Posts Tagged ‘identity’

 

I AM!

Friday, January 27th, 2012

“Am I doing the right thing?” I implored from behind sympathetic sunglasses, as tears streaked my already salt-stained cheeks.

She leant across the table. Her eyes turned to slits. ”What do you mean, Penny?” she asked – very slowly – certain she knew precisely what I meant, but not wanting to be presumptuous.

“Should I be getting divorced?” My lower lip quivered and I convulsed a little, deep within the lower parts of my soul.

She was bolt upright in a flash. “Are you fucken crazy!” That clearly was not! a question.

There are certain friends who should bill me for their time! And some who I’m sure would just like to medicate. Because, yes, I was emotional roadkill once again …

I have been working at the Chrysalis Academy (I need a whole blog post to expound on the magical synchronicity of that!) and taking hundreds of photographs to document the program. Well, one thing led to another and when downloading, I came across photographs of my (not-soon-enough) soon-to-be-ex-husband and myself. Already slightly emotionally unhinged – my usual state – I couldn’t help but slowly unravel, and when the above-mentioned friend called me for a drizz about her own emotional love affairs and despairs, all my seams popped open and I had to rush over to her place to merge with her river of tears.

The story goes on (and on) but I’ll take you on a short-cut to a long body-surf followed by the above-mentioned conversation – which clearly confirmed my momentary insanity – and a crack which needed mending … but not until I had found the cause.

And as the processing began and I started to run too much, work too hard, forget to eat … and then deal with a stuffed Achilles tendon and a fever blister that usually signals my body’s plea for help, a fragile Penny limped through the week, unable to fathom what exactly had mowed me down.

And then BAM! One more prescriptive look through the photos and I realized I wasn’t so much looking at Him … or even Us … so much as Me. And it wasn’t really Me at all. And that was it! That was the BAM! moment. I had been grappling with the notion that perhaps … despite the wailing and crumbling and running and borderline anorexia … I hadn’t yet mourned the loss of my marriage. But Oh, So Far! from it. I was totally and completely over my marriage, over my husband, over the branding and everything that came with the package. What I was really mourning was the Me that I couldn’t find in the majority of those photos. What I was really mourning was the fact that I had tucked so much of myself away for so long that I didn’t recognize Myself as Me.

And then I was back. The Me I had rescued had taken off another cloak. Where before, the moments of sanity were short and sweet, the lapses now form the blips on the evening news. I came back and I came back stronger. And stronger is good when you still have an albatross to rip off your neck. I am finally done with allowing myself to be punished for not being the Me that fitted His profile of the ideal Us. I am done allowing myself to be punished for not wanting to be married to Him anymore. I am done with the guilt.

I may still have the training wheels on, but I am Me. And that’s soon going to just have to be enough.

Facebook Friends

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

I had friends … you might call them acquaintances … in London, who have moved back to South Africa, had children, and totally dropped under the radar. I know it is normal to change friends when you have a child … after all you have a new identity and you need to be comfortable with that new identity without feeling like a total fraud because you have become a totally different person. Then there are the friends you have that are even better friends for the very same reason.

And then there are the Facebook friends … the people you once knew but who have now become their children – even on Facebook. I battle to get even a glimpse into the lives of people I haven’t seen in years because they have placed themselves behind their new personas as parents. There is the tricky issue of new last names … an argument I won’t get into as I kinda get the deal even though I am totally anti the idea myself … and the fact they use pictures of their children for their profile pictures. And all they ever discuss are things to do with theirs or other’s children and child-related things.

It’s fine to be proud of your children – obviously I realise that – but surely you lose yourself if you never let yourself see the light of virtual day. Somewhere behind the parent lurks the free-spirited singleton … surely!

Perhaps it is my own character that is flawed in thinking that no one could possibly be that attached to parenthood to want to become someone else in order to fulfil a stereotypical role. But is it too much to ask to just have my friends back the way they were even when I know they will never be the same again …?

Running screaming from motherhood

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

When I was desperately trying to find paying and/or volunteer work so as to not have to be at home with my child, it had less to do with getting away from him and so much more to do with getting away from the person I was terrified of being. I have always sold myself as a mother who runs screaming from motherhood … and that is exactly who I am. I don’t think I ran away from my baby, I believe I ran away from myself as the person having the baby.

I have identified myself by so many different things in the past. I am and have been a runner, a sister, a photographer, a consultant, an adventurer, an employee, a bulimic, a daughter, a swimmer, a friend, a hiker, a traveller, a shoe lover, a writer, a volunteer, an executive, a drinker, a scholar, a BMX rider, a failure, a girlfriend, a mess, a wife, a party girl, a poet, an employer, a shopper, a patient, an explorer, a lover, a thinker, a designer, a squash player, a rebel, a teacher, a critic, a pragmatist, a success.

So many things and so many changes … yet it was just the one label – mother – that totally flawed me. As I change yet again, I am reminded that I have to accept the role I am in and not necessarily define myself by it.