An Anxious Mind

I have been walking this line for quite some time. Walking like some kind of sick acrobat with a death wish I walk one foot in front of the other with the edges of my feet hanging over the sides.

I am good at walking the ledge.

I can move at a steady pace with no fear for years. I don’t look at the drop off. I don’t see the distance down to the assured body mangling splat at the bottom. I just walk with one foot in front of the other. My life moves on at this pace and my life is good.

Every once in a while I throw in a dance or a flip because I’m feeling courageous and want to flirt with the danger over that edge. Then I walk on and on.

Then every once in a while I glance down out of habit. Even if it lasts only for a second, in that second my mind remembers the danger here. My brain clicks on to the peril I am in and in another instant the walking stops.

Everything halts and I am stuck in place with my eyes trained on the bottom. My body rocks and my head spins, my legs shake, and my blood boils in its veins. My face heats up and my eyes are unable to focus on anything else.

Part of me knows I was walking fine a second before. I know I’ve been moving fine. I know I will again, but in this moment I can’t think of that. All I can think of is the fear of falling. All there is now is the drop.

There was no momentous occasion. There was no near fall to get me to the point of clinging onto the edge with both hands white knuckled. No one pushed me. No one scared me.

All it was was the slightest practically insignificant change in perspective, and my mind was gone. Lost to the fall. Walking is now not an option. I’m just holding on to survive. I can’t think. I can’t.

My pride forces me to look up to the edge. I look down the straight line of this walkway that ends when I do fall. I was walking a minute ago. I remember that now. I was walking fine. So with a deep shaking breath I push up onto my arms that feel like they might give out. I press my weight back into my rocking feet and raise my body from the floor slowly.

Don’t look down.

Don’t look down.

Look at the step in front of you. One step. One small step at a time. One unsteady foot moves in front of the other. At a glacial pace I move forward not trusting my own body or mind. I am hyper aware of the drop. I am focusing on falling almost as much as moving, but I pretend the fear isn’t there.

A few steps and my mind remembers the rhythm. I remember how to walk. I remember how to go on. One step. One step.

I move gradually regaining my confidence. The ledge is all I have and I will walk it each and every day. Some days I will dance. Some days I will lie down with shaking hands and racing heart and grasp it with an uncontainable fear of falling off.

There is no grand cause or scheme to change this. There only needs to be the smallest glance. A minute change in perspective and everything comes tumbling down.

Don’t ask me what happened. Do not ask me what went wrong. Nothing did and everything apparently did all at the same time. Things I am not conscious of happened within this mind of mine to send me clinging to the edge. I am always aware of the fall. I feel it in each and every step I step.

The fall is the out of focus section of the picture. Just a glance though in the wrong direction can make the fall the main attraction.

I will get up again. Moments of fear only make me stronger. They make me walk tall. I walk with pride knowing what I can survive within this war against my own mind.

Step by step.

One step.

One step.

©C. O’Connor, 2018

What I Really Want

The things I want are not what you think I want. I do not want clothes, or shoes, or material things. What I hope for is a state of mind.

I want to wake up excited for the day, every day. I do not only want to look forward to the special days when something new is planned.

I want to live without stressing about schedules: work schedules, sleep schedules, no schedules. Except for the ones I create. No life except the life I choose.

I want to be adventurous without worrying about the things that I should be doing.

I want to be reckless without worrying about my reputation.

I want to stay up and sleep late without knowing that the next day will be a waste because of it.

I want to have a job that doesn’t exhaust me so much that by the time I get home I have nothing left in me other than the ability to get ready for the next day.

I want to go outside and see the sun without glass in between.

I want to be happy.

I want to care about things that I care about because I care about them, and not because I’m supposed to according to someone else.

I want to look forward to tomorrow because I am excited about each second.

I want to want to live every moment to its fullest, and not see each day as something standing in my way. One more day on the count down to something.

I want more from life than this.

So stop telling me that I want I want I want, because I have studied, and I have worked, and I have tried this current lifestyle to my best ability. Now I think I deserve, but that doesn’t mean that I will stop working. I only want to work for something that I actually want instead of what I’ve been forced into caring about.

©C.O’Connor, 2016

R.B.F. (Resting Bitch Face)

I’m not the hero. I don’t think I am the villain. Hell, I’m pretty positive that were my life made into a movie I wouldn’t even be the main character. I’d be that random person standing in the background. Everyone around me would have reactions on their faces to whatever is going on. I wouldn’t. My face would be blank. My face is always, and has always, been blank. I’ve heard about it since I was a kid.

One of my earlier memories goes to a time when I was in second or third grade. It was the end of the school day with the excitement  of freedom coursing through the student body. I was leaning against the wall in the middle of my class’ line. I think it was the summer, close to the end of the school year. (I have no idea why, and I’m probably lying. It just feels right.)

I can see a blob of colors from kid’s clothes across the hall. I can hear the high pitched thrum of children’s voices overlapping. I don’t remember what I was doing in line, or whether or not I was talking to someone. I do remember the teacher I had in the first grade walking up to me. I do remember her telling me to smile. I do not remember my answer, but I kept thinking, why is she asking me? I wasn’t the only one not smiling. I wasn’t the only kid not looking happy.

So why did she ask me? Why single me out? I didn’t understand then. It took me years to hear the saving phrase that would explain the countless comments I’ve received throughout my life. It explained all of the looks, all of the are you okays?, the you look like you’re about to kill sombodys, and the are you depresseds? 

The phrase is Resting Bitch Face. I don’t know when I first heard it, but it has become a part of my life, my daily life. No I’m not depressed, at least not at this moment in my life. No I’m not going to kill someone. I don’t want to go to jail. And don’t even get me started on whether or not I’m okay.

©C. O’Connor, 2016