6

I suppose that "getting older" simply means acknowledging the passing and progression of time and realising that we process time in increments, trying to relate it to personal change. Lately I've been noticing the ways that I wear this time now.

I don't know if I worry less (particularly during this moment in history), but I surrender less frequently and less anxiously to that worry. I am better equipped to resist easy feelings, a seductive recklessness that teases the possibility of making up for whatever is lacking in a given moment. And of course, there are lots of empty moments. Maybe this is a way to say that all I try to do these days is embody acceptance.

I think that people who are not loved well or stably or reassuringly, or at all quite frankly, in a way they can understand when they are younger are inevitably more impulsive. They spend their entire lives looking in often the wrong places for something to fill up that void. I think this made me rash and it made me desirous. Above all, it connected me to all the outcasts and people on the fringe.

When I feel that lack, and trust me I do, I get tempted to pick up the phone, a bottle, a flame. I attempt to use other people, people who I do not know nor care for in the way that I know I can, or that matters, to alleviate me from the pain of loneliness, of longing, and of lack. And so I'm older now. I don't pick up the phone very much anymore.

At what point do you begin to take responsibility for your own life? At what point do you say: enough is enough and if I'm going to stick around in this place, I have to muster and magnify the resolve. I think the breaking point is not always profound or seismic like you see in the movies, but sometimes just a steady chain of fissures. So much of this life ends up being about accumulation which is to say that somehow it all matters and doesn't matter at all.

Taking responsibility to me means owning my role in things, especially my own fucking life. Assume the lead role in your own life! It positions me as an active director, not a passive bystander to which things happen.

Of course, there is an element of happening, of being acted upon. That's for sure; there are plenty of black swan events out of our personal control. We are living through one now. But we can control our responses to circumstances; we can keep trying to adjust them until they become more reflexive, and time passes, and we feel somewhat anew. Better. That's all it is: this going and going and ongoing and once you stop pushing against it, you can just lean in.

I think one of the turning points for me as an adult is no longer seeing the point of or feeling gratified by blame. I can point a finger in a factual sense; I can recall events, words and actions but it does me no good to attach emotional wounds to those histories anymore. I am not grown up in any proper sense of the word but I am grown up in that I no longer expect my parents (or others in my orbit) to do what a younger me believed they should have done; I do not blame them anymore for the way things shook out. It is nobody's responsibility once you are an adult to make you feel love or to heal you. I learned the hard lessons very early. Nothing lasts forever and you cannot make someone love you.

So much of taking control and ownership does not mean more management, more involvement but rather more perspective. Knowing when to take a step back, and stay there. Knowing that in the grand scheme of things you have no control, but you can still make someone, including yourself, feel good. You can always do something beautiful.

Getting Older
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