What’s
it like to live, I sometimes wonder. It’s easy to forget, especially when one
takes living for granted, which many of us do in today’s world—The sound of suction drainage of a gaping
wound resembles the guttural noises of a zombie protesting its infinite hunger—One
gets caught up in the drudgery of existence: working a menial job, spending
time on public transit, cooking meals, washing dishes and clothes and body
parts, flossing and brushing teeth, etc. These things add up, and before you
know it, you think you have no time for the simple pleasures.
Taking
living for granted is like taking drugs. You do it more and more until you're doing it cuz it’s easy and convenient, at which point you’re not even choosing it.
Rather, it’s choosing you. Drugs were my path for decades. In all that
time I didn’t have to plan my day. It was already planned for me—Shambling zombie-like along a dimly lit hall
in the geriatric ward, decaying bit by bit every day…Get that body to the
morgue before it rots!—but of course that arrangement can’t last forever
without serious atrophy of the brain, and a gradual deterioration of
self-respect. Which leads to a gradual forgetting, or annihilation, of one’s
self.
I’ve
been clean for over a year now, and while my story isn't by any means unique, it's still my story. I’m gradually re-learning, remembering, who
I am and how to live—Cancel Code Blue,
cancel Code Blue—and how to treat myself with dignity and respect. I was
lucky, though. I awoke from addiction staring into the beautiful face of a
smart, sexy woman. And yes, I know, one must quit bad habits for one’s
own sake, not for the sake of anyone else. But a smart, beautiful woman with a
sense of humour and a sexy reading habit—how’s that for incentive to stay
sober?
I’m a
43-year-old man who for eighteen years has worked a menial hospital
support-staff job, roughly paralleling the time of my drug addiction. I don’t work with corpses, but it sometimes feels like I’m
watching myself slowly become a zombie. It’s long past time to get out of this lame-duck
job and get into one that’s been my passion since I was a sober teenager. I
want to write and edit and work with words in an environment crackling with
creativity. I am looking for a new job, but it’s taking much longer than I
expected. (Nurse, how much longer will I have
to wait?) I am prepared to persevere and endure the wait—and
search—however long it takes.
In
the meantime, I still occasionally wonder what it’s like to live—but not often.
In the early days of sobriety, I would finish work and feel I had nothing to
look forward to. No bottle tokes, no white Russians, no cigarettes. The longer
I’ve remained sober, the more I’ve (re)discovered how to enjoy life, the more
I’ve found things to look forward to—first and foremost time spent with my beautiful,
smart fiancée.
Here are
some of the things sobriety has taught me (Shift
change! Time to give report): living is about filling in life’s cracks.
It’s about doing all the things in a day, big and small, that make one feel one
has used up the day such that it can be crumpled up and tossed in the garbage. Exercising,
working, reading a book, writing, completing that long-neglected project, cooking and eating a meal, cleaning up afterwards,
brushing one’s teeth, cutting one’s toenails, doing the banking, cutting the
lawn, seeing a concert, going on a date, taking a vacation. Relearning to live is about
remembering how to do these (and many other) things, and forgetting all the things that are unimportant or destructive in their extremity. The more enticements
towards sober, moderate living one has—a beautiful girlfriend, a full daily itinerary—the
easier it is to effectively grasp the practice of living. And the sooner one understands these
things, the sooner one can start living again without taking life for granted.
1 comment:
Been on and off the wagon too many times. Thanks for the post Jody.
EdBlair
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