Living your own life

If your deepest self is singing and coaxing you straight toward the bonfire, is it better to turn away? Stop your ears with wax? Ignore all the perverse glory your heart is screaming at you? Set yourself on the course that will lead you dutifully towards the norm, reasonable hours and regular medical check-ups, stable relationships and steady career advancement the New York Times and brunch on Sunday, all with the promise of being somehow a better person? Or…is it better to throw yourself head first and laughing into the holy rage calling your name?”
–Donna Tartt/The Goldfinch

I was talking to a friend the other night. We’ve been friends since we were 12. He was my first boyfriend. Well, kind of. Anyway, He was the only one where there wasn’t any sort of break up involved. His family moved across the country. So there never had to be any bad feelings. So we’ve always been friends instead of going through a hating each other phase.

We are an unlikely pair. I don’t think anyone would pick us out of a lineup and say “those two are friends.”

He is a bit of a pirate. No, not a bit. His lifestyle is completely different from mine. I am a Monday – Friday office worker. I have a husband, house and good credit. I have a salary and benefits. A pension. He doesn’t do what he doesn’t want to do. He lives a life that is on his own terms. He doesn’t make a lot of plans, and when he does he often decides to do something else at the last minute. He’s off grid a lot. He pays the price for it. In a lot of different ways, not just financially. He owns it.

The thing is, he has a thing he does that could potentially make him a lot of money. If he lived a straighter lifestyle. If he could be just a little more 9-5. But is that what he wants?

That’s kind of what we were talking about. He thrives on risk, but is in a place in his life where he’d like to settle down a little. I think he is seeing the price you pay for living a life that is totally your own. It’s being on your own. The upside and downside are the same thing.

We are similar in that we have freak tendencies. Rogue souls. Skewed world views. We are both deeply unconventional. I understand why he wants to live the unrooted life he does, in a lot of ways. Even if I would never live that way myself.

He says that a stable life, a life with a specific house and steady job makes him anxious. I’s not the work. He can work hard. It’s the structure. The daily grind, maybe. Maybe the responsibility.

I need it. I need a home. I need a certain level of physical comfort. I need a little bit of structure. I am a freak on the inside, but I need at least a little bit of a box to keep it in.

So what we were getting at, I guess, is that there isn’t one answer to what people’s lives should look like. Each of us values different things. Family. Love. Money. Success. Ambition. Intellectual or physical stimulation. There is not a right or wrong answer.

There are a few absolutes: don’t be a douche, try not to hurt people. But other than that, we all have to figure out what we want.

I haven’t yet.

You wouldn’t think it would be so hard. I haven’t ever felt like I’ve gotten to the real part yet. That’s because if you don’t know what you want, how do you go about living it.

Initially, I typed “leaving it”
Freudian typo?

Is the answer throwing yourself into the holy rage, whatever that risk is for you, or being what the rest of the world would consider a good person? At whatever cost to who you are inside? Do you have to be a grown up to have a good life?

The fuck if I know.







Fais do-do, a dream sequence

The two of them are at a fais do-do. A Cajun dance party. So, they are in Louisiana for some reason. Very rustic. Lots of fiddle and accordion. It doesn’t seem like a business function. It’s not cleaned up enough. Some of the people look pretty back-woodsy. It doesn’t seem to be a place of business. They definitely seem to be strangers, but people have welcomed them for some reason.

She is having a great time, drinking and eating gumbo, and listening to people talk in their pointy French. Her man is off being entertaining, but she pops over every so often to listen for a while, his arm around her waist. A lot of people are dancing, of course they’re dancing, and they keep asking her to dance, but she doesn’t know how.

“It’s OK, I’m having a great time. I don’t need to dance,” she says. And she means it.

“All the jeunes filles should be dancing” says a weather-beaten man who could be 60 or 90.

“Well thanks for the jeune fille, m’sieur”

“je vais t’enseigner” he says, and he grabs her and shows her the steps, guides her around the floor.

“attends, attends..j’peux me dechausser?”

“bien sur, ma p’tite.”

She kicks her shoes off and soon they are spinning around the floor.
She dances and dances in her bare feet, her man watches and smiles. Happy to see her so happy. Occasionally he rescues her during a slow song and they dance together.

“Having a good time, baby?”
She just nods, smiles, and puts her head against his chest while they spin in time.

Back at their hotel, she sits on the side of the tub, soaking the grime off her feet. Enjoying the hot water and bubbles on her tired feet. Taking her time. Pouring white wine out of a bottle on the floor next to the tub.

Her man, impatient, says he needs her to get her feet out of the tub and come to bed.

“You do NOT want these filthy feet in our bed, baby” and she keeps soaking.

“I am not interested in your feet right now.”

She laughs and says “then you will have to come and get me” and squeals when he comes after her. She pulls both of them into the huge tub, laughing. He pulls her on top of him and asks if she’s planning on sharing that wine.

“Don’t you know? Everything I have is yours.”

“Except those grubby feet.”

“No no–no cherry picking. All or nothing, Mister.”

“All. I’ll even wash your feet. After all, it’s Good Friday. It’s the least I can do.”

 

What I didn’t know then

I wish I didn’t know now
What I didn’t know then.
–Bob Seger/Against The Wind

You like to think that knowing more is better. That’s mostly true, I guess. You can probably never have too much general knowledge. Other things, like the things you learn about life and about people, are harder to be glad about.

As much as it pains me, Bob Seger may be right. There really are things I wish I didn’t know now that I didn’t know then.

So I’ve been making a list.

What I wish I didn’t know
1. You will not get through life without being hurt. The worst thing will be that sometimes you will be hurt by the people you love and trust the most.

2. Bad things, even very bad things will happen to you. There is no way to avoid it entirely.

3. People don’t all wish you well. Some people will hate you. There is not much you will be able to do about it.

4. Adults don’t know everything.

5. You will hurt people you love. Sometimes you won’t mean to, but sometimes you will even hurt them on purpose.

6. Sometimes loving someone isn’t enough.

7. Sometimes, your heart will break. I was 15 the first time it happened. Did it get better? Yes, but if I’d known how long it would take, I’m not sure I could have gotten though it.

8. Good people do shitty things at times.

9. It’s hard to live with people, including yourself, sometimes.

10. Loving someone can’t fix them if they break.

11. You can’t make someone love you, and you can’t stop loving someone. Learning that hurts.

What I am glad I do know
1. You can forgive anything, and that doesn’t mean you have to live with it or condone it.

2. Sometimes the people who hurt you didn’t mean to.

3. You can survive almost anything. Whatever doesn’t kill you kind of does make you stronger.

4. Love really can conquer almost anything.

5. People will generally be more open to people who are open themselves.

6. Being yourself, even if you are weird, will frequently make people like you.

7. Hiding who you really are doesn’t work. You will leak out all around the edges and people will think you are dishonest. They will be right. It’s always better to be yourself whenever possible.

8. Even when things are at their worst, there is always something to be grateful for. Always. It’s usually not even that hard to find.

9. Mostly? Life is good.

10. If you assume that people’s intentions are good, it will generally be true.