Well guys I don't know much but I do know that when you've had diarrhea for four weeks and then for three days you have what looks like your body's heroic attempt to form a soft serve chocolate ice cream poop you look at it and you are damn proud.
Flush away potential colon cancer lets fight a better fight than the toilet fight.
Other than the south end of me, life is pretty fucking amazing. I'm typing in my little daughter's room because it is the only one with sun at this last drops of the light time of day and there are two dogs at my feet lying in the same direction shape like furry synchronized croissant. From this room you can see through the big bedroom out across the pool to the horses gently swishing tails and eating hay lazily in dappled light and I'm in a fucking french painting.
I was at the shrink which I never want to do and this week we were talking about not carrying any more heavy stones around, like what is in me that I've been hefting for years that I maybe don't need anymore? Apparently carrying around sadness and clutching pain can an eternal internal burden.
I was riding around the lake yesterday with two horses and two dogs and just me and I was thinking what the actual efff, I can throw away stuff?? My mom never did. I mean she did keep a tidy house, we moved a bunch so we had only a core bundle of stuff, but emotionally she had a wide load.
We can throw stuff away that we don't need
whaaaat
So I don't know if it was the ride around the lake which I then did again today because when I went to bed that night I felt actually happy and I don't know if it was the sun or the idea of a lighter life but all these weeks with the shrink I really thought I was doing it for her, I mean she needs a paycheck and then I thought wait a minute I think I can help myself here, too. In this little space where I control everything, she said. It was amazing, to consider.
The creek looked bigger to me. The house seems bigger. Also it is the losing of children, this is a strange thing, watching a movie with B at night and no one is interrupting us with a project or screaming excitement or tears. Of course that is the tragic part of 25 years with chaos and kids. The kids are the meaning of everything. After one month we are slowly breathing again. No one needs a driver's test. No one is hiding in their room on the internet. No one familiar is stomping through the house. This is the tragedy.
But it is quiet and the light is filtering in like it must have been all these years and busy me didn't have a minute to see it. Yesterday I put a chair outside in the barnyard and sat down and watched the chickens and slowly my mind stopped ravelling. Unravelling instead like loose spaghetti on a cheap italian tablecloth. Meriwether the intermittent devil babyhorse came over and stood right next to me and I scratched him. Then when I stopped scratching him he still stayed and rested his head on my head. Then his head got so heavy he rested his nose on my shoulder and fell asleep. He stood there sleeping on me for five minutes.
Retired from active hands on motherhood is a little studied Avengers universe. It's only been a month. There are yawning spans of time that seem like silent film (mostly comedies). There is writing to be edited and done. The garage is looking workable but plenty more hours to be done. But I can open cabinets in there. And then there's me. Me and my rocks. Interior rock pile. The ones inside that I could throw away and watch the huge splash. They're rumbling and I'm putting a curious ear cone down to hear them. The shrink says it doesn't matter when you finally get to your rocks. There is no rush. She says every time you catch a fish, it's fresh.
Having a minute to gather your thoughts without the welfare of three lovely human beings looming in the forefront of your mind is a confusing, hot summer lake vacation. And there is so much writing in the garage. In boxes I am finding envelopes and scrap paper with sideways scribbled notes from scripts I was working on with baby Bess's infant pen doodling all over it and it looks like crazy. Like to hear dialogue and scratch it down on crinkled paper with a baby in your lap that's crazy. There's an urgency to writing. And mothering. Looks crazy.
Looking back from this dog spot on the bed, shhh it is crazy



