Starting From Scratch
On Saturday, I waited for the old year to play itself out, on Sunday, I started the new year with a feeling of dread, and today . . . well, today I got on with my life. Every upsurge of grief seems to end with a new level of acceptance, a renewed determination to live. One of the factors one has to deal with during the second year of grief is realizing for the hundredth time that this new state of being without our loved ones is permanent, that there is no redo. You start from here, from scratch.
Scratch is a starting line for a race scratched in the dirt, and starting from scratch means you start at the beginning with no advantages, even if you're the weaker contender. That's exactly how this feels — a scratch beginning, no advantages. We bereft see other couples, some who have been together for decades longer than we were granted, and yet here, at our new beginning, we start alone, uncoupled. I try to see this as being given a chance for freedom, but freedom connotes not just freedom from something, but freedom for something. I am free of my worries for my dead life mate/soul mate (though oddly, sometimes I still worry. Is he warm, comfortable, happy?) but I have not yet discovered what I am free for. That will come, perhaps, with living.
Today, as a symbol of starting from scratch, I planted my Bonsai. Well, I planted the black pine seeds. Bonsai means potted tree, and a pot of dirt and a few seeds do not equal a tree. At least, not yet. I'll just have to wait to see what happens. Who knows, in ten, twenty, fifty years, I might have my own little potted tree. That's assuming, of course, that if the seeds sprout and if they grow, I'll be able to snip off any of the precious growth. I mean, how would you like it if someone decided to make a potted plant of you, and snipped off a few fingers or even a limb just because they found it pleasing? Okay, so maybe I don't quite have the hang of positive thinking, but I did plant the seeds, so that counts for something!
My grief book is also in the works. I got my manuscript back from my publisher today with the final edits. One editor had to give up on it — couldn't see the words through her tears. The editor who finished the work said, You've written an exquisite book. It's wrenching to read, and at the same time full of profound truths. I can see many of the sayings from the book being used as proverbs by grief counselors, such as "time is the currency of love." You have many, many profound insights.
A nice way to start from scratch — with a new book and wonderful compliments. My grief book probably won't be available for a couple of months, and that's fine. I need time to get used to the idea. It's a hard thing to do, putting oneself out there for anyone to gawk at. People are mostly kind, especially those who will find comfort knowing someone else feels what they did, but I worry about the first time I get a nasty review. It's one thing to get a terrible review when it's a story you made up. It's something completely different when it's your life. What if someone tells me to just stop whining and get over it? Maybe I'm gathering disadvantages before I ever cross the starting line, so I won't think about that.
There might not be a redo button in life, but there is "do," and putting the book out there is doing something. And so is planting a tree. This might not be an auspicious beginning, but you can't expect more when you're starting from scratch.
Tagged: bonsai, death, freedom for, grief, loss, planting a tree, redo, starting from scratch







