New Year's, Grieving, and Moving Forward

New Year’s was really tough for me. My dad loved New Year’s. He loved Christmas, too. He loved getting an enormous tree, he loved putting up lights and decorations, he loved the angel that went on top of the tree. But New Year’s was different. There was no holiday stress with New Year’s. We’d made it through, and we had a clean slate coming up, and it was time to celebrate. We had a fancy dinner. My mom got out the good place-mats, and the good plates, and the good glasses. She made black eyes peas. My parents had lobster (which me and my brother hated), and we had something different. My dad always made us eat black eyes peas. My dad always had us recite our resolutions. New Year’s was fun. It’s honestly the only holiday that my family ever celebrated where I don’t remember conflict or yelling.

It’s been difficult since my dad died. Mourning someone who was abusive is hard. Grief is already complicated enough as it is, and I’ve had days where I haven’t known how to function. Because my father had been so sick for so long, not many people have checked in on me. Because he was abusive, people don’t seem to expect me to mourn or be sad. I don’t post a lot of personal stories on Facebook because it’s not a safe place for me. And it tends to be actively detrimental for my mental health. (Although it is kinda funny to watch a bunch of “woke” “friends” blather on about the importance of checking in on people who are suffering. They certainly haven’t checked in on me. But it also hurts. ) Plus, there’s a pandemic. Everyone is more isolated than usual. And doing their best to get through.

But it’s still been hard. And I want to say that. I want to say that these past six months haven’t been easy. I want to say that I miss my dad. That my grief is complicated. That I have a lot of conflicting emotions all existing at the same time. And that all of that is okay.

I’ve been learning a lot, too, and one of the things I’m learning to is take up space. That it’s okay to take up space. To exist. That I have, in fact, a right to exist. That even though I’ve been told my whole life that I don’t really deserve to be here, I do. I deserve to be here just by virtue of being here.

It’s a heady concept.

So I’m writing today to take up space. To be here. To say something I want to say. To be honest. To find my voice. To practice my voice. Because grieving has been hard. Being isolated has been hard. And learning and growing and changing has been hard.

Just so you know.

And Soon You'll Turn 43

No one tells you how to be middle aged. It just happens one day. You wake up and realize that you’ve lived half of your life. For most of your life, your life was ahead of you—a mystery, an unknown variable. You could be anything, do anything. You had so much time left, you couldn’t even imagine living past 30.

And then you did. And you lived further. And some of your friends died. A shocking number of your friends had cancer. You tried to reach out more, and you became a better friend, and you let go of the people that weren’t very good friends to you. And you thought about cancer so much that becoming diagnosed with cancer became one of your biggest fears. And your parents got older, and ill (with cancer), and your friends’ parents got older, and some became ill, and some died, and you felt mortality coiling around you and squeezing. You’re not ready for your parents to die. You’re not ready for your friends’ parents to die. You’re not ready for your friends to die. And there is nothing you can do to stop the inevitable tides.

You develop a prevailing awareness of death.

And you always thought you had time to have kids, and then you found yourself in a fertility clinic listening to a specialist, one of the best in the state, tell you that it was too late. You had gone into early menopause, and the only option was a donor egg, IVF, and hormones that would cost over $30k for an 11% chance of carrying to term. And you couldn’t stop weeping for the loss of something you never had. You wept at your friends’ children, and you wept at Shazam! (of all things), and you wept at old home movies, and you wept to your mother and your husband, who told you that it was okay, that you weren’t defective. But you still aren’t sure you believe them.

Your body continues to betray you, and although you knew it was going to happen, although you knew that things would start to hurt and creak and crack and pop and stiffen, you didn’t expect it to be your left knee. Or the ball of your right foot. Or that place beneath your left shoulder that becomes so knotted that when you hold things over your head, you hold them at an angle.

You expected to have a mid-life crisis where you would buy a ridiculous car or go on an expensive trip or at least get a completely different sort of haircut, and instead you question if you’ve done enough, if you’ve done it well, if you’ve done the things that you wanted. You question how much time you have left to do all the things you still want to do, and realize that you’re going to have to choose between them. You’ve reached a strange place where the opinions of other people matter less, but your aren’t sure what you think of yourself and your life and how your values have changed and how your goals have changed. You think things like if you adopt, is that a mid-life crisis? If you don’t adopt, is that a mid-life crisis? And since adoption starts at about $30k anyway, and you’re already in the hole about $130k for student loans, and you have a mortgage, then you think that maybe mid-life is about realizing that not only can you not take anything with you when you die, but how much you’ll actually owe instead.

And on second thought, maybe it’s a really good thing you didn’t have a mid-life crisis where you bought an expensive car or went on an exotic vacation because you couldn’t afford any more debt anyway. Retirement isn’t going to save up for itself.

No one prepares you for mid-life. No one is interested in mid-life accomplishments. Everyone is focused on the 30 under 30, or the 40 under 40, but no one writes about the 45 at 45, or the 50 in their 50s, the 60 in their 60s, or the 70 in their 70s. And no one cares if you’re 80 or 90 or 100, but if you’ve managed to live the longest, 104, or 108, or maybe even longer, then you get a feel-good news story about how you did it, and you can attribute your lucky longevity to whiskey and scrambled eggs and always owning a dog.

Sometimes, you find yourself writing in second person even though you always hated when people did that. Weirdly, it’s not so bad now.

You are surprised at what you know. You know how to argue against companies, and you know how to demand fair treatment, not just for yourself, but for the people around you. You’re very good at wrangling. You’re fairly savvy with money, and surprisingly organized, considering that once upon a time you never wrote anything down (who were you then?!). You have a strange affinity for rules and order that shocks the everliving ebejezus out of you when you find yourself complaining about jaywalkers.

You seek out seats at concerts and are delighted when bands start early. The idea of being out past midnight exhausts your soul.

You sometimes wonder if you will ever develop confidence in yourself.

You also sometimes wonder if you will ever develop a taste for anchovies. You are surprised that Skittles don’t taste as good as they used to. You marvel at some of the things you used to eat, and are not surprised that your tooth enamel isn’t better.

Your range and breadth of emotion has deepened and expanded, and you feel things now that are so complex and nuanced you cannot find adequate words to describe them. You find a picture of your old living room and you feel happy/bitter/sweet/nostalgic/yearning/loss/forgiveness/gratitude/delight and you don’t know what to call it. You feel things like that all the time now. You are surrounded by this nuanced ocean of emotional sensation and resonance. You are overwhelmed by the constant complexity of it.

You weren’t prepared to discover that old friends that you had lost touch with became addicted to drugs and are homeless.

You realize that your grandparents died 20 years ago. You have never stopped grieving their loss. At the same time, you can still feel them with you.

And you realize that everything from your childhood has changed. Your grandparents’ house. Your grandmother’s condo. The house where you grew up. The magnolia tree that your mother planted is gone. The fence that your father built is gone. And although these things are gone, you remember them, bright and vividly, like you could travel to where they were and they would still be there, exactly the same.

But you can never, ever remember to wear your reading glasses.

And you realize this is all okay. Life is more beautiful and precious and ephemeral than you ever realized. And although you already knew that life was amazing and precious and brief, you didn’t know that life was amazing and precious and brief. Only the accumulation of time has been able to teach you that in way that reaches the bone of your bones. Every moment matters more than you could ever have possibly realized before you were middle-aged. Life has a different savor. Like learning to taste the different notes in coffee. No one told you that time is transformative. You had no idea that mid-life would be a time of growth. You can feel the uncomfortable shifting of being in chrysalis, and you are delighted that you have the capacity for so much more change and potential than you ever knew.

Memory piles up thick and deep, like stacks of books. Little things remind you of other little things, and before you know it, you’re knee deep in the past. And every time, the past pulls you deeper into the present. Into this miraculous, flicker-short life. Into the sheer fantastic impossibility of existing as a being of consciousness. Becoming middle-aged is like becoming a banker, but not one who deals in currency, but one who invests in the daily miracles of being alive in this world. The miracle of breath. The miracle of grass. The miracle of rain. The miracle of motion. You have so much more than you ever thought you’d have.

And you’ve lost so much more than you ever thought you could lose.

No one told you that time is cleansing.

No one told you that mid-life was a time of incredible growth. That it’s painful and heavy and glorious and liberating and sad and adaptive and strange. But most of all, it’s learning. And accepting. And being.

You have no idea why people don’t write more about mid-life. Or make lists of accomplishments from middle-aged people. Or, perhaps more appropriately, lists of insights.

Being middle-aged is nowhere near as boring as you thought it would be.

And no one told you how grateful you would be to be here for it.

And you begin to think that, regardless of the amount of time you have left, it doesn’t really matter. Because the only time that matters is now. And now is all you have.

Now is all you ever had.