When I was young, it was customary at big holidays for us to go around the table and say something for which we were thankful while breaking off a piece of the traditional Polish Oplatek wafer. We usually did things in order by age so that the least patient among us (who, me?) could go first. My father recalls Thanksgiving dinners growing cold as I attempted to hold the proverbial floor by desperately adding to my list of thanks before the focus of everyone's attention could turn elsewhere: "I'm - I'm - I'm thankful for...puppies! And kitties! And bunnies! And horsies! And - and -and..." And you get the idea. While my thanks was not insincere, it certainly didn't encompass the larger, truer things I was lucky to have as a child - things like family and safety and food on the table.
Twenty years later, I'm better able to verbalize my thanks for things like family, friends, and all those other things people are thankful for on Thanksgiving. But this year, I'm hundreds of miles away from both my family and my fiancee, I'm struggling financially like I never have before, I don't have a home of my own, and it is work - work - to get through each day. Is it work worth doing? Well, yes, I'd like to think so. But so here it is. This year? This year, I'm thankful for the hard. For the messy. For the getting up each day, even on - especially on - the days when I feel like I can't.
There's often an unspoken (or sometimes spoken) question that arises around mental illness. It goes like this:
If you could, would you give it up?
If I could, would I wish away the bipolar disorder?
The bipolar disorder that makes it so that I can't get out of bed sometimes, that makes it necessary for me to swallow handfuls of drugs every night, the bipolar that landed me in a psychiatric hospital for a week when I was only 20 years old? No. I would not. I think that my manic depression is what allows me to feel for people as intensely as I do, which is often difficult but ultimately I feel it's valuable. I think I am empathetic because I've experienced such a range of emotion, at such intense highs and lows, that there's relatively little that I don't feel like I can relate to on some level. I think that my empathy will help me to be a strong mother and a gentle midwife, even if the degree to which I feel is exhausting sometimes. However, I don't see my illness as being some sort of window into the meaning of life, or as being essential to my being or something like that. I see it as the hand I was dealt and it's up to me to navigate the world with and through it. I would never romanticize this illness - I wouldn't wish on anyone the hope of death, unbearable helplessness, mania that makes one a danger to oneself and others, depression that renders one completely nonfunctional or the pure exhaustion that comes from swinging from one extreme to another like a pendulum you can't control. But it's part of who I am, and wishing that I could give it up is like wishing that part of me doesn't exist. And when I came through the period of time where I did want to die, I did so with the knowledge and appreciation that I was blessed to be alive and loved, I was worthy of existing, there was good in the world that I was meant to do, and choosing to give all that up was stealing value, hope, and joy not only from myself but from anyone that loved me and wanted to see what I could do with this life. So accepting who I was, and that I was valuable, meant accepting every part of who I was - bipolar and all.
There are the moments when I feel like I'm cemented into bed. Moments when I lie awake at 3 AM and wish for my heartbeat to slow down. Moments when I wonder how this will all, ever, work out. But there are also moments like this.
And it is for those moments that I am thankful.
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Friday, November 25, 2011
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Saying Thank You
There are a lot of things in life that are hard and get us down - things like not having enough money, working super long hours, feeling lonely, realizing how tough a relationship can be, and feeling like everything is one step forward and two steps back (i.e., our dog is apparently un-housetrained again). But you know what? There is a hell of a lot more to life that is - excuse the expression - Fucking Amazing. This is not a huge revelation that everyone stops to think about what they're thankful for on Thanksgiving, but it's a valuable exercise and one I'm not about to abandon even though I'm not at home, going around the table and each of us saying what we're grateful for before the first bite of turkey may be taken. What follows is a brief list of the things, both big and small, that we are grateful for this year.
Our dog and cat, however annoying and frustrating they can be. They make us laugh and they bring us unspeakable joy.
Our new apartment, shortcomings and all. It is home, and will be, for a long time.
Our health, imperfect as it is. We are lucky to have the care we need and the privilege to attain it.
Books, books, and more books! The time to read them, now that college is over.
Boots. Because I love them and they keep my toes warm in this NY weather
Flannel sheets. 'Nuff said.
My jobs - both of them. I love my little guy and I love my new friends at the bakery. I also love the cookies and scones at the bakery job but I may love them a little too much.
All of the opportunities we've been given to further our education.
Our lives that have thus far been filled with so much love and will only be filled with more and more.
Cookbooks. Particularly Vegan Planet, my new current favorite from which most of our recipes are coming.
Each other (duh). There is nothing about my life that would be the same without Alix. She is the reason I am a better person now, the reason I have faith in life and love after losing both for so long, and the best part of my future. I love her, and even though she knows it, now you all know it too. Go crazy with it.
Our dog and cat, however annoying and frustrating they can be. They make us laugh and they bring us unspeakable joy.
Our new apartment, shortcomings and all. It is home, and will be, for a long time.
Our health, imperfect as it is. We are lucky to have the care we need and the privilege to attain it.
Books, books, and more books! The time to read them, now that college is over.
Boots. Because I love them and they keep my toes warm in this NY weather
Flannel sheets. 'Nuff said.
My jobs - both of them. I love my little guy and I love my new friends at the bakery. I also love the cookies and scones at the bakery job but I may love them a little too much.
All of the opportunities we've been given to further our education.
Our lives that have thus far been filled with so much love and will only be filled with more and more.
Cookbooks. Particularly Vegan Planet, my new current favorite from which most of our recipes are coming.
Each other (duh). There is nothing about my life that would be the same without Alix. She is the reason I am a better person now, the reason I have faith in life and love after losing both for so long, and the best part of my future. I love her, and even though she knows it, now you all know it too. Go crazy with it.
"Love wasn't a thing you fell in, but rose to. It was what stopped you from falling." | -Darin Strauss |
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Thanksgiving
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