I hate feelings. I have said before that I experience them like a crash test dummy; ignoring them until I'm drowning and broken, without a choice. Four years ago, during the holiday season, I was given therapy homework to write about what I have for a really good coping mechanism, and one that I fail at miserably.
Hence the subject of this post. This one tips the scale both ways, depending on the day.
It has taken me 19 years, 2 months, and a day, to say out loud the reason why my brain is wired to treat my son the way that I do.
I've been getting run over by the freight train of self realization lately, and I think it has a lot to do with the amount of processing that I have had to do. I'm in a new place, both figuratively and literally, where I am completely unable to reach for the old familiar attempts at stuffing the proverbial "it" down.
My son.
Until the day that he was born, his name was going to be Connor. At the time of my pregnancy, the Laci Peterson case was all you could see on the television.
It's not a secret that I've been a single mom for 21 years. The story behind it, is kept for those who are interested in knowing. The story behind that story, is close to the chest. Like, took me 15 years to say out loud. I tell it a little more freely now that my children know, but it's still not ever going to be public information.
Back to the task at hand - I didn't take my meds today, so bare with me, squirrel brain is real, and it's even worse when you have been finally embossed with the correct label and you forget to take the substances preventing you from procrastinating for another 19 years.
I named my son after me. Kind of. Until I was 22, my nickname was Jessie to anyone who knew me. For ten years after he was born, I stopped using it, and while I don't know why, it feels good to use it again. The entire time I was pregnant with him, my favorite movie was Hanging Up, with Meg Ryan and Walter Matthau. Meg Ryan's character, is me. Watch it. You will understand.
These scenes makes me feel so much.
My least favorite memory, turned reoccurring nightmare:
My favorite name for a boy was always Jesse, so I said to myself, "Fuck it. Men do it all the time, and under these circumstances, who the hell is around to stop me?"He was born on his due date. I almost died giving birth to him while everyone who came to "coach" was worried about the baby and paying attention to him, the doctor was doing everything she could to keep me alive, and nobody cared to check on me. For three days, it was just me and him together in the room at the hospital. Reighan was so excited to be a sister.I had to muster up the energy to drive to Bangor to get his lay-away at Walmart that I had started for him. According to the doctor, I was supposed to have two more weeks. I was signing forms and the attendant at the desk had gone back to get the box. I felt the double stroller jostling around but I just figured it was my toddler being herself, bebopping away to the overhead music. She was very speech delayed, most everything that came out of her cherub-like mouth didn't make any sense to anyone but her. I can still hear her say, clear as day and with as much conviction a tiny big sister can muster, "THAT'S MINE."I turned around, to find an empty rear stroller seat. A woman was walking out of the service desk area with my baby!!!! After chasing her through the store and trying to navigate a cumbersome double stroller through early 2000's Walmart, I finally caught up to her, ripped him out of her arms while she screamed like a banshee that I was taking her baby. Her boyfriend had been using the bathroom and left her outside waiting for him. She was out on a day pass from Acadia Hospital - for those who don't know, it's a mental health facility in Maine.
"Allow yourself to grieve; you have to if you're going to keep your sanity." Something that his teacher told me when I noticed a sudden personality change in forth grade. I was so quick to jump to the defensive with that statement.
"First of all, I was never sane to begin with. I'm fine. I've got this".
Turns out, it the hardest truth I had to swallow. I had it like I was wrestling a greased piglet.