Tuesday, April 17, 2012

I’M NOT SORRY ~ A Year with Myself Prompt Module 15




I’ve spent a lifetime apologising for needing. Well, almost. I think it started around the time I was 9. Around the time I looked up and realised that Life was pretty much up to me Now. The other people, the grown-ups, well they were either preoccupied, overwhelmed, or simply stopped paying attention. At the time I kind of liked the independence and the possibilities of flying under the radar. 50 years later, well, NOT so much…

To BE honest, I’d thought this prompt NOT applicable to Me. Now, I am NOT saying I’m above this or even anywhere close to BEyond it, I’m just saying this is what I thought. At first. Even still a little bit Now. I was just fiddling about with my thoughtsandfeelings about BEing sorry, saying [or, in my case, writing] I’m sorry BEcause I really wasn’t hearing myself say it.

I have been kicking around a predicament of my Life for the past 16 months. The facts don’t need embellishing or even mentioning, BEcause they are NOT the point. The point, I have Now realised, is that I don’t think I am saying or FEELING I’m sorry BEcause, in fact, I am living from I’m sorry. Isn’t that a kick?!

It’s embarrassing and mildly frustrating to recognise something when all along you didn’t know. Like finding out you’ve been walking around with your skirt tucked into your tights. Or leaving a long voicemail at the wrong number. But there it is: Life. You have to admit, these things make it a little more comical.

Until I was 36 I didn’t know why I wet my pants or occasionally the bed or had to stop so often on car rides, even short ones, but especially longer ones. I thought I was just flawed. That though I have a pretty sharp brain on top of my neck, there were compensations, trade-offs, or simply this peculiar price for me to pay. When the stakes went up in that department, it REALLY got my attention.

No matter my shame and embarrassment or ohmygodicannotbelieveihavetosaythisoutloud  I spent 11 months spanning age 35 to 36 visiting doctors and specialists and having tests and BEing told it was all my way to get attention or, better yet, all in my head… um, hello?!

Turns out, Life has a sense of humour. A good one. But me, I wasn’t laughing. [after all, laughter was one of the surest causes for wetting my pants!!!]

When the 4th neurologist I saw listened to my little intro, only a quarter of the way into it he interrupted me to tell me I have Spina Bifida. And that just made me incredulous!!! I said to him [and by the way, he was a real sweetheart, but still…] I’M SORRY BUT BABIES HAVE SPINA BIFIDA!!!  And in case he hadn’t realised it, I was no baby!!!

His response?! Yes, you have had this all your Life. You were born with this. It’s just been hiding all this time. You could have knocked me over with a feather…

All that time, all those friends and overnights and screw-ups, the jobs I’d quit or been fired from BEcause of my uncooperative bladder, the harassment, much of it from my own berating voice in my head, the WHY of my son’s birth by Caesarean, despite my well-practised preparedness for something far different…

It was one of those moments I will never forget but really cannot wrap in words that would make sense to anyone else.

There were points along the Journey where this might’ve been discovered, sooner, but as I said above, I was pretty much flying under the radar and solo since my last few months of BEing 9.

I can still, nearly 23 years into KNOWING WHY, wake out of a sound sleep and BE Sorry for needing to have someone take me and my situation to heart, seriously. Someone to advocate for me so I didn’t have to live all those years in shame and SORRY for needing… something… after all, I was BORN this way, I didn’t DO anything to make it what it was.

Now, by the age of 36, one of the “good things” was that I was in my own care. I was the one responsible for ME, and my needs. Things have been well taken care of since that diagnosis, and today I am living a Life that is, still, pretty much up to me and under anyone else’s radar. And when I feel an I’m Sorry bubble to my surface Now it isn’t generally an outward thing. It’s an acknowledgement and a sincere one to myself, for the secrets, lies, and shame that kept me hiding my problems.

So much of my “disability” is invisible. It is heartbreak and guilt and sudden realisations far too long after the fact to BE able to DO anything to make amends. And it is anger that runs so deep and dark that it’s impossible for me to stop it. I’m NOT sorry, and I AM sorry.

The sum total of my relationship history is that Now I live alone, with my dear Golden, Gracie Mae. I love my Life, don’t misunderstand that for one blink of a second, but I see Now that it might NOT have been the worst thing in the World for me to have spoken up, or even to have got LOUD and DEMAND the grown-ups to pay attention, when I was still young and vibrant enough to “BE a kid” rather than BEing grown-up myself trying to apologise for BEing “imperfect.”

I’m NOT sorry that I need. Whatever it is that I need. But I still feel ashamed about it. It’s so deeply ingrained Now that I have pretty much stopped thinking anyone else needs to BE concerned with my needing. Almost daily I have to talk myself in off some ledge or another…

Still, I AM NOT so sorry…


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow, thank you for sharing so vulnerably, Currie. You had me at your first line. I, also, have spent a lifetime apologising for needing. Or, perhaps more specifically, wanting. Bless you, and your courageous heart!

paulaexuk said...

Wow indeed is the word. Since my husband passed I have learned that everything is very fragile and that we should really cherish every day as it comes, live it to the fullest we can, be ourselves in every way we can. I am guessing that is your grandson on your knee, now you have an excuse like me to be a kid again :-).

Enjoy the much needed rain we are having
Paula in the Acreage