you stay alive.
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Thoughts and Feelings
as american planes, Daniel Day, Deb Talon, Fair Hill, God, Iraq, Lewis, life, melting snow, movie, sad one, scene, shade of blue, tap shoes, time, way
Remember when I was all, Oh look, guys, I’m so much better. I’m telling jokes! and would you like me to get out my sparkly red tap shoes and do a dance too? Cause I have them!
The sad part is, I really do have them. But I am not a good enough tapper to ever wear them. It’s like that. I can wear loud, attention-drawing things while doing the forms of dance in which I am strong; I’ll wear garb that says, Hey! look at meeeeee! But when it comes to tap, I need to wear things that say, Hey! Look over there! So yeah, the only time I ever wore those red sparkly tap shoes was when I got a nice check for it. And please, if any of you are great tappers and happen to be a size 8 or so, you can have them. Seriously.
But I was asking you: remember when I felt good and almost happy-ish? And then you guys were all like, Whoa! You’re so good at healing! and Wow. Maybe thislifeinwriting.com will be…dare we say it? happier again! And then I was all, Actually, I am healing, but tonight I’m really sad…Or rather, that’s where this post comes in.
Because it’s true: tonight is a sad one for me. Maybe that’s good. Or maybe–like a lot else in my life, lately–it’s just plain weird. And maybe I just need to cry and listen to Comfort by Deb Talon over and over again. And by maybe I mean: that’s what I’m doing.
See, I really don’t know what to say when people tell me I am amazing. Or strong. Or a good person.
Because the truth is that I’m just…still here.
Are the people in Iraq who get bombs dropped on them by American planes amazing just cause they are still alive?
Because that’s what I am: still alive. And that was my one major goal the first month after the bomb was dropped on me. Every day, I just needed to make sure I was still alive.
A little while ago I was hiking in Fair Hill, feeling pretty peaceful about life. Liking the way that the sky hung over me in a shade of blue that was tremendous. Feeling okay with the melting snow, happy for the way that it indicated a new season. And then, unbidden, I suddenly remembered a movie that I saw a very long time ago. And not the whole movie, but one particular scene in the movie.
There’s this scene in The Last of the Mohicans where the two white women get captured by the hostile native Americans. One of the women’s love interest, the Daniel Day Lewis character, is just about to escape, but before he does he grabs the woman he loves. He tells her over and over again, You stay alive! I will be back for you! You stay alive! And makes her promise that she will not die before he can rescue her.
And suddenly she has one job: to survive. Because things will not always be this bleak. Because somebody loves her and will rescue her. Because her life has worth and meaning and she should not throw it away just because it looks like the worst thing has now happened.
And I saw that scene in my mind and started to cry. And it was strange, because I hadn’t been sad until that moment. It was like seeing a patch of snow in the middle of July. The emotion came out of nowhere, and the strength and suddenness of it was shocking.
Because the one person who should have been shaking my shoulders, telling me to stay alive! that day back in November, was gone. Silent. And the contrast from that movie and my life is so ugly. So pitiful. Wordless, almost. Though, God knows I try.
But then I thought about how other people stepped in. And they have been the ones to tell me to stay alive! And in no less moving ways than Daniel Day Lewis did. And that made me cry even more, I guess. Because I am humbled that such amazing people would see worth in me and implore me to stay alive. At all costs. Would remind me, over and over again, that it will not always be this way.
And in a very real way, they’ve rescued me.
But I’m still sad tonight. Because that scene, it’s a lot. And what’s happened, it’s a lot. And the fact that the one who should have yelled at me to stay alive! barely said a word at all, well that does leave some kind of mark, right?
But the fact that there are others–the best people I know–who stepped in. Grabbed my shoulders and yelled at me to stay alive! that leaves a mark, too.
And that’s the mark I’m gonna put my money on. That’s the one that will still be there this time next year. Obvious. Beautiful. Love.
yes, the walk was worth four dollars.
in Funny Stuff, I Lift My Eyes Up, photography
as blah, blah blah, Daniel Day, daniel day lewis, dollar, Fair Hill, jenna, Jerry Springer, Jess, letter, Lewis, love, love letter to my husband, marylander, rhetorical question, running around in circles, sad little smile, sdfsd, Shane, sign, snow, something, sun, thing, world of memories
So it saves you a dollar to live in MD.
Well, at least if you park your car in Fair Hill. Next time I go to MacDonald’s with a Marylander (and there are a few in my own family), thanks to Fair Hill, I think they should probably buy me something from the dollar menu. And maybe even a couple of things if they’ve been there more than once.
But yes, today I went to wander around by myself in Fair Hill. I almost didn’t, though. I almost went to the gym. But then I saw how the sun was shining in a glorious manner and, well, that it was being featured right now! and since you never know if that nice little off-broadway show I like to call The Sun is on a limited run or not, I decided to go see for myself what it was up to.
And anyway, buildings can be so predictable. So can running around in circles, for that matter. And since a friend of mine has recently–and so very kindly–suggested that I might be obsessed with my phone, I did something very gutsy.
I left it behind.
That’s right.
And I was all, who’s obsessed now? But it was a rhetorical question, which ended up being a very good thing since nobody was around to be like, not you!
I did, however, grab my camera (since nobody had mentioned me being obsessed with that) and one of the first things I had to capture was this sign.
What’s funny about me is that sometimes even my thoughts are sarcastic. I read the sign and I smiled a sad little smile as I pondered how amazing it would be if the sign said something about not putting yourself in a position to be lied to and wounded over and over again. And it was with some disappointment that I read something about locking your car and blah blah blah because getting your stereo stolen looks like a walk in the park right about now; I thought we were talking victims here, people.
But then I walked right past that sign and I let my thoughts compete with my legs for miles per hour. And I suppose I looked like this–
while I was walking around, and the reason you need to know that is, well, maybe you don’t. Need to know it, I mean. But I will still ask–do you see that warmest of wraps I am wearing? It’s something that was specifically made for wearing outside in rugged mountainous terrain. And wouldn’t you know it, but I am pretty much always cold in my parents’ house. That’s right. So dinner usually goes something like this:
Me: Mmmm, this food is really good, mom; and pop, can we throw some heat all up in here?
Mom: Thanks, Jess.
Jenna: It’s not cold.
Pop: Why don’t you go put your coat on, Jess?
Me: Because I’m going through a divorce, pop–so CAN THE HOUSE AT LEAST BE WARM????
Okay, so I’ve never said that last part. But haha, maybe I should.
And instead of manipulating my pop into turning up the heat with the ‘D’ word, I got that wonderfully fleecy thing, my Warm Snuggly, as I like to call it. And now dinner goes something like this:
Me: I’m warm, I’m warm, I’m warm…
So yes, isn’t that good?
But I was walking, all warm in my Snuggly, and I was just thinking. It’s nice to not be so afraid of my thoughts anymore. I’m starting to trust them again; I let the leash go a little longer again, I guess.
But when I saw this tree, I thought me too.

And I wondered if the morning of his demise was just like any other. I wondered if he had any idea that by the end of the day he’d be chopped down to just a fragment of what he’d been, that his roots would be mostly pulled up and exposed for just about anyone to see. And sure, he was still among all his other tree friends, but he had changed so drastically that he wasn’t quite sure what to do at their parties anymore; wasn’t quite sure what to say when everybody else was talking about their beautiful leaves and how close they’re feeling to the sun these days.
And I thought about how just the other day I was having lunch with some nice new friends and we’re girls, you know–we talk about our men and how we met and wow, isn’t it so nice that everything worked out perfectly? And there they were, sharing their pretty stories and suddenly it was like I had amnesia. Only it was all wrong, opposite or something, because instead of trying to talk about it yet not being able to remember a thing, here I was remembering so much, but biting my tongue because relating my story of how we met doesn’t quite feel worth the breath it would take.
And still, I see things that make me pause. Things that speak of mystery. Things like a tree who looks like her nanny came and braided her pigtails during the night.

And well, life can’t be all bad if we’re talking trees with pigtails, right?
But it’s strange.
And if you’d like proof of this, then I only need to reach into my purse and pull out the kind of letter written to the man I married that a wife should never see. I have been carrying it around for these past few weeks, sort of by accident because I simply keep forgetting to get rid of it.
And no, it’s not from me.
And no, I won’t tell you how I got it.
And no, Jerry Springer still has not called. Fingers crossed.
And to make the matter even stranger, the other day I was driving with my friend when suddenly he was on the phone, needing to write down an address for a gig we were going to play. And so I reached into my purse, grabbed the folded up letter, and gave it to him to scrawl down the words 2nd and Front.
He handed it back to me like it was just an old piece of paper anyway, actually even better–an old piece of paper made useful cause now it told us where to go and play some music.
And I think that’s like redemption and I think I will make a habit of scrawling down better words in place of the ugly ones that have hurt me so much.
And then, something else: the water at Fair Hill.
It was like a kid who had just gotten out of class, it was running so much. And all of the little gurgling sounds it made was good news, indeed.

And if this isn’t a sign of spring nearing, I don’t know what is.Because all of the sudden I looked down on the path and saw these two perfectly good gloves tossed aside.

And I can just picture it. Someone, maybe Mother Nature herself, is walking there, still bundled up, still bracing herself for the cold and the wind and that chill that grabs at your fingers and toes, especially. And maybe she looks to the left just like I had done; maybe she notices those little daffodil shoots pretending to be nonchalant about nosing their way through the earth this March. As if they hadn’t been waiting all winter long.
Come on, daffodils, stop your fronting.
But then she feels the sun, and feels it stronger, even, than the cold. And so in one of those rare times when caution is better left to the faint of heart, she strips off her gloves and goes on her merry way, confident in the approach of Spring.
And confidence. There’s a word to challenge me. Cause it doesn’t change a thing about what’s happened, but it might just change everything about what will. And I think I’d like to take my gloves off, too.
Confidently.
I think I’d like to say that something warmer, something even filled with flowers is coming my way also.




