Thursday 7 August 2014

The Bench (I Survived)

It was a rare morning.(Autism Mommy was starting to lose it because while she was on vacation, autism doesn't take vacations, and things had been drifting towards worse instead of better. So I hired a teenager to help take the edge off for 48 hours. Her job was to watch my ASD 3 year old in all the  in between time, (side, side note unrelated to the rest of this post: she was as exhausted, possibly more exhausted than I, just keeping tabs on him.))

But yes, a rare morning. Mid summer. Decided to spend the morning in one of my favorite staycation spots: the fishing village of Steveston. I dropped my son and the sitter off at Steveston's FABULOUS playground/waterpark, and then made my way up to Starbucks to get a coffee before strolling along one of many wharfs, walkways, and docks in the village. I happily sipped on my iced soy latte, felt the salty ocean breeze lift my freshly cropped locks, and stood at an intersection that offered three different directions I could take my peaceful walk. My heart bubbled with delight at my opportunity to walk/ drink coffee/ ponder on my own, and the summer morning was picture-book perfect.

Then suddenly I found myself THERE.
Confronted with that place.
 
That bench.
Where I sat with my husband on our last anniversary together.
 
 
I was 8 months pregnant.
And desperately trying. So hard. To enjoy our anniversary.
And it was hell.
Barely able to touch each other.
His disdain for me palpable, though he tried too.
Conversation was strained and sparse. There was nothing left to say.
 
 
I am gripped by the memories that go with the view from the bench, remembering the angle of the sun that day, glistening amongst the reeds, being absorbed in the horrible beauty... horrible because that was the first time I looked straight into the eyes of Divorce. I was paralyzed by fear. Paralyzed by the unthinkable. That bench was where I sat the first time I honestly considered that our 5th wedding anniversary could be our last.
 
And it was.
 
And here I am, 4 years later, almost to the day (and almost equal to the length of my marriage). I am on the other side of the Valley of the Shadow. I have learned to accept love from everywhere around me. I have accomplished far more than I ever thought I could (or wanted to). I have an adorable son who exhausts me beyond exhaustion, but also delights me with his antics and who he is.
 
I walk out on onto the adjacent pier and notice there is a totally different view from there - from beyond the bench. From where I stand today.
 
 
 
I feel the warmth of the sun, breathe the salty air, feel it caress my skin, and I realize that I survived. And life is good. Challenging beyond words, but very, very good. As I stand in the moment, in the presence of the river, I think of the death in me that occurred in that spot. And all the life that has magnificently erupted from that death. I think of the role of the river. There is a lot of death involved with the Fraser River - fish, industry, murders, drownings. And there is a lot of life - fish, water for all forms of life, a means to make a living. The river also moves and changes things, whether we want it to or not. It just does what it was created to do. Slowly. And with tremendous power.
 
Death began here, and life has resulted at a whole new level. The biggest sign of life for me, is that I didn't even think of that danged bench until I was right on top of it. I was just doing what I love. And it was an interesting experience for me to hold the dissonance of grief and joy in the same moment.
 
I practice a Pema Chodron teaching I recently read: breathe in the pain deeply, and exhale joy, love, and peace. Transformation.