Impromptu Tuesday: Depletion and Shame and Emergence

I’m settling into the last two days of August, enjoying a brief – if soggy – reprieve from the oppressively heavy heat. My elderly cat has finally settled on my lap, having been forced to give up his attempt to lumber up and lounge atop my keyboard. The mosquitoes haven’t yet found me. And I’m pondering how to start writing on this first #ImpromptuTuesday back after too long. I’m feeling contemplative, so I’m trying something new today. Stream of consciousness typing. 

This may be a colossal mistake. But making mistakes, they tell me, is basically like taking vitamins. 

For most of my life, the end of August has been the last hurrah of summer, gathering school supplies, choosing ‘first day’ outfits, comparing teachers and schedules, soaking in the last little bit of summer sleep and flexibility before the structured chaos of fall. Even in early adulthood, the spouse and I had only a couple of years where neither of us were in school of some sort. 

Of course, in those early years of parenthood, fall didn’t really mean that much. Less sunscreen slathering. More clothing to swap out after a spaghetti lunch. An easier time convincing stubborn toddlers that, yes, it was still bedtime, even if the sun insisted it wasn’t. But even in those years, Nick was in school, so there was still a sense of the newness, excitement, and intimidation of fall.

This year, our first full year of in-person school in Tennessee – and the first year of school, period, for my youngest – we’ve been into the school routine for almost 6 weeks now. That’s been strange, to be in a school routine in the blistering heat of summer. But I also see the wisdom in making the kids be inside during the most miserable weather month in this part of the country. 

So that means that, for the first time in nearly 14 years, I have had large daily chunks of time – Alone!

And somehow, I’m just now getting back to my own writing.

Why is that?

I mean, there are probably a hundred reasons. Three million “start of year” doctor visits. Staggered start of the year for the kindergartener. Four kids in two different school districts with excessive amounts of paperwork. Starting a new consultancy. Two pandemic years’ worth of built up tasks that need to happen without kids. Needy pets. Blah, blah, blah.  

But really, when I sit with my steaming coffee (which I’m finally able to drink while it’s still hot), and dig under the superficial busywork that’s always floating around, I can see there is just one reason.

Depletion

I was unreservedly depleted. To a degree I have never before experienced. I could feel it, this tangible weight, threatening to unravel me in the weeks before the kids started school. 

I am an extreme introvert, so after more than a decade of work-at-home-with-anywhere-from-one-to-four-children-constantly-with-me-and-without-childcare-because-my-partner-was-in-school-and-my-job-didn’t-pay-enough-to-cover-childcare-and-food, I was no stranger to being at the edge. 

Back then, when the fall came and some (never all) of my children headed back to school, there was always melancholic nostalgia. I truly do enjoy being with my kids. And there was a sadness that large chunks of their discovery would be away from me. It was hard and good to let them go and watch that bloom of independent confidence.

This year was different. There was a desperation I had never felt before. A profound fear—perhaps irrational—that I would never, ever be alone again. And that possibility felt like the time as a kid where I overestimated my lung capacity and dove a little too deep in the pool. That moment where I could just about touch the surface, but my air had run out and my frantic clawing threatened to be just a fraction of a second too slow.

And I felt shame. Shame that I had this desperate need for space. Shame that when I shared this feeling just a little, I received mixed reactions. Shock. Affirmation. Silence. The reminder that so many people have to send their kids away when all they want to do is be bothered over and over and over again with pleeeeeease, mom? Pleeeeease???? I remembered my one year when Nick was the stay-at-home dad and I went to work and missed out on so many firsts that happen between 15 months and age three.

But there it still was. A need so desperate that some days I literally felt like walking was too much work.

So after dragging myself into August and having some space to process, I am giving myself a lot of grace.

I’m sure that coming into 2020 already fried and then undertaking two years of pandemic parenting, working, and homeschooling four neurodivergent kids in a brand new state had something to do with it. But also, I think I finally discovered my absolute limit for sustained-presence parenting: 14 years. 

When I say it starkly like that, it seems ridiculous that I would even wonder why I was depleted. Or feel ashamed that I was. Because that’s a LONG TIME. As the kids still say, “duh.”

I’m now telling myself, “Damn. That was a long, joyful, hard, and excruciatingly beautiful season. You did a really good job of doing so much for so many for so long. It is understandable and expected to be depleted and to need space.”

As the torrential rains fall in the way that I’ve only seen in East Tennessee, I’m tentatively tiptoeing into the last summer hurrah before fall peeks her head around the corner. Holding space for my place. Holding space for those in a completely different season. And, it turns out, I’m getting my magical exciting fall shift after all. As I peek my head into this space that will be my new normal, it feels light and exciting and disconcerting. But, I can already see how this shift is birthing a more patient, inquisitive, and awed human being. 

❤️

 Side note: HOLY BUCKETS, am I an efficient worker when every other thought isn’t interrupted by “mom!” – so for anyone else who has ever had to be a productive employee without childcare:  Cut yourself some slack and remember – You. Are. Magic. 

The Lonely Summer

Apparently, I was lonely that summer. 

“My heart just broke for you,” my mom told me, years later. “You know, the summer when your friends stopped calling and everyone was busy with someone else? You just wandered around that summer, looking sad and alone and lost. No one was around when you called.”

“I called people?” I asked, my face scrunched up in confusion. Particularly as a child, I had a borderline phone phobia, willing to show up in public semi-nude if it meant I could avoid talking to someone on the phone. “Well…” admitted my mom. “I probably made you call someone once.” 

Ah. Yes. That sounded more accurate.

I twirled the lock of hair faster through my left fingers, trying to place this summer of devastating loneliness. Had I simply repressed that summer? Was it that traumatizing? 

“I think it was maybe the summer of Miracle Worker?” my mom mused as the ripely pungent banana chunks drowned in the banana bread batter under her KitchenAid mixer. “Maybe you were so busy at the beginning of summer with theater rehearsals that everyone just found other things to do.” 

Yes. I thought as a light illuminated in“The Miracle Worker” hallway of my mind. I smiled as I flipped through memories of the summer that I became Helen Keller.  

Warm memories the color of buttery yellow late afternoon sunshine filtering through half-closed eyelids, quasi-napping under glossy oak leaves dancing Tarantellas in the South Dakota gales. 

Memories that taste like the crispy green of snap peas fresh from the garden. 

Memories that feel like burning quads and calves after biking up and down the rare South Dakota hill. Like purpley-green bruises on my my hips and shins from hours of fumbling relentlessly around the house, blindfolded and ear-plugged, trying desperately to understand just a teensy bit of Helen Keller’s world. 

Memories that smell of freshly mown grass and crackling campfires and that punchy explosive smell just after fireworks fly.  Like the dusty, magical, welcoming aroma that somehow smells the same in all small-town community theater rehearsal spaces. Of decades of used and reused costumes and props. Of excitement and nerves and cheap makeup. Of thrilling abandon and layers of peeling paint and Aquanet hairspray. And, because it was South Dakota, the occasional waft of cow manure on particularly blustery days.

Memories that sound like glorious silence and thunderous applause. Like wind rushing past my ears and crunching gravel under bike tires and popcorn popping with cheesy pepperoni Pizza Hut pizza melting into Family Movie Nights.

Yes. That one summer, in the early 90s, on the cusp of entering The Dreaded Teen Years when the letters spelling Swiftwind traipsed across the bar of my pink and silver Schwinn bike. The shimmering  letters were bold and magically swirly, still pristine, unscratched and unfaded. I rode Swiftwind fast and far, nearly every day that summer. Alone. Which was just fine by me. Because I had discovered that my friends now thought it was definitively uncool to imagine that a bike magically transformed into Swiftwind the Pegasus whenever one rode fast enough. Which, of course, is what I did. I mean, can you get a better Pegasus name than Swiftwind?

Swiftwind carried me over the paved streets and across the gravel road between two pastures. We flew, my Jansport backpack stuffed with a thermos of water, a pack of Ritz crackers, a handful of garden peas, my Miracle Worker script, and my Lisa Frank dolphin notebook. Underneath the shade of the gigantic gnarled oak tree, I memorized stage directions and became Helen Keller, alone, in the hidden safety of the unpopulated South Dakota gravel roads. I sketched and wrote poetry and imagined I was a wolf. A lone wolf, under a lone tree, in the vast and spreading prairie. 

The summer I was lonely. 

That magical, refreshing summer where I belonged completely to myself in the fullness of how I was created. The summer I was untethered from the increasingly demanding rules of tween & teenage girl social structure. That summer, I was free from blindly nodding and chuckling along with my friends, clueless about their their pop culture references and jokes, but too embarrassed to ask. I tried to listen to the Mariahs and Madonnas and Boyz II Men and TLCs that my friends raved about. But I just couldn’t make myself care—all I wanted to hear was Mannheim Steamroller, John Denver, Peter, Paul, and Mary, the soundtrack to Dances with Wolves, and show tunes sung by Howard Keel and Dorothy Day and Julie Andrews.  

That summer, my brain got a sabbath, temporarily relieved from the generally unsuccessful attempts of those early tween and teen years to cram itself into a “socially acceptable” box—crisply uniform on the outside, but rumpled and suffocating on the inside. The summer where I was not yet sure enough of myself to be myself. But that was okay. Because I was gloriously by myself

The summer I was lonely. 

Lonely. Alone. The two words are so similar—only three little letters apart—that we equate the two. Where there is one, the other will necessarily be found. Right? If you are alone, especially for long stretches of time, you must be lonely. Right?

Yes, I have felt the darkness of lonely. Lonely is smiling in a group of people all laughing at a reference I don’t understand. Lonely is frustration that my thoughtfully crafted questions, yet again, have come across as aggression. Lonely is being among people who all love me, and don’t hide their frustration that I still can’t manage to do those simple things that everyone else learned by the third grade. Lonely is trying yet again, to show my love and appreciation, only to have it fall flat and unacknowledged. Or worse, resented. Lonely is fearing that if I share what’s really in my head, people will cringe. Or laugh. But not in the good way.

Yes, I have felt lonely

But not that summer. Not from being alone.

For me, alone, feels like a giant exhale at the end of a busy, beautiful day, one that has been filled with people I love and activities that bring me joy. Alone is sunshine spattering down onto the crook of a tree trunk, dappling the pages of my Babysitter’s Club books with only the chattering chickadees to keep me company. Alone is writing, creativity unbridled as the words snake out of my head and through my fingers. Alone is a magical land, a place outside of which some things can never exist. A place where I can set down and ignore my heavy luggage. Suitcases filled with the tools I need to be, to speak, to exist, in ways that make sense to those around me. 

Alone, I know, is a place that has never been forced upon me. Rather, it is often just out of reach. So, for me, alone, feels like time chosen, time free. Alone, for now, is sacred and holy. Alone is not where I always want or need to be. But it is somewhere I will always want and need to visit

When I am never alone, that is when the loneliness begins to creep in.

Because alone is the place where I remember to love who I am. In all my celebrated gifts. And in all the ways I don’t fit. 

So, that summer? I was not lonely. But I was alone. 

And it was glorious. 

 

A Home for my Weird Snowmen

Sometimes, my stories feel to me a little like a lopsided snowman. You know, those strange ones that Calvin creates in Calvin & Hobbes? Off-centered, a little unnerving, but with a lot of…character…?

They’re just weird. But they’re begging to be created.

It’s been hard to find an appropriate home for my strange little snowlings, because they don’t often follow a consistent theme or format or genre.

Enter, the blog.

So there will be no consistent thematic musings or practical advice or DIY genius. They will be fiction, nonfiction, and everywhere in between. This blog will be the home of my farrago of writing works. A place for all Kiki’s strange little snow babies to find a way out into the world where they can hopefully connect to someone somewhere.

Enjoy.