Life: Beyond Comprehension

I’ll never forget the moment I found out my Dad had passed away.

I had selfishly decided to leave the hospital for the first time in 28 hours to have a shower – I wanted to wash the stale scent of mystery meat and excessively pureed vegetables from my skin. In the back of my mind and in my heart, I was hoping that he would find the strength to open his eyes and see me; if by some magical miracle that moment happened, I wanted to look almost my best. But after one of the fastest showers I’d ever taken, I was on my way back to the hospital when my Mom called to break the news (and my heart). I had barely pulled over to the side of the road and from behind the wheel, my road rage had gone from non-existent to full throttle. In a matter of seconds, I was suddenly screaming in tears for other drivers to get out of my way, for the traffic lights to hurry up and give me a green light, for the universe to turn back time and take me out of this nightmare.

Within the hour, that anger was suppressed in the presence of staggering heartbreak. I sat there staring at my Dad with a shattered heart and a fierce regret for leaving his side for a damn shower. I knew that even if I had been there, I would have never been able to execute a suitable goodbye, but I never got the chance to try – and I only had myself to blame. By the next morning and as the days slowly passed, the unaddressed anger lingered in my body. When friends would check-in to see how I was coping, I’d scowl at my phone while pretending I was pleased to hear from them. On my flight to Toronto just a few days later, I had to exert all my effort into not blowing up to my neighbouring passenger while she told me stories about the family she was on the way to visit. I withheld my anger in business meetings – because, I didn’t want to be the one to make others uncomfortable with my unfortunate series of events.

For the past 4 months, anger has been simmering inside me with nowhere to go. I’ve been wandering, working, and filling my time with anything to stay distracted; to avoid unleashing my emotions where people can see them. Because death – the idea of it, the subject of it, the reality of it and the concept of it happening to us and to people we love is fucking uncomfortable and no one wants to talk about it, especially not for months on end. So yeah, at work and when (on the rare occasion) I meet new friends in this city that doesn’t feel like home yet, we don’t talk about it. Why would we want to talk about losing the people we love, when we can simply talk about what we love (that we still have)? Why talk about devastating circumstances, when there’s a million other even-just-slightly-less devastating events we can discuss? Why should everyone else feel uncomfortable, just because I’m not sure how to wrap my brain around the way my life’s unfolded over the summer?

No, I’m not trying to guilt trip anyone for living their own life and focusing on life moments that make them happy instead of sad. I’m just voicing my frustrations (because it’s my blog and I do what I want).

It’s just a bit discouraging how afraid so many of us are when the topic of death is brought to the table. It’s this outstanding part of life that we all experience in some form or another; it breaks all of us apart from the inside – yet no one wants to acknowledge the pain and maybe work together to find our way through it. I understand that it’s depressing, but it’s an element of life that we can’t just ignore; I mean, we can for a while, but you can’t outrun it forever.

So, what do you do when death unfolds right in front of you and takes over?

I’ve been trying to find an answer for months; I don’t think there’s anything really concrete. Whether it’s something we’re waiting on or an event that happens when we weren’t even a little bit ready for it, I’ve realized that death has different effects on every person it encounters. Some of us feel sad. Or maybe you get mad like I do. Or perhaps, it just doesn’t bother you at all. Actually, I think that last one is a lie – unless you actually do have a decrepit rock for a heart. But some of us are better at just not letting our emotions get the best of us and just plugging along with minimal fucks to give about what we can’t control.

But I think what I really want to get across with my words here is that if you’re ever going through something so utterly painful as someone you love passing away, you’re allowed to feel however the fuck you want to feel. If your heart just keeps breaking no matter how many ways you’ve tried to tape it up, that’s understandable. If you’re a little down and out and just not feeling yourself, that makes sense too. If you’re maybe a tad anxious, a bit unsure, slightly uncomfortable without the presence of someone who was always there – it’s not surprising. And hey, if you’re pissed right off that there’s absolutely nothing you can do to make things feel better right down at the root of it all – I feel you.

Just as discouraging as our minimal discussion about death, is the fact that so many people don’t recognize anger as a healthy emotion. Maybe it’s not healthy to be consistently angry – so angry and unstable that we let it fuel our habits and turn into destructive monsters – but I think it’s necessary for us to be mad about things that happen and to recognize what makes us tick. If we’re bothered and really shaken up about something, we shouldn’t just throw that away. Except, all too often I think we just feel the need to find a way to calm down, let go, distract ourselves with positivity.

Anger is just as important as any other emotion and if it’s surging through your body, I highly recommend taking the time to feel it (feel it hard!). I mean, if your lover broke your heart or the universe lit a match to your carefully thought out plans or if someone stabbed you in the back – or if your parent died the moment you stepped away for a 20 minutes – then I think you’re more than deserving to be mad about it — on top of whatever other emotion(s) you feel, too. In fact, I’d be super curious as to how dark and empty your soul is if you felt close to nothing at all in any close to awful scenario that happened to you.

It’s important to remember that you’re entitled to however you feel, but also to be mindful that other people may not feel the same or understand what you’re feeling. I’ve constantly tried to make my pain relatable to others, but no matter how I try to explain it – they’ll never feel the pain the way I do. And as frustrating as that truth is, that’s just how it goes.

So no matter how jealous, bitter, pensive, sad, or just plain miserable I feel — I’m just learning to live with it. Unfortunately, that means other people sort of have to, too. I’m doing my best not to lose my cool or cry excessively, and I’m trying to similiar to the fun, energetic self I was 5 months ago (before everything changed) but sometimes it just happens all that stuff just happens because I’m just too tired to stop it. Sometimes, getting upset  and feeling unhappy just needs to happen.

Grief seems to do whatever it wants to, and it seems as though the healthiest way to deal with it – is to just let it do it’s thing without feeling too bad about it.

If you haven’t faced it already, I’m sorry to say – but you will eventually. And when you do, I hope that you’re not too hard on yourself and give yourself permission to be incredibly imperfect in the process of navigating the pain, hurt, and uncontrollable way it affects your life – whatever that turns out to be. It may be bearable or it may feel impossible, and there’s really no way to prepare for it. The only thing I can tell you is that it probably won’t make sense.

But hey – neither did taking a shower, just to smell and look good at the hospital.

I guess that’s just how life unfolds sometimes. We just gotta’ keep doing what feels necessary in each moment that presents itself,  and the do our best  to take another step forward and figure out the rest from there.

The Struggle is Real

I’m going to start by telling you that moving to a new city is exciting.

For the first month and a bit after I had moved and set up my things in my downtown Calgary apartment, I felt like I was on a mini vacation.

Everything around me was new and exciting. Being in a different city was refreshing and liberating. I could be whoever I wanted to be and there were so many new people to meet and places to explore.

It was an adventure and a big transition into a new life.

But, it’s been a few months now — and as exciting as being in a new city is…

I’m gonna’ be real with you:

It’s tough shit.

I’ve talked about my struggle with eating disorders. Those demons still live in my head, and body dysmorphia is something I face daily. Anxiety, on top of  these overwhelming feelings of missing home, my family, my closest friends – it’s part of every single day of my life.

Day in and day out, I worry about everything and overthink my entire life. I battle with this need to be ‘perfect’. I constantly wonder if I’m even doing anything right or if I’m quite possibly awful at “adulting”.

These feelings aren’t new to me. I’ve experienced all of these things for years – but I spent a lot of that time living in the comfort of a city I had grown up in, with familiar people around me that I wasn’t afraid to be myself around. It was a little easier to manage then.

Now…

I’m somewhere new. I’m still fighting all of these wars, while also trying to maintain this sense of cool and create this rad new life for myself.

The struggle is real.

Throw in a new job, a never-ending list of things to do (find a new doctor and dentist, switch my car insurance, switch my medical services plan, get a new drivers license, etc.), plus freeways and off ramps to memorize and navigate. I love meeting new people, but making new friends- good, solid friends that can temporarily take the place of the friends I left behind- is not easy. Don’t get me wrong — there are a lot of really fantastic people here who I’ve met or talked to online or heard about, but I’m just worn down from repeatedly sharing my story and making good impressions and trying to build my own life up in the meantime.

Oh, and of course – there’s that thing about how I already let someone wiggle their way into my precious little heart, only to have them break it.

Do I sound like I’m whining yet?

In all seriousness, I often feel like I’m rambling on about things that I should probably stop complaining about. Because as annoying and tiresome as all of this is when you put it all together, I’m generally okay.

Yes, life is hard – but how boring would it be if it was easy? If it always made perfect sense, and everything just fell into place without a challenge?

Think about it.

Yes, moving to a new city is scary. Starting from scratch, being the new person at your job, at your gym, in the neighbourhood – is intimidating. Leaving behind my friends and my family and a place that made me feel at home, stings my heart and soul.

I’ve stepped out of my safe zone. I’ve moved from a place of comfort to a place of vulnerability.

I have serious fears of the unknown, but I’m taking a risk.

Because, I truly believe that that’s what makes life interesting – when we mentally challenge ourselves, push boundaries, allow ourselves to feel, absorb and breathe new experiences; when we open ourselves up to other people and form new connections or let them teach us something about life, or ourselves, or shift our perspective.

None of it comes easy to me, but all of it gives me goosebumps in the best (and worst) way possible.

In the past 5 months I’ve had a lot of good days. I’ve also had bad days, and other days when I can’t stop crying or wishing I was home.

I won’t shy away from the truth: There have been plenty of times when I’ve gone straight home from work to just fall asleep – so I can forget about trying to keep all the pieces of my life together, while the world keeps spinning around me.

But in those same 5 months, I’ve learned a little more about who I am and who I want to be. I’ve grown, I’ve shared love, I’ve tried new things and opened my mind to all sorts of brand new information that’s made my life better and made me a little, tiny bit wiser.

Earlier this year when I made the big announcement that I was packing up my life and relocating to a city I’d only visited for a weekend once before, there were a lot of people who commented on how “brave” I was.  As I sit here and write this, I’m perplexed by that statement.

I don’t feel brave at all. I haven’t felt brave through this entire process. I especially don’t feel brave right now.

Current status: I’m nervous for what the future may or may not hold. I’m still wondering if I am enough – and if I’m capable of everything I want to commit to. I’m homesick, I’m exhausted, I want to book a vacation and not tell anyone where I’m going and throw away my cellphone.

I feel so many things right now.
Brave, is not one of them.

The struggle is very real.

But, as much as I sometimes want to step back into my comfort zone and keep myself safe – I know I’d be missing out on a lot of really cool, new experiences that will undoubtedly make me and my life even just a little bit better.

The lesson?

I’ll let Benedict Cumberbatch tell you first:

“The further you get away from yourself, the more challenging it is. Not to be in your comfort zone is great fun.”

In my own words:

It’s perfectly normal to feel unsure and wonder what might happen to your life if you step away from what you’re used to, but there’s a whole lot of stuff – including yourself – that you could be missing out on if you don’t.

And if you need a hand to hold or a hug when life feels really hard…

I got you.

 

“Anna Kendrick”

She looked just like Anna Kendrick.

If I wasn’t sitting on a wobbly bar stool, stationed at some dive bar in the heart of some barely-heard-of small town, I would have thought it was actually her. Anna Kendrick, I mean.

I didn’t think much of her when I found my seat at the bar top, shifting the seat back and forth before sandwiching myself close enough to the edge of the bar that the seat stayed almost still. She was across the bar and facing the other wall, barely swaying her hips back and forth to the rock and roll music blaring from the speakers while she organized the rows of bottles to make sure that every label was facing the front.

… As if us bar patrons had no idea what each bottle held, just by the shape of the bottle and the tainted liquid inside it. We all knew what we wanted: our usual.

There was a handful of pretty young women working that afternoon, all of them had their tied up, slicked back, or carefully curled and held together with hairspray that sparkled. “Anna”, still facing the other way, had hair that was the colour of rich coffee with strands of caramel sifted throughout it. It fell nicely onto her shoulders, and barely covered the nape of her neck. A few brunette locks covered a small tattoo which was tucked beneath the scattered hem of her shirt. The dark hues of espresso and light caramel glimmered in the sun shining through a nearby window.

When Anna finally turned towards me though, I completely forgot about her hair.

She simply sked me if she could start me off with a drink, and I fumbled. No matter what bar top I’m seated at, my drink is always the same: vodka soda, two lime wedges and a lemon. But the minute Anna looked at me, I froze.

I was instantly lost in her eyes.

They were a crisp, sapphire colour. Pools of sparkling blue, fanned by full and sweeping eyelashes and a perfect dusting of black and brown shadows around them. They glistened, sparkling when she smiled.

“Can I get you a drink, new friend?”

I squeaked out my order, still absorbed by her beautiful eyes. She repeated it back to me, giving me a wink, while her tongue playfully slip between her teeth, before she moved onto a couple a few seats down. Her cheeks were a little rounder than the real Anna Kendrick, but delightful none-the-less. A dainty nose, cat-like eyes, and seemingly flawless and soft skin – everything was captivating and barely touched with makeup, except her lips that shimmered underneath a glaze of faint pink. When she walked away, I was left with a lingering scent of her perfume – something floral, but touched with musk to pair with her edgy style.

I studied her, as she danced around the bar making a drink for me and a few others. Believe me when I admit I wasn’t trying to be creepy. Really, it was impossible not to be completely intrigued by her; I couldn’t have been the only one.

She was wearing faded black jeans with holes in the knees, and they lightly wrapped around her long lean legs; tight, but not skin tight. The bottoms sat in rumpled cuffs above her worn out, bright green high tops. A small chain fell from her right front pocket to the back, which I later noticed was just a stylish way to keep her computer key from getting lost.

She wore a cropped black t-shirt that displayed a gold Wu-Tang “W” on the front. It sat crooked on her shoulders, allowing a sneak peak of her collarbone and mid drift. As she moved, the shirt shifted to expose a hint of a baby blue bra strap. Another tattoo peered out from underneath the hemline of her crop top – something elaborate and colourful.

And when Anna slid my vodka soda, completed with two limes wedges and one lemon wedge – as per my request – she winked again, pointing both her fingers in a friendly gun motion simultaneously. Her nails were covered in multi-coloured and chipped nail polish, one of her thumbs wrapped with a thick silver band. Another tattoo sat on inside of her right wrist; I think they were initials.

Anna danced around the bar afternoon, and I quietly watched her while I sipped my way through a few more vodka drinks and pretended to watch a baseball game on a screen above me. I felt like I was there for hours – I had nowhere special to be – and Anna’s groove never seemed to die down. Her hips continued to sway ever so slightly, whether she was standing still or moving along the bar to see if any of us needed another drink or basket of fries.

I’m willing to bet it’s that laid-back sexy style and sassy attitude that keeps those bar stools in an almost-unheard of small-town pub occupied. And, those brilliant, sharp blue eyes – that I hope I never forget.

But really, could I ever forget having the small-town twin of Anna Kendrick make me the drink – just the way I like it?

Never.