After the storm, I sit in the garden, sip my
coffee, and think about boys.
***
“Meredith, I
don’t like you that way.”
His public
declaration carries across the table to the listening ears of my 5th
grade classmates, who look up, surprised and intrigued by the developing scene.
My cheeks burn red.
I’m too shocked
to argue back, because I don’t like him either, I like Ned sitting next to him
(a tall and gangly youth who has probably gone on to become a multi-millionaire
techie). I had simply asked if he was part of my group for a social studies
assignment and instead, I got fired off with this response.
I am mortified
into stunned silence, and spend the rest of the afternoon chewing on unspoken
comebacks while coloring in Christopher Columbus and his voyage to the New
World.
This is the
first time that my sweetness is mistaken for a come-on.
This
embarrassment joins a sequence of experiences where I feel misunderstood and
don’t attempt to advocate for myself to clarify my truth.
This incident I
internalize as shame, and this public shaming cautions how I interact with men,
particularly how I choose to express genuine romantic interest.
This is a root
of an issue unearthed, and I follow the energetic influence through a timeline
of crushes, loves, hilariously humiliating experiences, heartbreaking
devastations.
My patterns
with men are illuminated, and I hold them in clarity.
If I like a
guy, I feign nonchalance and disinterest, while my inner world shimmers and
seethes with desire and blazing emotions.
If I like a
guy, I decide to make a move by asking him out first, and I do so as an attempt
to exercise control.
If I like a
guy, I send mixed messages as a method to minimize hurt, so as a result I don’t
express my enthusiasm, my adoration, my affection, and I suppress my
disappointments, my frustrations, my grievances.
In order to
self-protect from potential rejection, I do not show up in dynamic
authenticity. I strive to prove my worth
through my doings, my passions, my causes, which I will throw myself into once
and when the rejection inevitably comes because I’m not allowing the
full-fledged expression of my vibrant self.
And being
myself, and loving myself, and advocating for myself are the unexpected gifts
men have given me. The times of heartache, rejection, bitter disappointment
direct me back to claiming (and reclaiming) and strengthening my relationship
with myself.
Grief deepens
my compassion and nurtures the implementation of self-care rituals, healing
routines.
Anger catalyzes
action.
Rejection
reinvigorates a stronger embrace of all aspects of myself.
I’m an
emotional expert at managing the waves of my heartbreak, but only when there’s
memories of love or tenderness to gently carry me through to the shore of
another chapter.
There are no
memories of love, of even genuine care in the boxed up package of my last
romantic entanglement. His narcissism is carefully concealed under a
painstakingly crafted façade of good-doing. I orbited around his charisma
curious for an answer that when revealed shifted my understanding of humanity.
The truth burned, and my vocalization of his real self was promptly discredited
and silenced by a web of cleverly designed gossip.
I move to Texas
with little thought of him until I start watching House of Cards with my roommate. She and I are balancing our late
night comedies with dark doses of the Underwoods. As I watch (mesmerized and
horrified) Frank Underwood connive, lie, and charm his way to the presidency, I
see in entirety another man whom I was once too dangerously close to, and the
burn from our encounters has healed, but the memory keeps me cautious and
guarded.
It’s not just
my Frank Underwood past steering me away from romantic endeavors, it’s the
entire history of them, and the hurt that accompanies the stories which blur
into an overarching theme of being vulnerable with my feelings, not knowing how
to behave with my feelings, perhaps offering my heart, most of the time not
speaking up, and being left emotionally neglected, betrayed, used, hurt.
The old wounds
flare up when the boy calls me sweet. He calls me sweet, and the compliment
catches me off-guard, and I swoon at the loveliness of his voice, the energy
behind how he looks at me, and I indulge in the replay of the scene until the
fear arises.
The fear warns
against being hurt. Again. I feel concern about how I could brace and bravely
handle another blow.
I take my head
full of thoughts about boys, and my heart questioning men outside to the
garden.
I sit in the
company of towering trees beside a bed of ginger and a family of basil.
Sunlight caresses my skin.
I sip chameleon
vanilla cold brew from an exquisite cup where glossy hummingbirds fly along the
rosy rim. The summer heat is beginning to dissipate, and there’s a softness to
the air, a sweeter clarity to the light. The storms from the weekend have
cleansed the garden, and I recognize the feeling of heartfelt relief, of
illuminated release that arises after a much needed cry.
The lifting of
the oppressive heat reopens possibilities. I have missed walking, and suddenly,
I am looking forward to the coming weeks, the coming fall, where I can read on
the lawn of the Capitol, walk to downtown coffee shops and visit the ModCloth
boutique, and tour around the Modern Art Museum.
I savor in these
visions soon to be a reality, reinvigorated by ideas for future Austin
exploring. My new city. My new chapter. My rising to responsibility to create
and curate a life
I soulfully
relish this morning, the stream of pure light caressing shoulders and my hands
gently cupping my favorite Austin coffee find.
I drink in this
scene of my life, a life I worked hard, a life I only want to be effervescently
alive in, and love it.
And there’s the
answer. The answer about the boys.
I yearn to love
my life. I yearn to continually rise to create and curate a life that aligns
and nurtures connection, creativity, compassion. I yearn to love myself.
I crave a
deeper belonging and ease in my skin, in my body, in my manner of being. I
crave a romance where I scoop down and lift up aspects of self neglected and
taught to stay silent.
I yearn to love
myself so deeply and completely that I advocate for myself with ease and in the
same breath keep myself open to receiving and experiencing the richness and
vitality of the life circling around me, one that I am responsible for
curating, creating, spinning forth into purposeful action.
I crave to
revel in my own sensuality. I love getting swept up in style, in acts of
self-love and self-care: the glitter I trace onto my eyelids, the red lipstick
I paint and kiss onto my lips, the mala beads I cradle as I breathe, the Lovely
perfume I spray onto my wrists in the morning and rose water I spritz in the
afternoon, the downdog I stretch out into to let go of the day and soften into
evening.
I restless to
harness and utilize my creative energy toward higher forms of service. I want
to be brilliantly alive in living my purpose. I manifest a life robust in
sacred, celebrated connection – to friends and family, and to the earth, to
myself, and to men.
My
relationships with men will shift and change as the relationship I have with
myself evolves.
Instead of
wondering why that 5th grade boy said what he said, I focus on how
my 5th grade self felt and her response. That episode in time
teaches me the vital importance of standing up for myself, and not giving my
power away to boy. My evolution involves shifting the interest not to the boy,
but to me, my feelings, my reaction, my response, and learning to voice my
truth in that moment.
In my past
relationships, I sacrificed myself. I neglected my shine. I swallowed my
concerns, and hid my affections.
Now, I choose
myself.
If I like a
boy, I let myself like him. I let myself stay close to my needs, my wants, my
feelings. I go back to my breath, to how
I am feeling, to how I am really feeling, and trusting the wisdom of the body
to communicate a knowing that transcends words and informs with a language that
is energy, sensation, feeling.
Sitting in
garden, drinking my coffee, I bask in the promise of a late summer morning.
There are butterflies of excitement for what will be, gratitude for what was,
and a deepening of appreciative contentment for what is, for who I already am,
and this spark of love for what is readies me for the day, for the Austin
journey ahead.