pebbles & stones

Featuredpebbles & stones

The journey back to my Self is soil lined carefully, optimistically within the walls of a raw wound. The touch of Earth trapped underneath fingernails waiting to be washed again, and again, and again. Dirt. Caught in between my gums and my teeth, a softness, and sweetness, and inevitable bitterness of consuming the inedible. The journey back to Self is Dirt. A scent evoking the power of life, both in its ability to create and sustain. A familiar taste, unusual sensation, intimate proximity to the essence of the mother’s experience.  

The journey to Self is a symptom of survival and a grappling with what has not. An incision in the uterus, one on the abdomen. Hair loss, clogged ducts, a release of flesh and blood. Gravel and mud outline my scars, as I am embedded outside of a life that was and within a life anew. Balancing the darkness, pure glee rises among the cackling sounds of a baby learning to laugh for the very first time. Nestled between endless hums and sighs while her eyes drift off before my own, I create pockets of forced productivity among the disentanglement of an identity far away. My journey’s light is fueled by her eyes and simultaneously tested by a relationship unraveled. An imaginary ring returned for a veil lifted. A love made up of loose threads no longer braided slipping from my palm to my fingertips to miles away. Waves of grief, sparked by discarded scripts of what was supposed to be, how it was supposed to turn out. 

I can choose which pebble or stone to toss into the water, but I can not control the ripples or the waves. The yearning to be understood or desired refuses to yield. A tendency to discard myself in the hopes of the ends justifying the means refuses to prosper. Do ends ever really justify the means? How present can I truly be in this new world where responsibility to protect my daughter, my spirit as her mother, overreach my innate need to simply sit under the sun. Who can I be, what can I be, how can I be, what am I doing wrong? Am I the stone and those around me are caught in my ripples, or am I the ripple of their toss? 

Lord, provide me the guidance and the wisdom, the discernment to know when to push, pull, advocate- and when to turn to dust, water, pollen carried in the wind. To breathe, and accept, and trust that all this is in your hands. That all of our hands are a part of your plan, and it will all be how it is supposed to be. God, lift this anxiety from my chest, this pressure, desire to control and allow me to be receptive to trust. I am grateful to be here, typing on these keys. It’s been so long. I want to write for me. To heal, to play with language as I’ve done. To no longer see writing as an estranged friend. To feel the dirt in between my toes and the smell of mud in the evening rain.

little lessons

little lessons

I could go on for pages on the ways in which Life interrupted my plans to post, but I won’t. Simply, I’ll apologize and move on. I messed up. I’ll do better.

The professor looked in our direction, put their elbows on the table and told us if we could do something else, we should.

If we were able to enter a different field, shift academic trajectories, choose another program we should. If we decide to stay… if we believe this is what we were born to do…  “my condolences.”

I’m forced to be smarter here. I am in constant state of reeducation. I walk slower now, making sure I don’t “pull” when I should “push.” I adopt mannerisms, study ways my peers talk to the professor. I study outfits, diction… Durkheim.  As a graduate student in this prestigious program, I am aware both by nature and training of those around me. The air here is dense with complex text and discussion. Therefore, I breathe with intention. At a pace. I am learning. I can feel it.

I’m forced to be selfish here. I let a love be momentary once again. A fatal combination of free time and emotion led me there. And here. On my bed. Writing. I’m at peace. The goodbye was necessary, yet I remind myself it takes more than one to measure a relationship’s worth. Twenty two with two jobs and a thesis on the way… I need to be selfish in love. I am in a constant state of reeducation.

I’ll do better.

In the Door, a series (edit: short lived)

In the Door, a series (edit: short lived)

“Section 8 to Ivy League”

I saw her hands rise, just a touch. The tone in her voice becoming more urgent, less anxious. Sure of herself and her intentions, she spoke passionately against the field she taught in. Her words attacked the elitism and inaccessibility of education, her desire for inclusive research became her. I listened. I agreed. Yet, I couldn’t forget the initials by her name. The number of publications she’s authored. The number of times she’s been cited.

I couldn’t forget where we were. A bougie high end coffee shop in downtown Boston charging $4.75 for a pack of 3 gluten free cookies. Here, we critiqued the “elite.”

In a month I will begin my Masters degree at an Ivy League institution where you can feel the air of prestige even in the restrooms. This anger, this passion, this frustrated quiver in tone… it’s inside of me too. But I wonder, where do I stand in this fight for accessibility? How angry can I be at the “other side” while I plant my foot in the door? Is my desire to fight against the system contradictory to my walking into it?

In this blogging series, I am going to document my year at Columbia. My transition from one school to the next is more than a change of scenery. It’s letting go of a Section 8 voucher for more student loan debt. It’s a disguise of elitism, a false air of comfort… a childhood dream come true. Tackling with the complication of my position, I hope to make this experience tangible and in some strange way find strength in this vulnerability of sharing my journey with you.

I’ll be posting at least every other week.

(EDIT: I can’t even say I tried to keep up with this post’s promise. I apologize & moving on)