01/02/2024
Reflections: January 2, 2024
HOPE
There are many things that people droll on about at the end of the year, or rather the beginning, as it seems to be. It’s a time for reflection, rejuvenation and some might say resolution. We highlight our accomplishments, hold ourselves accountable for newly implemented diet/exercise routines, or wearily reference the things that went bad vowing never to allow them to happen again. As if it were that simple.
To some degree it’s comforting to see all the resolutions that people make. I like seeing friends stand up for a better, more refined version of self. Who doesn’t love a hero’s journey? Besides, it’s a worthy cause to make a fresh start in a new year. However, appealing to my more cynical side, I often find myself rolling my eyes and saying to myself with a proverbial cigarette in one hand and bourbon on the rocks in the other, “Sure Janet, I just bet you’re going to read 45 books this year.” Rest assured, Janet is not going to read 45 books, but she IS going to listen to upwards of 30 audiobooks at a rate of 3x the speed and then proceed to call it “reading”. I digress (sardonically flicks cigarette ash in tray*).
But I certainly don’t want to be left out of the great yearly self-evaluation, with an emphasis on well curated moments that point to where I went right (or wrong, I suppose). I too, want to climb the Matterhorn of self-discovery, placing my flag high atop, marking my arrival while I wax philosophic about my plans for the year ahead. Or rather confessing my rejections of the year past. Either way, it seems noble.
Though, on second thought, I’ve been burned one too many times making public proclamations regarding the future and the past so I’ll likely not do any of that. By burned - I mean I’ve been humbled beyond belief so I try to go gently in a direction that feels safe if even it becomes, unbeknownst to me, uncharted shark infested waters. What can I say? I’m no fortune teller.
This year was no different than any before, and as I started performing the breast stroke through life I soon found myself being encircled by the blood thirsty predators that only comes from finding oneself swimming in extremely deep unfamiliar oceans. This last year was another year of learning, understanding and healing. Though, I don’t think that’s earth-shattering news as any one of us in any given year has the opportunity to learn, understand, and heal.
However, this year was a little intense. I’m stubborn, so it takes me a while to understand any sort of enlightenment. By the time I start to get it I’m already being dragged kicking and screaming into the next less desirable iteration of life while bargaining with whomever or whatever is doing the dragging that I now want to do it the easy way and NOT this way. Alas, I will have waited too long and must surrender to the hard way as it seems to be the only option. I don’t say that in a self-shaming way. It’s just how I’m wired – that is until I choose to do it differently. One day far in the future, no doubt. Did I mention I’m stubborn?
While I won’t bore you with all of the bruised details you can surmise that the aforementioned shark infested waters of life proved to be alive and real this year with me barely emerging unscathed (though I’m not quite sure I’ve actually emerged) having my legs rubbed raw as the sea-dwelling beasts of prey brushed up against me threatening my every move. They got as close to me as possible without having me for lunch. Or dinner.
This year, due to a shocking revelation, I discovered (with the help of my Spiritual Director, Irene) that I have a penchant for transactional behavior especially where matters of the Divine and the universe are concerned. Things like: I do this, the universe gives me that. I make those strides, the Divine rewards me with these things. I soon understood that that my newly found awareness of being someone whose actions were always transactional, also rendered me a person lost without hope.
The problem was that what I had been relying on as *hope* had actually been some truncated ever-failing version of control and manipulation. My particular brand of hope felt like climbing upside down on a mountain that was covered in ice. As I reflected on that frightening image, I realized that I didn’t know what hope was or how to invoke it in a healthy way. My version of hope was anxiety ridden, and while I don’t know much I don’t think that’s how it’s meant to be.
Over the last several months I’ve set out to find a version of hope that is, shall we say, less wired. I’ve written in my journal, taken long meditative walks, and have had even longer talks with myself (and whatever might be listening) asking that a manifestation of this illusive virtue be given to me. At times it was almost like I could touch it. I’d try to fling a lasso around it to catch it in midair, only to realize I was yet again attempting to trade in transactional manipulation. This left me feeling strained, stressed, and stricken (I'm not sure this is the correct word, but you get the picture. Both comedy and alliteration work best in “threes”. What was I to do?).).
While this post won’t end with a lavish discovery of the meaning of hope, I will offer something that’s a bit more manageable. For the sake of a new year, I’ve decided to flirt with the idea of anticipation instead. Hope, as it were, still seems somewhat overwhelming as the tentacles of my bargaining past remain intact, although slightly more pliable. Cautiously, I will say that I’ve experienced dwelling in anticipation a few times without insisting that the Divine perform for me like a Genie in a bottle. And I liked it. This is much harder than it may sound, and I’m not exactly winning at it- though it’s my intention to stay in that space more each day. A space of wonder where I’ve done my absolute best. Without holding on. Without trying to control. Without transacting results.
As I sit here pondering in the first few days of a new year I remember a line at the end of Amor Towels debut novel Rules of Civility where the main character Katey Kontent stares out at the Empire State Building from her New York City apartment terrace. She looks back on the remarkable and painful twists and turns her life has taken and muses to herself.
“I have hoped; I am hoping; I will hope.”
Here’s to a year that I hope is filled with hope (or at the very least, anticipation).
Nathan Aaron