Waiting for Your Spring

Waiting.

Waiting for you is like waiting for a flower to bloom.

I know that some just don’t in the end,

That the frost just nips too hard at good, growing, colorful things

But I just refuse to believe

That it’s true

For you.

Because I’ve seen you,

And I know you,

Arguably better than most people

Ever do.

You’re kind, and smart, and brave,

And oh so many other good things,

All the things that will help you

Bloom

But you’re not yet sure

That you believe in Spring.

But I do, oh gosh darn it I do I do I do

And I can’t see how,

If you’re looking

If you’re feeling

If you’re thinking

That someday It won’t find you

Too.

It’s everywhere, It’s all around

It wants to wake you up,

And so do you.

You want It to be real too.

Because if It is real,

So many other things can be.

I. Hate. Waiting.

I’m notoriously bad

At waiting for things to grow.

I want to be their sun,

Their rain,

Their everything

And just fix all that is wrong and dormant and yearning

And seeking.

But I can’t.

I am not Spring.

I am only a fellow flower

That has awakened to It’s warm touch.

And now

I can only hope

That it will fix you too.

You tell me not to wait.

Not because you don’t want me to

But you want me to be free

And happy

And are scared that Spring won’t come.

But my bones know It will

With a deep peace and dedication

Called love

That I cannot shake.

And so I will grow with you

Barely touching

Waiting

To see you soon.

Falling into Love

When I write about love, it’s a complicated thing.

I’m not talking about a crush, or a fleeting friendship or obsession… I’m talking about love. Whether romantic love or friendship love or family love. Just love.

It’s hard. It’s beautiful. It’s messy. It’s darn complicated. It’s so so good. It can take you to towers of happiness or holes of sadness. Often it does both.

Falling in love… what is that even? ‘Falling’ is accurate… one day you’re walking along, and then you’re suddenly moving faster and you’re not sure why, and then you accelerate and accelerate without even trying until all of a sudden you realize you’re falling, falling toward something that reaches out to catch you, but all the same you’re afraid that you’ll miss it. How do you even know you’re falling in love? How do you know you’re not just falling? Or that you’re even moving at all? What I think–you don’t. You don’t know. You don’t know until you’ve been caught and everything is okay and the world is right and the sun is brighter than you’ve ever seen it. So when you’re falling, tumbling through the air with a dropping feeling in your stomach that’s equal parts excitement and fear, you just have to shut your eyes tight and hope that a certain someone will be there to catch you. Falling into love would be a better phrase. Yes, that’s it. Falling into love.

So much of love is trust. Trust in yourself. Trust in the person waiting to catch you. Trust in Jesus. No matter the situation, this is true. But the more complicated it is, the more this is true. The more trust is needed, in greater measure and fiercer strength. A simultaneous holding onto someone tighter than you ever have held anything before and also an uncurling of the fingers, an opening of the fists, palms flat and open, saying I trust that this good thing won’t run away from me. A trust that this whole crazy thing is going to work out, somehow, someway.

Yet an even crazier realization–you can hurt someone through love, even mutual love, sometimes especially through mutual love. When there’s something between you, love can push you harder and harder into that wall until you feel the hard diamond cold impressed on your skin and aching deep within your bones. Yet I’d much rather be hurt by love than not have it, the belonging and home and warmth and reassurance and hope and just pure joy it brings. And any wall can be moved. Any wall. No matter how freaking tall or wide or hard or dark it is… as long as you can still feel the person on the other side, you can break through or climb over or tunnel under. Don’t stop believing that, even for a second. Never ever ever. Because that’s what makes us human, that what makes life worth living–that will to fight for love and keep on loving no matter the cost. That’s what love truly is–determination to belong with someone no matter what, just because they are them and you are you. What a simple, blazing strong, most wonderful thing. What a thing to call mine, home, a flame in my heart to keep me burning all my days.

Jesus, give me the wisdom to love the right way. Jesus, give me the bravery to follow hard after the truth. Jesus, give me strength even when it hurts. Jesus, help me trust that you’re the God of miracles.

i feel like a tree in spring

branches reaching, stretching

budding

golden sap running through my veins

new

spring

green

bursting from my fingertips

joy               life               fragrance

happy peace in my roots

cool water bringing laughter

sun breeze in my hair

other branches entwining

homily

with mine

blue sky bits

filling all my spaces

fork cradling a place

for friends to simply be

held

in all the ways

they never

were

The Treehouse Family

I want a treehouse home, with a treehouse family, up on little stilts above the rest of the world, hearts on balloon strings, getting all tangled up in each other and giggling about it. Our porch rests high above the rest of the world on and amid wispy cotton clouds, a wind banner furling multi-colored joy from the roof peak. The front door is pleasantly peeling pale pink, rustic and warm, leading into a square little haven to cradle us in honey-colored wooden floors, lush gypsy carpets, multicolored walls of neon and pastel, and mismatched flumpy pillow piles.

We are the rebels of the conventional world, hanging up faerie lights and cooking pancake dinners with cheap Aunt Jemima syrup. Guitar sounds echo off cozy bedroom corners and muffle themselves in the tie-dye bohemian tapestry. Our little grey wolf pounces and stretches with deft, soft paws, needling tiny claws on the striped couch, sashaying here and there, counter top to windowsill, a queen stalking dust motes dancing in sunshine shafts.

I want to live with a boy with thoughtful brown eyes and laugh lines–we’ll have lots of tickle wars and pushup game battles and impromptu naps with fuzzy blankets and stargazing conversations in the crow’s nest on the roof.

I want to live with a girl with green-hazel eyes and a deep gaze, with calloused hands and sure movements, with a wandering voice, quick fingers, a big warm heart, an artist’s mind, and a loyal soul.

I want to live with a boy with a hooked nose who smells like fresh laundry, who wears layers like the never ending scarves out of a magician’s hat, who loves world peace and has a penchant for pancakes, whose head turtle-bobs while playing guitar, and who makes funny faces and domino jokes.

I want to live with a girl with red hair, a cute nose, and a smattering of freckles, with a loud happy voice, bright eyes, a feisty wit, and caring arms that want to encircle the world.

I want to live with a boy with dark shaggy hair, a quirky smile, and unraveling mystery, with a wry sense of humor and an impressive disappearing act, with a sassy hip twist and an impressive determination to be the wolf’s favorite uncle, with mad frisbee bounce skills.

I want to live with a girl who I’ve come to discover only recently, familiar yet only just out of hiding, a girl with an uncontrollable laugh, a leaping growing mind, a supple body, and a wild loving heart–a girl that touches and hugs and writes and plays and praises and climbs and sings and loves and loves and loves and loves, boundlessly and more deeply every single day and hour and moment and breath. Someone beautiful. Someone sure. Someone belonging.

A treehouse family of six, hanging pictures on the walls, plunking out tunes, and frisbeeing in the nearby wildflower meadow. A treehouse family, climbing into the heights of each other’s minds and hearts, leaving the dark depths of sadness and loneliness and confusion and doubt behind, discovering new bright levels and windows and rooms, sweeping floors and cleaning out cobwebbed corners and spreading fir fragrance and golden candlelight. This treehouse family, living a treehouse life, in this treehouse home, which we built, and continue to build, together, strength flowing from hand to clasped hand, into and out of hearts, cool green silver and warm gold, strength pouring from our bones, plunging through our feet into the rough-hewn floor, making what was once inanimate and lonely a living place to call “mine.” Ours. On and on and on.

My treehouse family, in my treehouse home, in my treehouse heart. Here, nothing will die, everything will remain, to the clear blue horizon.

pic creds to Natalie Somerville and friends

Stay

The moment I have a good thing, I’m always terrified I’m going to lose it. The brighter the memory, the crazier the joy, the more golden the relationships, the more cataclysmic that fear is. I have always hated the way it encroaches on the bet of moments, trying to push its dark, stalking, heavy, fanged presence out of my life with both hands. And it’s dang hard.

Looking back on my life, I think this lurking joy thief haunts my steps so doggedly because many of my best and brightest joys–specifically people–tend to leave me. No one is ever as permanent as they feel. I have had to fight the lie that I am not enough. I just have always wished people would fight as hard for me as I’m willing to fight for them.

And now, they’re all terrified. The people who I have fallen in love with these past few weeks and who have become my family are as scared of losing their home in each other as I ever was. They don’t have control over that joy and safety as they would like. And it’s hard to trust in this new Spring love we’ve just found when so often people just don’t fight for us as they should. For me, this experience has been one of secondhand terror, the utter chaos in my head transplanted by osmosis, their roots of uncertainty travelling from their hearts into our joined hands and into my own center. I understand what it’s like to be left behind.

But for me, that bitter root finds itself unable to penetrate the hardy green-wood coating of life and hope and faithfulness these people have gifted me. The fear will not take root inside my heart, where I guard these strong fledgling bonds jealously. I will not let the cold reach them and kill their warm purple flowers, just having bloomed from tentative buds. Because for once, I HAVE A CHOICE. (how good does it feel to say it, I have a choice!! a choice a choice a choice, hear it ring!) Nothing is being taken from me. And I will not let it be so, will not deceive myself into thinking I am impotent when it comes to protecting the happiness and friendship of the people I love and love me. I finally get to fight for a ship that’s not sinking and with a crew that actually cares, if minorly despairing. The sun is merely behind a cloud, the wind is merely waiting for tomorrow.

Maybe people are just not used to others–even wonderful people–fighting not to leave them. I guess when it’s something you never do yourself, because you know it won’t work one-sided, you forget that it doesn’t mean it won’t work at all. I’ve never been able to stop trying–I have found myself incapable of being passive, and that means when I get hurt, I get hurt. But I can’t help it, and I’ve never truly regretted it about myself. I think it’s a better way to live, a fuller way to love.

But for the first time I can remember–I have a choice. It’s my turn to decide whether it’s more worth it to go or remain. I can go off into the unknown in pursuit of new adventures, or I can stay here with the known delights of people who actually care about me. I can go hunting for more amazing people to adventure with, not knowing if they’ll accept me, or keep on building deeper with a family that’s already wholeheartedly said yes to living life with me. I could go looking for more people to want me or hold fast to people who have already said they don’t want me to go. We’re not perfect. We are messy, broken, confused, hurt, sinful people, just like the rest of the world, downright human. But we know how to love. And who to love, and how to live with the certainty of being loved back. And that is an indescribably precious gift. That’s called community. That’s called friendship. That’s called family. That’s called home. That’s called love.

And in the end, I know it was never really a choice at all.

I will always choose to stay.

Luckiest

Some days I feel like the luckiest girl alive. Especially now. Man, if you told me I could be this happy going to school in the city I’ve always known, I would have thought you were crazy! If you had told me that I would become so gloriously, nonsensically happy, that I would never want to leave, and that I wouldn’t want anything to change, and that I wish I could just stay where I was just as I was with the people that were, forever… I would have thought you were insane. I didn’t know it was possible to have an experience like this. I didn’t know it was possible to fall so lightning fast and so hit-the-dirt hard as I have for these wonderful hippie, dorky, best-friends folk. I am overwhelmed, each and every day, by the love I feel for these people and the utter, wild happiness that just engulfs me like a breaker wave on such a bizarrely regular basis. I am so happy. Like jump and shout and scream for joy happy. Like I can’t even explain, or even understand, just feel my body and soul and heart and mind thrill and laugh and spin and just burst with the ecstasy of life. I cry I’m so happy sometimes. What a strange thing, to cry because you are happy! I think it is because our human bodies don’t know how to handle such an overflow of positive emotion–often only sadness is so all encompassing. So we cry as an utmost expression of joy in a world that we didn’t know could be so bright. WHAT FREAKIN’ JOY!!! Hallelujah–and I mean that–praise the Lord! He has given me what I never thought I could have, and the possibility for so much more, deeper, different love than I ever have experienced with a community of people and even with individual persons. The horizon stretches out wonderfully pale blue and blissfully empty and free, all around me, like I’m standing on the top of some tall rock spire. And sometimes it’s scary, knowing all the directions and places I could go and the ways I could get there and how easy it would be for me to mess up and fall and lose it all–but then I feel Jesus’s arms holding me steady, and my friends hands steadying my feet and shoulders, and someone’s warm grip in mine. I hear laughter and I smell cinnamon coconut pancakes and feel the reassuring warmth of family. I feel as far from alone as I’ve ever felt, and more of a certainty of permanence than I’ve ever had. And so I dream of flying, instead of falling, and of a flock to guide me home.

Tension Me

What is up with my head–can’t think straight–tension pooling in my bones and sinews. Yesterday I felt that thick plastic cable reattach between and underneath my shoulder blades, the center of my upper back hating the heavy connection. So many moments of my life, my week, my day, my moment–wild moments of flashing blinding light and sickly shadowed sludge. I am a person of extremes. I hate feeling dirty. Trapped.

Yet other times, especially recently when I’ve been with him, tickling, waiting, living for a smile or a sparkle, and her, laughing and teasing, talking deep and long, playing and listening. Spark catching warmth in my veins–peace, happiness, acceptance, care, understanding, loyalty. (Love even. Maybe. Definitely.) My world, my universe, centered in its rightful place by hands I barely knew just days ago. Revolving in a wonderfully unbalancing, solid-underfoot, spinning motion, my feet firmly planted, toes spread in the earth, but head and shoulders careening delightedly, dangerously, in a white atmosphere of ethereal cloud. My center, centrifugal force, making all else blur out with its motion. Stars, stars, stars, oh my stars. Three stars in Orion’s belt shouting for the joy of living. Being. Of warm, hearts-beating-in-chests bodies held close. Humming warm skin, soft, barely touching, connected in a family of alive. Thrill. Stability. Rolling out faster, bumbling, strong and lithe and untamed, energy, growing out of control, reaching for Orion’s shout. I hold his hand. I hold her hand. Her breath in my ear, his laugh on my cheek. All is spring. New green grass and gold dandelion fire, verdant honeysuckle nectar, lavender syrup, river water, starlight whiskey.

I know the dark clouds burgeon, swell, brumble. Swirling outside my sphere, I can see them. An invisible boundary, firm, transparent and stronger for it, holds them back. Waiting for me to voluntarily breach the membrane, a sacrifice to the world–or a warrior to sacrifice it?–to offer up my heart.

They hold my hands. I grip back tighter. Tendons living copper wires, cool starlight, juicy green of dandelion stems.

And I know–we won’t ever let me go.

Whim

I feel like I am being thrown, spinning, at the mercy of some playful, surging force that tosses me up above dark clouds into brilliant, spearing light–and then lets me fall, plummeting, hard and heavy, through darkness and mist, wondering where all the light has gone and desperately dreaming of how I can fly back up, even as I fall, with a leaden, sinking feeling.

I grasp hard to memories, fighting off pangs of loss and black fear even as I experience some of the most beautiful sights and warmest moments and purest joys of my life.  I know that I will lose them, even as they come to me and pieces of them stay and promise to return, and this tears me to pieces.  I hate goodbyes.  I hate searchings.  I hate letting go.  Somehow I manage to push this darkness away in these hours of sun-shafted wonder, yet I am aware of the struggle.

The grey road back to the city feels like the walk into the gladiator ring–inevitable, exhausting, flat, stony.  In a way, almost without feeling at all, just a hardness in my body and my chest and my head and a savage bite in my eyes.  The city closes about me like a cage, wrapping my world in slatted steel.  I close my eyes to it all, holding onto the last vestiges of green tree and stormy, windswept sky.  The van is quiet.  The trailer rattling in the back makes it sound like we’re in a train.  I wonder if the others feel like I do.

And now, in this utter free fall, indulging my despondent self with sleep and a warm red blanket and soft acoustics, I can grasp the essence of the past hours of adventure, the two days that seemed much longer than so, in the most beautiful way possible.  It’s a funny thing, I can never grasp the essence until something has passed, and still I cannot put it into words–it is always a feeling warm and glowing somewhere deep inside my darkness, and I hold onto it like it’s my life I’m keeping lit.  This time it’s like a wooden floor, and feathers on dreamcatchers blowing in the wind, the smell of loose dirt and pine needles and wood, laughter, peppermint tea, the wind on my face, and a warm touch on my arm.  Even that’s not quite right, but it’s the closest I can explain it.  It’s an essence, a spirit, a memory in a golden, transparent bubble. Something you let fill you and try to keep there by hoping with all your hope that it stays… not something graspable with flesh and bone.

In my playful moments, I call this ‘adventure withdrawal,’ although it really isn’t something that lighthearted at all.  In the grand scheme of things, I guess it’s ‘no big deal’… but for me, it’s something between withdrawal and depression and an awakening and looking through a window to a world full of color from within a grey, bare, dusty house.  Sometimes it lasts a day or two, and others a week or more.  It depends on the length of the adventure, and the intensity of it’s grip on me.  But even two days can be a heck of a lot more powerful than you’d think.  I hate this stage of the experience–coming down from the mountaintop to realize that world has stayed the same since you’ve been gone, although everything looks weirdly different, and you have to return to it–yet, that’s still what it is, part of the experience.  As much as I loathe the coming home from my world of sparkling moments and whimsical blue daydreams, I don’t know if these adventures (for that’s what they are, whatever they entail) would be the same without the pits.  I don’t know if I would so sharply realize who I was and who I am and who I am becoming.  I don’t know if I’d discover so bitingly what makes me happy and what doesn’t, how my life needs to change and what needs to remain.  I don’t know if I’d learn so much about people, both in general and individually, if I didn’t see them when the rightness and personality inside is shining out through every pore and when the oppressive buildings of the city somehow bring out something unattractive and darker and equally true.  I don’t know if I’d make these glorious days so much a part of my identity, if I’d hold them as close, if I’d treasure them up in my heart and hide them from skeptical eyes.  I don’t know if I’d feel so alone, yet so found by others.  I know that I am made up of so many other things, and some more important than this, but in some ways, these essences make up me.  And I have never seen this more clearly than now, in the valley, looking up at the mountain I just climbed.  I may not like the valley, but it sure does make the beauty of the heights stand out clear and sharp against the sky.

Every time it is a bit different.  Today, I feel the sea–the salt, the wind, the air, the spray, the expanse, the colors, the sand, the shells, the energy, the storms, the foam–becoming a part of me in a way that it never has.  Today, I don’t want to turn my heater on, because I know how much fossil fuel went into making that electricity.  Today, I slept with my anklet of shells held close.  Today, I think fondly on the ways I’ve been embraced and loved by people who barely know me.  Today, I think of the ways I’m falling in love with them, despite our sins and flaws.  Today, I think of how I followed my heart instead of my head, said things and did things and reached out and was terribly transparent in ways that I never would have dreamed many months ago.  Today, I think of how I don’t know if what I did was right, but I think I can know that it was good.  Today, I think of how I messed up and how I might of, and how I can do things differently, or maybe I won’t, and how the consequences are hearteningly small either way.  Today, I think of how I love to create, and how easy and wonderful it is to create, and how everyone has this inner child that loves to see and touch and make and experience the world, no matter how much they hide it.  Today, I think of how much of creativity and friendships and community is openness and acceptance.  Today, I think of how sleep is such an intimate, revealing, trustful, growing thing, almost like eating communally but more so, and how much I love sleeping in a room full of people.  Today, I think of how if one person reaches out in a touch, breaks down that transparent barrier, says lets be true friends who aren’t afraid to be present, then the other person usually readily does the same, and is glad and grateful you asked. Today, I think of how darkness breaks down the physical and emotional barriers we put up around each other, how bumbling around in the night on a beach with blindfolds experiencing something totally new and different and bizarre and strange and wonderful makes people giggle and grin and speak up and pull and push and hug and lean on and discover again a bursting wonder for the world and be silly and vocal and not put too much importance on themselves or anything else and laugh and laugh and laugh.  Today, I think of how if you ask someone to share a piece of their soul with you, they often will.  Today,  I think of how there is always such a glorious tangle of multicolored threads inside someone’s mind, so much more value and activity than what meets the surface; how if you ask what’s going on in there, they’ll open a window.  Today, I think of how much meaning and value there is in a hug, and much more in many of them. Today, I think of how the whole natural world is much more alive in unseen, almost spiritual ways than most people ever take the time to experience or dare to think, and how it is so easy to forget that the elements themselves are not gods, but have such deep essences because they are pieces of the God that created them.  Today, I think of how freeing it is to be done with second guessing.  Today, I remember flow and freedom and hope alive and ocean blue and grasshopper. Today, I remember what they all said out on that beach in the night and I just wanted to feel goosebumps all up and down my arms with the thrill and the wonder and almost wanted to cry, my mouth often open in a startled breath of wonder.  Today, I remember how I will never forget.  Today, I remember sea blue and fine tan sand and a dead black swan and the sound the feathers made as we pulled them out, wincing and apologetic.  Today, I remember what it feels like to find your people, your kin, to feel like you have found another piece of your family.  Today, I remember when my eyes looked out over the green Otago hills and my mind said ‘home.’  Today, I remember walking through the mud in my bare feet and digging up cockles and laughing as the boys tried to sink their way deeper and hanging around the kitchen and stealing the shells as they came steaming out of the pot.  Today, I remember a long row of dreamcatchers blowing in the wind.  Today, I remember the sadness I felt deep in my chest when I had to paint my coral white.  Today, I remember his mischievous smile and warm brown eyes.  Today, I remember how laughably expressive her face was when we played mafia.  Today, I remember how kind and real her words were, how I could see the depth in her face.  Today, I remember the wonderfully peculiar blue of his eyes, light and almost icy but with a hint of ocean green–I wanted to tell him that his eyes looked like the sea and knew he’d like that.  Today, I remember what he looked like asleep–it was like seeing someone as they really are.  Today, I remember how I was forgiven for something I didn’t even know was wrong, or not. Today, I remember how one small heater can give so many warmth.  Today, I remember how the strumming of one guitar can make a room light up.  Today, I remember how one hand on a shoulder and the sound of many feet in the darkness can incite such a feeling of deep, deep trust.  Today, I remember we don’t need light to see.  Today, I remember what it feels like to be surrounded by people who are all pieces of yourself.  Today, I remember what it feels like to belong.

And today, as I struggle with the dead reality of being not in that place, not soaking in that essence and just being, today as I grapple with being not, I remember what I am, what the world is, what people are, what I have never really lost, and what I will soon be again.

In Love

I know what it is to fall in love.

I have been in love, although I have never been romantically in love. Some may say this is an oxymoron. Not I.

I know what it is to love the entirety of someone, to be in danger of adoring their flaws as well as their strengths.  I know what it is to latch onto every little laugh, the way she says her sentences backwards, or how her hair gets frozen in these brittle spiral ringlets because she uses too much hairspray.  I know what it is to recognize the smell of her clothes, and to use that skill to decipher which identical jacket is hers and which is mine.

I know what it is to desire to share the rest of your life with someone, and for that desire to be reciprocated.

I have felt all the intensity of love.  I have known what it is like to physically shake and shiver when having a deep conversation that cuts past all those boundary fences I have set up for myself and navigate around in polite conversation, cutting to the bone and casting off the moorings, daring to be vulnerable because I hope with a fair certainty that I will be accepted anyway.  I know what it is like to laugh myself silly until I’m crying for no good reason, often over something utterly ridiculous like bouncing cat videos we found on the internet page sporting a button that says ‘take me to a useless website.’  I know what it’s like to trust someone with my life, even when I’m scared silly, and then hold the other end of the rope while she does the same.  I know what it’s like to remember every tiny detail about her life that she’s ever told me–like the name of her dad’s best friend who lives all the way across the country and made a million frozen meals when her siblings were born.  I know what it’s like to share some the most sacred moments of my life with someone and to hold them like a secret, close to my chest, shining brightly somewhere deep inside my heart.  I know what it’s like to have some of the best adventures of your life with someone, to see my world expand along with hers.  I know what it’s like to have sunshiny afternoons filled with such delirious happiness that I can’t imagine a greater joy.  I know what it’s like to look at someone and see the other half of yourself, same but different.  I know what it’s like to look at her as she stands there in the bare-bulb half light, caught in a mischievous, sassy moment, and think, wow, she’s just so dang beautiful.

I know what it is to be betrayed.

I know what it is to watch another person fall out of love with me, and deny it to myself the entire time.  I know what it is to trust someone, even as she goes behind my back, even as her soul grows shadows and she starts keeping secrets hidden there.  I know what it’s like to have someone embark on the trip we planned together since we were fourteen–without me.  I know what it’s like to not say anything, to keep my mouth shut as the stab in my heart just keeps on getting deeper and deeper, bleeding out on the inside, hemorrhaging.  I know what it’s like to realize that I’ve been replaced.  I know what it’s like when the truth slaps me in the chest, words I’d never thought I’d read emptying my world of all comfort and leaving me numb and dazed, staggering where I stand.  I know what it’s like not to feel, because I can’t believe my world is crumbling about my ears.   I know what it’s like to hear the definition of the word ‘us’ change–it used to mean ‘you and me’ and now it means ‘you and him.’  I know what it’s like to realize that she decided that it was time for her world to leave mine–that her world got bigger as mine stayed the same and she didn’t share it with me.  I know what it is to not hear about her first real road trip experience, her first precarious college explorations.  I know what it’s like to have those things hidden from me, to realize that I am no longer trusted with the shallowest and deepest parts of her heart, although there seems to be handfuls of others that are.  I know what it is to only know what’s going on in her life through Instagram and Facebook and hate what I see.  I know what it’s like to cry and beg and pray and feel like I’m going utterly crazy and not be able to tell her.  I know what it’s like to sit down and talk to her in that coffee shop where all the hard conversations seem to happen, unburden myself, and see the tears in her eyes, and realize that she has nothing to say, nothing to contradict.  I know what it’s like to feel an irreplaceable hole fall out inside me, and for it to take months to get used to its presence.  I know what it’s like to truly grieve for the first time in my life, to feel like my physical body is going to implode, to feel a burning inside my chest, to want to scream or break something or tear my hair out to alleviate this awful, awful tension. I know what it is to walk around and have everything remind me of her–those shoes, that laugh, her hair, that song, that tone, that way of saying things. I know what it’s like to feel that others sympathize with me for a while and always listen to my chest-heaving ramblings but after a few conversations feel at a loss and therefore cope by adopting the reasoning that I really should have gotten over this by now.

I know what it is to lose one of the brightest lights in your life.

So you see, I know what it is to fall in love.  I know almost the entire range of what love means in this broken world.  I know what it is to be in love, and remain in love when you’re the only one left.  It’s an awful, terrible thing.  It is a thing that everyone understands, yet cannot fully understand in each other.  It makes love a very, very lonely thing sometimes, darkness shot through with bewildering, blinding fragments of swirling memory days.

And yet, there’s this thing… this thing I call desperate hope.  This thing that I can’t seem to get rid of, even if I wanted to. I have discovered that I cannot fall out of love.  Even when there have been brief moments where I have wanted to, I have found that I simply cannot.  I am glad for this–it is heroic, even when it is hard.  Although it be trying, it never be ugly. I have found a capacity to love in myself that I didn’t even know existed.  This cannot all come from me–there is a He who gives me help.  And with Him, I have found that I can bear existing in a one-way relationship, because I have this gray, flat, misty thing that is indeed hope, although it doesn’t come with all these bubbly, anticipatory feelings that it once did. It is a solid, grim, steadfast thing, like a horse gone through battle, slogging away through swampy sludge.  It keeps going, and there is a surging strength in its stride.  It isn’t pretty, but it is there, nonetheless.  Home is somewhere through that mist, it has to believe it.  Otherwise, what’s the point of keeping on?  This hope says pray.  This hope says give.  This hope says be who you’ve always been, even when it’s just you that remains the same.  This hope says be truth, be light, be love.  And if you wait long enough, eventually your love will wake up, look around at the mud around their feet, see the fake shadow of who they’ve been trying to be, and turn around and come running back, pell-mell.  Running home, because that’s what I’ve always been.

I have been in love.  I am still in love.  And in love I forever will be.

Not the One

Hello there… um, hi.  Is this Someone To Love Me?  Yes?  Whew, okay good.  Thought maybe I had the wrong number. Happens a lot these days.

I know you say you’re someone to love me,  but I don’t believe you, you see.  I’ve been looking for a very long time, or what feels like a very long time.  And I’ve found people, or thought I did, but they weren’t the right ones.  They said they were, but they just weren’t.  I can’t take that again.  So this has to be real, you know?

What’s that?  ‘Mm-hmm’?  Mm-hmm’s not gonna cut it, pal.  Try harder or get lost.

Just kidding, don’t get lost.  Well–not exactly.  Only get lost if you’re meant to get lost.  Wait, that doesn’t make any sense.  Whatever, just listen, okay?

I need someone who will love me all the time.  Someone who loves everything about me… and even the nasty stuff, they can take it, they can love me with it.  I need someone who knows everything about me, and I know everything about them.  I know exactly what they think of me.  They don’t keep secrets from me, or lie by omission, or hide things from me.  They don’t tell me they love me, and mean it somehow, and make me believe it, and then go do things with someone else who’s their real best friend.  They don’t keep secrets.  They don’t swap me out for someone else, and then keep me in a drawer like a pebble, take me out and look at me whenever they feel like it, tell me I have pretty colors, make me feel special for a moment, and then put me back in the dark again.  That’s not fair.  That’s just not flippin’ fair.  Don’t be that guy.

You would never do that, you say?  Really?  Prove it.  Put me first.  Be there for me when I need to talk.  Care about the stupid little things about my day.  Want to be with me every minute of every hour of every day, even when you’re not with me.  Can you do that?  I’ll do it for you.

Silence on the other end of the line.  Just fantastic.  You’re flunking pretty spectacularly.  I guess I thought you would, I just hoped you wouldn’t.

need someone, you see.  I’m feeling pretty desperate at the moment.  I’m missing something that makes me, me–and it’s another person.  Weird, I know.  I don’t really get it myself.  And I’m terribly afraid that person doesn’t actually exist, and I’ll just have to be this way forever.  Once I really love someone, I love them forever, no matter what.  So right now, I’m just left with a bunch of faded love, empty arms, and an aching heart.  I’ve cried out, ‘not fair,’ but there’s nobody to listen. There’s not many people that love like I do in this world.  I’m the oddball, I know.  But I can’t stop being this way.  Believe me, I’ve tried.  But love is all I know and all I believe in, and that is that.

Mumbling mumbling, cliche, mumbling.  I hear you.  That’s all you candidates do these days, is mumble.  My love life is starting to feel like this year’s national election–pointless.

What?  Yeah, you’re sorry.  I’m sick of sorry.  ‘You’re the one’?  Nah, you’re not the one.  I’ll know the one when I see them.  At least I think… even if they exist… or maybe I’m just not lovable in that way… or maybe I’m just too picky… or maybe, maybe–oh whatever.  Um, yeah.  So I’m just going to hang up now… yeah, bye.

*Click*

Sigh.