Rivers and Roads

Last night I went to see the band playing for free at The Barn, Sonic Gravity. Their renditions of Rock with You by Michael Jackson and Love on Top by Beyoncé were the vocalist’s strongest. I appreciated the energy of the bassist with aviator-adjacent sunglasses, a bandana on his head, and a grown-out beard mustache as the guitarist soloed. I would see them again. As they played, words finally found me for what happened last weekend, words I have not been able to find to explain what happened when the first person I dated after Jeffrey became a period and not an ellipsis.

I kept trying to explain why it ended. I sat multiple times this week to write through the waterfall of tears what took place, but words continued to abandon me. The reality is I really do not know what happened because half the story is missing. Something unraveled and he needed to be alone. There are details to the narrative that feel unclear to me and I have to settle into the fact they might always be that way. I have guesses, but I do not want to fill in the blanks for someone who has to figure out their story. The ambiguity is familiar and triggering. I would love to not know how to so expertly repair my broken heart, but here we are. Once again, I am repairing it, excavating the wound to allow healing.

Watching The People of Chico dance is a hobby for me. There is a freedom to the movement informed by excessive sunshine, bodies overwhelmed by the throttle of heat, music with lyrics everyone relates to and a Sierra Nevada Summerfest. A man wearing an oversized Hawaiian shirt and green baseball cap that says “Ireland” starts the crowd off first. He tends to be the first one up followed by the woman in sketchers that shape her butt, brown athletic leggings, a periwinkle blue top, a fanny pack, and a pastel pink sunhat with a floppy cylindrical brim she leaves at her table. A tiny child, not more than 3-years-old with three ponytails and red glasses twirls to the side of them.

There is a couple who walked in past me and they are effortless. Despite carefully crafted tans and bodies who go to the gym, they look unforced and several people aside from me watch them as they come in. The woman is wearing white jeans and kitten heels. He traces the seams of her denim crop top as she sits between his legs. Her long curly blond hair snares his fingers. He is scruffy in the perfectly intentional way and wearing Ariat denim. Both of them worked hard to wake up looking like this. That is when I notice she has hands of a 45-year-old and the face of a 30-year-old. California is weird. They wrap into each other, the only two people in this room.

Wasn’t I just them?

What do I know about the unraveling? I found boundaries around alcohol use I was not sure how to make before because I did not know what they were. I cannot be around someone who is mismanaging their drinking. I did that before. I watched Jeffrey physically die while I emotionally rotted and died alongside him. I can support anyone on a journey who is doing the work, who does not make me feel alone in our relationship. But when my partner drinks to excess and I am not ready, I feel lonely which triggers anxiety. The anxiety leads me to hypervigilance and monitoring. I did not know that before this person sat next to me at The Barn and now I do. I would not trade knowing for anything. I am grateful to have language for the feelings in my body for whoever comes into my life in the future. I can work on the Parts of Me who are anxious around drinking. I can help them grow confident in what they know. They do know quite a lot.

Billy Joel Just the Way You Are plays and the dance floor empties out. The woman with the pastel floppy hat is dancing alone. On the other side of the dance floor, a woman dances with an invisible partner, holding her right arm up as if resting on a shoulder with her left arm out to hold a hand. She moves with the grace of a robot, smiling without abandon. This same woman would later slap her own ass and move through Tai Chi movements when Sara Bareilles Love Song played. The freedom. Couples eventually filter onto the dance floor, taking advantage of a moment.

Would we have ever danced together? We talked about it, dancing. There was not enough time to see.

Parts of me learned I can trust myself more than I thought. I learned I am able to discern what I need while navigating getting to know someone. I am good at asking for help to make sure I am seeing what I am seeing. I have a solid support system. I am intuitive at observing my body and knowing something is wrong and I am patient, allowing myself time to understand what the “wrong” is. I am also a good advocate for what I need. I did not filter myself unless I was stuck and could not identify what I needed. I did get stuck the weekend things ended. Edges of the PTSD showed themselves and it took me time alone to see what they were. Once I knew, he did too.

I learned to what degree I do not trust my intuition, to what degree Parts of me still do not trust me. They wonder what I did wrong to not see this coming. They questioned the signs that were there all along. They critiqued why I did not set a clearer and firmer boundary when I saw something that made me feel anxious. These Parts tell me I am an idiot for being at this intersection again, that I let myself be vulnerable to heart break and that is why my heart broke. These Parts and their method of protection are cruel and self-loathing. They meticulously document every single decision I make and find every single reason why I am the fool who made them. My conversation with these Parts does not reason and there is no logic. There is only the extraordinary discomfort of pain and the negative belief I see needs work in EMDR: if I am in pain, it is my fault, even when I objectively see I did nothing wrong. It is maddening to continue holding both.

I know the counterarguments to the Parts of Me Who Do Not Trust Me: I did not want to judge someone I did not know too quickly. Especially someone with as many green flags as this person. I did not want Trauma to decide if connection is safe. It took six weeks for what happened to happen. It did not and was not happening all along. I did not ignore what I saw. I did not know what I know now and I could not know it before I did. I talked through every worry, every anxiety with my therapist, my grief therapist, Randy, Heather, my parents, with him. I got to know a complex person as a person who is also complex. I did the best I could and I think I did a good job.

All firsts since Jeffrey have been overwhelming. First weekend away from home. First apartment. First time solo out of the house. Everything since Jeffrey died is something I steer my body through. Meeting this person introduced so many other new firsts: first meet-cute, first date, first second date, first kiss, first third date, first walk in the park, first person in my apartment, in my bed, in my phone, in my struggle with grief. First person who showed me their home, their bed, their life. He is the first person outside of my family to see me panic when a siren surprised me, to see me panic with alcohol, to see me get stuck inside the Panic Prison. I cannot even digest all of the firsts, there are so many others that elude me.

He was the first person I was excited to tell people about, the first person I told parts of my heartbreak to. First person I introduced to friends while out and about. First person I decided to not question when it felt good, to allow myself just to feel worthy and trust that it was real. When we first met, I kept asking him if it was real. Was he feeling it also? He was. It was. We were. And now we are not.

Get Up, Stand Up plays and my cousin texts me, reminding me he is willing to sort through Jeffrey’s video game systems still in my closet. My family is absolutely the kindest people. We are all so different, different educations, different careers, socioeconomics, religions. No two of us agree on much politically. Many of my family voted for our current president and I avoid discussions of politics when we gather. I do not need to focus on what is different to love them. They are the gentlest people, there for anyone in the space of a heartbeat and without question. As my mother pointed out, if civil war broke out, we would need all of them to hide us, and we would absolutely hide them. To come from this kind of value system, from this kind of loyalty, is a privilege. I want to show them to someone I love, to someone who also could appreciate what it means to show up for each other. This person I met does understand that, comes from a similar family value system. Sometimes I feel the fear of not knowing if anyone will get to see what I love about my family before more of them are not here. Then I remember I am a product of this family I love so much. To know me, is to know them. As I reflect on this, my sister texted pictures of the family with my grandmother from 2021 and tears well in my eyes. To see her then, more lucid and in her own home. A time before we knew the pain of losing her. I am here listening to Bob Marley and I am there in her living room. Once again, I am touching time.

Something about my self-doubt shifted as I got to know this person. I do know what I need. I do know my body and I do entirely trust my body. I know it overreacts to things that are from the past. I see edges I did not see before and this person made the space for me to find them at my pace. It was safe, and warm, and kind. I told him all along if the only thing I got from knowing him is that I learned I can experience joy and happiness again, it was entirely worth it.

I will not rewrite that version of our story, even though it hurts to know I deserve better. I deserve someone who is ready to pick me. Who will not get lost when picking me. Who can both anchor me and float alongside me. Who will know how to find themselves in the sparkly Prussian blue of unseeable, violent water. I live in a delicate gray area. The water is deep, but color is so incredibly breathtaking. 

I can do hard things, and I can do them alone. That does not mean I want to. While I am thrilled and proud to have accomplished the Survival of Solitude, I resent every fucking minute I do it. He understood a version of what I meant when I explained this resentment and so very few people ever have to know what I mean. It is a specific type of pain I struggle to articulate. It lives inside of my stomach, in my hips, and in my chest. It makes my heart beat faster and my breath harder to catch. For the first time since Jeffrey died, I was not an alien under observation and study. To find someone who understood loneliness so clearly is something I feel so devastated to lose. And having had it all is so stunningly beautiful. The gravity of the despair alongside the gratitude overwhelms me. I wish it on no one and lug it grimly alone. Their symbiosis is a compliment I will humbly carry the rest of my life. I hope I can find someone who understands it like he did. I deserve to feel witnessed.

My sister’s childhood best friend texts she is in the neighborhood. I invite her to meet me and we watched the end of Sonic Gravity and then went to dinner. We talked about our adult views on growing up together, on being older siblings, on Catholic school and coming out and breakups. As we flowed effortlessly in conversation, I connected to the confidence of the life I am building and sustaining beyond my tragedies. As I keep saying: I am alive.

The song Rivers and Roads by The Head and the Heart plays in the background as I write this and for the first time I wonder if the song is not about reaching someone who is no longer available, who life took away from me, but about reaching myself. Maybe I am finally here.

Rivers and Roads by The Head and the Heart

A year from now, we’ll all be gone
All our friends will move away
And they’re goin’ to better places
But our friends will be gone away

Nothin’ is as it has been
And I miss your face like hell
And I guess it’s just as well
But I miss your face like hell

Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh

Been talkin’ ’bout the way things change
And my family lives in a different state
And if you don’t know what to make of this
Then we will not relate
So if you don’t know what to make of this
Then we will not relate

Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh

Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh

Rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you
Rivers and roads, oh, rivers and roads
Oh, rivers ’til I reach you

rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you
(Oh) rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you

rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you
(Oh) rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you

rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you
(Oh) rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you

rivers and roads, rivers and roads
Rivers ’til I reach you

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