My Life in Words
3. The Long Middle
The long middle of my life
was a novel: one of those
family sagas. First love,
first job, first marriage,
first affair ... and all the rest
in each category.
The first and only
full-scale nervous breakdown
came early, in that first, young,
brief marriage. ‘Compulsive
gambler’, I say now, to explain.
And pathological liar, I might add,
and bipolar, and impotent. Or
I could trace the cause further back,
remembering my drunken shrieks
of wanting to kill my father –
surprising myself most of all.
Years of therapy. Do we ever
truly recover? I learned to go on
into new chapters, new men,
and the everyday miracle of children.
School, cooking, travel,
financial planning, all that.
Love in the suburbs.
After some decades, if we're smart,
we give up trying to conform.
We start to honour the self.
I let go of magic, pushed it away
(not to be mad) shut the messages
out of my ears, and the power
out of my hands. Eventually
stopped remembering.
Poetry, though, would never
let go of me. Words
have always saved me,
whether talking my way
out of potential rape,
or telling myself the truth
in writing – mining my depths.
Twice divorced, once widowed.
And there was that other, younger
love who died. And one of my sons
permanently estranged. (My choice,
for good and sufficient reason –
are you shocked? Never mind.)
Bankruptcy. Poverty. And finally
the Pension. Learning to be frugal
and live well. Learning all kinds
of competence. Along the way
the magic poured back – too strong,
too real, to stay suppressed.
Again, this would have to be a lot longer to do justice to all the details. But it's a scaffolding on which to build the prose chapters later.
Just enjoyed Rosemary. So much packed into your poem and your life. We are here in the morning writing together!
ReplyDelete