Indefinite

You asked me once how I healed from a breakup, and I told you it was time that took care of it. In a way, that’s true. That’s not what it feels like sometimes.

So what does it feel like sometimes?

At the halfway point between my home on the farm and my home in the city, alone in my car: that’s when I feel it the most.

It feels like I’m living without half of me. It feels like I’m always searching and waiting. It feels like I’m looking for something that I can’t quite put my finger on. It feels like my heart has been cleaved in two; or like it has gone missing from my chest- I can feel where it used to be. It’s excruciating. It’s indefinite.

I have lied to my heart and have told my soul a fairytale. I have convinced myself that I believe in soulmates and dimensions. I need to. I cling to my hope that in another dimension we’ve found our way back to each other; that our ragged edges have met and joined again. In another lifetime, perhaps, our paths have crossed with better timing and the fates have kinder plans for us.

A love like ours cannot have been for nothing. The sheer amount of it can’t have just faded away into nothing. Surely the laws of physics apply to love, for what is love if not energy? It feels consuming and electric. I need to believe that it still exists out there somewhere. The heartbreak cannot be larger and longer-lasting than the love that caused it.

These are the lies I tell myself. They must be working and maybe I have successfully fooled myself. It doesn’t always hurt and I go about my life as an ordinary person. But, oh, those moments. They take my breath away and I feel like half a person, a hollow shell, like only arms and legs. I have no heart, for you have it still. I can tape together the edges where it once was and I can pretend.

If only reality and fates and fairytales could meet with kindness. Until then, and until another lifetime, our souls exist only as halves; incomplete.

I know you feel it too, you’ve told me so. That doesn’t make it any easier, even if that’s what you had hoped those words would accomplish.

It’s indefinite.

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Hope this finds you well,

-L

If Not Love

Spending time with family used to bring me a little slice of contentment and peace, just knowing they were safe and happy was all it took.

Now it slowly slices off pieces of my heart. They are happy and safe, and they feel contentment and peace. I feel years removed from them. Their joy is no longer my joy. Time spent together is like rubbing salt in a wound, like hand sanitizer on paper cuts.

I spent so much of my life protecting them and shielding them and all I get for it is pain and faked smiles.

I was invited over for supper and by the time I got there, everyone had already eaten and the supper was cold. Their uncaring sliced deep. They were a family without me. I had worked thanklessly over Thanksgiving while they all spent time with loved ones but I did not get the same courtesy.

I spend so much time picking out presents for them that they will need or will find useful and I get not a one in return. My only gift this year was a jar of lotion in a scent that makes me nauseous, from my mother who doesn’t even like me.

It’s just one thing after another. There’s been times where I haven’t felt loved, but I’ve never felt so unloved.

I’ve always hoped to feel love from my family; true unconditional love. Now I don’t think I ever will.

I’ve loved them with my whole heart for my entire life.

I suppose I stuck with life partly because I always hoped I’d eventually feel love and that my family would feel like warmth and security. Family has been my safety plan for 20 years.

That’s what the books say, isn’t it? Have a safety plan. Create a safety plan. Have your friends help you make a safety plan.

Mine has been crossed out, scribbled over, crumpled up, and now it’s finished.

What is there left to live for, if not love?

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Hope this finds you well,

-L

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If you or someone you know needs support right now, there is help available.

http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org/

Funerals, Loneliness, and Space

At funerals, people love to use phrases like “she loved life and life loved her right back”, or “she found joy in the everyday living”, and “she lit up any room she walked into”. Even worse is “she was the life of any party”.

Anybody who uses sayings like those at my funeral will be lying or they never really knew me at all.

I’ve never really loved life, and life hasn’t loved me back. I’ve just been lucky enough to have loved people in this lifetime.

I have spent my life wishing that I could take up less space and wishing that I could take up none at all. Even as an adult, I spend my days cowering in my basement apartment, trying not to make noise or bother my upstairs neighbour.

I don’t want to be a bother.

I work hard to appear okay and work even harder to avoid vulnerability. If people don’t get close to me, I won’t be hurt when they inevitably leave.

That’s the truth.

Also the truth: I just want to be seen.

I only get hugs in my dreams, and I dream often of reuniting with people who truly know me; without me having to reach out first.

I am the friend who checks in with everyone else, I am not the friend that anyone checks in on. When I’m lonely, I reach out to others, though I doubt if I didn’t that they would notice.

I wonder, frequently, who would notice if I quit posting, quit communicating, and quit being.

I’m not sure my own aching loneliness could stand to be out of touch with people in that totality.

“Hey, how are you?”

“……. you?”

“Alright!”

This leaves no space for knowing, for wondering, for caring. I box myself into a corner by wanting people to ask how I am but then not answering truthfully when they do.

Life has always been lonely for me and I feel like it always will be. That looming perpetual loneliness is a heavy weight, one that I’m unwilling to bear.

I wish for sunshine, joy, and warmth to filter into my life as if I could remember what they feel like and I could recognize them if they came. By now, I’ve spent so much time in the dark, surely I could recognize light when I see it.

Perhaps not, perhaps all my days will be grey and cold. Maybe all my life will be empty.

I’m tired of taking up space in this world.

I’m so tired.

Nobody will say “she dreamed of death” or “she lived an aching life” at my funeral, though both will be true.

What will they say, then, to phrase the constant loneliness, emptiness, and chill that I have lived with? How can you spin looming despair into a personality trait?

If my friends can look me in the eyes and not see that I’m not okay, either I have done my job well or they’re not really looking; they’re never really seeing.

Life gave me loneliness. I searched so long for safety and protection, and now I only feel lonely. Loneliness is the only thing I am certain of.

There is no “life of the party” in me.

I do not light up any rooms.

Everyday living has no joy for me.

Who can see me?

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Hope this finds you well,

-L

We Don’t Know Each Other Anymore

I fell in love when I was sixteen. It wasn’t the fleeting, teenage romance as depicted in novels and biopics, but the love of two souls who found contentment with each other; the deep, forever kind of love.

He was a hardworking farmboy- blonde hair, blue eyes, dimples, and enduring kindness. He was strong and steady but a worrier at the same time; somehow spontaneous but organized. A walking contradiction of sorts, if you will.

He made me feel as though the stars in his sky shone only for me. The first time we watched a movie together, he cried when he was leaving because he didn’t want to go. Our connection was instantaneous and it swept us away.

We spent all the minutes together that we possibly could. We talked, laughed, and cried together. We felt we could only be our true selves when we were together, and still to this day, I maintain that there’s nobody who knows me better even though many years have passed.

We grew up together but sooner than we wanted, the growing led to hurdles that turned into us growing apart. Distance played a part in this; I went to university and he stayed home to work. The difference in trajectories was our downfall.

Tenacious and stubborn as we were, we kept being drawn back together as if we couldn’t help ourselves. We didn’t know how to be apart. Though technically not together, we talked every day and spent time together every chance we had.

We shared our exciting news with each other first. We held each other and cried thinking of the other loving someone else. It wasn’t that we didn’t love each other or that we weren’t together, we just weren’t in love with each other anymore.

We didn’t date. We didn’t put the effort in. We just expected it to be how it always was. We relied on magic and circumstances. We pretended as long as we could. The spark wasn’t there. The care was, the passion was, the butterflies weren’t.

We finally dated other people. We asked each other for opinions and advice the entire time and the day we were single, we got together again. It was as if we were magnets.

Every time we were together, we entered this bubble that made it seem as if time stood still. We were still sixteen or seventeen, life hadn’t gotten in the way, and we were still invincible. We knew how the other would react, we knew what would get a reaction, we knew how to make each other laugh.

Deeper than that, we knew what the other needed to hear, we knew how to comfort and how to hold each other, we knew when to lighten the mood, and when to get the sparks flying. We calmed that piece inside of us that was unsettled everytime we were apart.

That bubble had a reverent kind of stillness in it, as if we could be two puzzle pieces that when coming together, shut out the rest of the world. With each other, we were no longer cynical young adults, we weren’t broke, we weren’t hurting, we weren’t worried. Together we could feel safe, loved, free, and relaxed.

Even after we no longer spent time together, receiving a text from him would bring a sense that all was right in the world. Every time a text was answered with what I knew he would say and with what he knew I needed to hear, that bubble surrounded my heart. I could hear the same thing from someone ten times over, or from ten different people, and it still wouldn’t resonate the same as it did when he said it.

Now that we’re living two very different stories after having promised each other forever, I can’t help but miss the timeless feeling I had when we were together. That feeling alone is enough to make me miss him, but do I miss him? Do I miss the bubble? Or do I miss the him that was in our bubble?

We aren’t the same people anymore and that has been one of the hardest truths to realize. We didn’t get to grow into the people we are today together. We don’t know each other anymore, and that phrase will never get any easier to say.

He’s married now and I’ve switched careers. I’m outspoken now in a way I never used to be. I’ve travelled across the country, and he’s travelled across the world. I drive the same car but I don’t wear his ring anymore. Some things remain unchanged, and some things will never be how they were.

We were never perfect, no matter how we might have thought we were. Rose-coloured glasses do exist and through them is how I see much of our tumultuous relationship. We didn’t have it all figured out and we weren’t as invincible as love had led us to believe.

He knows me in that immortal bubble, from 16-year-old me to 21-year-old me. I know that 16-year-old him loved the colour red and that 18-year-old him had a scar on his back from where his brother threw fencing pliers at him and that 21-year-old him worried about the debt he went into to buy farm machinery.

The challenge was getting to know me and getting to be content outside of that bubble, knowing I couldn’t step back inside to put all the pieces of me together again. I needed to find new glue and to find other things that soothe those pieces of my soul.

I’m blonde now, and my favourite colour is no longer blue. I don’t wear the same kind of deodorant and I’ve moved away from my sheltered and naive life. I’ve lost myself and found myself again.

The timing wasn’t right, we were too young, or the fates had other futures planned for us. Whichever reason you’d like to use is probably true. Now, I doubt we’d even find that same contentment if we were together. If we sat down to have a real conversation, I doubt we’d come away with that same sense of timelessness.

That bubble still exits somewhere, and in it, my stars still shine for him. I do believe that we still love each other, even if it is a different kind of love than the one we needed to be together. It’s more of a fondness for what we had together and an eternal wish that the other is happy and that their family stays healthy. We don’t know each other anymore, but now we don’t need to.

 

Hope this finds you well,

-L