Posts Tagged ‘memories’

 

True Destiny

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

I continue to play the eternal game of hide and seek with life, searching for guidance in the lessons I learn and assigning meaning to things like Osho, who guides me to ā€œput the memories in a box, tie it up with a bow if you have to, and then throw the box awayā€. So I continued with a recent theme and found someone to read my cards … a path to truth through the way others express the things about me that I am too often afraid to admit.

In a nutshell, he says I was born a person of heart and spirit but somewhere along the way, I lost my path. I can’t deny that. He says I have been guided by other people’s need for material wealth. I can’t deny that either. He warned that there are people who have designs on my heart and they know how to manipulate me through recognizing it as my weakness. Hell yeah! He says that I over psychologise stuff … Exhibit A: my blog! – certainly NO denying that! I have to find out what inspires me and get creative with it – all along I thought I was looking for a Creative Career but my cards say I’m a one hundred percent original chick and it just comes with the territory … my self-sabotage, however, does not fall into the realm of creativity, as masterful as I may be at it.

No short cuts and no real answers – the real answers, I have to find for myself. Palm readers, card readers, astrologers and sangomas are like those buffed garden service guys who I need to call in from time to time to supplement my labour. But the garden service can only do so much. It can’t tell me how to stop compromising myself for the sake of the people I love or how to stop sacrificing myself for just a whiff of somebody’s love, and it can’t tell me why I always excuse my intense emotional sensitivity rather than just find the people who can handle it without manipulating it. My heart may be weak but where my weakness lies, therein also lies my strength and until I find my spiritual path I can protect it from further hurt by choosing not to believe in the misguided hope contained in Destiny but rather in the choices that will guide me there.

My shadow side could do with some fresh air and some time in the garden about now… I can’t make peace with my feelings of anger, jealousy and fear unless I expose them to the sunlight. I can’t become detached, centred, patient and self-aware unless I plant those seeds. Spring has sprung and although the air is still cold, it is time to let go of winter.

We’re back

Friday, June 18th, 2010

We’ve been back for over two weeks already … although I can’t say ā€˜back home’ as the term ā€˜home’ requires a fair amount of redefining right now. The old adage, ā€˜absence makes the heart grow fonder’ does not ring true in my case. Less hostile perhaps but not fonder. What absence has done, however, is give me clarity as a person free from attachment and therefore free of influence from other people, where I am, or what I am doing. I have come back with a stronger sense of being.

All those who accused me of needing to run away to India to find myself were way off. I didn’t need to find myself since I never lost who I am. We never do you know. We always maintain exactly who we are but access different parts of self at different stages of our life, adapting and changing to different circumstances.

As suspected, the memories of India have blurred and faded and even looking at the photographs feels more like looking at someone else’s holiday, bar the gorgeous boy with long blond curls who looks very familiar. I don’t. India was the mountain I had to climb to get to ā€˜the other side’ and the person in the photographs who looks a bit like me is the person I lost touch with only days after touching down on home ground. The smile has faded too. But the strength and the courage and the feeling that I can do anything that I set my mind to … that’s still there. I may not have climbed the mountain to find myself but I have come down off the mountain with a far greater sense of self. I conquered fears and stereotypes and I created a whole new part of myself.

In a moment of missing his dad while we were in Bahrain, my son insisted on buying a book about a little boy whose dad wasn’t around and he imagined him to be on the moon. In trying to explain the moral of the story, I asked, ā€œIf you had to imagine where your dad was right now, where would he be?ā€ ā€œOn Mars,ā€ was his quick response. Hmm, just a coincidence? ;) As I grow up … and just grow … I look for some element of change or growth in my partner. But, just because he’s not ready, doesn’t mean I need to wait; we’re all on our own timetables and have to evolve at our own pace. I know we still have stuff to work out but that will have to be in our next life. And what about the child, you ask. Well, he’ll be just fine.

As Darwin once said: “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor is it the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.ā€

Feeling pensive

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

I remember walking to school, the park, piano lessons. Walking slowly in the hopes that each slow step would make me another minute late. It didn’t of course – I was way too close to all those places for a slow walk to make much of a difference. Or maybe punctuality was inherited. I would give the storm water drains a wide berth for fear of falling down and joining lives with the sewer rats. I used to get this feeling walking on the jetty at the yacht club too – I thought I would fall through the gaps. I remember those dreadful childhood tails about the boy who had long hair and never cut his nails and the girl who didn’t eat enough and went down the plughole with the bathwater. They terrified me. My parents threatened me – I was not a big eater as a child – I was destined to disappear with the bathwater. That was the reason for the wide berth. I remember being told I was a ā€˜sweet little thing’ I was. That was when I wasn’t being a ā€˜two-faced little horror’. I remember the fear of disappearing; the pressure – trying so hard to remain despite gaping holes ready to swallow me up because I didn’t want to eat my peas.
I remember the long walk down to school taking care not to step on the lines between the paving stones. But there were no cracks or gaps. And those dreams – I remember those dreams – of arriving at school without my bag, my shoes or even my entire uniform. Naked dreams; exposed, embarrassed and guilty. I remember the normality.
I remember running away from home. My sisters packed my bag. They said I’d have a great time. I remember not knowing where to go once I got to the bottom of the road. I remember getting home before anyone really missed me.
I remember Jonathan Eacon, the minister’s son. The first boy I ever took a bath with. I always had crushes on minister’s sons. I remember they never had crushes on me.
I remember walking home when my mother forgot to fetch me … I remember she forgot a lot … and I remember hiding behind each tree I passed in case she was driving past to fetch me. I remember she never panicked about not finding me because when she forgot me, she forgot me for the whole day.
I remember the fear of the leather slipper, the wooden spoon or the cane. I remember the defiance as I stood there and took my punishment. I remember the tears that came once I had closed my bedroom door.
I remember being stolen.
I remember good times too.
I remember the surgeons in wellington boots.
I remember the time I didn’t have to try and stop myself from hitting my child. I remember the relief when the need for willpower slipped away. I remember when my child said I love you for the first time. I remember the fear of losing him. I remember that daily. I remember when things began to feel right. I remember the feeling of the tear rolling down my face when I heard his first cry. I remember when I started loving him.
I remember when perspective began to change my world.

Long-term memory

Friday, August 7th, 2009
Long-term memory
I was speaking to a woman with grown children and she can still remember working and studying while bringing up her youngest … and still not being able to cope with the fact that she had to go to a business dinner with her husband and had no idea what she was going to talk about.
I thought these were the memories that faded with time, but evidently I will always be filled with dread when thinking of those times I felt I couldn’t string a sentence together and my sentences trailed off midway because I was bored with what I was saying and felt so sorry for my audience of one. I would read the Economist to my newborn babe in the hopes that I would absorb just a few sentences of intelligent information … just a snippet that would clear out a bit of mindless nappy and singsong and storybook fug.

I was speaking to a woman with grown children and she can still remember working and studying while bringing up her youngest … and still not being able to cope with the fact that she had to go to a business dinner with her husband and had no idea what she was going to talk about.

I thought these were the memories that faded with time, but evidently I will always be filled with dread when thinking of those times I felt I couldn’t string a sentence together and my sentences trailed off midway because I was bored with what I was saying and felt so sorry for my audience of one. I would read the Economist to my newborn babe in the hopes that I would absorb just a few sentences of intelligent information … just a snippet that would clear out a bit of mindless nappy and singsong and storybook fug.