Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Near Misses

My first hurricane barely missed us, veering to the east at the last moment. I keep swinging back and forth between relief and something close to disappointment. The anticipation and the anxiety are so enormous that to have nothing happen to justify them feels like I've wasted so much energy. Logically, I know that we're lucky to have missed the destruction. I couldn't have dealt with the lost wages or the possibility of damage to my care. The experiences I can take in stride no matter how trying they may be. Money is always what ends up breaking me.

It seems like that's always been how it worked. There's no denying that I've done my fair share of making bad choices and reacting to situations in inappropriate ways. The repercussions of these have been long lasting and in some cases, have changed the course of my life in terrible ways. But it seems like each way I tried to turn, lack of money had erected a barricade in my path. It's useless to sit around and think about what could have been, but it's inevitable some days. Nothing changes and yet it still sucks me in.

At a family gathering, a rarely seen relative asked me what I wanted to be. My eight or nine year old self was very certain - I wanted to write movies. I had already spent countless hours staring at the television, watching the same movies over and over until the tape started to degrade. My free time was filled with Marilyn and John Wayne. When they weren't available, I buried myself in the highest forms of literature I could find at the time - Nancy Drew and Babysitters' Club novels. I studied their writing styles and character development as if they were maps to storytelling.

The response was unexpected, although nothing in my life so far could have led me to believe that any other reaction would have been possible. But we are cursed by the naivety of youth which tells us that anything is possible and ensures our constant disappointment until the lesson is finally learned to stop hoping. "What about being a teacher?" she asked. Surely that would be obtainable for someone like me, which the limited resources and opportunities that would be available to me. It was sheer practicality that prompted this. There was no malice or even any forethought of how this would effect an impressionable child. But intentions are not magic and it had the same result no matter the reasoning behind it.

I don't remember consciously realizing the implications of this conversation until years later. What I remember is the sudden disinterest in what had been my main drive in life. I kept watching movies, kept reading anything I could get my hands on. But there was no intention behind it anymore. Of course I couldn't write films. How ridiculous to even let the thought enter my mind. People like me didn't do magical things like that. We had nothing to say that could inspire others the way I had been inspired. We lived routine lives of manual labor, early marriage, unwanted children, and numbness. The greatest chance I had was as a teacher and even that was questionable due to the education required.

Did she end up being right because she understood the cold, hard reality of my situation or because her words altered my perception of what was achievable? I'll never know. But I proved her right. There was no money for education no matter the level of my ability. There was no stable environment where I could do the work needed to overcome finances. There was no one to provide encouragement and support. Everyone around me already had their dreams beaten out of them by the constant barrage of life, of poverty, of accidental pregnancies and bitter marriages. They knew what my life would be because they were already living it. As a child, I was already subconsciously beginning to accept it.

In the end, I ran from it. It was already too late to reclaim that person I had wanted to be as a child, but I could at least not fall into the same traps. I've become a hybrid of what I wanted and what was possible. Climbing out of that kind of cesspool requires baby steps. It's a generational game. I escaped, but I'm already far beyond the point of even considering attempting those lost ambitions, but maybe I've been able to show that it's possible to get out. It's doubtful that I'll ever have children to take the next step forward. My disposition doesn't lend itself to family building, most likely because I've only experienced the damage those relationships can inflict and not the joys of it.

So what's my end game? I'm honestly not sure. I've already done everything that I let myself believe was possible. I left. I have the freedom to go as I please (in the confines of finances - there's that ever present fence again) and think for myself. I can behave as I wish and there's only me to both make the judgements and suffer the consequences. My life is my own and I'll sacrifice so much to keep it that way, mostly in the way of relationships and bonding. But there's never been an end game. Survival mode doesn't allow for ends. Maybe it's time to finally allow myself the luxury of looking to the future. I don't know if I have it in me, it's so foreign to everything that I've used to construct the nature of my personality. But maybe the next stage of that survival is planning.

There are no ends. There are only means.

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