Bravery

I always thought I was brave. Until I met my wife. 

She was married when we met. To a man. They had been married for twenty years. It was a stable marriage. They had three kids together. They truly loved each other, and provided a loving and trusting home for their children. It was the type of life that no woman would dream of leaving. 

Except she did. 

We met nine years ago. Our friendship developed instantly. The connection was deep and the respect was mutual. I had been in multiple relationships with women since my early twenties. Dating a woman was never even on her radar. The attraction between us crept up subtly, without each of us realizing it was there. Although perhaps we both did. I had not had a true friend in longer than I could remember, so I equated our sometimes-flirtatious encounters as just something that close friends did. We passed innocent notes back and forth, joking about dating and getting married someday. Never dreaming that those notes were the beginning of an incredible journey.

A journey that never would have become a reality if not for her bravery. She left a marriage that was all she had ever known. A marriage that, although not providing the type of happiness that a relationship should, was still a loving one. Leaving a marriage such as this one for a new relationship, a relationship between two women nonetheless, is a decision I cannot even begin to imagine making. Yes, the financial implications, logistics and divorce proceedings would be difficult. However, the relationship with her kids was where her real bravery shone through. Her children were the most important thing in her life. Their relationship was open, honest, trusting and real. The fear of losing them, either due to divorce or a same-sex relationship, was intense and all-consuming. Yet she continued to move forward with our relationship, believing in the strength and connection that we continued to grow every day. She had raised her kids to be open-minded, inquisitive and honest with her, qualities that resulted in them not only accepting our relationship, but also loving me and treating me as if I were their own family.

Her bravery did not stop there. In the coming year, she would be let go from the job she had been at for twenty-five years, sell the house her kids had grown up in, receive a terrifying medical diagnosis, and suddenly lose her ten -ear old family dog. Since then, she has gone back to school and received her bachelor’s degree in Nursing. She started a new job, completely different from the one she knew so well, and has flourished in her new role. She found a specialist and stabilized on medication, even while hating the thought of taking pills and being frightened of the potential effects of the disease in the future. She bought a new house in the same town so that her kids could remain in the public school they knew so well, despite there being more affordable housing in neighboring towns. Her new puppy brings joy to this new house every day.

Through all of these life circumstances, her bravery is evident. Her strength is both inspiring and contagious. However, it is the subtler actions she takes on a daily basis that make me appreciate her bravery even more. I am a hiker. I always have been. I climb tall mountains, hike long miles and stay overnight in the backcountry. She prefers shorter walks on smaller mountains, and a warm bed to sleep in. Staying overnight in the woods was something she had never done. Yet she chose to try this, because she wanted to share with me an activity that I loved and had always wanted to share with her. For a number of reasons which I will not identify here, she was uncomfortable, fearful and uncertain about sleeping in a tent in the woods, miles away from the nearest road. 

But she did. Because she is brave. And because she loves me. 

That is my wife.

QUOTES

PEMA CHODRON

“To stay with that shakiness – to stay with a broken heart, with a rumbling stomach, with the feeling of hopelessness – that is the path of true awakening. Sticking with that uncertainty, getting the knack of relaxing in the midst of chaos, learning not to panic – this is the spiritual path. Getting the knack of catching ourselves, of gently and compassionately catching ourselves, is the path of the warrior.”

“If we’re willing to give up hope that insecurity and pain can be exterminated, then we can have the courage to relax with the groundlessness of our situation. This is the first step on the path.”

“If you resist that kind of panicky energy, even at an involuntary, unconscious level, the fear can last a long time. The way to work with it is to drop the story line and not pull back or buy into the idea that “this isn’t okay”, but instead to smile at the panic, smile at this dreadful, bottomless, gaping hole that’s opening in the pit of your stomach. When you can smile at the fear, there’s a shift: what you usually try to escape from becomes a vehicle for awakening you to your fundamental, primordial goodness, for awakening you to clear-mindedness, to a caring that holds nothing back. The image of the warrior is of a person who can go into the worst of hells and not waver from the direct experience of cruelty and unimaginable pain. So that’s our path: even in the most difficult situations, we do our best to smile at fear, to smile at our righteous indignation, our cowardliness, our avoidance of vulnerability.”

“We long to have some reliable, comfortable ground under our feet, but we’ve tried a thousand ways to hide and a thousand ways to tie up all the loose ends, and the ground just keeps moving under us. At every turn we realize once again that it’s completely hopeless – we can’t get any ground underneath our feet.” 

J.B. Priestly – Delight

“I have always been delighted at the prospect of a new day, a fresh try, one more start, with perhaps a bit of magic waiting somewhere behind the morning.”

SHEL SILVERSTEIN

Where the Sidewalk Ends

This is a story that I have never told
I gotta get this off my chest to let it go
I need to take back the light inside you stole

You’re a criminal
And you steal like you’re a pro

All the pain and the truth
I wear like a battle wound
So ashamed, so confused
I was broken and bruised

Now I’m a warrior
Now I’ve got thicker skin
I’m a warrior
I’m stronger than I’ve ever been
And my armor, is made of steel, you can’t get in
I’m a warrior
And you can never hurt me again

Out of the ashes, burnin’ like a fire
You can save your apologies
You’re nothing but a liar
I’ve got shame, I’ve got scars
But I will never show

I’m a survivor
In more ways than you know

‘Cause all the pain and the truth
I wear like a battle wound

So ashamed, so confused
I’m not broken and bruised

‘Cause now I’m a warrior
Now I’ve got thicker skin
I’m a warrior
I’m stronger than I’ve ever been
And my armor, is made of steel, you can’t get in
I’m a warrior
And you can never hurt me

There’s a part of me I can’t get back
A little girl grew up too fast
All it took was once, I’ll never be the same

Now I’m taking back my life today
Nothing left that you can say
‘Cause you are never gonna take the blame anyway

Now I’m a warrior
I’ve got thicker skin
Now I’m a warrior
I’m stronger than I’ve ever been
And my armor, is made of steel, you can’t get in
I’m a warrior
And you can never hurt me again

This is Me – Keala Settle and The Greatest Showman Ensemble

I am not a stranger to the dark
Hide away, they say
‘Cause we don’t want your broken parts
I’ve learned to be ashamed of all my scars
Run away, they say
No one’ll love you as you are

But I won’t let them break me down to dust
I know that there’s a place for us
For we are glorious

When the sharpest words wanna cut me down
I’m gonna send a flood, gonna drown ’em out
I am brave, I am bruised
I am who I’m meant to be, this is me
Look out ’cause here I come
And I’m marching on to the beat I drum
I’m not scared to be seen
I make no apologies, this is me.

Another round of bullets hits my skin
Well, fire away ’cause today, I won’t let the shame sink in
We are bursting through the barricades and
Reaching for the sun (we are warriors)
Yeah, that’s what we’ve become 

Brave – Sara Bareilles

Everybody’s been there, everybody’s been stared down
By the enemy
Fallen for the fear and done some disappearing
Bow down to the mighty
But don’t run, stop holding your tongue
Maybe there’s a way out of the cage where you live
Maybe one of these days you can let the light in
Show me how big your brave is

Say what you wanna say
And let the words fall out
Honestly, I wanna see you be brave

Innocence, your history of silence
Won’t do you any good
Did you think it would?
Let your words be anything but empty
Why don’t you tell them the truth?

Say what you wanna say
And let the words fall out
Honestly, I wanna see you be brave

“My struggle ended the day I started telling my story” – Chris Heron