Learning to Shine
Continuing from yesterday's blog entry...So there I was, hiding under the covers, teeth rattling, skin crawling, every hair on my body standing on it's very own goosebump, a psychic wreck. I was continually haunted by the thought that I would never get out of the grip of this terror. What was I going to do? What would I do if this agonizing psychic pain didn't stop? And the real heart stopper-- what if it got worse?
I had never before personally considered the possibility of suicide. But, at that moment I came face to face with the grim reality of the answer to my question. If the pain wouldn't stop, if it got worse, then I would have to end it. This realization did little to comfort me. If anything, it drove me further into the grips of the terror that held me. I felt the tug of a vortex of blackness draw me in. I had to get out. I had to get to the light.
My survival instinct inspired, I abruptly pulled the sheets off of myself. I tried not to notice what was at that moment a sickening intensity of colors, the hollow tin-like quality of the sounds of the world around me. I scrambled through my apartment outside onto the deck of the dormitory apartment building where I was living at the university. The mid-day sun of spring shone down on me in all of it's intensity. I latched onto the railing of deck with the intensity of a drowning person scrabbling for a life buoy. I was terrified that some impulse within me might overwhelm my resistance to the pain, and I would cast myself headlong over the edge. I closed my eyes and let the warmth of the sun engulf me. The red intensity of the light easily overcame the thin layer of my eyelids. I breathed in an out and let the sun hold me, and gradually the terror left me.
Slowly I opened my eyes. I was still feeling very badly, but for the moment I was coping. I had to get out of there, classes or exams be damned. I had to get back home to my close friends, to a real place of comfort. I had to regroup and nurse my wounds and assess the dammage done.
I don't really remember packing my things into my VW bug. I think I threw everything that I could into a huge army duffle bag, got in my car and drove straight to a good friends apartment in my hometown, which luckily was only a bit over two hours away. My friend who had recently married his highschool sweetheart took me in and let me sleep on his couch. And I slept. I slept. And I slept some more, trying to put as much distance as I could between myself and that terror. Finally I resolved into a compact state of instability. That is I was like an old barn that is ready to collapse, and yet I was still standing. I was able to go about regular activities, talk with my friends and family, not about IT, but I was able to let them know that I wasn't feeling well and that I just needed some time.
I got a job with a pizza shop as a delivery person and my father let me stay in a townhome that he owned that was vacant. I buried myself in the job and drove my car. Pick up the next batch of pizzas, drive the car, watch the price of gas, fill up the car, and drive some more. The Tips weren't bad, but the real key to it all was that I was keeping myself busy and moving, focused on getting to my next delivery in the shortest time.
At this point in my story I have to back track so that you might understand exactly where I stood at that moment. It was true that my time of experimentation had given me some major scars, but it wasn't all negative. During my self-assessment I realized that while I was presently caught in the groove of a very bad experience, but I did have some major assets in some of the really positive experiences of my life. How could I use these to my benefit?
I went through my memories of positive experiences in my life. Most recently, earlier in my first year of college, during a certain psychedelic experience, my eyes had been opened to our connection to the planet, to nature, and to each other. This had been a very positive, beautiful, life changing experience. It was my strongest and freshest memory on the bright side of things. I recalled deep feelings and memories of love for my family and friends. I recalled sitting on my grandfather's lap as a small child, literally basking in the warmth of the love that he shed on me. I remembered all of the fallings in love and crushes of my childhood. I remembered the exhilaration of joy as I sped, wind whipping my hair, down a steep sidewalk on my Big Wheel as a four year old.
All of these memories where bright and full of light, love and joy. I could remember them clearly. And as I did so I could again feel the love, joy and shining brilliance of those moments. Being of a philosophical inclination, I found it interesting to think about and observe what I was feeling. What did it mean to remember those feelings? Even as I was remembering moments of light, joy and love, I was actually creating new memories of joy and love. There was both the past event, and the new event of my remembering it. If anything, I found that as I focused on the details of the joy of those memories, excluding many of the details of the actual event, sometimes the new experience of the memory was even more intense and longer in duration.
Again, I will have to pause in my story as I have to earn a few dollars for the day...