to be on bottom, with a man, must be married by age ??, kids by age ??, sit with my legs crossed, be polite, etc." ?? For me, most of those things just did NOT resonate with me at all. I wanted the things on the boy list "play in the dirt, trucks, be with a woman, be the aggressor, protector, provider, sweat, muscles, etc." We use gender to explain things. And like most stereotypes they are stereotypes for a reason... because they are often or usually accurate. But why do we just take this stuff for granted? We should commit the time to ourselves to know ourselves well enough and be secure enough to depart from the stereotypes when necessary. Without fear.

And the flip side of that is that it is easier to put other people in these little boxes, rather than actually stop long enough, look deeply enough, listen hard enough to KNOW them, to know where our assumptions are inaccurate. I mean at the end of the day what are we? We are people and people are complex and complicated. We are not machines driven by binary code, hundreds of on/off switches. We cannot be reduced to flow charts.

But as George Clooney's character said in "Up in the Air"- stereotypes are efficient. Which is true. Without some type of filtering system, we would be paralyzed. You can't actually know everyone you interact with on a deep level, nor do you want to, nor do they want you too. I think we just have to be careful about not FORCING people into them or getting angry when they don't fit.

And yourself is another story. You have to be with you everyday of your life. It seems an investment in getting to know you might well be warranted. So, next time you get a haircut or pick a piece of clothing or accept or reject a date, take a good, hard look and ask yourself why you chose what you chose. Ask yourself it it is because you are "supposed to" or if it is really a reflection of you. But be warned, the worms in that can are squirmy and slippery.

I have gotten used to worm herding. And have come to realize that all this work I am doing is about being me. But that means I have to be willing to LOOK at me. And sometimes that is not fun. Sometimes it means admitting a weakness or cutting of a limb lost to gangrene. And often amputations are followed by phantom pains. But mostly I find when I let loose of the old, diseased, wounded rotten parts, something new and healthy grows in it's place or I learn to do without it... I discover I didn't need it in the first place.

Kinda like those extra socks and underwear I always pack. I mean really, when will I learn that if I have an real emergency, requiring extra underwear, there is surely a stream, sink or wal-mart around. Or, heck, if worse comes to worse I can always go commando. :)

So, I will take what I decide I need and want. I will take what is really important to me to the other side. And after a long hard day of deciding and packing and trudging along, you will find this MAN relaxing taking a nice long soak in my bubble bath, complete with candles and a good glass of wine.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Think Charlie Brown

So, last night I was looking closely at myself in the mirror, monitoring changes and guess what I found? One, lone, long, wirer-y chest hair. LOL! Right on my sternum!

Reminds me of Charlie Brown's head. :) Thank goodness my hairline hasn't receded quite that much!

Thursday, January 7, 2010

What Goes Up...

What goes up, must come down. This is a basic scientific principle. The laws of nature dictate balance.

I have recently come to realize that I am a junkie. I love adrenaline, the high. I love the thrill ride of being whole-heartedly invested in something... like being so crazy in love you can't see straight, or throwing myself into school or work, or even transition. I love those moments while having sex when the whole world disappears and you are on an island with intense physical pleasure, wholly unaware of anything around you (except maybe the person that is there with you). I asked myself WHY I love these things... because in reality I can recognize that putting TOO much of yourself into something only sets up disappointment and debt. And, eventually, you must come down.

I have basically lived my life like a gambling addict. I have used my own energy and soul as chips, wagering them against the odds. So, I keep hoping for the big haul: approval/affirmation/love or better yet, escape. That is the jackpot. So, I push a stack of chips out on the table, often going all in, sometimes throwing in my watch, my rings, anything I have of value. And I let it ride. Because what if, what if THIS TIME, I win? And I would win little payouts often enough to keep me coming back. And I keep coming back and coming back until I am totally broke, broken and in debt.

So, understanding that the reality is that I am so much more likely to be disappointed and disillusioned, why do I keep going back? What am I wanting? Why is the high SO important that I will risk so much for it? I have come to realize that for me, it was the escape. That moment when the world stands still and something, anything, is loud enough to drown out my own pain and fear. And then I realized that all those years of trying to be someone I wasn't, telling myself to sit down, shut up, be still... the pain of being invisible was largely what I was trying to escape.

So, now that pain is easing but I still have the habit of thrill seeking. According to my therapist, I need to mourn the loss of that top edge of the high. I will miss that feeling that comes with detaching... the climb... the apex. But, I will not miss the terror of plummeting toward rock bottom, aware of impending impact. And I certainly will not miss the pain of splatting at the bottom. This pain at the end was all part of a sad cycle. Somewhere along the way I picked up this idea that pain is the price that must be paid. "No pain, no gain." "Pain is weakness leaving the body." So on and so forth.

But I now realize that I can CHOOSE to be still, and stable, and safe and avoid bringing pain on myself. I have realized that I can and do deserve to be happy and don't have to risk it all in the process. Self care.

I used to think that going gung ho was indicative of courage. Now, I am learning it takes far more courage to live in the moment, to sit still, to FEEL. It takes more courage to look inside yourself and poke around and to love yourself no matter what you find in there.

That is what I am working on now. I'll still take risks and embrace adventure... but maybe I'll just take 20 bucks to the casino and play for fun. And walk out with my emotional, spiritual and energetic savings account in tact.

It's my own personal bail out plan. :)