I learned a lesson in love this week.
Intellectually I could say I already "knew" what I am about to share;
it is after all, what I teach, write, and practice on a regular basis. But, we
all have those particular lessons in love that need to come out of difficult
places relative to our past and to who we are now. They are the ones that move
us into a deeper ability to love. Of all things, it came by going to my grade
school class' 25th reunion. You might think, "who goes to such a thing or
what kind of school has such an event?" I'll give some brief background
and it is understandable if you don't relate to this part of the story. In the end, I
think what awakened me is something we can all relate to. It happens in all
groups, in all places; it is not particular to me.
I went to a private school on the North
Shore of Long Island from 3rd through 9th grade. It was a class of around 40
students and most of us were together for all of those years and many were there
longer. Looking back I can say that the education was excellent. The
school ended after 9th grade and most kids went on to boarding schools. My
parents moved us to Florida after graduation and I was no longer in touch with
this group of people with which I had spent these critically formative years.
Something about my experience there was not easy for me. I never felt like I
fit in. I was shy. I didn't belong to the same country clubs. I rarely felt like
I had the right clothes and I always knew my life was going to take a very
different turn. It did.
When I got the invitation to this reunion, the first of
its kind, I felt this surge of complex feelings run through me ending with the
question, "do I go?" I'd be a single mom going with a history that
would surely be "different" than most of the paths taken there. I had
an artist's life. I struggled to get by. I lived in Brooklyn and now in NJ
(saying NJ alone, turned some heads, which if you're from NY you know what I
mean). I work hard and live simply. My fear in going was that I'd feel so apart
from the group, yet again. My excitement in going was to return to this place,
where I once felt so much struggle, with the sense of who I am now, which is
much more confident, not so shy, joyful, and appreciative of the richness of my
experience. I wanted to step onto those beautiful school grounds, walk through
those buildings, talk with my past classmates, and feel good. I wanted some
healing. Not healing from a bad experience or from being treated wrongly, of
which I never was, but healing in the internal struggle I felt there, that I
have never been able to reconcile. This
feeling of being “apart.” It is a feeling many of us may know.
I pulled up alongside the old, tremendous
trees that line the entrance to the school and was flooded with memories and an
unexpected sense of joy, excitement, and familiarity. There is something about
leaving what you know so well that makes returning magical. If we never leave,
we lack the perspective to see anew. I drove through the gate and passed the
playing fields that sent me reeling back in time to wearing those blue athletic
shorts and gold shirts. I walked into the new building where the event was to
be held and it was not long before I was greeted with a huge hello and a giant
hug from a classmate of mine whose outgoing nature clearly grew even larger in
the years away. It was such a welcomed relief to receive first thing upon
arrival. Only a small section of our class was going to be at this reunion, but
it was perfect. I can't say I was completely at ease, but as we all took a walk
through the school and reflected and laughed at the times there, there was
something warm and comforting about it. As I listened to people, I could tell
my life was in fact way outside the bounds of theirs, as I always knew it would
be. It still unnerved me as I drove the long drive home feeling that
strange mixture of warmth and separateness again, even though they all made me
feel welcomed. No one asked too much and so I never had to share the turns of
my life over the past 25 years. As I drove, I imagined that, if they had
inquired, I would be judged. That assumption kept coursing through me,
perpetuating this old notion I had of the way things were. But then, an amazing
thing happened. I slept on it and in the morning had the insight that if I put
all of my defenses down, if I stopped that story that I was on the outside and
instead took in these friends who never rejected me or hurt me and opened my
heart to them, I could finally heal. If I stopped being afraid of being hurt
and brought forward the person I am, with my openness, warmth, and kindness and
shared it as I do with so many these days, I could, for once, enjoy this group
I had spent my childhood with. Not only could I do it now, but I could do it
retroactively. I can now appreciate those 7 significant years. I have
permission to say, “wow, that was a gift of an experience.”
We can choose to love. We have the amazing
capacity to decide to let go of our defenses and love instead. I can stop the
comparing and the judging that I was doing, thinking all along it was “them.”
Even if any one of them were to judge my life or not include me in his/her
circles then or now, I can still love and keep my heart open and offer
kindness. I would have nothing to lose; love can't be hurt. When we are
fearful, we limit our experience of life. It is as though we put a cage around
ourselves in the name of safety, but in fact there is no tiger to guard
ourselves from if we recognize that love and safety are inside us and are
boundless. We often limit our freedom. Even a tiger coming at us can’t touch
our love. It is the most powerful tool we have, greater than any shield, armor
or weapon.
Some part of me feels as though I owe an
apology to my classmates for holding myself back out of fear all those years. I
also feel that I owe myself a tremendous amount of compassion for feeling the
way I did, for those years of not knowing who to play with on the playground
when I wasn't outwardly invited to join in the game of foursquare or the
anxiety of who to sit with at lunch. Kids don't do that! They don’t necessarily
invite you. I am now teaching my children not to wait for an invitation, but
rather to be the invitation. To share our love and life, laughter and pain --
that is what makes a rewarding life, at any age. It needs no invitation. When I
think I am going to be judged, I am holding myself back and that is a lost
opportunity. I can also see and value that my nature is sensitive, that I
am an observer and a reflector, and that those years of feeling slightly apart
set me up to do the work I do with people. There is nothing I would change. In
fact this lesson will continue to serve me in new settings I enter, in
teaching before a group, in giving a talk before strangers. It reminds me that
it is not their acceptance I need, it is my smile and warmth I need to give and
that is all. To be a monk walking in the rush-hour crowd at Penn Station. It is
the same thing. No matter where I am, I have at the core of me love and I can
move, think, act and feel from there. This is happiness.
Who really knows how different my path is
from any of those classmates of mine. It appears different on the outside, but
inside, we are all made of the same blood, flesh and bones. We have the same
vulnerable hearts and the same wish for love. That is all we ever need to
remember. I am grateful for my experience, for that school, for the teachers
there, and for the boys and girls who made that grade. I could see their beauty
at the reunion and my own. There is such healing in that. I am grateful that I
had to leave and I am grateful that I came back.
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