Floating and Falling

The Grammy Awards were last Sunday. I love Billie Eilish and that night she won “Song of the Year” for, “What Was I Made For?” If you haven’t heard it, you should change that…now. It’s an amazing song…in my opinion. She wrote it for the movie “Barbie” which I have not seen yet. Anyway, the beginning of the song says, “I used to float, now I just fall down. I used to know, but I’m not sure now….” As I’ve gotten older there are so many more things, I’m not sure of. Everything was so clear when I was in my 20’s…so simple…so black and white…so rigid.

When I was younger, I was an athlete. I played basketball, softball, and I swam…all competitively. I was coordinated. I could stumble and catch myself easily before I’d ever fall. I could run forward and backward…I thank basketball for that. When I went to college, the basketball coach was interested in me for the team. It was a very small school but still that was a dream come true. I ended up having knee surgery instead of trying out for the team (thank you field hockey…I should have never trusted a sport that makes you wear a skirt) and that was a big loss for me. Being an athlete was a huge part of my identity then. I think it was my identify. Everything in my life was connected to sports, all my friends played, and we spent our time together on and off the court. I had a basketball with me all the time and got really good at spinning it on my finger…I could even switch fingers and hands (my grandkids used to think that was very cool when they were little).

I wrote about my accidental fall, surgery, and ongoing recovery a couple weeks ago. I wasn’t really planning on writing anymore about it because it was done. Right? Then I was walking my dog and I tripped on my crutch and that whole accident came crashing down on me. I was back on the beach as if it was happening again right then. I saw myself fall. I heard and felt the crunch and snap of my arm breaking. My heart started racing and I felt the warmth of tears welling up in my eyes. I felt overwhelming fear and sadness, even though I was fine in that moment. I did not fall. I did not even come close to falling. I just tripped. I was so afraid.

I used to float…I’m not sure I ever floated but I didn’t fall. I wasn’t clumsy. I was coordinated. Now I just fall down, randomly and for no reason or that’s how it feels to me. And worst of all, I don’t know how to stop it. Missteps that I could have easily corrected in the past, knock me to the ground now. And I am afraid. Afraid to live in my body. Afraid to feel in my body. Afraid to fall in my body. How can I mentally feel like I’m 40 and physically move like I’m 90? That’s fucked up. I feel like everyone treats me like I’m fragile and about to break. But I’m not…okay I did break but I’ve been put back together with metal and cadaver bones. Just missing duct tape.

“I don’t know how to feel but I wanna try.” Feelings are hard for me. As a child, I was encouraged not to have them. Feelings are messy. No one wanted to know how I felt. How do I know this? No one ever asked. No one cared how I felt. If I was angry, I got in trouble, even though anger seemed like the go to emotion for my parents. And if I was sad or cried, I was teased or taunted. I felt humiliated. I decided emotions were way too much trouble for me.

Let me be real… I don’t know how to feel because I’m having difficulty being in my body right now. I was learning to be present in my body and feel my feelings and then I fell…my catastrophic fall. I feel fragile and I am not a fragile person…so that pisses me off…which I’m sure is helpful. I am not fragile. I’m fucking Superwoman. I deal with, manage, and take care of tons of shit every day. I am not fragile. Fragile feels bad to me, weak. I am not weak. I can’t be weak.

I don’t know how to feel…that’s true two ways. The “I don’t know” as in I don’t recognize the feeling, and/or the “I don’t know” as in I can’t decide, too many choices. I’m with number 2. I can identify feelings, I’m better at it with other people’s feelings but I can get to mine…it may take a minute. I have a master’s degree in counseling…I know lots of feelings…a grade 18th’s worth. But it’s not so much that I don’t know how to feel as I don’t how I can manage all these feelings. I have a fucking tsunami of feelings.

You see, it turns out I have all the feelings. So many feelings. I have spent years learning to feel my feelings…years. And convincing myself to stay present in my body, even when my body hurts. To stay with the physical pain and any feelings that arise from it. I feel afraid of all the feelings inside me. Afraid of being devoured by them. I’m afraid and sad. I feel diminished by falling. I became a fragile and weak person in other people’s eyes, and they question my capabilities…and their doubts eat away at me…and so do mine.

Now let’s be real…I might have some PTSD, just a tiny bit. I’m afraid. I’m afraid of being me and living in this body. I feel fragile and vulnerable in a predatory way…like my body is out to get me. I don’t know how to be in my body right now, it feels complicated. I’m afraid of my body, as if it’s separate from me, and can damage me on its own. I feel breakable in a new way since I fell. And it’s not so helpful that my mom tells me I need to stop falling because I’ll end up in “bad shape,” basically dead is what she means. If it was as simple as deciding not to fall, then it would never happen again. It’s not that simple. I’m careful and I fell. I’m careful and I’m afraid. 

It feels strange to say that I am scared of myself. Makes me feel a little bit like I have multiple personalities and I’m afraid of one of them…the one making me fall. I don’t know exactly what to do. I can pretend that there was no impact on me from the fall but the the slightest misstep or stumble and my insides collapse. Physically being put back together didn’t fix my fears. My bones have healed but not my heart.

 Let’s be real…I can’t outrun my feelings. I actually can’t outrun anyone, except maybe my English Bulldog. And neither of us believe in running. What’s the worst thing that can happen if I stay with my feelings? Allow myself to sit with my fear and sadness? I suppose I’ll feel way more than I want to but what else? What’s the worse thing that can happen if I feel…feel it all? And what’s the best thing that could happen if I allow myself to feel that whole tsunami of feelings? They are messy and I am messy, but would I learn to believe? Believe in myself. Believe in my ability to handle anything that comes up for me. Believe I can feel a tsunami and survive. Believe I am bigger and stronger and smarter than my fear. Believe in myself and my potential just like I promised myself I would. Perhaps practice what I preached just a month ago…there’s a whole lot of believing that’s ready to go on here…and all I have to do is stay, relax, and feel. So simple and so scary. Until you do it…until I do it.

Post traumatic stress disorder is a big topic so next week I’ll talk more about PTSD and the fear and sadness that can accompany it. In the meantime, I’m gonna practice what I preach and I’m going to love. I’m going to love myself and the people around me. I’m going to practice a loving attitude toward the world. Love will keep me a glass half full kind of person. It’s all in my perspective…so I’m keeping mine focused on love, because in the end all that matters is how we love people…including ourselves.

In the Event of My Death

We have lived in Florida now for about 15 months and 12 of those months my father has been on hospice. Last week my family met with my dad’s hospice nurse and his status was changed to “imminent” as in dying any day now. When did it get so close? Since that meeting I shut my world down. Now I sit with my dad and wait for death…wait for death to take my dad away from me…imminently.

It’s a weird thing to wait for someone to die. It’s uncomfortable and peaceful at the same time. I am a person with strong propensities and under stress they pop up…or pop out. I’ve been breaking out all my coping mechanisms. Comfort food and wine were first. And always I turn to reading. Books allow me to explore and question what’s happening around me and to open up to the present moment. One of the best things reading does for me is move me out of denial in a way that I am amenable to…sometimes I don’t even know what’s happening until I realize I am actually feeling my feelings.

“Bardo” is a Buddhist term for in-between time. After death and before rebirth. A transitional time…the gap or space between what ended and what is yet to come. My teacher, Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, says, “This experience of the present moment is known as bardo in Tibetan Buddhism. Bardo in a literal sense means ‘interval’; it can also be translated as an ‘intermediate’ or ‘in-between’ state. Thus, we can say that whenever we are in between two moments, we are in a bardo state. The past moment has ceased; the future moment has not yet arisen. There is a gap, a sense of newness, of pure openness, before the appearance of the next thing, whether it is our next thought or our next lifetime” (Mind Beyond Death, p. 10). So, the essence of bardo is found in the experience of nowness, the gap between the end of one moment and the arising of the next one. 

Why is death so scary for us when we experience it all day every day? Something ends and something else begins, over and over again. The reality is that death and birth happen continuously. Every day is filled with small deaths. We are continually faced with endings…transitions between the end and the beginning. Our fear comes from our desire for things to be permanent and solid. We don’t like impermanence. We like sameness. We like the predictable, consistent, and comfortable. Our desire for comfort keeps us butting our heads into reality…get a helmet.

Pema Chodron, in her book How We Live Is How We Die, says, “What everyone can agree on, however, is that during our present lifetime, thing’s definitely keep going. And as they keep going, they continually change. Things are constantly coming to an end, and things are constantly coming into being.” Change never stops. The way to live with the fear of death is to embrace it. What we resist becomes stronger. I must open myself to the inevitability of death, and the fear that arises, and live in its presence.  Live with death in mind because how we live is how we die. Death doesn’t just happen at the end of our life; it happens in every moment. Impermanence. Reality will take place whether I like it or not. My dad is going to die. Everyone will die, including me. We can be open to everything whether we like it or not, because it’s going to happen, and then it’ll change. We are always in a bardo because impermanence never takes a break. There is never a moment that we are not in transition.

It’s strange knowing death is imminent. Of course, we’ll all die but we don’t usually know when that will happen. I think I prefer the mystery. As for him, I’m not sure what he knows. His whole life has been reduced to our family room. The family room is where everything happens for him…makes it an aptly named room. He gets a bath, nurses and aides come to check on him and up until a week ago he used to eat in this room. He isn’t eating or drinking anything now. He has to be changed every day and that has been the hardest thing for him, because sometimes that responsibility is mine. One day he told me that he used to change my diapers and now I change his, and he paused a minute and said, “That’s just not right.” But in a circle of life kind of way it is right…it’s exactly right. We need to take care of each other.

It’s a strange time when someone’s death is imminent…waiting for death…waiting for the transition. I wonder if he feels like he’s waiting? Or getting ready for a big change? He sleeps most of the time but sometimes while he’s sleeping his mouth will move like he’s having a conversation with someone but there is no sound to his words. I wonder if he’s talking to his mom and dad…getting ready to see them after 55 years. I don’t know who else he might be looking to see on the other side but he’s got something going on. 

At this point the only thing I can think to do is tell him that I wouldn’t have traded a single day of this past year being with him and my mom. There have been some challenges, but I wouldn’t change anything. I hope that helps him and eases his worries. He has told me more than once this past year that this is not what I signed up for, and I tell him it’s exactly what I signed up for. I hope he believes me.

Let’s be real…when we reach the time of our death, that’s not the time to try something new, something we always thought we’d try but never did, like meditation, or prayer, or who knows what. All we have at the end of our lives is what we had a second before the end. We aren’t suddenly a spiritual guru, if we have never cared about developing our own spirituality. We won’t suddenly be relaxed if we’re always anxious, or loving if we’re cruel. We won’t be able to be present in that moment if we routinely live in the past or the future. All we have is who we are, our habits of who we are and how we think. Our propensities. We’ve had a lifetime of building our propensities, the habits of our minds.

The only way to become comfortable with death is to develop our ability to remain in the present moment. Stay present with the little deaths that happen all day every day. Learn to live in the in-between state. Become comfortable with groundlessness, the uneasy footing of continual change. Facing these fears day after day is how we become comfortable with death, and with life. After all, living a life we aren’t present for isn’t really living at all. Let’s love ourselves enough to be present and love others enough to give them the gift of our presence. Never forget love. Love always wins.

“When the appearances of this life dissolve,

May I, with ease and great happiness,

Let go of all attachments to this life

As a son or daughter returning home.”

Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche