Faith No More…?

I recently read “God is Not Great” by Christopher Hitchens.  I have wondered for years why Catholics and people of all faiths hated him so much:  apart from saying religion was a fallacy and the cause of major conflicts, what was he saying that got everyone tied up in knots?

I dithered for many years about purchasing his books, then a friend bought the aforementioned book for me a few weeks ago because during the course of our conversations we agreed that I may in fact be ready to see the alternate view.  I have had my doubts about Catholicism for years and yet almost all of my adult life, I have been fully on board with the faith given me as a baby, attending Mass and not just on Sundays, saying prayers in the morning and evening, having my son baptised and so on.  But there was always a pressure behind much of what I did, especially going to Mass and receiving the sacraments.

I read the book very quickly and wondered why Hitchens was (and is still) so reviled, when he made sense?  Everything that had rubbed me up the wrong way, about faith in general  not just Catholicism, was there. It was eloquently set down and pulled apart and I read much made my blood boil, some of which I had been completely unaware.

If you allow your scientific mind to assert itself, something I had held in check because of my beliefs, it is possible to accept the sound arguments that Hitchens makes against the existence of a deity/deities and for the main argument he makes of religion as a man-made form of control.  Never mind the whole religions start wars business.  My particular curiosity was to do with the idea of the existence of a being so powerful and who is in charge of a world that is more miserable than ever.  From where comes our help and why has it not come?  The world is not without beauty – I am not beaten down by all the wrongs I see and hear about.  Indeed, there are many great and small acts of kindness and generosity that make a huge difference.  The thing is we hear less about these instances and the focus is on the negative, obsessively so I would say.  There is too much navel gazing and not enough of looking up and appreciating what is in front of you and ahead.  Bloggers blog as it were, to make sense (or nonsense!) of the world around them and the world they immediately inhabit; it doesn’t really matter if nobody reads/comments upon the blogs – it is cathartic to commit thoughts or ideals on paper or online.  We do so and move on to the next…  It’s a space to be yourself and maybe for some, to say those things that you might struggle to articulate in company.  But I digress…

My friend asked me if my “faith had been shaken?”.  I said no.  What I read had “simply galvanized what I was already feeling” about my beliefs.

The supreme arrogance that the Catholic faith is “the one true faith” is staggering and a slap in the face of all other belief systems – that bothered me and still does because it is confrontational and controversial.  I am questioning miracles, the incorruptible bodies of saints, visions, ecstasies, levitations, exorcisms…  Read the book if you are open to having your beliefs questioned.  If you still believe after reading it there is no shame in that and I am not looking to destroy anyone’s faith.  Religion can be a force for good and can turn people around where all else has failed.  I’ve seen it and even experienced it myself.  In fact, having faith made me stronger – but it also held me down.  That is my personal experience and that of so many.  But if like me, you question key areas of your faith (whatever that faith may be) you are probably ready to read this book with an open mind and see where it leads you.

So am I no longer a believer?

My son says I’m now agnostic (and he is quite horrified).  I don’t like labels and the following definition does not in fact apply to me:

“An agnostic is one who believes it impossible to know anything about God or about the creation of the universe and refrains from commitment to any religious doctrine. An atheist is one who denies the existence of a deity or of divine beings.”

It doesn’t apply to me because I don’t accept that it is “impossible to know anything about…the creation of the universe…”.  We know a great deal about the creation of the universe – and it was not created in seven days by a supreme being…  What I can say I believe is that there are forces at work beyond our imagining and the fact that people exist is a miracle when you consider how we evolved, hauling ourselves out of a swamp, on fins that eventually became limbs and so forth.  We are still learning about anatomy, the science of the brain, chemical reactions within our bodies and the extent to which we can push our bodies and minds.  We all know that there are things we do now that would have been thought impossible centuries ago, even 50 years ago.  We have science to thank – and sheer determination. In the course of evolution, mammals have proved to be a force to be reckoned with.

Something is at work shaping our world and the universe.  I feel it is grounded in science and not the divine, and it is no less incredible for that.

Furthermore, is it a stretch to think that maybe there are other complex lifeforms in the universe or that there may have been?  I don’t think so when you consider how vast the universe is – and we cannot know everything, even with all we have at our disposal dedicated to trying to do just that.

Sometimes though, not knowing is a good thing – it allows space for hope (but not ignorance).  My closest friend is an atheist and I have to say that just a few chapters in to “God is Not Great”, I understood what it is like to be him and it hit me with some force.  The tremendous burden of feeling that it’s all on you, all on us, that he lives with.  It doesn’t weigh heavily upon him every day but the reality for an atheist is that there is no help coming from above nor any reward when our time here is done.  By the end of the book I felt quite at a loss and more than unhappy about how much of my life I had given over to faith and how much control it has had over me.  I was stuck in a terrible situation for so long because of my beliefs and I felt such guilt and anguish at going against those beliefs.

What has it all been for, I asked myself?

I’m not ashamed to say that I wept a little.  I was frustrated and it was not unlike grief.  I am in the process of letting go and still catch myself praying for people who are suffering – the terrorist attacks the world over, people close to me struggling to cope with loss, a severe illness, abuse and so on.  What I can do is keep trying to be the best version of myself that I can be and not allow the daily grind to beat me down and continue to not be afraid to live when lights start going out around us.  I’ve seen hysterical posts on Facebook and the like, from people who are scared to go out or go about their business, over emotional posts claiming solidarity with one race or group or faith.  Worse, I’ve seen ignorant posts about standing up for your own (class/country/faith) and sod everyone else.

Negative change comes from without and I mean that in both senses of the word.  Positive change comes from within.  We start with ourselves and project what is right and good in the hope that it will encourage others to behave decently and even to respect themselves.  I am not an idealist with my head in the clouds and know full well that this doesn’t always work.  Let’s face it: if the world was perfect – if people were perfect – we could indeed claim a deity was behind it…

No amount of radiant, loving or compassionate positivity projected towards an extremely negative person will make them change.  A deeply ingrained belief or the power of a destructive incident/s is not something one moves on from easily – it takes years of questioning yourself, the circumstances and allowing yourself to be questioned – one has to become more open and less conditioned.  Healing, moving on, is necessarily a long process  – or what went before actually meant nothing.  Faith meant/means something to me but not the man-made tenets of it, the control, the unwillingness to adapt to the world we now live in.  By way of example, the inability of the Catholic Church to come to a unanimous agreement that it is not right to bar a remarried Catholic from receiving communion, knowing full well the gradual destruction to the soul that this entails if you so believe it. And if you do believe it, the thought is devastating and more often than not, people in these circumstances leave the Church altogether.  St Paul’s writings on divorce, etc have a lot to answer for.  If God speaks to all of the clergy, why are they so divided on this and other points of Canon Law?  Also, why is it right to ex-communicate a pop star for hanging herself on a cross, when abusive clergy are “moved on” as opposed to being automatically ex-communicated for their sins, whether it’s a misappropriation of finances or much, much worse?  I could go on and on and on…

I know this much: I am not an agnostic.  Maybe I am somewhere between an atheist and an agnostic, if such a space can exist, and I don’t feel as wretched about it as I did a week ago – but then being a mammal, I am highly adaptable…

I don’t have the answers but what I can say is this:

I am a work in progress.

And I’m ok with that.

 

 

 

Do you gotta have faith?

I’m not so sure these past few years if faith is a crutch or a control for me.  Neither is good.

As a crutch, you rely upon a set of beliefs to prop you up and don’t necessarily dig around inside yourself as much for the answers – you believe that your God will light the way and accept that what comes is the will of your God.

As a means of control, faith can be devastating; I have lived through the effect my belief system has had upon me and those closest to me.  In short, adhering to the tenets of my faith cost me decades of my life throughout which I learnt a great deal about myself and others, but by turns I lost so much and caused pain to others through bitterness at feeling betrayed (by people and my God) and trapped (by the same).

Not good is it?

We all know about the wars started in the name of a God we cannot see but believe in:  The Crusades to name one very bloody and shameful part of Christian history.  We lament the so called death of Christianity and the rise of the secular age but it comes and goes in cycles and sometimes the Christians are on the wrong side or hold an ugly viewpoint.  How dare one belief system set itself up as THE belief system and systematically set about crushing and destroying any who dare question it by eradicating one belief and culture for another.  The Spanish Conquistadors decimated the people of the Americas, promoting a Christian God on one hand, whilst plundering gold and precious resources with the other.

The God I believe in would not advocate anything like this.  Too many men down the centuries have hijacked religion for their own ends, starting wars, wiping out cultures and peoples, masquerading as men of God when they were anything but.  Tony Blair anyone?  He claims God whispered in his ear to go to war against Iraq.

Oh really?

What bull!  I’m a cradle Catholic so I had no choice in my religion but as an adult I can choose to follow it blindly, pick and choose the bits I like or abandon it altogether.  What I am choosing to do is believe that God does exist but not accept everything that is spouted from the pulpit, however sincere.  The four main Gospels were chosen to fit a particular time – the rest simply did not fit the narrative that those in control sought to enforce upon the majority.  Men decided what stayed in and what got cut if you like.  Learned men (and women) from those times and up to the present day, make up the rules as they go along based upon their interpretations of The Bible.  This is why year on year, from one priest or vicar to another, the same reading, the same Gospel passage will be read and understood in myriad ways depending upon what the individual reads into it and then expounds to the masses.  It can further be said that the interpretation changes with the mood of the times – and this is when faith takes a back seat and control steps forward.

You see, too many people really do blindly follow what they are told about passages from The Bible.  If the priest or vicar tells you black is white, such people accept it because he’s a man of the cloth and his guidance comes direct from the big man upstairs.  But I know a priest who agrees with me that one size doesn’t fit all and therefore, The Bible passages, with their wisdom, foreboding, poetry and control simply cannot apply to everyone because we are all so different.  The life we live is not cut and dried and our world is full of complications caused by emotion – the two strongest human impulses are anger and love. Both can be used to devastating effect.  Fear plays it part and fear of the next life is not something a Christian sniffs at and blithely ignores if his faith is strong.  Being afraid to live a certain way or make certain choices for fear they may compromise our path to heaven is incredibly delimiting.  It is a cause of much sorrow.  It kept me “in my place” for too long.

If God created us all, then he created homosexuals too.  It is not right to say that love between same sex couples is abherrant and that they simply need coaxing onto a “straight” path.  They can no more be straight than a heterosexual can be made homosexual.  It is what it is – not cut and dried.  We do not choose to be one way or the other or a bit of both – it chooses us.

Rules are constructive, yes, but in this context and in the context of divorced remarried Catholics, the rules are brutal and leave no room for negotiation.  The Synod on the Family has all but shut down any hope of remarried divorced Catholics from being able to receive communion.  To be barred from the sacraments is not, I believe, something God would intend for someone like me were I to marry again.  To bar me from the sacraments would be wholly unfair:  I did not have an affair, my husband did; I got divorced (after holding on for decades because of my beliefs) because the situation was increasingly toxic for my son and I.  To fall in love and want to marry again or simply live with the one you love is surely not a bad thing?

Should anyone be damned for love when it is good, strong and true?

Surely God would be happy if this happened?  If God is directing our lives, how could it be wrong?  But then that same God was behind the scenes when my life fell apart.  He was behind the scenes of all of our worst moments.

Do we gotta have faith?  I think what we need is a good heart, beliefs that don’t hurt or control anyone and a willingness to question everything without giving rise to rancour.  Beliefs should be questioned and not accepted without self examination or examination of the one who is doling it out to us.  Priests, vicars, nuns and all pillars of all faiths are people first and they are not above corruption, as history and modern times have shown us.

Keep the faith?  Yes, maybe for me, but my mind is more open.  The personal experiences of recent years and so much that I’ve seen and read have taught me much.  I still have a great deal more to learn.

 

The Get Away

So, my son asked for a break by the sea and I have delivered!

A colleague has a property by the coast, undergoing a bit of renovation but still habitable, so I asked if I could stay there with my son – don’t ask, don’t get, right?

We’ll be a short walk from a very nice beach and with sea views from the property – I can already smell the sea air!

I’m a water baby and I can’t wait to get there.  My son is very excited and it’s so unexpected which adds to it.

It doesn’t matter what the weather does – we’ll be away from the everyday routines that cripple Londoners for most of the year.

There’ll be none of this “letting life happen to me” crap!

Carpe diem!

The Phantom

There dwells a phantom deep inside of me.  It has no form and terrible strength if I let it take hold of my dreams.

Do dreams fade with the light or in darkness?  I guess it depends on when you feed them…

Sometimes I take the lash, push the dream on

or away,

when a nightmarish landscape forms from once golden threads of thought,

impossible and beautiful, attainable and yet…

I am beaten down by the weight of my dreams – how to achieve them, retrieve them – call them into being?

The phantom at work, monstrous and cunning.

I feed my dreams at night and hold them close in the dark.

I possess you.

We move together, soundlessly, and hide from the phantom.

The world is still in our dark time –

fingertips light, familiar,

soft skin,

bright eyes,

a touch to calm the storms inside.

I breathe you in, find your centre,

tease out the part of you that holds us back…

I kill the part of me that is a phantom.

The dream sees the light.

One small step or one giant leap….? Which will you choose…

On Saturday it will be a year to the day that my life completely turned around – and not for the first time.

I’d been unwell for 8 months but had no idea exactly what was wrong and neither did the doctors after referrals and scans aplenty.  I was in severe pain and although I’d been here twice before, this was different.  I’d had persistent pain in my stomach that pain killers did next to nothing for.  I was in agony frequently and increasingly and I was often unable to walk without razor sharp pain, move or wear anything restrictive like jeans – and I love wearing jeans.

I struggled in to work and well before Noon I was barely able to function.  I went up to a quiet room to get away from everyone and so that no-one could see how bad I was (didn’t want the fuss).  When almost everyone had gone, I came down, made my excuses and left.  I had every intention of coming in the next day but ended up at my Mum’s place and unable to go anywhere.  I threw up twice (clear liquid), I burst into tears because the pain was relentless – I couldn’t get comfortable in any position and I wished I could reach in and pull out whatever was hurting me so intensely. Mum used to be a nurse and she was very, very worried.  I stayed overnight.

I had not felt like this since a similar episode in early February – basically, I felt as though I was dying.  I wasn’t wrong.  I was in the centre of London and I struggled home with my son, who was worried sick.  I was doubled over in pain on the underground, in the street, on the bus – nobody cared.  I experienced what it felt like to be invisible in this city – it’s not always like this and I’ve often benefited from the kindness of strangers.  But not that day.  The pain subsided in the evening and then in the early hours, it all went bananas and I was unable to move at all.  I called for an ambulance on the advice of the on-call doctor and when I was finally seen by a doctor (a real bitch) and by which time once again the pain had died down, she gave me pills and told me in no uncertain terms to not come back if it happened again – I should have just called my GP when they opened in her opinion.

Anyway:  After lying on Mum’s sofa all day, groaning, the pain subsided a little by 8pm but then within an hour it had ratcheted up again – and this time I was petrified.  I was afraid and alone in my old room, panting and on all fours, sweating like I was in front of a furnace.  Words from scripture came to mind, about Jesus sweating drops of blood, the agony in the garden… I had never sweated like that my whole life, great drops falling like rain.  It was ridiculous and I couldn’t even call out for help because I was trying to concentrate on breathing and not passing out.  Luckily my son came to check on me, just as I needed to throw up (again clear fluid).  I told him sharply to get my Mum to call an ambulance.  It was a Friday night and I knew it would likely take hours – and I wasn’t at all confident they’d get to me in time.

I literally writhed in pain for hours and ended up on my knees on the floor and with my head on the bed while I kept focusing on my breathing instead of the pain (no easy thing) and doing something not unlike a buddhist chant – and it did go some way to relaxing me.  Eventually the pain subsided so that it wasn’t like someone was on the inside pinching me (where everything pulsed) with pliers, but pinching with tweezers instead – still sharp but slightly more bearable.  The ambulance came at about 2.30am – 5 hours after being called.  A farce ensued whereby one of the ambulance personnel could not handle a wasp being inside so we could not drive away until it had been chased out – this took about 10 minutes but it felt like an hour.  I did not have the energy to shout “For fuck’s sake, I need to get to the hospital NOW!!” but I think my face told the story…

So in the small hours of August 16 I was admitted to a ward around 3 hours later, much to my shock:  I thought they’d send me away with a flea in my ear like the last time.  So for the first time in my life, I was facing a lengthy hospital stay.  My one and only hospital stay was little over 24 hours and was when I gave birth.  In A & E and again on the ward, I underwent several painful internal and external examinations that made the pain even worse and always just as it began to calm down.  I cursed the sky, my body, this life, the insensitivity of junior staff who thought all I needed was a shit or Pepto Bismol – what the fuck? Does constipation, does indigestion really mess you up like that? I doubt it!!  In fact I know the symptoms I had were far removed from what you see under those circumstances.  I pity anyone who’d have my symptoms when all they need do for relief is belch or block the toilet…  I see the funny side now – I fucking did not a year ago.

Mum suspected what the docs had failed to detect in all the examining, talking, scans and x-rays:  that I had appendicitis.  In fact, that wasn’t discovered until I was re-admitted for an operation a month later…  The clear vomit, the acute pain, the pain subsiding and then coming back with a vengeance.  But there was more.  What they did discover was that I had a huge ovarian cyst that had burst and that another was waiting to pop like some grim balloon.  The prodding and poking had made things worse (I’d been poked and prodded in April several times, inside and out with a view to an operation in May). This was a party I didn’t want to be at.  I dissolved in silent tears, with Mum at my side when the doctors left .  I had to be admitted to the gynaecology ward and I wasn’t going anywhere for a while.  What a shit start to my time off work. What a shit time for my son with whom I’d planned so many things, whether I was in pain or not.  How awful for Mum to see me like this…

I was in hospital for close to 14 days and I was desperate to get home whilst at the same time oddly enough, I was enjoying round the clock care with drugs on tap; they wouldn’t let me go until the drugs they were giving me enabled me to manage the pain.  I was on liquid morphine.  Most of the time I needed high doses but most of the time it didn’t help.  There was another woman in almost the same boat as me but when she was admitted it was a Sunday and the ambulance came quickly so they operated almost immediately – I knew her pain (she was crying out and her Mum was beside herself) and it was thanks to a formidable young nurse that she was operated on within an hour of getting onto the ward.  They got to her cyst before it burst.  Lucky her but her ovaries on one side had to be removed.

My story got far more serious.  Around day 11 of my stay, I was supposed to go for an MRI and instead met with the man who saved my life (along with 3 other surgeons).  He was going to do yet another internal exam (miscommunication) and I said no.  No.  I cannot undergo another internal exam when I already had several that week.  No. I was meant to be having an MRI. No.  I can’t do this waiting around and pills and morphine and the like.  Please, just operate, please do a full hysterectomy.

He agreed, immediately and unreservedly.  He fired a shot in the arse of the person who fucked up and told them to put me at the front of the queue for an emergency MRI that same day.  I’d have hugged and kissed him if I’d had the energy but I had nothing left at that point.  I wasn’t exactly relieved.  I knew what I was asking for, knew what I was facing.  All the doctors before him had said no to me (because I was too young), heck even I had decided against hysterectomy because I had hoped to have another child.  The surgery in May (that I cancelled because the pain miraculously went away between my son’s 16th birthday and the end of his GCSE’s), would have been a D&C procedure because they thought the issues were due to 5 large fibroids.  It would have been the worst thing given the seriousness of my condition.  And I had dozens of fibroids, not 5…

You see apart from the multiple fibroids that were pulsing and in their death throes, there were another 3 massive ovarian cysts and I had endometriosis.  I had no clue that I had endometriosis, none at all.  Having read up on it several months after the op, it should have been obvious and I had grounds to sue.  I didn’t and I won’t.

In late September I had the op.  But it wasn’t just a bad case of endometriosis – it was so advanced that it had covered and become stuck to my organs and had coated my insides so thoroughly that the doctor, that wonderful man who’d ordered the MRI, told me that in all his years he’d never seen anything so severe as what he saw when he opened me up.  He said he had no idea how I had been able to maintain my day to day life for the past 9 months when the condition was so bad I ought not to be standing at all.  I reminded him that in August, I had gotten to that point with finality.  I also said that in my family, on my Mum’s side we have a VERY high pain threshold.  It’s not a good thing to be able to withstand so much pain and I don’t wear it as a badge of honour.  My pain threshold is so high that my ex used to think I was pretending when I cried and asked for his help whether it was this pain or any other pain (arthritis afflicts me from time to time to varying degrees but it’s nowhere near as bad as it once was).  Trust me, I’m so independent and I did not want to ask for his help, so much so that I’d rather struggle and end up hurting myself more, than ask him to help me open a can of beans because some of my fingers were inflamed for example.

Wanker?  Yes.  But I’ve come off topic (though the stress he heaped upon me and laid at my door across a quarter century went a long way to exacerbating and prolonging the health issues I had).  But I’m also to blame for allowing myself to be so put upon and for so damn long.

So, in the end a 2 hour op went on for over 4 and a half hours; when I went down for the op, my body resisted the anaesthetic for over 40 minutes and much to the anaesthetist’s surprise – she said I was very strong, though I didn’t feel like I was; 4 surgeons worked on me to remove the crud that was all over my organs; they discovered that I had a ruptured appendix that had healed over more than once so they removed it (it had been inflamed by “the endo” and had been grumbling all this time); I had to have 5 blood transfusions because as fast as it was going in, I was bleeding out; I was minutes from death when they gave me the 5th one; I stayed in recovery for 5 hours because my blood pressure was dangerously low; in the morning I had to have a 6th transfusion on the orders of the anaesthetist who came to check on me (I had become big news in their dept. and in the gynae dept. too) or I would have died on the ward (and none of my bedfellows would have been surprised as they told me they thought I was going to die in the night because I “looked like death warmed up”; my awesome lead surgeon told me that morning in a quiet, small and somewhat strangulated voice that “you gave us quite a challenge…it was a good thing you signed those consent forms, otherwise…” and he let it trail off there.  When he left I went into shock. Someone came to see me, they wanted to ask me how I’d managed with all the pain before the op, they were going to write it up in the medical journals and I was to be a case study as they needed to pick up on people like me far sooner.  Yeah, no shit Sherlock…  I was in no mood for twenty questions.  I’d just found out that I nearly died in theatre.  You can fuck right off.

I stayed there for 7 days; it wasn’t great because I couldn’t get a bed on the wonderful gynae ward of my August stay.  I was on a surgical ward with only 2 people who had similar experiences to mine and 2 selfish old women one of whom drove me nuts and I complained and there were also 2 thoroughly nasty nurses on the ward about whom I also complained.  Now me before the op might have put up and shut up and kept her head down but after what I’d been through and needing to recover well in those first few days, I was in no mood to suffer fools, selfish bitches or incompetents gladly.  When I don’t get enough rest, I can get migraines and I was already very weak, so weak I could barely speak and that felt so odd – it’s not something they make up in the movies, you really are so weak you can’t speak properly.  The selfish old bats kept gas bagging and also calling out in the night after lights out instead of pressing their buttons and waiting – they kept the entire ward up.  We all fumed but it was me, ironically given I was the weakest and had had the biggest surgery, who spoke up and in polite terms told them to please shut the fuck up.  I’d had such a bad migraine that morning that I’d vomited 3 times and been unable to eat at all just when my appetite had returned. They didn’t like it and I got verbal abuse off one of them who said, with venom, that the most injured child gets the most attention and how come it was alright for my dozens (jealous? Yes) of visitors to make noise (they didn’t I said and they came during visiting hours)? But guess what?  They shut the fuck up and we all slept soundly for the first time in days.  The one who gave me verbals was very nice to me on the day I left for home sweet home – I had sorted out glaucoma drops for the other selfish old cow, her having waited 4 days for them; poor administration, the NHS in its’ worst form, meant she had gone without them for far too long.  I’m not a bitch you see.  Treat people right.  I cannot stand an injustice and will fight for you even if you’ve been horrible to me for no good reason at one time or another because if it’s wrong, it’s wrong and I want to see things put right.  I thought to myself “Yeah, you love me now don’t you bitches”.  Jeez…  When I told my Mum, in creole, what had gone on, she glared at them and I thought they’d turn to stone.  They knew I was filling her in, but still Mum was nice to the mouthy one when she couldn’t find her brush and she saw it on the floor and picked it up for her.  Guess I get it from her.  Guess our attitudes must have burned them too but that isn’t why either of us did what we did.

So much more happened and this is a much edited version but why am I writing about it at all?  Truth be told, until now I’ve struggled to commit to paper what happened to me between January 2014 and now.  As the August and September anniversaries approach, I feel ready to say something and chose to say it here.  I tried to write about it a couple of months ago but I got emotional and couldn’t quite face it.  I’ve said nothing of the long, trying and frustrating road to recovery that is in fact ongoing.  I still have to be careful and l get twitches in my stomach, post-op muscular jolts as I knit back together inside and reminders that I’m not 100% yet and as scar tissue forms, that also causes spasms not unlike the “endo” pain and which caused me some worry last week.  I am having such “pains” as I type this.  I’ve said nothing of the immediate onset of the menopause and how that affects me physically nor how it affected me emotionally in those first months.  My life is utterly changed and for the better.  I can live with the relatively few menopausal symptoms that I get and I am very lucky in that regard.

I was sorry though that I could no longer have children, despite being 43 at the time and single.  Still I don’t dwell upon it and I actually feel liberated by the idea of sex minus babies – however being Catholic makes me pause and not jump right in!   You can remove my womb but remove adherence to a basic tenet of my faith?  Now that’s an altogether tougher procedure!  But after what I’ve been through with the endo and life in general, I’m more flexible about many things.  I have a son headed for Uni in just over a year so I’m going to be free to live my life without restraint – another child at this time of life would I feel have been madness.  It was just a sentimental notion I had held onto about having a little girl like me, with curly hair and ribbons and bows and pretty little dresses. I did really want to know her but I was blessed with an incredible son – and some people can’t have kids at all so I count myself lucky to have him.

I am writing this for me but if anyone gets anything good out of it, fill yer boots.  So many cliches spring to mind about my journey but to use one, life is short and I almost lost mine on several occasions last year.  It changes you and if you just settle back into old and bad habits after peeking into that black hole, shame on you.  You should know better than to let yourself get shafted or fail to embrace opportunities when you’ve been given a second chance.  I had more chances but didn’t know it. What I do know is this:  don’t let people shit on you, don’t shit where you eat and if someone shat on your plate don’t eat their shit – walk the fuck away! Hindsight is a bitch right?  But you don’t have to almost die to wake the fuck up.  I woke up and went back into a coma more times than I care to recall and more than I am prepared to admit to.  I am ashamed of the life I “lived” and the people, especially my darling son, who got affected by my rotten behaviour while I laboured under a rock that was dropped on me from a great height and which I did not deserve. So, what was that rock?

My ex had an affair and had a baby with his amour 2 months before our son was born.  Who did he sleep with?  My sister. When?  It began before we married.  I had my suspicions, called off the wedding 2 months beforehand but he so convinced me that I was wrong that it went ahead and only a few months afterwards, she was pregnant, had an abortion then got pregnant again and kept the baby (who I happen to love very much).  It was not until 2 months ago that I finally had enough of my sister’s shit and cut all communication with her. I love her, care about her but she doesn’t give a flying fuck about me or my son.  She has and always did have my ex in her life, by her side and by their kid’s side all these years; my marriage was a sham, a shell, a joke.  No love from him for me, faking a feeling and me putting up a front that took an enormous toll on me and on my son more than anyone else.  A great deal of damage has been done.  The whole situation, trying to keep up the pretense of family all this time for my Mum’s sake (she asked me so I did) strained me physically, emotionally and mentally and intellectually I was some kind of cabbage.  How else can I explain what I put up with for so long until I filed for divorce five years ago?

So again, this part of my story is heavily edited but I don’t think I need say too much more here and now.  You get where I’ve been and where I’m coming from with my current attitude to life and how I live it.  Who I am now was always there but beaten down and held back.  All that rage was because I was contained, largely I’d bound myself and made sacrifices that left me on the floor, maybe lower still.  I felt suicidal several times, I knew the black and twisted power of hate, I knew what it really meant to wish someone dead and the feeling, if you could call it that, which accompanied that thought is not something I ever wish to “feel” again.  I wished my sister, flesh and blood of mine, dead.  It was a scary place to be.  I was as dark as it gets. There were no lights anywhere.  And I used to be sunshine before him and before “them”.  Now I’m more like the sunshine that peeps from behind the cloud on the weather map – I’m still under clouds from time to time but the sun always shines through.  I’m more sunny than gloomy that’s for sure and there are far less clouds these days.

Emotionally, life is pretty much as it should be for a woman like me who has gone through what I’ve gone through and emerged standing – though I may walk through life with a limp sometimes!  I get down about stuff but it doesn’t take hold like it used to and that’s partly due to maturing, partly because I almost died but also because my chemical landscape is much altered so I’m less emotional – and I was very, very emotional and highly sensitive.  I have very little oestrogen so I don’t get put out as easily as I used to nor do I blub or stress about family stuff that would normally have me in bits.  As a family, we did everything together even in the aftermath of the affair.  We went on holidays together, days out, the lot.  I care about my sister but I can very much live without her and do not miss her presence in my life at all.  When we’d fall out I always missed her despite everything she’d done and continued to do, she and my ex flaunting their great friendship against the bombed out background of my ex’s relationship with me and our son.  This time I feel no remorse whatsoever at doing to her what she threatened me with time and again over the years.  I have cut her loose and I am all the better for it. This hurts our Mum but I couldn’t live for her anymore and the cutting of ties began some time before, but was cemented during my long recuperation.

I have to live for me.

I don’t really know how to end this… I’m over 4000 words in…  My aim was to fully articulate my year, one year or so on.  I wanted to do it, maybe needed to do it.  I thought this would go in my journal and I didn’t expect to share it with strangers but it might do someone out there some good as I mentioned already.  Maybe nobody will read this and that doesn’t matter because I’ve composed this for myself so that I can parcel it away and begin to move on from what was an horrific year.

To end positively:  I laugh more, I paint and draw, I have this blog, I reconnected with so many people I’d lost down the years because of my difficult marital situation (the shame of it), I am stronger, I speak up more.  I’ve finally grown into me and it shows because I am apparently “glowing” and there’s “something different” about me that no-one can put their finger on.  People like what they see and I like it too.  It feels good, I feel free and I’ll keep on learning and moving up, resisting the urge to coast through this life.

Now stop reading and – big or small, I don’t care – go change something in your life.

 

 

Mr Nobody

So my son and I are browsing in the book shop (naturally) and we gravitate towards the Mr Men and Little Miss carousel (don’t ask).

I pick up Little Miss Naughty at random and turn to the back to look at the characters and get all nostalgic until I see that six characters have been added, one of whom is Mr Nobody…

I want to know his story.  What kind of life does this guy have – how do you spin that to a child?  More importantly, I want to know how it ends…

We search the carousel and guess what?

Mr Nobody wasn’t there.

He was No. 47 on the list and that’s all he was today – a number.

The search continues…

Suicide Season

My kind of person – Chris, you are awesome.

The Renegade Press

‘Ignoring your passion is slow suicide. Never ignore what your heart pumps for.’

  • Kevin Claiborne

Let’s play a game of Russian Roulette.

You and I are seated at a table in a smoke filled room; there’s an old six shooter positioned perfectly between us with a single round floating in one of its chambers. The heavy aromas of mildew and fear cling to your skin causing you to perspire. We’re alone. There’s no one here to save us; the only entrance to the cell is destined to remain locked until only one of us remains. You’re scared. So am I. Our lives have been reduced to this moment where we’ll play a game of chance to see who survives. Nothing else matters right now. It’s just you and I.

There’s a coin beside the gun. We’ll flip to see who shoots first. I pick it up and use my thumb…

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