Moving On.

By alison February 14, 2007 22 Comments 7 Min Read

Thinking2

"We shall hardly notice in a year or two. You can get accustomed to anything."

Edna St Vincent Millay.

Last year something happened, some kind of wonderful, that  I chose not to tell you.

It was in the midst of my Winter terrible, when  my whole body was screaming something was wrong, but I, in  my eternal efforts to be be optimistic, chose not to see it. (That our bodies do  not let us ignore the kind of fiasco’s our emotions want to lock up inside, is, I think one of the more astonishing laws of nature…)

Having recovered from a draining chest infection, I went deaf  due to some kind of vicious  torture that scarred my ears  ever after.  I lived in a bubble for a while, wandering about in a dirty dressing gown, unable to make sense of the terrible atmosphere and clinging  on tooth and nail regardless.

And then one night I flicked on my emails and the tears started.

There amongst the flotsam and jetsam of the adverts for Viagra and the begging letters from unlucky Nigerians,  was an email from Sarah Ban Breathnach, and on my doorstep three days later, a beautiful sea-foam green box tied with pink ribbon and the beautiful flourish of Sarah’s gorgeous handwriting.

It felt to me as if my very own conscience had come a calling.

Sarah Ban Breathnach’s literary interventions in my life have always been uncannily timely and somehow this was too much to cope with. Though physical vanity is, shamefully, an intrinsic part of who I am, I resist validation of  what I do to a ridiculous degree. I’m not good at receiving either gifts or kind words, almost as if acknowledgment of these tiny kindnesses requires me to agree with things that make me blush. Because I spend all day every day feeling like a fake and it scares me senseless. Because I haven’t got the confidence to stand square in front of the mirror and scratch away the foil long enough to see who I am. So I pass  my days consumed by gratitude and yet saying thank you is an almost daily struggle. If I’m totally honest, I can hardly spit it out and I truly do not know what that says about who I am.

And so to have the woman who had effectually shaped my entire adult personality, she who  gave me the blessed gift of authenticity and indeed gratitude, tell me that she appreciated my work, sort of sent me spinning.

A dream comes true and instead of embracing it, you collapse into the kind of egotistical histrionics you would expect from a woman wholly unable  to take credit beautifully bestowed upon her. Readers if I was on the edge, it was Dear, Wonderful Sarah who pushed me over. Once again forced me to acknowledge my reality with a signed copy of both the tenth anniversary edition of Simple Abundance and a much coveted copy of the newly written Moving On, accompanied by a darling of a note, now amongst my most prized possessions.

It was this gift that said, hey you are doing OK- regardless of whatever else is going pear shaped, you Alison May are doing OK…

And so I cried.

And cried. And cried a bit more. Then Mark left me and I cried so much the Doctor had to be called to prescribe a hefty dose of Valium. And then I stopped crying, just like that, and a little tiny voice inside me whispered that maybe it wasn’t such a bad thing after all: that there is only so long a person with any degree of understanding of what matters in this life can go on pretending…

But I didn’t read the book. I can’t even begin to tell you how mortified I am to admit it, but I haven’t read "Moving On". Not really. I couldn’t. Moving on was the last thing I wanted to do…

And then there comes the day when you have no choice.

I knew since the day I met him, that Mark wouldn’t be good for me. He was and is a little boy and  though little boys, their cute smiles and endearing ways are compelling, they cannot pay the bills, understand a woman enough to see past the fact that occasionally she cannot help but be a sandwich short of a picnic, or indeed quite give up their attachment to the bottle (whether it be lager or Mothers milk inside it… ) long enough to deal with the sheer headache that is responsibility. The fact is that his leaving did not add to my problems in any shape or form: what was a problem when he lived under my roof is still a problem now, because I learned to look after myself a very long time ago. He gave me no choice.

Though Mark has in the past  nine months frequently asked me to "move on"- he in all his ignorance is truly asking me to move on physically, to move out of my beloved little house, so I can release enough equity to allow him to create a new life for himself unburdened by the noose around his neck that is supporting us, to some degree, financially. To free him from the obligation to keep a roof over his sons curly locked head…

No matter because it isn’t going to happen. End of.

I sometimes think I moved on from Mark when I was twenty three, but love is a funny thing and it is very difficult to extract yourself emotionally from a  member of your family: he was and is my family. I love him for who we were, for all our innocence, for all the the rubbishy things that happened and one way or another stitched us together. For all the ways he can still make me laugh like no-one else and for all our yesterdays. But I love him like a pet. Even I recognise that and still feel the urge to pat him on the head and congratulate him for being a good dog when he remembers to pick his son up on time, or offers some degree of humanity in what is now an alien face.  But let’s face it, a dead dog is comparatively easy to get over…

What is harder to move on from is something so colourful, so thrilling, so unacceptable, that it has you floating on cloud nine. It isn’t easy to pack raw emotion in a box and store it on a shelf ready for unwrapping when it no longer hurts. It is downright bloody difficult.

It is hard to move on from a picture of the future you’d had painted for you in glorious technicolour. Nobody sensible wants  to move on from a past littered with precious moments. Though we shall hardly notice in a year or two, because  you can, apparently get accustomed to anything

And more than anything else it is almost impossible to move on from the aspects of your  personality that prevent you  reaching your full potential. It takes guts, will and determination to move out of your comfort zone: in my case to learn how to say thank you, to snap up the opportunities that come my way instead of resisting them, and to understand when something or somebody is compromising me to the degree that I am almost willing to give up my authenticity for little pieces of nothing.

I can’t say I’ve got guts, determination or indeed willpower in spades. I’ve been biting my nails for thirty years. Offer me a glass of wine and I will steal the whole bottle and more than that offer me glimpses of how scrumptious life could be and I  will dream it into being, a reality so true I can taste it…

But it’s time to move on. I don’t wanna, but I gotta.  I’m doing OK, right?

The books sit wrapped in the ribbon they came in, on the red cabinet in my living room. Once somebody asked me why they were there. Was everything in my house contrived to tell a story about who I am? Contrived? No. Everything in my house tells a story certainly, a story I don’t have to explain. Every object whispering it’s meaning as I move from room to room.

A story I hear loud and clear. Time to go back to who I’m meant to be it says. To throw rainbow coloured prisms over another grey day and dance into tomorrow.

I’m ready to read Moving On, Sarah. Somebody hold my hand?

22 Comments

  1. Sandi says:

    A package from Sarah! How lucky you are. And talented. I keep waiting to see that you are writing your own book.
    Sandi

  2. Clare says:

    What a wonderful piece to read – enjoy the book!

  3. June says:

    This is a wonderful and touching posting. You are blessed in many ways, including Sarah's books and thoughtful caring of you–but you also are a blessing to all of us. So, yes, I for one am happy to hold your hand.

  4. See you are cutting yourself short. Not only are you moving on already…I believe you could help other people in this manner and I agree-write a book of your own. You say things I would never be able to put into words,like-"Nobody sensible wants to move on from a past littered with precious moments" Whew-thats good.

  5. jane says:

    One of the main reasons I visit "you" every day, first thing in the morning, is because I find your authenticity, and your writing sooo wonderfully refreshing. Honestly, I love the way you write. I love the way you put yourself on the "page" for all of us to experience.
    Alison, share your beauty and your gifts with a larger audience ~ when you are ready ~ and write your own book…You will comfort many in the ways Sarah did and does you…In the meantime, just KNOW that you already offer many of us comfort, joy (you are so funny), and inspiration "here", everyday…
    Happy Valentine's Day!

  6. Lorraine says:

    Bravo, Alison! I'm in awe of the way you express yourself and how you're able to lay yourself out here for the world to see. Your courage and writing skills are truly inpsiring and I love how you make your stories both touching and funny.

  7. hester says:

    You are so strong, and I think that moving on has so many steps to it, that you have already moved on so much without realising! I love reading your blog every day and admire your strength and honesty so much – I also cannot wait for your own book!!!
    x

  8. Mary says:

    As someone who has gone through a very similar experience, I applaud you for being able to let others see and feel your pain. In doing so, trust me, you are helping them.

  9. Amber says:

    That is the most wonderful bit of wisdom that I've heard in a very long time. Isn't it a pity that it hurts so much to learn life lessons?
    I would buy your book if you wrote one.
    And I've read Moving On, and you MUST read it.

  10. carol says:

    Alison I love to visit your writings everyday
    carol

  11. Mabel Fortune says:

    good!

  12. Gail says:

    Alison, you slay me…while I am a big fan of Sarah, I so much more identify with what you write. There be "boys" and there be "men" . . .You've already started moving on – you stepped out in faith with your post.
    Happy Valentine's! Gail

  13. Gayla says:

    What a perfectly wonderful day to begin. I recently re-read Moving on, and once again enjoyed her so much. You know how much I think of you. It's hard to move on, to reliquish our dreams, acknowledge we maybe spent way too much of ourselves on someone unworthy… much easier to keep a torch out for the person we wished him to be, for the one who would make our all out attempt seem more intelligent??? That is how it seems for me, at least.

  14. Cindy says:

    Bless you and darling Finn and your beloved family and friends…..
    "Each rose has it's thorn(s)…"

  15. Tracy says:

    Alison, I love Sarah's writing, too! I will be first in line to buy your book. Moving on is sometimes frightening, but it can be a very good thing too. Bravo to you! xx

  16. kali says:

    I'll hold your hand dear girl. xo

  17. Ashley says:

    LOVELY! You are dreamy! In a girlfriend-you've-got-it, live-across-the-ocean, saying-beautiful-things, adored-by-many-women, wish-i-could-sit-and-have-a-snack-with-you kind of way! Blessings to you…a precious soul indeed!

  18. Ashley says:

    LOVELY! You are dreamy! In a girlfriend-you've-got-it, live-across-the-ocean, saying-beautiful-things, adored-by-many-women, wish-i-could-sit-and-have-a-snack-with-you kind of way! Blessings to you…a precious soul indeed!

  19. Lisa says:

    I recently began the job of my dreams, I'm now a librarian. One day, it will be your book I'll be placing in a prominent place on the "new titles" display shelf.

  20. Joanne says:

    Alison, I think you'll really love Sarah's book. I've lent it to my (young enough to be my older sister) aunt, who has gone through a lot of big, scary life changes over the past couple of years. I loved the book, and I really think it will help you 'move on' – and it's really OK to move on. We've been doing it our whole lives anyway, in different ways. I think that things always turn out for the best in the end. I know you'll be OK. More than OK.

  21. Joanne says:

    Alison, I think you'll really love Sarah's book. I've lent it to my (young enough to be my older sister) aunt, who has gone through a lot of big, scary life changes over the past couple of years. I loved the book, and I really think it will help you 'move on' – and it's really OK to move on. We've been doing it our whole lives anyway, in different ways. I think that things always turn out for the best in the end. I know you'll be OK. More than OK.

  22. Karla says:

    I think you are doing very okay. You are where you need to be right now. Sometimes forcing ourselves to do things we aren't ready to do can be a disaster. I'm glad you are listening to your heart – knowing when to sit and allow yourself just to be – and when to push yourself up off the proverbial couch. It's very confusing sometimes isn't it? But you're doing wonderfully. And I'm glad you're not moving out of that wonderful cottage.

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