The Things I Feared Most

At age 18, I started fearing my parents would die. From that point on, I dreaded the day that would happen, imagining what it would be like to lose them in a swift blow. How many years did I have, I wondered. Was it just a few? The answer was no. All these decades later, they are still very much alive.

When I got married the first time, I thought, “How will I go on if something happens to him?” I thought I could not survive his death. But he didn’t die. He left, sure, but from divorce, not death.  And yes, it was hard, and I cried, and I grieved, but I got on with the lessons I was meant to learn and pulled on my big girl panties and went on with rebuilding and working and dancing.

From the time I was in my late 20s and had my first big health scare, I worried constantly I would be diagnosed with a particular disease I was told I had a high likelihood of getting. When I went to my check-ups every six months, sometimes I would cry before and during them. I had scare after scare after scare—almost but not getting the dreaded disease.

Which reminds me of a story my mother told me long ago, about how my dad took a work trip across the globe—back then, that meant unreachable by phone easily or at all. My mother was young, and my sister and I were very small. My mother was so scared to be alone. The first night my dad was gone, she stayed up as late as she could, with the TV turned on in her bedroom for company. Back in those days, the TV programs would end late at night, and all that would be left were static bands of color until morning. She turned off the TV when that time came, and she tried to sleep, and then BOOM she heard a crash somewhere in the house.

Sometimes you must go looking for and face trouble even when you don’t want to, and my mother, cognizant of her own safety and those of her two small children, got up and checked the first room outside of her bedroom: the bathroom. There were two small shelves in that room, both filled with items (shampoo, razor, conditioner, soap, those kinds of things). But one of those shelves was swept clean, as if someone had taken their hand and pushed everything onto the floor. All of it lay there, tumbled down, scattered, but with the shelf perfectly in place.

She checked my room, my sister’s room—we were both asleep, and no one had broken into the house. She tried to go back to sleep, but she could not.

The second night, same routine: she put us to bed, went to her bedroom, turned on the TV until the programs ended. She tried to sleep, but then BOOM another crash. She rushed into the bathroom, but the shelves were filled with all their bottles and lotions. She checked my room—I was asleep; She checked my sister’s—she was asleep, but something else, too had happened. One of my sister’s shelves—filled with toys and dolls—was swept clean, all the items on the floor, except the shelf was in place, perfectly positioned still on the wall.

No one had broken into the house. All the doors were locked, no windows shattered. My mother was perfectly awake.

Who can explain fear, and how it comes to us, and how we learn to let it go?

That third night, my mother was exhausted. She put us to bed, and then went to lie down in hers.

Go ahead, she said to whatever had been, come get me. She was too tired to be afraid anymore. That night and all the nights that followed, the house was quiet, peaceful, and my mother slept.

When I finally did get the disease I had feared for so long, it was detected early and taken care of and gone, and soon I was running again and living the life I so wanted.

So many things I feared never happened, or didn’t happen in the way I thought they would, and the hardest things I have faced have been ones I hadn’t even imagined—other deaths, other losses, other hardships, ones I had never even considered worrying about. And they came anyway because life is filled with all of it—the joys and sadness, the ups and downs, the good and bad and in-between.

I am learning to accept it and, however slowly, how to let go of all that unwanted fear.


Upcoming Online Writing Classes

Prompt-Writing like Speed Dating: Prompt, Write, Next, Prompt, Write, Next (online)
Sunday, August 4, 3-5:00 PM Eastern
If you’ve attended Let’s Write Together with me, you’ll recognize the format: I’ll share a piece of writing to inspire you, offer a prompt related to it, and you will have time to write. Except I’ll be offering a new piece and prompt every 7-12 minutes during this two-hour generative class. Think of it like speed dating—there’s another piece and prompt ready to inspire you just around the corner, with plenty of time for sharing at the end. This class is in partnership with Press 53. THIS CLASS WILL BE RECORDED AND SENT OUT THE SAME WEEK. Cost: $45. Register here.

Poetry Prompts for Publication (online)
Wednesday, August 14, 3-5 PM Eastern
This is a generative poetry-writing class where you will be given prompts to write to, time to write, and then a specific publication where you can send each piece for consideration (if you want to). Come warmed up and ready to put pen to paper. This class is in partnership with Press 53. THIS CLASS WILL BE RECORDED AND SENT OUT THE SAME WEEK. Cost $45. Register here.

A Plane, a High Horse, a Waiting Door

My husband I flew out of state on business last week. On the plane, I got seated in the middle, my husband next to the aisle. It was a sold-out flight, so a woman eventually turned up and pointed to the window seat, indicating it was hers. My husband and I got up and let her in.

I avoid the window seat because I don’t like being boxed in. “Just so you know,” I told her, turning to her with a smile, “I love standing up, so please don’t hesitate to let us know if you need to get up. We are happy to.”

“I won’t be getting up,” she said. No smile, no turning to me. She stared straight ahead. “I never get up.”

Okay, then, I thought. Her body language was clear: I don’t want to talk to you. Leave me alone.

I like introducing myself to my seatmate and finding out why they are going where they are going. I do like chatting—but only for a few minutes, and then I want my quiet time. But she couldn’t know that. I am sure my chirpiness irritated her. I took the cue and didn’t say another thing. You don’t want to interact? I thought. No problem. I thought about how people can be so grumpy and unfriendly, and I got on my small but high horse.

As the flight began and the plane soared into the air, I took out my sketch pad and Sharpie pen and started doodling. The minutes ticked by, and I was deep in my drawing, creating a strange tree with leaves and flowers.

“That’s pretty,” my seatmate said, nodding toward my doodle. Her eyes met mine.

I had to pull the reins on my high horse. The horse whinnied but stopped.

My seatmate and I began talking. We began a conversation about her trip to see her grandchild, how much she missed him and how much he missed her. We talked about my doodling and why I do it—as a way to relieve stress—and I told her about how I always believed I was incapable of drawing, until I opened a door and allowed for the possibility that I could walk through. And then I did. I told her how it didn’t matter whether I was good at drawing; it was only important that I try. She told me about how once she retired she decided to try and learn something new every single year. One year it was gardening; another, knitting. It inspired me—she inspired me. Here was someone who wanted to push themselves out of their comfort zone every January and for the next eleven months.

We didn't talk that long, maybe five or ten minutes. Then she went back to her quiet time, and I did too. We both wanted that. But there was a gentleness between us now. A softness.

I’ve thought about that interaction more than once since I deplaned. I’ve thought about how sometimes I make assumptions about people, about how sometimes people make assumptions about me, about how often we are all wrong. I wonder how often I misread people and never find out I did.

I’ve thought about how judgey I was, how judgey I can be, but I’ve also realized that I don’t have to stay believing that about myself. I can be different. Each of us has the capacity to open a door, and then to have the courage to walk right through.


Photo credit: Sasha Freemind from Unsplash.com

Stand Off

Every once in a lucky while, I read a piece of writing that changes me, and by change I don’t mean that I become a completely new person. What I mean is I understand life in a different way: maybe I gain a new insight, or I step into someone’s perspective, or maybe I learn something about humanity that makes me feel more connected to the whole of this world, not just my little part of it.

“Stand Off” by Nancy Miller Gomez is a piece of writing that changed me. I’ve studied and taught this poem—and while I won’t get into the architecture here or why the artistic choices she made work so well—I can tell you right now that I felt those choices as I read the piece, and if a writer can make a person feel deeply, they have accomplished a big thing.

Here is Nancy’s poem:

This poem is from Nancy’s chapbook, Punishment, published by Rattle and featured on Rattle. You can learn more about Nancy Miller Gomez here. She has a new collection, Inconsolable Objects, forthcoming from YesYes Books.

Thank you so much, Nancy, for having written this astounding poem and for allowing me to share it.

It’s the end of National Poetry Month. Thank you to all my blog subscribers and readers who went along with me on this poetry journey during April. And thank you to all the poets who allowed me to share their work. (You can find links to all of the poems on the sidebar of my blog.)

And now we’ll return now to our regularly scheduled program.

(But don’t forget to read a poem now and again. Feel free to check out my latest poetry collection, Something So Good It Can Never Be Enough.)

Photo credit: Jonathan Cooper from Unsplash.com