And in the Middle of the Chaos, a Love Story [pt I]

I started work again on Monday. And just like that, it feels like I never left. It was a good week, an uneventful week. Even with that being so, my feet are swollen and sore, my knees are killing me from being on my feet all day. I’m exhausted, I’m breaking out, and I’m realizing how difficult it is to take care of yourself when you are a teacher. Most of all though, I hate what it’s done to my relationships.

I’m the kind of person that will do what it takes to do my job well. Unfortunately, teaching is the kind of job with an infinite to-do list. If you’re like me, and you have to be perfect, there will be an unending list of demands to keep you busy and distant from everyone in your life but your students.

My initial concept for this blog post was a detailed assessment of the aspects of being a teacher that makes this the reality. But I quickly got bored. As shocking as the details are (or should be) to everyone else, they are the mundane reality of my day to day. Instead, I ended up daydreaming about my husband.

You see, on Sunday before I went back to work, my husband admitted to me he had anxiety over me going back to work. He was anxious because he felt like he was losing me. Since I would be going back to work. And he had gotten used to having me around.

I have to admit, this crushed me. And it’s all my fault. I started reflecting on my and my husbands relationship, and really realizing how much my mental health and my job has had an impact on it.

I realized how much I had put my husband through.

I realized how badly I needed to make changes, so my work life could no longer suck the life force out of my physical, mental, and relational health.

So on that note, I will be following up tomorrow with a poetic narration of my own reflections in this vein that ended up in a love story of epic proportions.

And as it goes for everything else, I’m kind of starting to lean into this theme of freeing myself from the mold of how I thought my life should go. So who knows…

2019, The Triumphant Year

It’s New Years Eve and, like many, I’ve been doing a lot of reflection. Looking back, I cycled through many adjectives before I could find the right one to apply to 2019. I landed on triumphant. When looking at the year as a whole, 2019 was not exactly good. There were important moments of joy, but there were just as many important moments of heartache, and even near tragedy. I worked hard this year; at work, for grad school, on myself. I not only went through changes, I went through complete transformations. All in all though, 2019 was a triumph for me. Here, I have included a brief reflection on the events of this year that made it so damn triumphant.

The Joy

On January 23, 2019, my sister’s divorce was finalized. This may seem like a weird event to include in the “joy” category, but believe me, it was the right choice. Sometimes marriages need to end. My sister’s marriage was one of them. And when it did, I got my sister back in a big way. This event also started out our theme for 2019 with a bang. This year, my sister and I decided, the theme would be “Taking out the Trash.” Basically, that’s our asshole way of goal setting. The goal being that we would spend 2019 ridding our lives of anything toxic that no longer served us. And we totally did. Toxic relationships, toxic thoughts, toxic habits; we systematically deleted as many as we could from our lives throughout the course of the year. And believe me when I tell you, I felt a sense of increased joy and freedom with each deletion. 

On the other side of the coin, I opened myself up to new kinds of connections this year. I brought new people into my life. And, in 2019, I built connections with these new people by being genuinely myself. As someone with a lifetime of low self esteem under my belt, I attracted a lot of people based on how I could serve them. I made many friends and relationships over the years by being a people-pleaser. I became a pro at morphing myself into exactly who each individual wanted me to be (a pattern which widely led to our theme this year, see above). In 2019, I quit doing that. I worked on building my confidence. I committed myself to being honest, to allowing myself to take up space. And, as a result, both the old relationships I kept, and the new relationships I made, are stronger, more loving, and more supportive than I’ve ever experienced. 

These people are what brought me joy in 2019. I traveled with them, I traveled to see them. I had silly drunk dance parties with them. Explored new outlets for creativity and worked on fun projects with them. Stayed up all night talking to them. Sang Celine Dion with them. Watched every single movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in order with them. Taught them. Learned from them. Laughed with them. Cried with them. Leaned on them for support. So, to all the people who helped make 2019 a triumph for me, thank you. Thank you so much. 

The Tragedy

Whereas some of the highs I had in 2019 were the highest highs of my life, I also experienced the lowest lows. The first half of the calendar year was the last half of my 2018/19 school year as a teacher. That was a really difficult school year. I had a high population of students with childhood trauma, a high rate of suicide attempts among my 8th graders, rampant issues with homophobic bullying in my school (that my school district handled inappropriately regardless of how hard I fought for change). By the end of it, I was questioning whether or not I still wanted to be a teacher. Those questions immediately sent me into an identity crisis, as teaching is all I ever planned on doing, and all I ever felt I was good at. The school year ended with me witnessing an episode of gender-based violence in my classroom that triggered my trauma.

When summer rolled around, I really should’ve taken a break. Taken care of myself. But another stressor I’ve been struggling with is money. So, I taught summer school and I enrolled full time in grad school for the winter, spring, and summer semesters. Overall in my life, I’ve used work and school as a coping mechanism to avoid thinking about my inner turmoil. If I’m busy, I’m not thinking, so I have to stay busy. In 2019, this habit almost broke me.

Then the 2019/2020 school year unfortunately started with more triggers. On September 9, 2019, a student from our school was kidnapped by a member of the community. She was held and raped inside my school building which was open after hours for a community event. The man was caught and is being appropriately sentenced. But this event made my place of employment a rape trauma trigger that made going to work almost impossible. 

When October rolled around, I was primed for a breakdown. October is always already a difficult month for me. I was raped at a Halloween party in college. Therefore, as much as I love it, the Halloween season is an incredibly salient trigger for me. All of the sights, sounds, and smells of Halloween spark flashbacks that plague me all month long. Combine that with the triggers I had already experienced this year, and I walked into October on a razor-thin edge. Then, on October 19, 2019 I was volunteering at a Halloween event in Detroit. I basically volunteered to pick up litter and empty cups off the tables so I could get free entry. I was in my own world, cleaning up the balcony of a ballroom at the Masonic Temple while a goddess of burlesque performed down below, when a drunk man I had never seen before grabbed me. My official insignia as event staff didn’t protect me from being dragged into a shadowy corner as anonymous drunk asshole attempted to stick his tongue down my throat. 

I fought him off.

I went and told my supervisor.

Security found him and, no questions asked, kicked him out immediately.

I thought I was fine.

10 days later I almost killed myself.

If you’ve been reading my blog, you know the rest. 

The Future

Both the joys and tragedies of this year taught me a lot. They actually led to some of the most important transformations I’ve ever been through. Every single thing that happened in 2019 helped me understand myself, my needs, and my mental illnesses much better. They convinced me to seek help and make the changes that I desperately needed to make. The therapy I engaged in was the best choice I’ve ever made for myself, and I am looking at starting a new year, and a new decade, in the best emotional, mental, and relational space I’ve ever been in. 

And, for 2020, my sister and I have officially decided on our new theme: I Come to Slay. In other words, 2020 will be a year of continued deference to my best self, my strongest needs, and my most important desires. I will take up space. I will be assertive. I will love myself as much as I love others. I will try my best to make positive changes in the world. 

I’m ready for you, 2020. Let’s do this. 

While writing the first draft of this post, I got very overwhelmed by the magnitude of what has happened in the world in 2019. From the most recent Prime Minister election in Great Britain, to India’s anti-muslim actions in Kashmir. From the climate crisis, to the continued indigenous rights violations and trans-violence happening world-wide. I look around and the world is a scary place. The state of affairs in the wider world is causing a great deal of trauma among many populations and gives me anxiety almost every day. That being said, I felt as though ruminating on all of these things I can’t control isn’t exactly the type of healthy reflection my therapist was talking about. So, if you are interested in educating yourself more about what’s going on/want to learn more about how to help, I’ve provided a list of links below: 

India/Kashmir

Climate crisis

The bigot Great Britain just voted into its top job

Trans Rights

Indigenous Ally Toolkit 

SOME of the many important issues impacting indigenous populations

One very small piece of mass incarceration

Literally every voice in this publication is worth learning from

Force of Nature

Look into my eyes.

Is there fire there? Do you see how the spark has returned?

I let my spark go out. It got put out.

Years ago.

When the kindling that once resided at my core was dampened by the dark void that swallowed it as I looked deeply into my own eyes reflected in a mirror over a dirty bathroom sink during one of the worst moments of my life.

But it’s back, I can feel it.

It started at the base of my pelvis. And caught. Traveling up my spinal column, flooding my senses with a sense of assuredness. Gusto. Moxie.

And others can see it too.

“You have that spark in your eye.”
“I love when you give me that fiery stare.”

“You look beautiful, full of energy.”

Look into my eyes.

Is there fire there?

Strength

A redwood.

Tall.

Steady.

Thousands of years old.

With stabilizing roots stretching down, extending their plump, life-gathering tendrils towards the molten core of

Me.

You.

Everything.

A volcano.

Fierce.

Willful.

The force of which cannot be stopped. Cannot be tempered by any man.

It bursts forth with the power of an exploding star.

And then, as its grit settles softly into the nooks and crannies of existence, it whispers:

“You are strong.”

Darkness

I was halfway through writing a post about why the capitalist consumerism of Christmas bums me out when I stopped mid-sentence and burst out laughing. Oh my god I thought, I am so morbid.

I immediately thought about a conversation I recently had with my sister. 

I am a writer. I have been a writer since I started crafting my own letters and narrating my own stories to picture books in kindergarten. That being said, I’ve never shared my writing with anyone. I have a bachelor’s in history. I’ve written history. I’m getting a masters in curriculum and instruction; I’ve written curriculum. But my personal writing, the contents of my brain, and my heart, and my soul; I’ve never shared that.

And now I am. With this blog. This is my first taste of uncensored sharing of the deepest part of my brain, and my heart, and my soul. And it scares me. And I know people are reading it. Not that many people, but still, people. But I am getting zero feedback. Not negative, not positive, just none.

Well, that’s not completely fair, nor true I guess. There have been a few who have reached out and thanked me, told me they’re proud of me, and told me to keep it up. I appreciate that feedback so much! Knowing I have support at all has been key to keeping me going.

But I’ve not gotten any specific feedback. No critiques, no comments about how certain things made people feel, or how they may have been changed because of what they read, or how they connected to something I said. And that makes me hella anxious.

I don’t know how people are actually reacting to my writing.

When I voiced my concerns to my sister, her answer was so simple I had to mull it over for a few days before I was able to accept it as true. Basically, she said there is nothing wrong with my writing. It is honest, it is unflinching, it is dark. And people have a difficult time processing through the kind of feelings this writing makes them feel. 

I knew she was right. It made sense. My darkness has been present my entire life. I remember my mom freaked out when I was in preschool because I said my favorite color was black and she thought I was depressed (I don’t really remember if I was yet, but hey).

The reality is, I’ve always been drawn to thinking really deeply, realistically, and morbidly about things. I’ve always been drawn to dark colors, late-night discussions, cemeteries, and the quiet solitude of large bodies of water at night. My curiosity is ignited by decaying buildings, bones, skulls, fungus. I relish the intellectual challenge of true crime, against the background of the crimes themselves. 

It probably isn’t a coincidence that I’m also terrified of most of the things I just named.

I have no idea where that morbidity comes from. Maybe it is just my depression manifesting in my personality. Maybe I am just a pessimist. Either way, I’ve slowly come to realize how my darkness can make others uncomfortable. My sister is right, darkness scares people. Darkness brings up feelings people usually try to avoid. Sure, I have set my own darkness free and am glorying in the freedom I feel because of it. But a lot of people are perfectly happy suppressing their darkness and keeping it positive.

I guess it makes sense the masses wouldn’t want to consistently have to confront something they fear so much. 

I realize that, just because I’m ready to talk about this stuff, that doesn’t mean everyone is. 

I guess I hope that one day, we will progress as a people to regard the darkness with less fear. For, why should darkness be so scary? Why are we so terrified of the unknown? Why do we literarily apply the color black to evil things, “the dark side?” 

In the meantime, dear readers, I realize the emotional rollercoaster I’ve taken you on. I thank those of you who have returned to more than one of my posts. I will work on sharing more of my triumphant feelings associated with my mental health journey to lighten the tone a little (at least more so than I am now). And I promise I won’t ruin your holiday with a rant about my critical analysis of the Christmas season. 

All I ask in return is that you allow yourself to spend more time with your darkness. Ride the wave of that uncomfortable feeling, let it all out, and see where it takes you. Allow yourself some time to really process through an intense emotion, and see what you find out about yourself in the process. 

Love & Happiness to you all. 

Chosen Family.

Angela Bowers Photography
Northville, MI

Chosen Family: People who you care about and consider family.

This term has emerged within the LGBTQ+ community to describe the support systems queer folks build themselves (often after being rejected by their natural families).

It is a term I want everyone to know. There is power in this term.

As a culture, Americans often put a lot of stock in the “nuclear family.” One mom, one dad, and their biological children. This cultural value has crept its way into every american’s brain through politicized homophobia in our government.

When we move away from thinking about the “nuclear” family and towards the “chosen” family, we empower ourselves to find love and support within a wider, more complex and interesting community.

These are pictures of my sister, my nieces, and me. A different kind of chosen family than you were probably thinking after reading about the term’s connection with the LGBTQ+ community. I am not attempting to co-opt the term from the LGBTQ+ community. Nor would I like to detract from the conversation about family and acceptance for LGBTQ+ folks. And, for all intents and purposes, assuming there has to be romantic love between parental figures is indicative of our cultural heteronormative indoctrination.

These are my nieces. But in a lot of ways I have been a parental figure to them since they were born. I have changed their diapers, helped sleep train them when my sister was at her wits end, comforted them through cutting their first teeth, taught them new words, done my best to instill values of open-mindedness, kindness, and inclusiveness within them, and sometimes I’m the only one that can get them to eat.

My sister and I also have had a yin and yang connection since I was born (her fiery aries personality clicks perfectly with my wishy-washy pisces). We have been each other’s unconditional support system for eternity.

These family portraits mean so much to me because they represent one of the most important familial connections in my life. This is why I survived and continue to survive 💕