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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Looking foolish along the way

Eating crow: humiliation by admitting wrongness or having been proven wrong after taking a strong position

Eat humble pie: to apologize and face humiliation for a serious error

I’m not sure either of these describes exactly how I feel, but they come close. I had a particularly, and unexpectedly, emotional day. Around noon, I learned that a friend’s sister overdosed last night. I didn’t know the sister, but this recovering alcoholic can tell you that there is something about hearing that this disease has claimed another person that shakes you at your core. I believe it was that shaken state that allowed everything to bubble up to the surface.

I can’t write list posts or tell you how to get through your first day of work or even how to make more room in your life for love. The only real thing I have to offer is a candid view of the way I live my life, and to be as achingly honest about it as possible. And I’ve been wrong. About several things.

It started innocently enough. I stopped by Old Navy on my way home from work to pick up a pair of pajama shorts since it’s become clear to me that Date #4 will not take the hint and leave behind the necessary boyfriend boxers I would prefer to sleep in. While there, I decided to be a good auntie to my cousin’s 1-year-old daughter and pick up a few cute little things. I dumped it all on the bed when I got home, changed into my new shorts (ah…) and stared at the clothes. They were so cute, so little, and I couldn’t wait to see her in them. A feeling started to come up… and I shoved it back down.

All day, I’d been shoving it back down.

The loss of my friend’s sister stirred up my still-raw emotions over the loss of my friend Maureen back in March. I shoved it back down. Date #4 not being able to spend his birthday weekend with me stirred up feelings of jealousy, resentment and fear. I shoved it back down. As I stared down at the little girl’s clothes, it stirred up emotions of something I’d lost years ago, and I shoved that down too.

But it wouldn’t stay down.

As I tried to finish going about my night (I needed to blog, get my work and running clothes ready, make some concrete business decisions…), it just wouldn’t stay down. Something wasn’t right. It’s been this way for a few months but I couldn’t put my finger on it. I thought it was maybe my sinuses, maybe not exercising, not having my work and life balanced just the right way or not doing the right kind of work. I searched, all the while shooing away this nagging feeling that I wasn’t working something important out. Shoved it down.

It came up. All at once.

I miss Maureen and her death has affected me. I can’t ignore that. I don’t want to feel that pain because it is so very strong. I am missing a friend, a person who totally got me, who gave to me and took from me, to whom I told “I love you” every time we said goodbye. I wasn’t dealing with those feelings, that grief. I ignored it.

What I really want when I imagine a good, fine life for myself is to own my own café, just as I envisioned it in December, an airy cozy shop full of funky vintage furniture, good coffee and an owner (me!) who knows everybody. I would be in a cool town, maybe not too big but too small. Somehow I got the notion into my head that it just wasn’t grand enough a business for a smarty-pants like me. So I shelved it, said it was best left for retirement.

The most startling realization to you, my readers, might be what else I see in this picture. As I run my own successful café, I very clearly see children running around my shop. I want children. Three years ago, I was an alcohol who could not bring myself to bring a child into my world. That experience has been far more impacting than I ever thought, and fear has driven me in that regard.

I realize now that when it comes to the emotional things in my life, it’s going to take much longer to heal than I thought. It wouldn’t say much about my friendship with Maureen if I weren’t still moved to tears a mere five months later. I am. It wouldn’t be treating my disease with enough respect to think that the choices I made years ago because of my drinking would just go away on their own. They haven’t.

As to my business choices, I think I simply veered off course looking for something perhaps a little more glamorous, a little more grand than my simple dream of owning my own coffee shop. But now that I’m back there, it’s like a warm blanket, familiar and just right.

In some respects, I’m back where I was in December, which isn’t necessarily bad. I feel a little sheepish, a little humbled admitting that my ego inflated as I attempted to fluff myself up to meet these grand ideas. I don’t always know what I’m doing. I thought I was just putting on a brave face. When I put a brave face on, I only fool myself. And fool myself, I did.

Life is a tricky thing. I’m skeptical of anyone who says they’ve got it all figured out. Especially in these early years, as we try to form ideas of who we want to be and how we can become those people, certainly we’ll look a little foolish along the way. I guess I’m just happy to be trying.

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11 Comments:

Anonymous Norcross said...

Bravo. Realizing that your dreams don't have to fit someone else's view of 'important' is an awesome feeling, isn't it.

And remember, "you're right where you are supposed to be". More relevant now than ever before.

August 19, 2008 11:02 PM  
Anonymous Adam said...

Thanks for sharing this Holly. Being this personal on a blog is never easy, and you're definitely a writer who can pull it off.

I think the point you make is extremely important, and I really wonder how many of us are chasing the dream we think we should be chasing rather than the one we actually want to be chasing.

Thanks again.

August 20, 2008 5:05 AM  
Blogger Melissa said...

Hi Holly-

Just a twist on the perspective- running your own business is no small feat. Just because a coffee shop would be deemed a “small business” doesn’t mean that it takes a “small business owner” to run it. Just the contrary- it takes a big person to run a successful business of any size- to start from scratch, to maintain all the important aspects, to be profitable, to live your dream. There are plenty of people out there who are too scared to start living theirs. You’ve already proven that you can look yourself in the eye and come to terms- being a recovering alcoholic is no small thing. Many people loose everything because of alcohol and still aren’t ready to face themselves. I have lived my whole life with an alcoholic father who over time has lost everything- his business, his family, his spouse.

This entry really spoke to me for a couple of reasons. I am 27 and have been trying to figure out my big dream, all the while being careful not to duplicate any of the mistakes I witnessed as I grew up. I recently went into business with a friend of mine and we are really trying to make a go at our web start up (thecollectionspace.com). But trying to achieve balance between my day job, my start up, my husband, my house, my blog….ahhh! You get the picture. I can’t even imagine what it would be like to have a child too. What I do know is that I have to work toward this goal and it’s not a small goal. It’s a life goal - I don’t think they get any bigger than this.

Thank you for the candor and the honesty.

August 20, 2008 10:54 AM  
Anonymous Holly Hoffman said...

@norcross: Yes, yes it is. It feels damn good. I used to hate that phrase, but now I feel its truth. I am where I'm supposed to be. It's a comforting thought that forces me to soak in today's lessons.

@adam: Our dreams are the ones that are most important, I'm realizing. No matter how small or how big compared to other people's, they are ours and the grandness of them comes when we go for them.

August 20, 2008 11:39 AM  
Anonymous Holly Hoffman said...

@melissa: You are so absolutely right! To start a business is no small thing, I know, and no one ever scoffed at my cafe dream but myself. As a matter of fact, the only person who didn't seem to realize how perfect it is for me is me! To dream your perfect life and to attempt to realize it is the biggest dream there is. I hope I have the courage to pursue it.

August 20, 2008 11:43 AM  
Anonymous Steve Errey said...

Knowing that you're flawed and a work in progress can be a hard lesson for some people, but it's the simple truth of things.

Nobody has it all figured out (me included); we're all doing the best we can.

That counts for a lot, and pretending otherwise can lead to all kinds of problems.

Just keep what's important to you closeby, and the rest will take shape as it will. Sending you a big hug Holly!

August 20, 2008 2:00 PM  
Anonymous Johanna said...

This post is so honest and simple. You're on the right track: being true to yourself. Keep on going in that direction, even if it hurts -when you stop shoving it all down.

August 20, 2008 2:29 PM  
Anonymous Honey said...

I am happier in my current job (which has nothing to do with my PhD) than I have been in the last 5+ years of PhD work. Go figure--I'm right where you are except I already have the job I never knew I wanted...

August 20, 2008 9:41 PM  
Blogger d.edlen said...

Found you through your comment at thinksimplenow.

Loss simply sucks. I was lucky enough to not be in the club until this past February. I can't even imagine dealing with what I'm dealing with if I had been an alcoholic too. So, wow to you for being functional.

It's hard to continue to let the feeelings out because they are so strong and so persistent. But we must allow them to be. We must look at our feelings as separate from us, and allow them what they need to be what they are. Acceptance is really damn difficult, but at the same time totally simple.

Life is to learn and experience, so embrace the mistakes. I'm very impressed with your openness and your clarity of expression. Continue to give yourself credit and try to avoid beating yourself up about goofs. It's how we grow.

Peace.

August 21, 2008 2:29 PM  
Anonymous Missy said...

I stumbled across your blog thru HoneyandLance. What a lucky girl you are to embrace sobriety so young.

When I hear about members of my group "checking out" my heart sinks and literally aches. I can not imagine life being so painful that it wouldn't be worth living. It is a huge wakeup call that we have a deadly disease.

I don't know enough about you to know if you are a friend of Bill W. but I am thankful that I have a design for living. It makes it so much easier. MOST OF THE TIME *wink*

Thanks for your honesty. I am looking forward to reading some more of your blog.

Besides that, You're a TEXAS GIRL!

Hang in there!

August 21, 2008 6:48 PM  
Anonymous Kyleigh said...

Well said.

October 27, 2008 5:17 PM  

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