3.2. 10 Minute Warning

I gave my boys a ten minute warning. In reality it was meant to give me time to write out this post before we launch into what promises to be a very busy day. It is the 4th, Independence Day, and the day I am helping my partner get settled into her new home.

This too is part of the path–us being separated in a sense and growing together in a sense as we rediscover basic wants and needs. I personally am learning day by day what matters most in my universe. These are all lessons that should have been learned long ago. These are the kinds of things that people argue, “If I had it all to do over again…” Indeed I wish I’d known these things earlier and made different choices, but I am not long on regret. I am long on learning from what is. Right now what is is an opportunity still dangling out there like a brick of gold on a ledge. I need to go out of my comfort zone to get what I want in life, but I know the risk promises the satisfaction of having written that novel, of having made the family I want, of living the kind of life I aspired to live.

For a while the question has been, ‘do I really want those things?’ The question should have been. ‘am I going to put in the effort for those things?’ That feels like a more fundamental human question. They are linked, but not as people often suggest. It isn’t so much that you don’t want what you don’t fight for. It is a matter of comfort and the cobwebs that stretch across your body and the belly that rises like hot dough, and mental joints that creak from disuse. What Maslow never told us was that once you ascend the pyramid, it is very hard to look back down even a step. To displace oneself from comfort and routine is far more difficult and overlooked than I would have ever suspected.

Here we are now in this year of my rebuilding and I am learning how high I’ve sat, guarded by my fragile white picket fence in this house of cards that so easily tumbles. Here I am learning how rare and strange it is to want it to fall down.

3.1. Daybreak/The Road

The road begins with new experiences, routines, and challenges. I’ve made vows to read (actual print) every day. I’m working towards the re-exploration of my bookcases and beyond just reorganizing, I intend to revisit many of the novels and short story collections as well as spend a good chunk of time reading the couple dozen books I never did read. Meanwhile I have adopted this theory of exploration. I believe that we live to learn and explore. We are all dying in the physical sense but it is the spirit and the mind that enable us to endure. I intend to endure and to do so by learning and trying new things at every opportunity, and by breaking from the old routines to discover new ones.

Today I went to the Mighty Mighty Bosstones concert. It is the first time I’ve seen them and my first Ska since the Dropkick Murphy’s wandered through Ames, IA back in the college days. The concert was loud and driven and dressed in meaning and metaphor. The band was smaller than usual but their sound filled the space. It was my first ska with my partner and my first time taking any of my kids to a show. I intended to blog out a review, but that isn’t really want I want to do with this time and space. I want to reflect on having had the opportunity and having seized that opportunity when I might not have done so a year ago.

This road is about growth and change, and I am already making good on the promises of yesterday while healing the wounds of yesteryear. No big proclamations here. It is just another day on the long road and preparing for every tomorrow.

Some Thoughts:

  1. It is not lost on me how the days add up. It stands to reason that on Day 1 of the return to the regularly scheduled numbering system (in a year). I will be in a new home with my partner and we will have completed the absolute merger of lives.