The busy season is upon me, with spring and change in the air. I seem to be spending almost as much time trying to pull my thoughts together as I am getting any work done, but at the end of the day I can see progress – thanks to well thought out to-do lists.
I’ve
been incorporating meditation into my daily life, with over a solid month of 10
minutes or more per day. I like it, and
I like that I’m doing it. Is it making a
difference? I don’t know, but I feel a
bit less anxious, or more precisely, more at ease.
But tonight, my mind and emotions are in a
bit of a flux, and I’m feeling discontented.
There
is such an ebb and flow to how I feel and think about my son, waves of
intensity. Some days I find myself
walking by his picture and lightly touching the image, so grateful for the
connections we had. Other days I sit and
doubt… everything. The moments of
gratefulness I embrace as much as I can, and the others, well, sometimes I give
them airtime. I’m trying to learn to
hear the chorus of critics in my head without necessarily listening to them; learning
to acknowledge the fears without letting them take control.
When
it comes to my son I never knew how to tell people that I wanted to talk about him. That
even though it usually made me cry I still wanted to and to find ways to
acknowledge his existence. Now, as I
continue to learn how to share him, and I tell people I want to be open about
him, I find myself resorting back to my old default when they do bring him up: clamming up and shutting
down – it’s so frustrating! I don’t want
to do that anymore.
My oldest sister
spoke of my son fairly often, more so after we were reunited. She wanted to know if I’d heard from him or
talked to him. It’s one of the many
things I’ve always loved about her – that she never seemed afraid to bring him
up in conversation. She always made me
feel as though he was a normal part of my life, our lives, and she never once
doubted he would find me one day.
For
that I am so very grateful.
My oldest brother and
his wife have their own very personal relationship with adoption: they adopted
two beautiful boys. When they began
their adoption journey, we talked about my experience and what I looked for in
perspective parents; I think they were hoping to get the inside story – I’m not
sure I was ever really helpful, but I hope so.
Our conversations, no matter how seemingly insignificant, were precious
to me.
The youngest siblings,
my baby sister and baby brother, were only 9 and 11 when I had my son. I can’t even tell you what they thought about
all of it, what their feelings were. We
never talked about it then, and haven’t really since, but I hope to learn someday
how they felt and what their experiences were, if they are willing.
My son expressed an
interest in meeting them all; especially
my brothers, since his adopted family was heavily populated with girls. One of the few times all of us siblings were together we talked with anticipation
and excitement about when and where and who would be there (we didn’t think it would be wise for all of
us to be present - we were a bit afraid to overwhelm him with the full force of
our combined craziness).
We talked and
laughed and dreamt about what it will be like… would be like...
We just never had the
chance.
Believe-you-me, girl, I seriously feel your pain.
ReplyDeleteI lost a gorgeous, brilliant girl at 17.
But, yet, we must remember 3 things:
whatever You want, Jesus, is what I want...
-AND- we'll see them again in Seventh-Heaven...
-AND- our suffering brings us closer to God...
High, girl!
Wouldn’tya love a forever,
an eternity of aplomBombs??
An extraordinary DHTML @ warp-speed
with no zooillogical-expiration-date?
With an IQ much higher than K2?
Here’s what the prolific GODy sed:
“Faith, hope, and love,
the greatest of these is love -
jump into faith...
and you'll see with love”
Doesn’t matter if you don’t believe
(what I write);
God believes in you.
God. Blessa. Youse -Fr. Sarducci, ol SNL
Meet me Upstairs, girl, where the Son never goes down…