“Ha ha, I feel so ADD today.”

I hear this type of comment quite often. It’s become a metaphor for our entire culture. The title of my post alludes to one of many t-shirts that poke fun at the condition.

But I am here to tell you that if you really HAD ADHD, you would not find it to be a laughing matter. If you really suffered from this disorder, you would be too busy trying to hold your life together, or drowning in a sea of self-hatred because your 140 IQ was completely useless in helping you to achieve any level of success in life. If you really lived with ADHD, you would know that all the joking in the world would be no match for the chaos that was driving your life on a daily basis.

So next time you are tempted to make a joke about how you are having an “ADD type of day”, try to remember that for some of us, this is what we are dealing with every. single. day. Think about the pain your words may cause, however unintentional. Those of us who live with this scourge will appreciate it.

I did really well on Valentine’s Day this year.

I was actually quite proud of myself. While friends of mine expressed their dissatisfaction with being alone on this day, I found myself strangely content, at peace with myself. Really, I don’t mind being single. To be honest, at this point, I can’t picture myself any other way. I feel like I have a rich life–I have friends and family who love me dearly, and kids in my life that I love more than words can express, and who think the world of me–and while I certainly am not where I want to be in life, I am still here, and my story isn’t over yet. So yes, I’m okay being alone . . . I really am. But there’s one small problem . . .

In therapy today, I was talking about looking at the choices some of my friends make in relationships, and how I can’t fathom how they tolerate certain behaviors or accept how they are treated. We were trying to unravel this, and things were going along fairly well, until she asked the question that tore apart all my hope of believing myself to be “normal”.

“Well, you can’t really speak to this issue, because you’ve never been in a relationship.”

Maybe she saw my face, because she attempted to clarify. “That’s true, right? You haven’t ever been in a relationship?”

No. No, I haven’t.

And as much as I say that I’m happy with my life, that I accept being alone, that I can’t really see myself in a relationship at this point anyway, this single question touched upon my deep, dark secret–namely, that there is something wrong with me. I am inherently incapable of doing what every other human being since time began has been able to do, that is, be in a romantic relationship.

I know that there will be those of you reading this who will try to argue with me, but please don’t. I know that there is something wrong with me, something about me that  makes me different, strange, a freak. “Freak” may seem like too strong or too harsh of a word, but I don’t think it’s an unfair characterization, and I’m not just saying that so that you will reassure me that I’m wrong. It’s a human impulse to want to mate . . . if everybody was like me, and just had no interest in being paired in a love relationship, the human race would have died out by now. I have long fielded questions from people who ask me, “But don’t you WANT to find a man?” I am not usually ashamed to answer “no” to that question, but tonight I am. I know that this is something that makes me different than “normal” people . . . I know that everything in society and in nature tells me that this is something I should want . . . but I don’t. I just don’t. For years, I’ve fielded the lesbian question, since apparently not having a man=not being physically attracted to men. This is not the case with me, and what I always want to argue in response is that if I did have a preference for woman, then I wouldn’t be alone–I would be in a relationship with a woman.

But I am not in a relationship. I am not with anybody. And I never have been, and I’m pretty sure I never will be. And no, I’m not dissatisfied with my reality. I am, however, horrified by the implications of this. People far dumber or uglier or more dysfunctional than me have all mastered the art of being able to date someone. I have not. And it is the “why?” that haunts me.

Other people are fat.

Other people have been abused.

Other people are brash and opinionated.

Other people live with mental illness, are in dead-end jobs, talk too loud, are hoarders, wear ill-advised clothing, spend too much money.

Other people are not incapable of being in a relationship. I see people on the street sometimes, and it’s someone you might think was the last person on earth who could find a partner, but guess what? They do. They do, and I do not.

I have long lived by the mantra, “I’d rather be alone than be with a guy who treats me like dirt”. I do believe that–I believe it with all of my heart. I have seen too much heartbreak in friends of mine who fail to value themselves enough to see that they deserve so much better than what they are living. But it doesn’t change the fact that they are in it–that they are capable of what I, apparently, am not.

Let me say this one more time–I am not unhappy with the status quo. I am not trying to be something I am not. Most of all, I am not living a life of despair because I don’t have a man. I just want to know what’s wrong with me. I want to know why I am lacking the ability and the desire to engage in one of the most basic aspects of being human. I don’t want to change the way I feel. I just don’t want to be the only one. I want to know the specifics of why or how I am so irreparably damaged that I cannot do life as I am “supposed” to. And I just don’t know if there’s an answer to that question.

(this is one of three blog posts about the situation that my dear friend has been going through–I have two others that have been in process for quite a while, and maybe this nablopomo stuff will encourage me to finally finish those too.)

It’s hard to believe that things can be change so quickly . . .

It was barely six months ago that we were looking ahead to a time when she was going to be free of the school/internship/work cycle . . . “imagine”, we would say. “You’ll have so much extra time that you won’t know what to do with yourself”, I often told her. This promise of relative freedom was something I pointed her towards to encourage her on particularly rough days. I always admired her in that she knew beyond a shadow of a doubt what she wanted to do with her life; she had worked so, so hard for eight years, and now, a new stage of her life was about to begin. And she is good at what she does . . . intuitively good, in a way that can’t come from a classroom. She had–no, she HAS–her whole life ahead of her.

We talked about living arrangements. Wouldn’t it be nice, we speculated, if we shared an apartment, one that had an extra room for our mutual godbaby, as well as any of the other random kids who were around at different times. Sure, maybe it felt a tiny bit weird in a “playing house” kind of way, but it made total sense from a practical standpoint. I could keep him overnight anytime if I knew that I would have someone who could cover for me if I needed to run to the store for an hour . . . it would be fun, but more importantly, it would allow us to be on the same page in terms of his medical needs; it would allow us to be consistent.  And, although I would be there with my cluttery self, she would finally have a space to call her own, a place to live where she could spread out beyond one room.

There was just so much to look forward to . . . there was just so much energy behind my encouragements to her that things were going to get better. But I don’t think any of us could have seen what was to come next . . . I know that none of us could have imagined that one attack would turn into a “once-a-month” occurrence, or that there would be a flurry of useless court dates and unproductive ER visits and constant fear. I am certain that six months ago, nobody could see things ending this way, with her fleeing for her life.

It wasn’t supposed to go this way. And I’m waiting for things to turn right-side-up again . . . but realizing that, in so many ways, things will never be the same again.

It doesn’t take a lot for the green-eyed monster of jealousy to be unleashed in me. I am so utterly dissatisfied with who I am that I instinctively fixate on the traits I see in others that I wish I possessed.

Today I found myself in the presence of someone who is the type of person that brings out this jealousy in me. She is successful in her career, an amazingly talented woman of God who serves in her church in a variety of ways, has a life rich in relationships . . . one of those people I can look at and see everything that I am not.

I immediately kicked off the self-pity party, measuring my own lack of success against her many accomplishments, and as always, finding myself guilty of not being someone other than myself.  With her example staring me in the face, all I could think was “and I can barely get my laundry done”. I am Just. So. Tired. And I don’t understand where she finds the strength to persevere, and even to thrive.

Today, though, I realized something significant about this longing.  It isn’t just the tangible outward signs of success that I envy, but something even greater than those surface indicators. It’s not merely that I wish my life in some way looked more like hers, although that is part of it, because no matter how others define “success”, my own definition is simple: Success is anything that I am not. And no matter how many people tell me that I should consider myself successful in things that I might label as trivial (being a good friend, loving the children in my life, etc.), it doesn’t matter to me. I am not answering to anybody else’s standard, but to my own internal critic. Plain and simple: I am not okay with being who I am. And so I grasp onto this longing to be like the people I see (or think I see) who seem to have these traits that have eluded me.

And yes, blah blah blah, I know that God doesn’t require “success” of me, but it goes back to the concept that God is like your grandmother–He HAS to like you. So although I would not disagree with the notion that I am valued by God no matter what I do or don’t do, I am still hopelessly bound to my own (seemingly unattainable) definition of “success”.

But I realized something else today . . . aside from the impossibility of achieving even a fraction of what this woman has achieved, and even beyond my own faulty reasoning and twisted self-image, there is a deeper jealousy, one that feels more valid, healthier, maybe even God-given.

She is beautiful. And I want to be beautiful as well.

I’m not speaking of physical beauty, although that often seems to come with the territory. No, this is a beauty which goes so much deeper than that. This woman, and others like her whose “success” I have envied, is beautiful down to the depths of her being. She radiates God’s light, and *that* is where her beauty comes from, not from the outward achievements, but from a place that seems far more unreachable.

I want to know how she got to be this beautiful . . . I want to know how I can be beautiful too. But, even more than I despair of reaching an acceptable level of success in my career or in my personal life, I am certain that I do not know how to get there . . . I do not know how to become beautiful in this way. I am too tired; I am too selfish; I am too prone to inner ugliness. And yet, something within me holds on to some irrational hope that perhaps, if I sit at the feet of these women long enough, I just might find a way to glean from their wisdom, to figure out a way that I might be able to take on even some small piece of who they are and what they have, and to create some of that beauty within myself.

I think I am afraid of the truth that I am certain lies behind this–that the greater the beauty, the deeper the pain that has been weathered . . . and yet, I am hardly a stranger to pain myself . . . so why do some turn that pain into something lovely and glowing and inviting, when people like me exude ugliness instead?

I don’t know the answers to this. But I find myself drawing nearer to these beautiful women, to do everything I can to put myself in their path, to try to glean some of their energy in place of my own constant exhaustion, to try to become what they are.

And maybe, just maybe, if I put myself in their presence often enough, I will be able to put aside my desire to be “successful” in the limited ways that I have defined success, to find new ways of defining it. If I can only learn how to do this, maybe someday I will find a way to be beautiful.

(wondering if this is what a mid-life crisis feels like?!)

the questions that are currently getting in the way of my falling asleep:

  • how is it that a person can be so convinced that things are heading in one direction, to feel in the deepest part of their being that this thing is going to come to pass, but then have that certainty shattered in a few short hours by an equally intense pull in the opposite direction? To “know that you know that you know” a thing, but then to be confronted with a sense of being equally certain of another thing that, if true, would make the former thing, that thing that you were so sure was about to come to pass, an impossibility?
  • how much does a person choose to give up out of love for someone else? This is where I know that I am quite clearly NOT as much like Jesus as I would like to be . . . because a selfishness screams out of me, and the words I’ve heard so often echo in my mind . . . is it a lie, something the world tells us, or is it a healthy level of self-preservation that brings the advice, “you need to take care of YOU . . . you can’t live your life for other people”? even in this, there’s confusion, because the reasons I want to do this thing “for me” have so much to do with this calling I’m convinced I have to “do” for others. . .
  • how do I let go of my desire to feel like what I’m doing is “important”, as I define that word? (part of that definition involves a rejection of any other person’s attempt to convince me that my idea of “important” is too limited.)
  • is my dissatisfaction with my life a flaw in my character, or is it a catalyst that will bring me to a place where I can assuage this intolerable, unrelenting restlessness? really, will I ever have a life that I don’t despise? it’s not even so much about having a “Spark-worthy” life as it is about feeling like I am doing what I was meant to be doing. is the problem really in my circumstances, or am I doomed to be restless, dissatisfied, and feeling like an underachiever for the rest of my days on this earth?!

The crazy thing is that all of this middle-of-the-night speculation is based upon two things that I don’t know at this moment. In other words, neither has come to pass as of yet. There is this thing that I feel so certain is going to come to pass, but there is also this new bit of information that would wreak havoc on that certainty.

In a few days, I will know about the latter, and in three weeks or less, I will know about the former. But in this moment, I have zero knowledge that either thing will even come to pass . . .

I am just so afraid, though, no matter what the outcome, that my life will not be any less unsatisfying than it was before this journey.

And now, having spewed up some lovely self-serving, too-much-informationing ranting, I am finally feeling sleepy enough to try to go to bed . . .

buenos noches . . .

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