Was

I’d finally become that guy you see walking around the neighborhood at odd hours wearing a fluorescent high-visibility vest. Sure it made sense as a safety measure but people in those vests always irked me, their look-at-me-I’m-so-responsible attitude, the way they walked with such pride and hoiti-toitiness. Rule followers. Like Homer Simpson’s annoying neighbor with his mustache and sweater, not my types. But this Christmas the family got me one so I wore it. Perfect for reflective walks.

Over at the mansions across the way, by the horse farms, they’d started taking down Christmas, dismantling the season to a few blinking snowflakes, the closest we’d probably get to snow this winter. Though it was dinnertime and dark it was so mild I could walk in my T-shirt, sweater tied around my waist.

Abstaining from my daily video game routine, some variant of Dry January, has left me feeling hapless between dinner and bedtime, a scant two-hour window I’d rather not fill binge-watching video or the news. Tonight I opted for a rare evening walk instead.

I’ve been reflecting on the absence of that video game, which I’ve played for about five years, and why I like it so much. If I’ve really quit or if I’ll start again. The damage to my hearing is the top reason I can’t play it anymore, the tinnitus. And I can’t play the game without sound because it’s just not the same. Maybe I’ve got this thing called process addiction, like when people get hooked on slot machines and the silly sounds they make. It feels like the same thing.

That’s funny because I’m a consultant who’s pretty good with process: helping spot gaps in business process, or to create process. But deep-down, part of me hates process and rails against it. My sponsor said alcoholics are like that, we like breaking the rules.

Maybe I could walk every day in the mornings and evenings and do yoga twice a day also, extend my meditation time. I’d climb Tiger Mountain on the weekends and when the days got longer I could go mid-week, too. I pictured my next annual physical and how proud I’d be telling the doctor about my healthy lifestyle. Sober five years. Multivitamins and fish oil. Yoga.

But it seemed like there was something missing. It’s what I always feared about going sober, this letting go of some imagined, other life. That other life was edgy and dangerous, unpredictable. A part of me still craved for that sense that anything could happen, that I didn’t know how my days would end. Now they were all the same.

I wanted yoga and meditation to help me transcend. The book I was reading (Buddhism and the Twelve Steps), was a mash-up of AA doctrine and eastern philosophy with a reflection for each day. Today’s was about surrendering and why it’s so hard for us to do that because we’re conditioned to think of surrender as a bad thing.

It reminded me of what my sponsor said, “The good news is the battle’s over. The bad news is, you lost.” That stung. But he was right. I had a problem with that whole premise of being powerless over the substance. I thought I’d exerted my own power by beating it. But the problem was my ego. I thought yoga could help me quiet that. I was probably wrong.

Outside it was so mild the frogs were singing and I watched our old dog squat on the lawn. None of them had any ego. Life just was. All you had to do was survive.



Categories: Addiction, Creative Nonfiction, Memoir

Tags: , , , , ,

17 replies

  1. You nailed something here, the loss of the unpredictable. I’m increasingly a fan of routine — and feel I lost a lot of my writing because I dropped out of that routine — but there’s also something invigorating about the unplanned and unpredictable. I’ve started the year with a breakup, and the return to quiet predictability is psychicly calmer but kind of a drag.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Ugh I’m sorry to hear you started the year like that. Hopefully there’s something positive in that still. Our needs shift to more predictable maybe but there’s some sense of adventure (and life/mystery) lost in that perhaps. The mistake I made was folding that life expectation into alcohol and drugs. Or video games I guess. Duh…nice to hear from you Ross and happy new year, I hope…

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I read something like this, Bill and feel tempted to give advice. That’s what friends do, right? Yet I know sfa about this stuff. In desperation, my subconscious floats an idea about the difference between routine and ritual, because ritual can transform the ordinary into something meaningful. But of course that doesn’t address restlessness and it doesn’t address that need to be determinedly individual, which may be linked to that rebellious streak.
    Hmmm.
    Be well and do good.
    DD

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Maybe a listen to Bowie’s Rebel Rebel is in order too.

    Liked by 3 people

  4. Yeah, look at that dude, hiking in his yoga pants / wearing a Steely Dan t-shirt; man, isn’t he interesting?

    Ha ha see the old duffer in the hi-vis? Jeez, hope I die before I get old.

    Liked by 3 people

  5. I haven’t visited your writing for a while and this piece reminded why I always enjoyed your words. That thing about alcoholics not liking rules. That’s interesting. And also the void between dinner and bed when you don’t want to stuff it with things. And that tiny sliver of excitement thinking the day might end in unpredictable ways, maybe that’s a hangover from teenage days when drinking was the new thing to date. I don’t have any answers but I hope the tinnitus isn’t too bad. Good work on five years. That’s massive.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Love to hear lovely notes like this! Message in a bottle style. Thank you kindly for reading and the beautiful note. Be well! (And come back soon ha ha) 😆— Bill

      Like

  6. “Perfect for reflective walks” made me lol out loud. I discovered a new very old band recently that’s been haunting me, can’t shake them. It’s a band called Beckett who put out only one album way back in 1974. Part Beatles-like strings, part Zeppelin, part disco/funk/prog. I’ll send you a link.

    Liked by 3 people

  7. I laughed out loud at that line, too! “Perfect for reflective walks.” Thinking such a clever Bill Pearse move, too just slip that in : )

    Liked by 1 person

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