Tuesday, March 30, 2010

My greatest fear


One of my favorite inspirational quotes was one shared with me by my sister Natalie, written by Marianne Williamson:
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There's nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we're liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."

I couldn't agree more with her that it is
completely terrifying to allow yourself to become the best you can be when you see others struggling to just BE. Time and time again I have sacrificed my career or put my education on hold for the men I love. I don't blame them, I blame myself for giving everything to them. For putting their happiness before my own. I was ignoring my own soul's beauty and ability to be great, because I believed in them and wanted them to be great.

By doing that, I hurt them. I hurt all of you. By not allowing myself to be the beautiful, passionate, out-going, insanely determined and independent woman I once was, I have hurt my community--and within it hundreds of children--by NOT being ready and available to help them. Economists say that an unearned dollar is a lost dollar: for every month longer I take to complete my degree and certifications, there is less opportunity to help others.

When I fell in love with a surgeon, I let my fear of our opposing philosophies [regarding health and healing] stand in the way of my interests in alternative medicine, specifically how it can reverse autism. I was terrified that my theories would conflict so greatly with his education that I was putting our relationship at risk by pursuing alternatives to his ingrained "Experimental-Based Medicine!" Recently I got over it and realized: by feeling the need to justify the physiological reasons for such "alternative" therapies to HIM, I was further educating myself on the subject. I never got the chance to share with him how much I've learned, but now I'm definitely more educated on the subject because of it.

IT SHOULDN'T HAVE TAKEN SUCH REASONS. My mistake was not pursuing what
I wanted; it shouldn't have mattered what he thought. It doesn't matter. I don't think any less of him even though I believe most surgeries are unnecessary (that's not just a personal opinion, it's the result of my personal studies pertaining to survival rates of cardiac surgery patients and the skyrocketing rates of procedures like C-sections and hysterectomies/vasectomies)! So why did I worry he'd think less of me for believing in progressive therapies? Because it is my light, not my darkness, that most frightens me.
Then, as if God/Creator/Gaea/Universal Being (whatever you want to call Her) couldn't stand seeing my weak dependence and fear-driven life, She plucked the very focus of my Love. Now with no one in my arms, I HAVE to feel the emptiness inside of me. I HAVE to address it. I HAVE to fill it with my own strength and Love--for myself, my purpose, my reason to Be.

So that I can no longer serve just one man.

So that I will instead serve the World.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

this is my hell.


My beautiful Ryder,

I don't write you nearly as often as I want to. Lately I've been shutting down emotionally about losing you, for fear that your parents are closing the adoption... but that's no excuse.

For months after I first moved to California, I felt deserted. In some way I think I relished in this emotion, because it made me feel closer to how adoptees feel. We share that. A sense of deserting. Except I made the mistake of deserting myself.

By losing you, I was supposed to give up all the parts of motherhood. I'm told I no longer "have" a son, so I am therefore no longer a "mother" to a boy. I was supposed to refocus. To buckle down and achieve all the things I was meant to, but no one told me those dreams would become insignificant to the dreams of motherhood.

So after losing you, I then lost my drive. I lost my foundation, my family, my trust in men. I lost all confidence and belief in myself. I then lost my sense of who I was: who I had been, and who I was to become. If fate makes me a mother, and yet I can not BE a mother because I have no child to care for, then would I ever get to be one? How could the beautiful Universe ever allow me the opportunity to be a mother again? I shoved that fate back in Destiny's face. And her punishment for me is this.


This.
This is my hell.

All thoughts, beliefs, wants, dreams, yearnings, intuitions, fears, and love boil within me as a brew of maternity.

I crave your touch—the affection of my child—and worry for your safety and health.

I dream—both night and day—of your smile, your laughter and favorites and interests.

I hear your distant voice, somehow carrying on the wind of the night's sky to me. I hear you tell me that you're confused and just "want to be like everyone else" without the complexities of parents, law, and distance. (Of course, you won't be able to verbalize this for sometime, but I still hear you explain it as I sleep.)

My hell is that I can't say back that I'm sorry and want you right back in my arms like you used to be. I can't watch your curiosity grow and revel in your young intellect.

I know you fall and skin your knees but I can't be there to wipe the dirt off and kiss your tear-streaked cheeks. I am merely a young girl in legal chains that have stricken me from reaching out to you too much, for fear of being locked even further out by your parents.

This is my hell.

This hole in my body that you used to fill has become a cell block. I am imprisoned to the confines of maternity and yet separated by bars of fire-forged fear from you. Furthermore I am supposed to be grateful for my imprisonment. My only, rare visitors expect to see nothing but smiles and tears of joy for my few moments with you, as if I had done something wrong that would necessitate such a loss, and thus should feel lucky mine wasn't permanent.

This is hell.


I am not the lucky one. Your new 'parents,' and big 'sister' are the fortunate ones. They are constantly blessed by your radiance. You smile upon them, and call them by the most sacred of names: mommy and daddy. The only thing that gets me through these dark days in my cold cell are the warming dreams of the possibility that you may one day remember that you are my son, and I may be a mother to you again.

My love, I want you to know that as much as this all hurts, it is not you who made my life such an empty, sad place: it was I
.

Eternally,
Your Mama Anne