On being small

I recently had an experience with my 89 year old mother that opened my eyes to a lingering side effect of my husband’s infidelity and related nonsense. Namely, I am accustomed to making myself small.

I am not small in stature or in voice. Despite that, I realized that my goal since DDay, has been to blend in with the wallpaper. The seeds were certainly sowed before then, during the period of my marriage where I was slowly manipulated into making my needs nonexistent. I was astonished though to see how it still impacts me, even when I least expect it.

Picture a stereotypical New England clam shack at a beach. Great lobster rolls and seating at picnic tables with paper towels for napkins. It’s me, Handsome, and my mom. We have a terrific meal. As we go to leave, my mom gets her legs kind of caught up on the picnic table bench. At her age, her skin is incredibly thin. She immediately has blood pouring from both shins.

To be clear, I’m not talking about a normal person slow trickle from a scrape. By your standards or mine, these were small contusions. Nonetheless, I’m talking about a blood thinner- induced river of red that was running down her shins, pooling in her shoes, and soaking the ground around her feet. We were totally silent, but yet the mere fact of the situation made every movement seem loud.

I’m somewhat accustomed to this. It happens any time my mom gets cut and the slightest bruise makes her look like she has been battered. But there we sit, in the midst of this outdoor dining area, and I found myself resenting my mom for drawing attention to us. For inconveniencing the other diners. For ensuring we were sticking out like sore thumbs. For taking up too much “space” in that moment. WTF??

Of course, like a diligent and loving daughter I was on my hands and knees in the sand trying to stop the bleeding, fielding offers of assistance, and trying to get my mom situated to get her to our car. And I was so incredibly, terribly uncomfortable. Just to pile on, I recognized the absurdity of the discomfort in the moment and it made me angry at myself. Have I really allowed myself to be shoved into such a tiny box that a minor accident makes me feel bad for inconveniencing (at worst) a bunch of strangers??

Having had some time to sit with this I can look back and note times where, during Handsome’s acting out, my whole being revolved exclusively around him and our kids. Therereally was no me. Yes, I worked, but I never really got to enjoy the fruits of that labor other than on a vacation or two. Forget self-care. I recall enduring incredible inconvenience and sacrifice to accommodate him and his needs. I recall not asking for anything, ever, because I knew my request would be discounted or ignored. I’ve written elsewhere here about the one Christmas where I got absolutely nothing from him, and the birthdays and Mother’s Days where I bought gifts for our kids to give me because he couldn’t be bothered and had probably spent all his money on skanks and sex.

When you grow accustomed to that smallness, of course you start to believe that your very existence is likely a nuisance to those who don’t even know you. Fast forward to a sunny day at a clam shack and I was turned right back into that gaslit, manipulated woman, undeserving of space to exist. And I deflected that right onto my mom. How dare she have needs, in public.

I swear, trauma is a bugger. Every time I start to feel like I’m making some progress, something like this kicks me in the butt.

I often de-escalate myself in these situations by telling myself “that was then, this is now.” I need to deliberately remind myself “this is reasonable” to counter all the residual effects of the gaslighting telling me that my needs or wants are unreasonable.

In this instance, Handsome was there, working with me to help my mom and offering reassurances to us both that it would be fine. He wasn’t focused on himself. He was present, both literally and mentally. He was trying to be helpful.

He knew I was suffering, but not why. I wouldn’t know how to explain it. I’m not sure I could make it sound logical. And yet clearly this compulsion to not take up space, not make waves or rock the boat, is still deep inside me. I want it to be gone.

A Day of Remembrance

I find myself thinking about 9/11 a lot. Perhaps more than you might expect. I was actually booked to fly that day on a 3:20 flight from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts via JFK. Needless to say, the flight was cancelled. When I finally flew out -I think it was on 9/14 – the trip was notable both because there was virtually no air traffic, and the sight of lower Manhattan without the twin towers was incredibly disconcerting. If I’m honest, I still haven’t gotten used to it. It’s like my brain struggles to process the fact that they are no longer there.

Years before 9/11 I bought my first piece of pottery from an artist named Mikael Carstanjen. Far from being high-brow, the pieces were functional and they reminded me of my summers in New England. I loved seeing Mikael at craft or pottery shows and I added a piece or two regularly to my set.

On 9/11, Mikael’s son, Christoffer Mikael Carstanjen, was on United Airlines flight 175, bound for LA from Boston. He died at 9:03 AM, along with 50 other passengers and 9 crew members, when the five terrorists on board crashed the plane into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Christoffer is number 383 on the official list of 9/11 victims.

Christoffer’s dad, Mikael, stopped making his pottery shortly after 9/11. He closed his studio and stopped attending shows. I still value and treasure the pieces I have. About a year ago I was walking through an art exhibition in Provincetown, Massachusetts and a painting caught my eye. It was beautiful and I was thrilled to see that Mikael was the artist. He is still creating art. His grief did not take that from him. There is a lesson there in resilience that we can all use.

Hug someone you love today. Remember that none of us are guaranteed another day. Let us all never forget those lost on 9/11 and those they left behind. ❤️🕊🕊🕊❤️