Evolution of Disaster

Thursday, November 5, 2009

There are few topics more warm and fuzzy than your parents going back to court, again. You would think at the ripe old age of 25 I would be past feeling the emotional drain that divorced parents typically draw – but clearly I am not. It has been more than 12 years since they separated officially, even longer if you read between the lines – and yet each year, each season really, brings a new battle to survive. The truly ironic thing about the whole thing is that with each passing drama I find myself on opposing sides of the argument. Not to say that I necessarily chose one parent’s defense to keep but as time passes my perspective continues to evolve. Taking the utter pain and ugliness out of the situation, it is sociologically fascinating.

This not being meant to draw out the brutal timeline of events, suffice it to say in the beginning I felt very strongly that my “father” was completely and solely in the wrong, he had an affair. He was the asshole. He was the terrible father. My mother was the victim. My sisters were the victim. I was the victim. Fast forward twelve years and my dad and I have arguably one of the better relationships in the family. Perhaps it was the fact that I was a 12 year old emotional basket case with fire balls spouting from my mouth? Whatever event or series of events are responsible for my dad and I being able to form a relationship are irrelevant now I suppose, because when the storm clouds rolled away a great deal of the pain and hurt went with them.
Simultaneously, though not in conjunction with each other, the relationship between my mother and I evolved as well. I can say with a fairly unwavering degree of certainty that I will always regard my mother as my sole provider. Regardless of the relationship I now have with my father; my mother has always been my sole caretaker for a number of reasons. And to be fair, I would argue that this is the case for many people – whether they had divorced parents or not – because women are simply more nurturing by nature. In the case of my mother, nurturing would be a grave understatement. For nearly thirty years now, she has lived and breathed her children in everything she’s done – right or wrong – it has always been about us. I am who I am today in many ways thanks to my mother, and I am eternally grateful for all she has sacrificed for me. But in as I grew into a young woman, forming my own ideals about the world at large and collecting my own battle wounds separate from my family – our perspectives seemed to divulge more and more. It is truly our difference of opinion which comes between us, nothing more.
And in recent years I have found myself in scrutiny of my 12 year old self. Had I been too hard on my father? Did I understand what had happened? Did I make too many judgments calls? LONG PAUSE. Then I stopped the incessant questioning and reminded myself that I was in fact a child and that very few certainties remain. How can I possibly be resentful towards my childhood self for being hateful to a man I chose to know only through the eyes of my mother? How could I be anything but grateful to a woman, who gave up her entire life for us, her children; who does everything and has made each decision for what she thought was in our best interest? And how do I resent a man who in the past decade plus has made remarkable strides to be the father we so wished him to be all those years? All of it continues to evolve. Each event ricocheting off another sending fragments of fact, emotion and circumstance in every which way – only to be joined by other broken pieces from previous and future battles; each conglomerate growing in size, gaining strength like an asteroid and eventually coming to a head. Quite graphic I know, but really the only way to attempt painting an accurate portrait of the on going emotional roller coaster that is my parents divorce and the toll it has taken on all of us.

Today a new asteroid made contact; my mother was taking my father back to court. I can’t really call them mom and dad in this situation because I would like to separate myself entirely from the event and somehow by making it formal, they are more contemporaries this way than my parents whom I should be able to love equally, freely and without debate. But the internal struggle begins almost immediately. They are both wrong and they are both right. Sparing too many intimate details, the subject matter is clearly money. Being that their children are grown and love being irrelevant here, the only survivor is money. He owed it, right or wrong. He didn’t pay it, she needed it. Neither of them really have it. So what is the answer? CLEARLY we cannot just put our swords away and call a truce, this battle will be fought to the death – until one or both parties is completely drained of all strength. Ultimately one of them is going to lose, and it will be tragic to watch. And yet regardless of how the terms are settled, my sisters and I will also bare the scars. Innocent bystanders if you will.

Only now have I allowed myself to feel the raw emotion of it all. I found myself racing to the car to this coffee shop, feeling as though my heart would explode with feeling. It seemed only fitting that the rain began to pour as I turned down my street, blaring the music in an attempt to drown out my thoughts. I wish I were optimistic enough to believe that one day the fighting will cease completely but the realist in me knows that will never happen. It will just continue to evolve, and all of us involved will be forced to make judgment calls to keep our sanity. We will continue collecting battle wounds along the way, further hardening our perspective.

Who is the victim now? Are there any victims or are we merely victims of our own conviction? What if we were able to wipe our hands of it all – to wipe the slate clean and start over, to right wrongs, to say “I’m sorrys” - such a simple theory but seemingly impossible. And so victims remain on both side of the spectrum because the available choices are less appealing than truce.

I hang somewhere in the middle? Unable to wipe my hands of my parent’s drama, feeling obviously tied to both parties. I suppose I could walk away but the circle of pain’s magnetism is too great- so I will continue to orbit. I swear it will be an absolute miracle if I end up a financially stable woman in a loving relationship some day.

Fall

Friday, October 2, 2009

Without so much as glancing at the calendar, it has become poignantly clear that it is fall in Minnesota. A familiar chill now hangs in the air, darkness greets us a bit earlier and the bronzing foliage decorates the tree line. This summer aside - as we had uncharacteristically cool temperatures for the majority of the past four months – fall is typically welcomed by Midwesterner’s alike with open arms as a much need break from the summer heat and humidity. Beyond the temperature of course, there is a sense of a return to ‘normalcy’ for some. Considering the frozen tundra we all willingly inhabit for 6 months plus a year, spring and summer quickly become a jam- packed, schedule- juggling masquerade of weddings, grad parties, BBQs, town festivals, etc, etc, etc and somehow fall seems to offer solace from the hustle and bustle. I often wonder if people in year round, neutral climates like California feel this same sense of “change” in the fall.

Then of course there is Football, a season all its own in many households. We gladly cancel plans to sit on the couch for four hours to watch multi-million dollar athletes throw a ball back and forth down a field; and hey I am not judging, I am often a member of this society. But what is it exactly about fall that seems to wrench such emotion and nostalgia from me? What is so unique about this particular passage into a new season? I don’t become even remotely introspective about the beginning of winter? In fact I feel quite angry about that change, but I suppose that is another entry entirely!

For example, about a week ago I was standing on the corner of 32nd and Bryant waiting for the number 4 bus with my ipod blaring Michael Buble’s “Haven’t Met you Yet” in my ears and as I looked up I saw a cascade of amber leaves falling to the ground in front of me; I was instantly captivated and a bizarre sense of sentiment crashed over me. What is that? Perhaps it is the culmination of the weather and the beloved festivities that fall brings for me; football season, my birthday, Thanksgiving, Halloween, Christmas?

Whatever rationale exists, I love fall. And although I know it will not last long as big bad winter will soon come to over power my favorite time of year, I am grateful for this window of opportunity to feel truly inspired every day - by the beautiful colors around me, by the undeniable enthusiasm people evoke, and by the cool air that I breath deeply into my lungs when I step outside.

Daily Inspiration

Monday, August 31, 2009

Life is ten percent what happens to you and ninety percent how you respond to it.

Life Sized Game of Memory

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

It is amazing how at the ripe old age of 24, I have already begun to collect battle wound. And to that end, have been around the block and on the road to recovery. Insert here the most recent occurrence which sparked this entry. A friend of mine (for lack of a better word) and who shall remain nameless decided to move away from Minneapolis, by no means a heart wrenching situation – merely fact. This person has seen me at my absolute lowest – ‘my formative’ college years if you will. To say that I had a rough year or so would be a grave understatement. And this individual was a member of the peanut gallery to the live performance of “Erin: Wasted and Downward-spiraling.” Fortunately however I had been able to salvage some type of reputable status with this person in the years since the “depression”. Yet upon his decision to move and throw a going away part, I was casually left of the invite list? Now the average, un-calloused person might simply chalk this up as pure human error, “he forgot”, “boys aren’t the best party planners after all” one [female] might point out? But this wasn’t the reaction I had. An instant wave of nausea crashed over my entire body and the all too familiar crimson stained my cheeks as my reality set in, “this is because of who I used to be – I am being punished for being a complete mess four years ago.” Insert complete hysterics and irrational thoughts. In the end I was welcomed to come, so I suppose we can in fact chalk this one up as an error in party planning?
Albeit this “situation” passed with less self loathing than I had initially thought – but it still causes me to ponder whether or not you can ever fully escape your past? Does an adulterous couple ever truly forget the pain – is true trust ever fully restored? Can hurtful words and actions really be “stricken” from the victim’s record? Forgive, perhaps? Forget, arguable. Perhaps I am merely a nay sayer – but no matter how much time may pass, the initial hurt and pain will always be there; it may become dormant for a time but the moment something reminiscent to the initial situation arises, emotional flood gates are opened again and you can literally taste the disdain on your tongue, like fresh paint – it is like no time has passed at all! Ironic how easily you forget the names of chemical elements, past teacher’s names, historical facts and just about anything related to calculus but when it comes to an event tied to emotion of any kind, you can likely recall the exact outfit you were wearing? What I would give just about anything to forget that year and a half of my life, to wipe the slate clean – to not feel that I ultimately I will be eternally held accountable for the choices I made during that time. I literally cringe when I think back to some of those days. Yet it seems I will never fully forget that feeling? How different I might be if all I had instead retained the kindnesses done to me during that time, the positive effects I might have bestowed upon mere strangers or the compliments I was paid.
Whether they are painful or joyous; incredible how our memory retains such detail when such events happen. Perhaps teachers need to begin inflicting pain or passing out 50 dollar bills during lecture and their students my actually have a chance of remembering it.

Bloody Monday

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Yesterday was labeled “Bloody Monday” in honor of the 71,400 jobs that were lost in the United States. This seemingly humble statistic will now be coupled with the 2008 job casualties that reached an astounding 2.6 million. And then today another 11,500 jobs were lost – a reported 1,500 of those came from Target alone.

Just before 9 am this morning my entire department was informed that a mandatory meeting was being held to share corporate wide information. Anxiety and tension blanketed the air like a thick July fog as busy minds began to speculate what was coming. Nearly every member on my floor was in attendance as the inevitable sentence was read, the crippling economy had finally taken its toll on Target and layoffs had been made. It was surreal, because even though our department was safe – for now – it was bittersweet. Shuffling out of that conference room was incredibly somber; it felt like a funeral.

As I sat back down at my desk I attempted to process the reality that not only was the economy crumbling but it had finally gotten a little too close for comfort. Just as soon as began my analysis I realized just how little I actually knew about the current financial state of our economy, how we got here and more importantly how we were going to get out.

I spent a considerable amount of energy trying to understand how it is that a nation with a culmination of the brightest minds, most advanced technology and arguably the most power in the world has let itself fall so deep into crisis that even asylum seems impossible now. And the reality being that it is going to take at least as long to get out of this mess as it took us to get in. I emphasis the word “us” because amidst disaster the finger pointing breaks out in epidemic and no one person can possibly be completely to blame - though I think we all know the one person so many are quick to cast the blame. Certainly that person who shall remain nameless does deserve a certain amount of the credit, but there are many at fault. Depending on who ask, what time of the day you ask or the intonation in your voice when you ask, you may hear different cause for the mistakes made; “the War”, “the Bush administration”, “the housing market”, etc, etc, etc.

The truth is there are likely many culprits here - but the overriding factor is that we broke a very simple rule, “do not live beyond your means – don’t spend money you don’t have.” (My dad is shaking his head in agreement at this one) The country spent more money than it had, lent more money than it could afford and people turned around, took that money and spent it on commodities they themselves could not afford and the viscous cycle landed us somewhere near 83,000 American jobs being lost in a mere 48 hours.

What is the solution? I have absolutely no idea and am hoping that the most brilliant economic minds sitting around that table today are finally able to ‘balance the sheet.’ In the meantime I will continue to thank my lucky stars that I am one of the more fortunate – that I still have a job and a good job at that. I will not take for granted the cup of Starbucks I so carelessly purchase every morning, grumble when the alarm goes off so early in the morning or complain about rush hour - because as long as I am still engaged in such activities, it means I am still employed and that is more than so many can say. And I am grateful.