Then, on facebook, a quote we've all read in some form or another, "Just like a shoe. If someone is meant for you, they will fit perfectly. No struggling. No forcing. No pain."
(In facebook, as in life, you zero in on the posts that meet you where you are, and breeze over the rest. We're all the same in that way.)
The procrastination continues as I click to a friend's link to a video from Deepak Chopra on Self-Love.
Then, another friend links to this story on female friendship.
I recall crying to my mother in her kitchen last night. About the same thing. The same man. The same unresolved feelings. She said, "I wish I could fix your head and your heart to match."

While I've struggled to come to terms with a loss so mild compared to the losses of others but equally real, my friends have done the following: traveled across states and continents to visit me, called or emailed or been in touch every day, cried with me into sidecars and sodas and pizzas, written me letters, taken me dancing, gotten me horribly drunk, fed me, hugged me
, held me, sent me uplifting articles to read, made time, baked, cooked, 
I've been impulsive, emotional, slow to heal and frustratingly sensitive many times throughout my life. I've apologized to my friends and family and felt guilty for not "getting over it" faster. But years ago I started to accept that my sensitivity to emotional matters, and my deeply reflective nature is what led me to my career as an artist. My gift to the world is my willingness to fully and wholeheartedly experience this life and reflect and express and translate and symbolize the nuances of relationships, emotions and the unspoken human-ness that unite us all.
Knowing I am never alone in my experiences is the reason I share so much. I go out on a limb over and over again here on my blog, in my work, in my gallery, with reporters writing stories, with friends over a meal and a bottle of wine, because every time I balance and step one foot in front of another, heal to toe, arms outstretched, to the end of the branch... there is always someone there.
Perhaps this is what makes my tree paintings so meaningful to so many people. A trunk full of limbs we've all ventured out onto.If gratitude is the light that shines a way out of self-centered pain, it came to me today, like a blazing sunrise. I am thankful for my friendships over the years,
some have gone, some have remained, and all transcend time and the things that have "happened to us."It is darkest before the dawn.

6 comments:
Wow
This is something I wrote in college many years ago that kind of describes the feeling you speak of..it's called
Into the depths
It's like when
you swim to the bottom
of the deep end of the pool and
lie flat for a while then
let out all of the air in your
lungs and push off to
try to beat the bubbles to the
top and you can see the leaves
of the tree distorted by the inch of
water still left between you and
the breath that's aching to be in your
chest and then someone grabs you
by the leg and pulls you back down
I think maybe it's time to write the sequel about breathing again...I'll keep you posted
P.S. I didn't drown and neither will you
So true for me as well..Love all of that..
So true for me as well.. Love it all..
Beautiful post. Reminds me of a dear friend of mine wrote on her blog recently...
"We don't suffer because we're artists; we're artists because we feel everything so deeply."
Happy Painting:)
jenny
I wrote the sequel...
Again
it's like when
you are swimming to
the surface and
someone has pulled
you back
down and your
heart is closed and
you swim up once
more to try again and
her face appears
distorted by the inch of
water still left between you and
the breath that's aching to be
in your chest and
she comes into focus beautiful
deep soul crooked teeth
intoxicating smile and
you are breathing
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