Freedom

Iowa in mid-August is a baking, steamy oven of a place where heat just hangs in the air because there is nowhere for it to go and the heat is certainly in no hurry to get anywhere. There weren’t enough popsicles or homemade folded fans in the world to keep my five-year-old self cool.   But there was one thing that immediately changed my temperature.  In fact, whenever the thought of it entered my head, I was chilled right to the bone.

THE BRIDGE.

The rickety wooden bridge, with its slight sway and slats wide enough to accommodate my leg, covered the creek that had to be crossed in order to reach the ultimate beacon on the hill. . . . SCHOOL.

I was torn and tormented.  I wanted to go to school so much that it HURT.  My backpack had been ready for weeks, stuffed to the gills with the requisite Kleenex, crayons, kindergarten paste and number two pencils.  It sat in the corner of the closet, waiting for the day to arrive when it would finally be drafted into service. But every time I approached the bridge, my breath would come in short, shallow bursts, my stomach churned, and my knees went weak.  The only way I was able to go from the safety of home to academic nirvana was if someone gave me a piggyback ride across that death-trap of a bridge.    

You see the problem.  Big kindergarteners walk to school themselves.  They cross the bridge and laugh in the face of DANGER.  They certainly don’t get piggybacked across the bridge anymore, and definitely not everyday.   

Thus, the training began.  Each afternoon, my mom, sister, and I would walk to the bridge and every day, I would have the same reaction.  Sheer terror.  I simply froze.  I may as well have been Lot’s wife, because the sight of that bridge froze me into a pillar of salt EVERY TIME.

I would have to cross, and in my mind, CHEAT DEATH, twice a day, EVERYDAY, for the rest of my life.

Exasperated, my mom called in the big guns.

SHE CALLED HANK. 

Towering, formidable, Hank, with hands bigger than a catcher’s mitt, a chest wider than our street, and a gruff determination to fix anything that needs fixing.

To my little self, he was Paul Bunyan, who happened to live next to me on Driftwood Lane.  Or, better yet, he was like Aslan, the lion from The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.  He was scary, but he was good.

Hank, the lovable curmudgeon next door, didn’t tolerate nonsense like little girls who couldn’t cross bridges.

He said we would do it after dinner.  Just me and him.

Needless to say, I wasn’t much interested in my tuna casserole and canned green beans.  I didn’t even want a popsicle.  I was terrified, but in the best possible way.  This matter was going to be settled once and for all.  Either freedom was at hand, or DEATH BY BRIDGE.  If I were a betting woman, I would reckon that Hank would settle for no less than FREEDOM.  I started to sweat.

We walked behind the tract houses on the sidewalk that led to the bridge.  People on their back porches greeted us and inquired about where we were headed.  Hank gruffly responded that we were getting ready to conquer a big ole fear.  The lump in my throat rendered me mute.

We arrived at the bridge and stared at it for a few moments in silence.  

Suddenly, I felt my hand enveloped by Hank’s giant paw.

Slowly, he walked me back and forth across that bridge dozens of times, holding my hand throughout, guiding without forcing.  He gently asked me what was so scary about this bridge, then kindly refuted each of my fears in his gruff, no-nonsense way.  He talked to me about doing hard things.  He talked to me about the importance of studying a problem not from a posture of fear, but as a curiosity that needs to be solved.  In short, he taught me this:

For God has not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind. 
-2 Timothy 1:7

What’s your bridge?  What’s holding you back? 

What is making you less free?

Jess Connolly and Hayley Morgan explore this idea in their first book, Wild and Free:  A Hope Filled Anthem for the Woman Who Feels Like She Is Both Too Much and Never Enough.  
Which sums me up in a nutshell.  I feel like I’m WAY too much, and never, ever enough.  
In alternating chapters, Connolly and Morgan discuss how we let fear, doubt, convention, comparison, competition, and expectations limit our lives and prevent us from being who we were created to be.  They argue that there are all kinds of bondage in this world, and our lives will never change unless we allow ourselves to get FREE.

They want people to cross their bridges.  

So do I.

Freedom is on the other side.  

 

 

 

Get To Work

Here's the not-so-pretty scene:  

Me, idling in my car, three kids squawking in the back, waiting to pick up the fourth, scrolling through Facebook like I am wont to do.  And there it was.  Staring at me.  An innocuous Facebook announcement from a well-loved and notable writer promoting her new endeavor. That's how, I’m sure, it was read by most scrollers.  But, to me, it may as well have been a neon sign blaring. . . .

Sorry, sucker.  Too bad for you.  I took your chance.  You have nothing to say.  There's not enough room for all of us writer folks.  Give up.  Be done.  Sling snacks to little kids because that is all you have the time, energy, and talent to do.  And freaking organize your house, return emails and phone calls before hell freezes over, finish the laundry, get in shape QUICK before summer comes, and for the love of Pete, GET YOUR GRADES SUBMITTED BEFORE THEY ARE LATE AND STUDENTS START STALKING YOU AT TARGET.  Oh, also, did you realize your shirt is on backwards AND inside out? Gah!!  What is WRONG with you?

I'm spewing all this vitriol in my own direction because one of my favorite writer/bloggers has been invited to write for an organization I love.  Not only love, but aspire to write for myself.  Not only aspire to write for myself, but long to be an intimate part of that particular community of smart, thoughtful, faithful people.

I surprised myself by being reduced to hot, angry tears. All I could think about was how this woman, who I truly admire, was living THE WRITING LIFE OF MY DREAMS.  I bought into the notion that there is a limited space for creative people out there, and she just took my place because I was too busy schlepping kids hither and yon to get anything done.  I'm late to the party!  There certainly isn't enough room for me. Now this (extremely talented) writer is now surrounded by the people that I would give my right arm to be working alongside.  Not that it was ever even a viable option for me in reality, but WHATEVER.

I feel indicted. . .indicted by my own lack of commitment to the craft of writing, by my lack of showing up for myself everyday on the page, for not just going for it, and for letting my dream be deferred, one snack request and laundry load and text message at a time.

BUT.  More than all of that, I feel profoundly, deeply, desperately afraid to be rejected. 

I'm afraid to FAIL.

So I don't get to work.

I make excuses.

I create habits and activities and tasks that prohibit me from working.  I escape and feed my Bravo TV  habit. (But, in my defense, I also read the Bravo blogs!  It's studying the craft of writing, OKAY?).

The differences between me and my envied writer/blogger may be legion, in that she has real, quantifiable, actual talent, and I scratch out missives on a teeny tiny little blog, but there's definitely one glaring difference between us:  she works.  As in, gets up every morning before her kids and gets her work done.   Me, not so much.

In studying the habits of writers, I realized that I'm not alone.  Stalling, procrastinating, self-defeating self talk, the shame spiraling. . . all writers cope with it.  The ones that succeed just push through all the nonsense and do their work.

Here's the amazing thing.  The writer who "took my place" didn't take anything from me.  In fact, she is one of the biggest advocates of aspiring writers out there. Which, frankly, annoys me even more in this moment.  She is magnanimous AND talented?  GAH!!!  She makes it so hard to be mad at her. 

Shortly after my tearful outpouring of frustration and envy, I read these words by Jennie Allen in her book, Restless:

Behold my view in the carpool line, where everything GETS REAL. 

Behold my view in the carpool line, where everything GETS REAL. 

Hear me.  You have a race that no one else can run. So please run.

Please run.  Despite my jealousies and histrionics, I resolved that I do not want to write for just fun, or for accolades, or even for the prospect of being read.  I just want to write as my work. Because by writing, I may, in fact, work out my life.  The process of running my race and writing my stories. . . it helps me to determine what I think, feel, believe.  Through wrestling with words and ideas, I can see who I might become.  The process of writing could be life-giving for me, and maybe (cringe!) for others as well.  And these "others" don't have to read my work in the New York Times or on HuffPost, although, who wouldn't like that?  Maybe some folks will just read what I have to say in an email.  Or on my wee little blog. Or not at all.

Tears are wiped dry.  Sighs released.  A congratulatory Facebook message is sent to the writer that unknowingly sparked all of this angst.

I don't have any more time to waste.  It's time to get to work.

My life is waiting.