On Dealing with Death (a pondering)

Have you ever experienced the sudden, echoing, yet fleeting feeling of overwhelming fear in your chest?  The one where it feels like something wraps its icy hands around your heart, squeezes, and it pulses across your body like frozen lightning. As soon as it appears, it is then gone and you’re left somewhat dazed with the shadowy leftover of sadness, panic, and confusion as to how it happened.

When I was in middle & high school, I used to get this feeling often and without warning. I would be walking home from the bus, sitting in class, or reading a book (entirely unrelated to the mention of death). In middle school, I was the quintessential goth: chain pants, black, shirts with ‘funny’ and sassy sayings on them, and a love for My Chemical Romance and The Used (which I admit, a decade later, I still love those bands–RIP MCR). I was obsessed with the dark and morbid, surrounding myself with all things that screamed death and darkness. Despite all of that, I was terrified of death. It was a five letter word that struck in me a fear of the unknown, of not existing, of drawing a final breath with lungs burning for air. I tried to immerse myself in the idea of it so I could feel more comfortable with it. I wasn’t suicidal, my brain was racing to the end of my timeline–when I was eighty- or ninety-something and on my deathbed. I figured that the last fifteen years of my life have gone in a flash, why not the next seventy? In the moment of that aforementioned fear, it felt like that moment would be tomorrow and it gripped me so tight that it would send me into a panic attack. A few years later I developed depression that was noticeable enough to seek help. I was harming myself to feel pain through numbness, and my inner voice was very mean. The venom in the things I told myself was so intense, especially late at night, that I would make myself cry until I passed out from exhaustion.

My first memorable experience with a close family death was with my maternal grandmother’s passing in 2008. I couldn’t comprehend how someone could exist one moment, and not in the next. I would remember the tears on her face whenever we left her house after a visit (she lived 6 hours away in WV and we could only visit 4-5 times a year).

I wonder if she was thinking that it might be the last time she saw us?

She passed a week before Mother’s Day weekend that year, when we were to go up and visit to celebrate it and my mother’s & my birthday (ours a week apart).

How can someone look so different when their face is still, gravity pulling it down, body so strangely still with no breath to swell the chest? 

Other deaths of distant family friends have felt disconnected and unreal, since I didn’t know them directly. Other than family pets, I’ve only yet felt such sadness after the death of my mentor’s mother last fall before Samhain (Halloween). Although I only spent time in her presence two or three times, her passing hit me hard. I knew it was coming–she was sick–yet it still came as a tidal wave of confusion and surreality of not understanding where she had gone.

How is it that I can no longer hug her, talk to her, see her, when I just did that last week?

I’ve been trying to approach a different way of coping with death as a concept. It’s a natural, inevitable part of the life cycle–despite how much we strive to put it off.

No one gets out alive.

When I fully embraced being Wiccan, I was immersed in the understanding that we were once a part of the earth and the force of life that swirls around us. When we have our physical incarnation to carry out a living journey, we must eventually come to terms that someday we will rejoin the life force embodied by the earth. We will merge with it and nourish the next cycle of life that comes after us. We will be come a part of the grass, flowers, and air that lives on after us. Green burial actually highlights this point, that being buried naturally into the earth will aid the process of new life. The embalming fluid, concrete, chemical-treated wood, artificial materials, and ash of cremation is an attempted barrier made by the living to separate themselves from the idea of the withering, rotting corpse that will become of that person in a matter of days and weeks. We try to prolong death even after it has happened.

I collect animal skulls to remind myself of the simplicity of mortality. The fascination of seeing this beautifully macabre thing that was once encased in blood vessels, muscle, skin and fur/hair/feathers is a stark reminder of the almost incomprehensible concept that it once lived as I do now. I keep them (and clean them) to honor their time on this earth. I care for them because that is my way of acknowledging that life force. Someday I hope that there will be one who remembers my life force like that.

So then I ask you to do this for me. Listen to “In a Week” by Hozier. Don’t just listen to the lilting melody, really listen to the lyrics. This song on repeat has instilled a calm in me that I’ve never known. It places beauty of nature next to the sad realness of your death (and that of those you love), and–at least for me–helps me deal with the bigger picture of the world. Though I may be hardly a speck of dust within the blink of human existence on this planet, I will someday contribute to the future of its environmental prosperity.

Ten years later, that cold feeling of fear has become a heavy stone suspended in my ribs. The warm pulse of my heartbeat is much steadier, despite the smoke-like evasion of the fear that once sent me into a spiraling frenzy.

I’d call that progress, wouldn’t you?

Breathe, ground, and repeat. One day at a time.

What Am I Supposed to Do? (rambling/whining)

It’s hard to sleep when you’re afraid of having nightmares. Even when the calm of the night settles in and the creaking of the house stops putting you on edge and you can start to focus on the softness of the pillow and the cocoon-like feeling you get when swaddled in blankets while curled around a stuffed animal…the thoughts start buzzing in. “Oh my god my feet are freezing. If I put socks on I’ll get hot later…but I’m cold NOW. Why won’t my cat SETTLE DOWN? What is that gurgling noise, is that the water tank? CAT. STOP SITTING ON MY FACE. I think she’s trying to smother me. Have I cleaned her litter box lately? I’ll do it tomorrow. Did I take my meds tonight? Why can’t I SLEEP? What time is it? I really don’t wanna go to work tomorrow.”

Aside from self sleep deprivation, the anxiety is keeping me from moving forward in my life. I don’t know how to get out of retail and into a better job. I’m not sure I want to have a job in what I studied. I can’t be a freelance artist with the lack of reputation I have. Making a living off of stained glass commissions and crocheting scoodies? I wouldn’t even be able to afford ramen. I’m interested in taxidermy, but school for that averages at $8-9K. Even then, I’d have to move out of the state to get a decent clientele from hunters or museums. I can’t even afford rent now (I’m lucky my parents let me live at home), how could I afford moving away without any idea what I’ll be doing when I get there? So many people can do that, but the fear of the unknown is crippling.

The fact that I have to rehearse in my head the asking of a simple question like “Oh, you speak Swedish? I’m trying to learn” when I notice a customer’s phone is set in a different language, and then chickening out because that’s more social effort than I sign up for on any given day. And despite my handful of friends and family who say that I can talk to them at any time, even if it means waking them up at 3am because I feel like a failure…I can’t do it. The impossible prospect of interrupting their sleep, burdening them with more emotional baggage, or the grueling task of just trying to put into words what I’m feeling and why (if I even know why), creates a massive blockage that prevents me from picking up the phone or waking them up. I know they’re there for me and I know they want to help me, but when the moment comes to ask…I can’t. So then it feeds the feeling of being alone (when I know I’m not), and I cry myself to sleep while trying to breathe through the faucet of snot that won’t shut off.

My spirituality is hard to keep intact when my mentor is hundreds of miles away, dealing with her own issues of a new house and all that life has thrown at her. My friends are drifting apart, drama brews, hardships blossom, and I feel helpless to aid their coping. All I want to do is sleep, but I don’t want to because I don’t want nightmares.

I’m in therapy but I don’t know when I’ll achieve my equilibrium again. The breathing is getting harder. I’m still trying to ground. Just needed to purge the thoughts and feelings into words that won’t make sense when I read them tomorrow.

Pre-Quarter-Life Crisis (Whining/Rambling)

As a 22-almost-23-year old, I have just enough experience to give me stories and plenty of naïveté to have no fucking clue as to what I’m talking about. Just enough pizzaz to make me dangerously obnoxious…in a wise way. I’ve officially coexisted with depression and anxiety for five years, I’ve dealt with sexual assault and abusive friendships, and I’m in a relationship that I see as one of those rare first/last everything kinda deals. At the same time…I don’t know heartbreak and I have lived a pretty cushy life with parents who are still together and provide me with everything I’ve ever wanted and more. From some perspectives I have no place to complain about anything in my life, no matter how superficial. From others, including my own, I am not one who has experienced unimaginable hardships and I do not compare my life to those starving children in Africa that are often held over your head as a child who doesn’t like vegetables. As someone with depression, it is unfair to belittle your pain, emotions, despairs and fears because someone somewhere is having a life one billion times worse than the single most terrible second of your own life. There will always be someone out there who is suffering, but that doesn’t make your suffering less important.

My mentor taught me something that I try to remind myself daily: “Sometimes other’s feelings aren’t our work.” That’s not to say, “Fuck everyone else, I’m the only one whose feelings matter,” but rather, “My emotional well-being is slightly more important than others, because I am the one who lives my life and I can only heal others if I first start healing myself.” As a natural empath, I absorb the pain and emotions from those I hold dear. My first instinct is to try to take their pain away, because it hurts to see them hurt. It took a long time to start acting like a sponge and not dry wood: to then wring out others’ pain after I have absorbed it so it does not affect my own mental health, rather than sucking up all of their emotions only to let it poison me from not letting go. I’m a work in progress, but then so are you.

Moving on to the purpose of this post: I have no idea where my life is headed. I went to college pursuing an art degree. I graduated with a BFA with a photography concentration, a minor in Spanish and another minor in Art History. In the real world, that pretty much means diddly squat. Before I graduated, I loved photographing people and capturing the inherent beauty of the human form. A few months after graduation, I get a job at a family portrait company and I thought I found my dream job. My anxiety gets in the way, I end up resigning, and I’m now a low-level manager at a retail store. I get enough hours to be just around the maximum hour requirements to remain at Part-Time, and I consistently question if I want to have a career in photography because I’m afraid that working in a medium I love will spoil it. Within a year, I’ve gone from wanting my own studio in ten years to doubting my entire career path. I’m throwing up my hands asking, “what ELSE am I even good at?” because all I can do is carry a rough conversation in Spanish and write OK scholarly papers. They don’t prepare you for the real world in school, especially for those of us seeking higher education in a field that’s kind of a crap shoot. You’re either ‘in’ with the good connections and find your niche in a gallery or industry, or you’re a starving artist who has a day job to pay the bills.

I went on a hike with my boyfriend yesterday with my camera and the kit zoom lens it came with, and I had fun photographing the nature as we went along the trail. I though I took some great photos, but when I looked at them on my laptop they are not nearly as sharp as I had hoped. My camera has limited capability in how far you can push its high detail and sensitivity to light, which I got spoiled on from the professional-quality cameras we used at school. Even when I get excited to take photos for fun, I get disappointed because the quality ruins a fairly good picture (or at least an attempt at one). I don’t have the money nor the budgeting skills to buy a better camera (or even a better lens for the one I have), and it’s frustrating to see something you used to be passionate about slowly swirl down the drain. I have no idea what I’m good at, I’m scared of people (especially strangers), and I don’t have a Go Get’em attitude because I have low confidence. If there was a job I could do at home without human interaction that could give me enough money to do the things I wanted, that’d be a dream and a half. Clearly it’s just a dream, we can’t earn what we don’t work for. Every night by the time I get home from work, I’m repeating my “I hate people” mantra over and over in my head. I understand why retail makes people so bitter and sad. On top of that, dealing with the pulsing aftermath of dealing with self-repressed memories of traumatic experiences (with the help of a therapist) only makes everyday things feel more daunting. Numbness, lack of focus, my thoughts flittering around like a swarm of hummingbirds on crack in a cloud of confusing gas. I can’t even make my daily practices consistent because of my inability to instate and repeat a routine on my own. Since the beginning of this post I’ve lost my direction of where this was going to end. I guess I’ll just stop here for now.

Still breathing. Trying to stay grounded.

Adult Childhood (a Rant)

I wish I could understand what strikes people to make themselves feel ready at my age (22) to be getting married and having babies. I do understand the allure and fantastic daydreams of a wedding and having a place of my own with my significant other and someday having soft little babies of my own to cuddle and watch grow. But that’s what they are: daydreams. How is it that in just four years after I have turned the legal age of an adult, I am of an age where marriage and starting a family is commonplace? And for so many, it happens even before that. How can we create children if we still are children? How do girls that age have the maturity and the sense of responsibility to want to get (or be careless to not prevent getting) pregnant? It may be thrust upon them to grow up fast in order to care for the child and raise them, but what is the percentage of young parents (these days) who actually raise a well-behaved, well-rounded child and have a healthy family life?

I know I am biased. I know that although I have been told I have maturity beyond my age that I still feel like a child every now and then. Despite society’s hell-bent desire to put an age and legal ceremonialism around the threshold of adulthood, the line is so fuzzy that I dare to believe it doesn’t exist. The label ‘adult’ is such a sham. What makes us ready to be an ‘adult?’ A job? A degree? You can achieve both at almost any time in your life. Many have the intelligence and work ethic to do it sooner than later, some don’t have the means to. What measures an ‘adult?’ The number of traumas and obstacles you’ve mustered through until your shell is hard like a jawbreaker? It is a callus that builds, yet at its core is it still soft and vulnerable. More like a clam than an indestructible iron sphere. I’ve been through my share of problems. From the struggle of getting out of bed because the retreat to your dreams is so much easier; sweeter than the reality of your increasing mortality, to emotionally abusive relationships. We are born to die; working to achieve a barely tangible thing to achieve other things (material or superficial) so that we can distract ourselves from the inevitable Eternal Sleep. We prolong our species’ existence to continue the Cycle. The Delusional Trend.

**I get all existential and dark when I’m avoiding sleep. I’ve been nursing a headache born from caffeine, stress, and lack of sleep, and my eyelids feel like lead, but still I fight. And I don’t know why. If sleep is such a haven, why resist the transition? I digress. I’m actually terrified of dying, so don’t chalk me up to being suicidal. And that’s seriously not a joke, it’s a disclaimer because so many people will get a blog just to write about those kind of thoughts.**

My point is, how can those of us who haven’t even lived a quarter of a century know the power, responsibility, gravity, and binding of the long-term commitment that is “I do,” or “We’re expecting.” Media may have glorified young pregnancy and poisonous marriages and meet-me-for-the-first-time-at-the-altar impulsive decisions for entertainment with the anything-but-reality TV, but it has shaped my generation and the ones finding themselves now. The children being raised by the Digital Age look to the screen for role models when they should be searching for one in the flesh. Maybe not their own parents–the late 20th century didn’t breed all the winners either–but there has to be someone out there who could be good for them.

On the other hand, if you were raised by a young single mother/parents, and you turned out alright then you’re one of the lucky few. I don’t doubt you and your family faced its hardships and adversities. It just saddens me to hear a child talk about wanting to live with her father but doesn’t want to hurt her mom’s feelings, and her only other role model at home is a brother younger than myself who is shotgun-married to his baby mama. I used to babysit that guy. What is happening to this world; my world? Marriage isn’t a few quick vows and some bling worth a fraction of his/her salary. It’s a commitment to spending the rest of your time on this earth bound to another with love and legal documents, making decisions that affect more than yourself and requires more than consent and an officiant. I’ve been with my significant other for almost four years, and although we have talked about marriage someday (read: NOT NOW), we are no where near that point because we are not trying to rush to get on everyone else’s level. It’s a life choice that changes your path, not a trophy to be won and compared to.

Word vomit complete. /endrant

Not meant to be controversial. Just see it from a different perspective. Share yours, but without venom.