Sunday, May 11, 2014

The Day They Stole My Brave

I found my Brave. I finally took hold of it with both hands and pulled as hard as I could. It was mine, bold and shiny and terrifying and free and all mine at last. The Brave I have struggled to claim for as long as I can remember. I took my brave and I packed it in a suitcase and I walked out the door.

And then the chains. How they rattled and clanked. How they pulled and creaked, rusty and stiff from being still for so long. The weight, so unbearable, long-forgotten from years of quiet tolerance. So many hours of nodding and smiling and "mmm hmm" and "nuh uh," just waiting for my wings to sprout and my Brave to come.

I found my Brave. But it wasn't enough. Like so many other parts of me that aren't enough. That will never be "enough." Because as soon as I pulled with my Brave, they pulled back, harder than ever, with heavy chains and thick ropes and overwhelming shame.

They told me it was wrong. That my Brave was evil. That it was carnal and selfish and not Brave at all, but cowardly. They told me I was stupid. That thinking I could be Brave was crazy and idiotic. For the next 3 hours, my Brave, once shiny and bright, was battered and beaten, dragged down, wings broken, and finally thrown into a box and locked away. "You can have it later," they said, but what they really meant was:

     Don't ask.

     Don't try.

     Don't run.

     Don't dare.

     Brave isn't for you. It was never for you. Brave is only for them. The dirty, the unworthy, the sinners.

They spit the words like venom, sour and dark and poisonous, piercing my very soul until I cowered on the floor, broken and bitter and bloody and so, so trapped. They built up their arguments like a cage around my life, my ambition, my future. Squeezing my world into a tiny box of "yes, sir" and "no, ma'am," where you choose logic and money over love and adventure and spontaneity.

They stole my Brave. They took it away and reprimanded me for playing with the big kids' toys. They told me I wasn't old enough, I wasn't ready, I couldn't handle Brave. I could only handle Timid and Obedient. They sent me to my room, the very room I had pulled so hard to escape, and told me to think about what I had done. They clipped my wings with jagged shears and left scars that will never heal properly.

They stole my Brave. Cut it from my chest with words and paper and Angry-Jesus. Spitting scripture like fire just to keep me chained in place. Whatever happened to "my chains are gone, I've been set free?" This isn't freedom. This is house arrest. This is worse than prison. It's the taste of freedom without ever getting the whole bite, the whole plate, the whole dish. There is nothing worse than hope.

They stole my Brave. They said it was never mine to begin with.

But they were wrong.

I'm taking back my Brave. One day at a time. Bit by tiny bit. I'm collecting the pieces. Gluing the feathers back onto my broken wings. I'm cutting the chains, one by one. I'm making my plans, packing my bags, and making my way out that door one toe at a time. I'm getting ready and as soon as I see my opportunity, in the blink of an eye, the flash of a second, I'll be gone. They'll never see me again. I'll be no more than a flicker in the candlelight, a shadow on the windowpane, a whisper in the wind.

Blink. I dare you.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Eternity in Our Hearts

I want to talk about love.

Real love.

The kind of love that weeps and yearns and overwhelms. The love that washes over you like the tide, crashing and soaking and slipping and moving and refreshing. That flows seamlessly into your heart and fills you to overflowing. The kind of love that can only be described as divinely ordained. Oh, how stunning, how spectacular, how utterly incredible this love can be.

I once thought I had love. That I knew what love was. That it was nice, and sweet, and lovely. That it meant long quiet evenings of spending time together, even though we had nothing in common, and someone to say goodnight and good morning to, and then go on with your day. That it meant making it work, even when it was hard, and choosing to stay together, even when it didn't quite seem right anymore. I was wrong. So very, very wrong.

Yes, that was love, but it was a different kind of love. The love between longtime friends, almost like siblings. A tolerant love. But true love should not be built on tolerance. On "making it work" and hiding in your own separate corners and smiling politely from across the room.

Love is not polite. It's messy and loud and rooted not in smiles and conversation, but in souls and stars and the ebb and flow of passion beyond words. It lives in the realm where words cease to be more than sounds and pictures, where communication is achieved through some mutual language of the soul, incomprehensible by human consciousness, but clearer than crystal to that deep, hidden part of you that only the soul can find. It is the most glorious experience available to humankind, and it is unique to humanity. It's when the very fibers of your being tie and weave into the fibers of another, so that no matter wher you are, some part of you is left with them, and some part of them is always with you. Irrevocably connected. Forever and ever and longer.

My mother has always teased me that I have eternity in my heart. I'm often late, and easily lose track of time. We joke that I run on some cosmic time, which doesn't align with human time. I exist in a state of eternity.

Now, suddenly, I've found someone to share that eternity with. Someone else with eternity in his heart, to lose time with and enjoy each other's company - not just tolerate it. Eternity has never seemed so... Short. As if it's not enough time for us. As you may know, I'm a child at heart, and one of my favorite movies is Winnie the Pooh. A quote comes to mind, when I think of this love. "Forever isn't long at all,
when I'm with you." When the world says "forever" it's a very long time, implying almost an impatience, a desolate wasteland of neverending time. But when we say forever, it isn't long enough. "Forever could never be long enough for me to feel like I've had long enough with you," as the song says.* 


Photo credit: admiredlyrics.com


It's an incredible feeling. One that can't be described. I implore you, if you haven't found a love like this, do not settle for tolerable love. Hold out for that incredible, passionate, inexplicable, eternity defying love. It is well worth it. More than you can imagine.

- Happy Hippie Herbivore



*Marry Me, by Train.