Wednesday, April 27, 2011

What Should Come First- The Identity Crisis or the Vow of Poverty?

I often feel at odds with an imposter that has usurped my soul and, in addition (grasping at the most self-aggrandizing of language) made me a total phony to myself. This has always been my greatest fear— but at least in the fantasy, I was rich, traveling, and important.

What is this imposter, though? How do I look at it carefully, at a distance, for its whole being, when I dispense so much of my waking self upon another trajectory— that which I hope to accomplish in my work—my “call to service”? Where do I begin? And end. How do I examine myself when I’m staring at the memo, the phone, the godforsaken subway tunnel all day?

The imposter, as far as I can tell, is this sort of second-self. The one that, in many, likely inhabits the shoulder or kneecap and merely whispers and mutters suggestions of impending failure. It points to pathways of dissatisfaction, of lying to ourselves, of regret, and indecision—pathways we’d look back on later and wish we had never seen the signs for. And though this second-self might point to such delusional realities in ways that are practical and to some extent even helpful, for it is how they are to be avoided at all, this send-self is ultimately to be ignored because, damn it all, we’re Americans and we don’t have to worry about regret! We can do anything, because we’re modern people in the free world! and we can explore whatever roads we want in life, like cooking school, the suburbs, and bicuriosity. This “second self” is no more than a shadow looming on a low day, I suspect. Moaning on a Monday when we want to switch jobs or have an affair or up and move to Dubai six years ago. Maybe that’s what it is, for some.

For me though, this second self is so labeled the “imposter” because it takes over and impersonates the sum of my character. It clutches the skeleton that holds me together pushes me, contorts me, in violating motions so convincing that everyone around me believes that I really believe what I say and do. The words I utter, the messages I write, the enthusiasm in my eyes are all fake, and for my salary, it’s downright cheap for me to sell my soul at this price. So close to resembling what I want to be, and yet so far from being it. That is the essence of deception.

Maybe it’s not all quite so melodramatic. I spend most of my moments with others hungrily pursuing opportunities to move up- to move out- in the world. I seek a sense of centeredness, of belonging, of saying, “Oh, yeah. This is me.” More than that, I am compulsively hunting for a reasonable alternative for the worst-case-scenario I have wandered into through some self-fulfilling prophecy. I search in vain, thus far, for the solution, a resolution to my malcontent. But perhaps, first, I should locate the source.

It’s far less about my skin and hips and sexuality now than it is about my location, my ability to sit still. And the irony, of course, is that I flew thousands of miles to sit for weeks in a Soto Zen temple in Japan to learn that a single grain of rice might be worth setting all of one’s senses upon, if it means snatching the grain of rice in the exact manner in which we intend. Meaning that, if we give ourselves over to something without reluctance, we can find gratification and a symbiosis with that thing in such a way that the search for gratification is thereby over. I learned this in the most clichéd fashion and forum possible. It benefitted me for about a week.

I’ll give you another example. Today, on the subway, I stared at a dog for 30 minutes. It felt like what I imagine acupuncture is like. It targeted something really lost in me. I doing so, I recognized how desperately I wanted to hold it, to pet it. I have only distant memories of what the fury haunches of a Labrador really means to me, and that seems wrong. Such sensory deprivation is beyond criminal. I have become the creature that readily expects a disabled train but not a friendly nod by any stranger. I know the ring of a Toshiba X200 but cannot remember what hot pavement feels like anymore. I am more familiar with disgruntled muttering to myself than I am with naïve optimism.

Even in “public service” I have become a zombie amid my corporeal deficiencies over the course of the winter, in which I spent most of my days under fluorescent lights, in steel chairs (in chairs at all!) and in a state of strange absorption. Others’ words, others’ orders, others’ interpretations of women and sex and the world and many other things I hold dear. Why, then, was I not able to turn my thoughts to my writing at the end of the day and reflect upon what I’d “learned?” Why couldn’t I, at the very least, spew some minor insight beyond an incensed “status” update without further exploration? Why haven’t I, at the most basic level of what we call the names of Zen and Feminism, “just do good”? That’s all it ever asked of me, and I failed. I fail. But it’s likely because I forgot the foundation beneath that tenet.

The first thing to remember in anything that claims to have the interest of others at its core is to care for oneself—to saturate the senses with goodness to further churn the Good. “Inundate one’s compartments for love with music, warmth, and light.” It’s all there, though many of us might misinterpret any experience we have with “Buddhism” or something of the sort as “extinguishing desire” and losing the self completely. But the lesson delivered by my brief conscious (and expensive) practice and my everyday experience of refusing my soul the things it needs most is that, to push the spirit to exist, nourish, and love outside of the body, it must first and always flourish within it. There is no singular “sending off” of the soul onto some vaporous plane of assuredness, accomplishment, and goodness. It is, instead, an appendage with unlimited expanse and reach— if its roots are enduring, nourishing, and fertile.

I’ll break from my “Eat, Pray, Barf” tangent here, but it is actually critical to my point. We cannot discover ourselves or our self-indulgent journeys to the core of our purpose(s), or any sense of peace in my mind if we don’t recognize and cultivate our most basic needs.

That is to say, perhaps sitting at a desk all day writing emails saturated with nonprofit buzzwords with someone else’s signature is not the best way to change how the world sees and talks about rape. Maybe sitting under incandescent tubes all week isn’t as fulfilling as the four weeks’ vacation and health insurance might have us believe. Maybe bullshitting my way through a “practical” graduate degree because it sounds like something people in my field might hire for is wasting more time and money than the goddamn PhD or JD I really wanted but talked myself out of because I was too scared of standardizes testing. Maybe by the time I’m 30 I’ll have hit that maternal phase and none of this will matter anymore because my “kids will be my whole life and no regrets ehhhh!”

And maybe this is all terribly obvious to everyone. But that’s part of living alongside a life-sized parasite in one’s body— it’s so convincing, so articulate, and it knows you so well that sometimes, you forget who is the real Rach. Who is the boss, who lives, and who dies. And who just lies. Waiting to be born. And even as I lie in wait, I fear you will read this, and mistake me.

Chasing Tails, Paper Trails.

“I wanted only to live in accord with the promptings which came from my true self. Why was that so very difficult?”

It has taken me two hours, 4 months, and about 10 years to write this. Even as I begin to type, I can feel the surge of expression clinching in my throat and sifting back down into dislocation— or perhaps fading, not unlike the lucid nightmare that we forget shortly after waking. A stillborn dream, sucking the calcium from my teeth and then expiring. Back to dust and mixed metaphors.

But it’s worth trying. That’s what I’ve been telling myself in the decade that I have tried to leave the paper trail of my soul- not to anyone precious enough to wade through it or traverse down it, but rather, to something more ethereal that might alter my karmic nature. This sounds, of course, pretentious and grandiose, and that is why I have not articulated it before. And I am starting to think that the silence is more to my detriment than the impending criticism from my real and imaginary naysayers.

I have not written for fear of failing to perfectly articulate myself. The breadcrumbs of my lifelong polemic lead from misanthropic discomfort to foolish anger to inescapable codependence. I have spoken out, to be sure. I have updated my “status” (what is my status?) almost compulsively since a platform for it existed for it. I have complained, shown righteous indignation, and all the while searched in vain for some practical, lucrative, and “secure” way of channeling my otherwise seething outlook on the world. I have mustered my inner megalomaniac and determined I have no choice—no choice!— but to defend my personal and improvable perception of what’s worthy and deserving in the world. Hence the venture into public service. But I have not written for fear of being wrong, for fear of regretting the permanence (are words permanent anymore?) of my thoughts, for fear. I have found every way possible to live a life that resembles what I want, but in so doing actively avoids what it is I want. For fear, and that is cowardice. That is, if my perception of the world and desire to alleviate suffering has any relative merit whatsoever, I am a coward for hiding behind the institutions that, in complicit fashion, position me as an advocate for any cause. Yes, it’s true. I have not written for fear, and this is the greatest offense not only against myself, but against the very karmic nature I am speaking of— my choices themselves spring from complete self-absorption and end with them.

Which is another problem. Aside from the fear, I like to think of myself as this tool through which good might be wielded. The problem there, of course, is that I think of myself first, and the Good second. I want to do it all perfectly: find the ideal role through which I might help people, fill it in the right capacity, fit the proper gaps in the universe in manner of some martyr so that I might be absolved of my (let’s face it) yuppie angst and liberal guilt— and all with great benefits and job security.

That’s not to say I don’t genuinely care about people. I do. Except for the general manager of the MBTA. He can take a long walk off a short pier.

But all this is to say that one thing has become glaringly obvious to me this year. And that’s that I’m not happy. I appear to have too many windows in my mind open at once, and the cross breezes of my consciousness relentlessly cast the unfortunate circumstances happening around me, my participation in them all (great and small), and my obsession with averting regret (and thereby risk) makes for a very unfortunate future in my mind (and present, for that matter). I am debilitated by fear and indecision and all in the fragile guise of a “go-getter” dedicated to the public interest. I volunteer! I started grad school! I make shit money in a neat nonprofit! I’m good, right?

Maybe what I’m really going for, since I can’t clearly see what it is I want without flinging myself around like a pinball at the prospect of standardized testing, exhausting hours, and low wages, is to just have someone tell me that my interest in the public interest is satisfactory enough. Perhaps my real dream is to be eulogized in some awesome tragedy in manner of Marlowe, the Greeks, or Michael Bay. Now that would make an impact.

So why is it, with all of these opinions, substantial grammar skills, and the faculties to at least detect wit and humor, that I can no longer write? Why is it that, despite being housed for most of my waking life in an office that spouts the feminism I live and breathe, I cannot sit and tell you about it? Why is it that, despite living my dream of a paid teaching position, I cannot stand and deliver? Why is it that, despite two years of vetting the “next step” in my education, I’m desperately unchallenged, unsatisfied? Is it me? And worst of all, if my priority truly is the interest of the public, why have I already referred to myself in the first person in this piece more than a dozen times?

It could be circumstantial. Sure. For days, I could cite circumstantial reasons for my dissatisfaction and recite a yarn of convincing and acceptable excuses- for my fears, my pitfalls, my ultimate failure to discover and truly be what I want (what is that, again?). I could say that 2011 has been tainted by my beloved Nonna’s unexpected death, an emergency surgery, the unforgiving cancellation of my already floundering graduate program, my family’s brave but failed attempts at “recovery,” and my year-long displacement from a real home, to say the least, is disheartening. But it always has been. I could list all of these things, and do, here, as I have been reminded to by countless loved ones. (I should take a moment to pause and appreciate that my recent and crippling fear of failure in my vocation has helped to alleviate my fear of being abandoned and alone. Score one for the codependents.)

But to list these excuses is deeply unsatisfying, and only magnifies the menacing cloud ahead of me: if I am unable to withstand the challenges of independence, which come with the pursuit of doing good- real good- in the world (what’s real good again?) then I might as well give up now.

(To clarify, the sorts of things I consider “giving up on” include, but are not limited to: my dream of changing the cultural perception of sexual violence against women; my goal of doing so through the written word and oration; my hopes of pursuing an academic track in law, public policy, global health, or some other related field; ever taking the GRE because I am terrified of math; ever being able to spend more than two hours alone without calling someone; ever being able to afford to grow old; and relationships in general.)

Remember that show “Eek! The Cat”? Wasn’t he afraid of ham sandwiches? Well let me you, I was petrified of that show. What’s that say about me? Enough about me- what do you think about me?

Back on topic. I’m yellow in that I answered the phone between this sentence and the last one because I can’t say “no” to the prospect of being sought after by someone who shows interest in me. Mostly because I am afraid of the consequences of not clutching to another concrete thing outside of myself when it reaches for me, and of painful consequences in general. Such things lead to involuntary solitude. Abandonment, as I said. I previously tolerated negativity and misuse from others because I feared the alternative, and now surround myself with good folks who might not know that I chew my fingers wondering what I’d do without them.

Why am I afraid of rejecting attention, even if it’s poorly timed or placed? And does it really matter? I used to think so, but the more I’ve “dealt” with it—the “my parents are to blame” model of self-actualization—the more I’ve questioned what other areas of my life besides residual adolescence are at the detriment of such a pervasive fear, and where it manifests in my self-perception and interpersonal dynamics—you know, outside of the “I hate my mom and dad” one.

Turns out, everywhere. Or maybe that’s part of the obsessive compulsion to self-analyze. Either way, it’s become a full-time job alongside my full-time job, part-time education, and feeble attempts at building a successful present and future. It is ironic and counterproductive in that it is equally exhausting to recognize a pattern of behavior and all but completely fail to break out of it. I expend most of my energy each day acknowledging that I say “sorry” too much, that I feel subverted by working and writing on behalf of other professionals without ever increasing my own skills, that I lack complete confidence in ways I never have, and yet, I do not have the energy or resources or wherewithal to combat (or perhaps accept) my current self. I thought that three years of immersing myself in the culture of “what I want to do” would make me more confident. But the truth is, I resorted to writing this in order to avoid preparing for my lecture tomorrow. Maybe I’m just not mean to teach. But more likely, I simply have lost my voice to a strangler in the work-a-day world.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

let your poison choose you.

They said that you’re the one

but we don’t give much credence

To the voices behind the ice

Or the poison that drowns them

anymore so I don’t tell you.

They were prophets

And made a megalomaniac

Of me and now we know the crystal

They throw is not a ball, has no shape

for soothing at all.

Just a plastic vessel for their disease

The idea, the shape of emptiness

Waiting to be filled.

But still, with it I tell the future

To you now, each night.

Inherited the practice, I did

To look into the glass

Predict your sorrow

And mine

For silver

Linings

outside

this cabin

Of gypsies, beggars

And thieves.