Thursday, January 24, 2013

Of Love

I had a cat a few years back that had been severely abused as a kitten.  He was from a local "animal mill" and when I called to inquire about finding a Siamese cat, she explained that she had two left.  She explained that one of the cats was inherently evil and was going to be going to "Kitty Hell" within the next few days.  I explained that my cat needed another cat and I didn't particularly care what this cat's temperament was like--I would take that one.
 
When I arrived at her establishment, she directed me to the garage that the cats were kept in.  The cage she led me to had two male Siamese cats in it, both nearly a year old.  One was gentle and the other was the hell cat she referred to.  Several times she asked me if I didn't want to just buy the nice one, I explained that no, I would take Hell Cat.
 
He hunkered down in whatever corner of the cage was farthest from her--his eyes never leaving her.  The closer any part of her got to him, the more he growled, hissed, spat and swatted.  He truly did look evil and frightening.  Eventually, she got a large metal fishing net and explained that one time he managed to get out in the house and she was unable to catch him until using the net.  As her attempts progressed, he became even more fierce.  I noticed that as he backed up into corners, attempting to attack her, I was able to pet his fur through the bars of the cage without him becoming upset.
 
An hour later, he was in a cat carrier and heading to my house.  I attempted to keep him in a small bathroom located off of my bedroom, with food and a litter box, until he became used to his surroundings.  Over the next days, anytime I attempted to approach him or if he even thought I was coming near him, he would leap and throw himself at the walls to the point of leaving bloodstains behind.  He became desperate to free himself from that room and tore a patch in the carpet at the edge of the bedroom and chewed, clawed, and fought with the accordion-style door until he had claimed the bedroom, as well.
 
For several days, he refused to move from the floor air vent and urinated where he was sitting. Being that he was an unneutered male, the smell was overwhelming.  Attempts to recapture him and return him to the bathroom led to him hiding under my dresser.  I was at a loss.  Despite years of ferret rescue and dealing with other unwanted, aggressive animals, this cat was still beyond me.
 
Since he was completely unsocialized and viewed humans as the source of his misery, I decided to begin by letting him watch interactions between my other cat and myself.  I would sit on the floor near the dresser and pet my cat, Mashed Potato and talk softly to both of them.  Eyes would peek out from the tiny space he was daily contorting himself into.  Other times, I would use a feather wand and let him watch Mashed Potato and I play.  Eventually, mornings would find the feather wand upon the floor as he had attempted to play with it through the night.
 
We lived like this for several months.  He would watch Mashed Potato and I interact. We would see eyes appear from under the dresser.  He seemed to be a hopeless case.  As time passed, he became more willing to interact with Mashed Potato and she became more tolerant of him, also.  One night, he slept with her on my bed and I was able to see the cat now living with us.  Sleeping at the foot of my bed eventually led to him becoming more curious about me--the human that the other cat doted upon...
 
Finally one morning, he let me touch him; while it was brief and he would only let me touch him while I was laying down and trapped under blankets, it was a start.  Touching led to petting, petting led to him eventually reaching a point in which he would rub his face upon mine each morning--but I still couldn't touch him or get near him unless it was in bed and I was laying down.  He did eventually become a lap cat, but he never really became a normal cat.  He often relied upon Mashed Potato and followed her around for safety.  Trips to the vet were horrible because he would still become terrified when he would see the cat carrier or if humans, including me, attempted to catch him.  Twice, he bit well-meaning friends of mine; one of the bites leading to medical expenses and complications for my friend.
 
We lived like this for a little over four years, until I had to have him put down due to health complications. I still think of Anubis often and find myself saddened because it seems that he should still be here. But then I remember, also--we granted him four years of life that he almost missed because of one cruel woman that had deemed him evil.  Sometimes the damages done during youth carry over and make it nearly impossible for a "normal" life, with "normal" loving attachments.  While Anubis clearly wanted love, craved human contact and wanted to free his playful nature; his fear and past experiences with humans had stunted his ability to simply live, be comfortable and to relax.
 
As a Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) survivor, I understand these fears and self-imposed restrictions upon freedom and happiness.  Life has taught us to always look over our shoulder.  It has taught us that life is fraught with tragedy and that another one is always waiting around the next bend.  Constantly alert, hypervigilant, and often missing the happiness in life due to these fears is part of PTSD.
 
But beyond being a PTS survivor, I can relate on an even deeper level.  When we never develop secure bonds in youth, when we are taught that humans hurt us; when rejection is pushed upon us from all sides and the ones that "love" us are the ones that hurt us the most--attachments to others often never truly develop.  Instead of developing normal human attachments, we withdraw into ourselves, we isolate, depression festers, and confusion and fear regarding the world around us become a reality in which normal, daily survival is a challenge.
 
I have often wondered if I (and perhaps also my brothers) am one of those rare humans that is afflicted with Reactive Attachment Disorder (R.A.D.).  The naked human eye viewing me now, in most situations, would laugh and suggest psychosomatic issues or hypochondriasis.  Adults from my youth would likely stop, tilt their head, massage their chin and the lightbulb would go off.  Those that have attempted long-term, romantic relationships with me may also pause and nod their heads.
 
As a youth, I was consistently pushed away and rejected--by my peers, family, and eventually teachers.  I remember in kindergarten, on the last day of school our teacher made us line up and do something special as our way of saying goodbye to her.  For me, this was a horribly frightening exercise to begin with, being placed on display in front of my peers (I was also horribly shy to the point of being backwards).  The girl in front of me offered our teacher a hug, which was enthusiastically returned by the teacher.  When I reached out to her, to do the same, she pushed me away like a bag of rotting meat.  So I did as most of my other peers had done and signed "I love you" in American Sign Language and returned to my seat.  Yet my embarrassment, feelings of hurt, puzzlement and rejection never left me.  If it were an isolated event, not a repeated pattern of youth, perhaps the scar would have been avoided.
 
Through my youth and teenage years, I received similar treatment from my grandmother and always felt looked down upon by my father's side of the family.  Which, truly, was my only family since my mother grew up 2000 miles away; her mother died when I was ten-months old; she never saw her father after the age of fifteen and she had no siblings.  My brothers and I had our mother and this paternal side that generally turned their nose up at us.  Love and admiration seemed to be reserved for our cousins, while we watched on.
 
Our mother was bi-polar manic depressive, had lupus and many other health problems.  Between her depression and chronic pain, she often spent days in bed and left us to our own devices.  Her own mother had also been bipolar and she often relayed having been raised by a slew of different babysitters throughout the years and frequently coming home from elementary school to find her mother unresponsive and being forced to call ambulances to deal with the numerous suicide attempts.  Her mother also had frequent men in and out of her life and as a single mother raising a child during the 1950's and 1960's, with her own significant mental health issues, my mother may not have had the best example of how to raise children.
 
My earliest childhood memories are of crying for what seemed like hours and being sure that I was home alone.  As I began to walk, I would feed myself raw hot dogs and pickles because these were what I could obtain on my own.  My youngest brother (there are ten years between us) recently related similar stories of remembering pushing chairs to the sink and then taking glasses of water into our mother as she laid in bed.  My guess is that the middle brother and I were in school during these times.

I am the oldest and when my first brother was born, my mother often complained that he was difficult for her because he was significantly rougher with her when nursing and cried more than I did.  She stated that it was probably best that I was born first since I was calmer and that had he been born first, she may have inadvertently killed him.  She told me that she often grew frustrated when I would cry and that she would shake me out of frustration.  I don't think she meant to hurt us, I think she just didn't have the coping skills or the strength to deal with raising children.  I know she tried her best, but raising children is impossible when you are not even able to care for yourself.

By the time I was nine or ten, our family doctor told our mother that she was concerned that I may commit suicide.  By then, I was so locked within myself that I would often just sit and stare at the walls.  I lived in a fantasy world, within my mind, that also offered protection from the hostile environment that I faced within my home.  School was no better as I was the frequent target of bullies and I had no friends.  Attempts to reach out to my peers were not well received, and being extremely shy did not help matters.  Recess was generally spent sitting, watching the other children play and eagerly waiting for it to be over.  I hated school and I especially hated free-time when I was expected to interact.  From kindergarten through my senior year, I always missed at least forty days of school per year.  While my home life was no treat, it was generally quiet during the day.  Our mom would be in her room or on the couch and I was free to play, read or sleep.  Without a doubt, this was preferable to the hated place known as school.

There is much more to this story and there are also, of course, smatterings of sunlight through the clouds--however, for today, my inability to effectively bond with other humans was my focus.  The reasons are beyond what I have shared here, for how can one adequately display a lifetime of angst? Not to mention, these are the bits that I am willing to share, the parts that I am willing to expose to you.  Do we not all have darkness underneath that recoils at the thought of being viewed by human eyes?

The R.A.D. diagnosis...  As I mentioned, there are many other factors that left scars and that fragmented me as a child.  I think I have done exceeding well in my survival.  Were this life to be viewed from beginning to end, as a movie, it would be unbelievable to most--a pathetic attempt at portraying reality to many.  If karma is truth, then I am either dealing with 90% of the trials and wretched human experiences possible, in as short of a time as possible or I was a bad, bad person in past lives.  I suppose most of us feel this way.  I also know that reality is what we make it.  I know that focusing on the positives leads to greater happiness.  I know that focusing on the negatives leads to sorrow and self-fulfilling prophesies of failure.  Yet this is my reality.  I am also aware that without self-reflection, I am doomed to fail.

I run from intimacy beyond sex.  Sex is easy. It is physical. It relieves tension. It is as close as I can generally come to showing love.  I am generally caring and empathetic to the outside world--the world that allows me to heal them as long as my own walls aren't touched.  My private life?  I have been called cold and callous, more than once.   It isn't that I don't want love.  It isn't that I don't need human contact.  It isn't that I don't crave laughter, happiness, or freedom.  It is just that I have been taught differently.  I wasn't raised to accept those feelings, emotions and "natural" human traits.  I more closely resemble the cat raised in a cage with fleeting episodes of terrorization by the hands meant to protect and nurture me.  I have learned that to survive I am alone and am better off left alone.

I realize that in order to heal others and to be a therapist myself, I need to heal the darkness within.  I can not help when I, too, am breaking down.  But in all honesty, my life-time experiences with therapists have been no better than with other humans.  As a result, I have always internalized and sought the answers within myself.  I, again, turn to the written word because sometimes putting it down on paper helps us to make sense of our internal struggles.  I don't know how else to function.

I just want to quit running. I want to be able to accept love and not try to swat it away.  I want to know how to share my world and let another in without fear of the destruction nearly always attached to love.  But I am best at building walls and pushing others out.  I don't know that I will ever be "normal."  I don't believe that there truly is such a thing beyond a dictionary definition.  I just know that I want to quit hurting and move forward. But yet, again, I find myself paralyzed...

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Just Another Day That Hurts

I have a niece in NV that I have never met and have never even spoken to. I have two nephews in MO that prior to 2010 were a huge part of my life but I haven't seen since December of 2011. Today was my father's birthday and it was the third year in a row that I ignored the day and waited for it to go away. I don't care how old I am, I hate these family rifts and even when I am 103, this will still hurt. My nature is to forgive, forget and try again. Even though I know these walls are necessary for my survival, I still despise them.
 
I want a relationship with my niece, but her mom caused so many problems when she was in my life before (long before my niece was born). With the nephews, I think that there is always going to be an empty spot, as long as they live so far away. They were essentially the children that I wanted but couldn't have. It doesn't help that both of my brothers are far away and out of my life, either.  My relationship with my paternal side of the family is nonexistent.  And my dad, well, yeah. I love him, but he can't be in my life. I want a relationship with him, but it isn't an option. If I hated him, the world would be a much simpler place.
 
I do have two wonderful families that I have created.  Between finding a group of wonderful people which has provided me with many amazing friends and by also having an awesome family that "adopted" me many years back; I have created family for myself.  Yet, there is still that part of me that wants relationships with these other people; these family members that I know are toxic to me. I don't know if it is because I lost my mother so young that I crave that family-piece or what it is.  Regardless, this month has been unbearable.  Between the twenty-year anniversary of my mother's death, the daily stress of work and trying to hold together my clients (while trying to hold myself together), I am truly beginning to feel as though tears are just a normal part of breakfast, lunch and the drive to work...

Thursday, January 10, 2013

It Was Twenty Years Ago, Today...

I came home tonight to find that I had been tagged in odd comments on facebook--however, the comments were all related to my father.  Negative comments, of course--comments about gun control, baiting wild animals, and other issues related to law enforcement.  I have had people attempt to hurt him, through me, all of my life--what a joke that has been.  So now I am not sure if they think that this will get back at him or if they are too ignorant to realize that: A) my father has a different first name than I do; B) that I am not affiliated with the Game Commission; or C) a shared last name sometimes equals nothing more than a shared last name. Nearly forty years of being bullied, beat up, and more because of him being my father--yeah, it never gets old...  The groovy part is, you can untag yourself from photos--but not comments.  And since I am not friends with these people--I can't comment and set them straight, either.  I really don't want it to go any further than it already has and I don't need additional idiots deciding that I am the one that arrested them/fined them/harassed them--whatever. Doesn't seem to be anything that I can do though, other than wait for it to blow over.
 
And of course, it has been hanging over my head for quite some time--today marks twenty years since my mother was murdered.  Yes, twenty years. I should skip merrily through these days while throwing roses to everyone that I meet...
 
It's been twenty years. I should be over it. I should feel nothing. I better not cry! I better not feel sad! This late in the game, I believe even taking flowers to her gravesite earns me a visit from police, handcuffs and my own padded cell.  We saw how my tears on her 60th birthday in March 2010 led to a personalized piece in my father's 302 report stating that "She cries over her dead mother." No, I won't cry.  I will pretend that it is any other Thursday, of any other week. I will go to work. I will do what I do. But I will not express emotion.
 
I hoped maybe having a partner would make it easier this year.  I tried making plans with him for Saturday.  No go.  He is gaming.  Okay.  Initially, he planned for them to meet at our house; thankfully, my friend volunteered for it to be at her house, instead.  Initially, I was also a part of the gaming group.  Gaming has been cancelled other times when it didn't work for other people--and I did mention that my partner is the DM, right?  In other words, he controls all of that.  His response?  He has never really lost anyone.  He doesn't know how I feel.  Yet he has a Master's Degree in the same damn stuff that I do. Goes to show that a piece of paper doesn't mean jack when you are in the real world.  It is all good though. I have spent the other anniversaries alone--partnered or not--why should I expect this one to be any different? 
 
So maybe I am just having a pity party. Maybe I am whining and acting like a child.  Maybe this constant hiding of my emotions is manifesting in extreme irritability.  Maybe I am tired of being harassed because of who my father is. Maybe I am tired of being harassed by my father.  Maybe I am hurting and feeling alone; yet again, as it always seems to be.  Maybe I am tired of reaching out because no one seems to get it anyhow.  But hey, not a tear has been shed as I was writing this.  And this is where most of them end up--late at night, alone, tears and the continued attempts to put myself back together when most of the pieces themselves are broken...

Monday, December 31, 2012

Resurrection

 
Those that know me well, know that I subscribe to a slightly different outlook on life than most.  One of those areas is the belief that animals are often messengers and when they show up repeatedly, you should take heed.  Peacocks (not the horrible Katy Perry song or some random subscription to Peacocks "R" Us, either) have been showing up in my life to the point that since early December, I have stated repeatedly that I needed to look up their meaning.  They have been appearing every where in my life (work, gifts, jewelry, etc) as many as two to three times daily.  I don't know about you, but peacocks are NOT a normal part of my daily life or thoughts!  So after yet another appearance today, I consulted my Ted Andrews books and discovered that peacocks are associated with wisdom and vision.  Along with the phoenix, they represent rising from the ashes of our prior life and resurrection.  Peacocks also appear with the reminder to laugh at life.

I have come a long way since the trauma associated with 2010, but it still often causes me more grief than it should.  A result of those events has been to not only hide my tears, but to hide my laughter as well--after all, laughing at life and what was being thrown at me was apparently part of the problem.  Showing emotion of any kind is frowned upon within the paternal network of my family--laughter is no different.  Happiness is frowned upon--stoic German heritage at its best.  In the opinion of my family, leaving my relationship should have led to tears and misery.  Leaving my relationship and appearing not only happy, but filled with laughter and smiles at each new found day could only mean one thing--drugs.  Meth was the first one they accused me of--many others followed after.
 
I remember hearing my father laugh one time at my Grandmother's house. It was an odd, foreign sound and a hush settled across the kitchen as everyone stopped what they were doing and turned to look and see if he was okay. It was not a natural sound. Our reaction was nearly one of fear--similar to the response when someone begins choking. Everyone freezes and then wonders if that person is alright or if they need assistance.  When my father laughed, no one else joined in--glances were quietly exchanged between my cousins and myself and I think a silent shudder may have passed amongst us, also.  You think I jest; yet I remember the experience quite well.
 
2010 and my laughter led to questions regarding my sanity.  The common question was "Why does she laugh and clap?  What is wrong with her?"  Nobody in my family was happy that I wasn't grieving.  They were angry with my zest for life.  It didn't not fit in with their expectations.  It was not logical.  What they didn't seem to understand, was that the grieving phase had occurred while I was still trapped with him.  Happiness was the natural response to having been set free of him and that life--who would not find a smile and a song upon their lips?
 
Sometimes I feel that they won.  I am ever more cautious with my tears and with my laughter.  I am again nearly a robot most days--stoic as I should be.  Flat as they think I should be.  But I do not enjoy their desire of who I should be--their vision for me is not the same one  that I carry for myself. Perhaps these are the reasons peacocks keep creeping into my life... To remind me to laugh. To remind me to rise above and recreate myself from the ashes and shattered self of 2010...
 
I am again reminded of the words from one of my closest friends during Father's Day 2010 when my pain and rage were consuming me.  He explained it to me as such: "Who needs fire when you have got plenty inside?  Create and recreate.  It is what you do best.  The art of creation and destruction are but one in the same.  Just destroy with a smile on your face and don't get rid of what you truly need."  Months after that Father's Day, the same friend also provided these words: "I have never doubted the fact that our families are our worst critics. Give your brother room and time. He will remember how to see you. The heart seldom forgets. Until then, don't discount your own vision for yourself...You must continue. If anything, you must not forget your worth. You are going to be a better you. One day, they will rise to meet you on a ground unseen by them. Pity them, if it helps... but continue. You are better for it, hard as it may be. You are not alone."
 
Thoughts for the new year ahead.  Thoughts to again find the person I was before they put me on the chopping block.  Thoughts to again allow happiness, laughter and light into my life.  That has always been me--always been my path--I must resume my journey as life means for me to live it--no longer by their visions for me...
 
 
 


Thursday, December 6, 2012

Ponderings and Parables

It is a well-known fact that I am a stickler for manners. It is rumored that my grandmother once stuck her fork through the hand of one of her ill-mannered husbands when he reached in front of her at the dinner table. What does that have to do with the pondering of the day? Nothing really. Or maybe it does?
 
And I wonder, has she yet discovered the truth about the woodpecker?  Not my grandmother, mind you, for she has been gone from this world for nearly forty years.  No, it is another that I speak of now.  An important part of my family, for a brief while. Does she realise yet, that it was not ever tree decay that was the concern, so much as tooth decay? Mermaids with gingivitis were truly always the issue. Yet how silly to end a friendship over a woodpecker! It was silly coincidence that placed a full-fledged, live, feathered woodpecker in her favorite tree.  While I told her as much at the time, she insisted that it must be about her, because clearly, my world revolved around her.
 
Thus began the chain of lost friends, handcuffs and police cars.  Thus began myths of meth, of starvation, of suicidal and homicidal plottings.  Such began a world of witchcraft, talking to God, and visions of angels.  Friendships and family, trusted loved ones, all thrown to the wind  under the wings of an imaginary bird. Silly, you say?  No sillier than harboring dangerous animals, no sillier than being caught with paddles and handkerchiefs, no sillier than transforming oneself into a contortionist while handcuffed in the back seat of a police car.  Truly, no sillier than believing that the world consists of safety and that one may have personal rights.
 
It was a simple message. A message that had nothing to do with her. Yet, with it, she laid waste to my world and thought herself clever.
 
It is all right, now.  She has fallen over her own folly. Ill-conceived, nonexistent predictions now have become truth. What must they think now when they look back at those so called ramblings of insanity? Surely now I am even more ill-marked as the demon.  And so, the lies meant to destroy, have circled back around and found their true owners.  Paths have been cleared, obstacles removed, foes uncovered from beneath their masks of adoring love. It was a cleansing, a rebirth, a shedding of skin that was unbeknownst cancerous.
 
She was right, in a sense.  My world did revolve around her. Not in the same manner that she twisted herself around my world and attempted to constrict the life from it.  My world revolved around her in that, she was the one I called when I needed someone. It was her shoulder that I laid my head upon and cried. It was her that cheered my sorrows, found my laughter, and eased my mind.  Did she truly believe that  all of the gifts; the favors of dishes washed, children watched; anniversaries of sorrow well-marked, remembered and softened; that the years of attempts to make her life more pleasant were simply a ruse? A major plot of her demise at the expense of my own pocketbook and career? In what world does this make sense? Clearly, the same world in which woodpeckers destroy friendships.
 
It is safe, now. For clearly, she was not deserving of my love or the gift of my friendship. She took many with her.  So many that I miss; so like herself. But truly, do I miss her or the concept she stood for?  I recognize now that I watered tainted soil; the seeds that I carefully tended were devoured and reduced to rot. Looking back, there were many seeds that I nurtured and lovingly cared for, during those years. How much better it is to discover the empty soil and no longer waste precious resources needlessly toiling.
 
What has changed? My back still aches with the close of the day. My tears still fall to the tilled Earth.  Yet the sun rises each day and I begin again. I continue to pull and cast aside the weeds, still occasionally finding a spent seed husk. The seeds which I lovingly fed her; the empty husks that she spat back in mockery.  Seeds of the past; just empty shells of yesterday.  
 
Yet I still sometimes marvel over this immense chasm; all over a misunderstood parable that she so badly wanted to claim as her own.  Does she see it now?  Does she realize yet what she has cast away? Does she realize that only the very ill-mannered would treat a friend in such a manner? Ah, and truly, it matters not. 
 
Today, I choose to cultivate gentler life.  Today, I remember the lessons and recognize that sometimes a woodpecker is a woodpecker and sometimes, the sisterhood is broken.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The Evils of Desire

"There are two ways to get enough.  One is to continue to accumulate more and more.  The other, is to desire less."
 
To walk this path, it takes a certain change in mindset--an anti-modern American mindset, if you will. It started for me three years ago--recognizing that not only did I already have everything that I truly needed, but that my possessions do not define me, as I had once thought. Truly, it is the opposite--they hold me back and keep me tied down.
 
I do not wish to be tethered by possessions. Less is more and equals a happier existence, overall. Sometimes I still slip and see useless things that I think I must have, but overall, I would rather use the money that once was wasted on possessions and use it for experiences, such as travel and time spent with distant friends.
 
My family and many of the people in my life really fought me when I first started getting rid of my possessions--it led to conflict and turmoil that I can't even begin to describe--from me being on drugs and getting rid of my possessions to support my meth habit (because this also explained my weight loss) to me preparing to commit suicide (because according to THEIR calculations, I should be depressed over my recent break-up, not happy--as they were seeing).  Apparently, change is threatening on many levels. Thankfully, with that change also came the reduction of many people in my life that I thought were my friends but were actually sucking me dry and were bent on my destruction.
 
"The Buddhist gazes into the empty bowl and sees that it contains everything and that it always has.

The Nihilist gazes into the empty bowl and sees that it contains nothing and that it always has."
 
Just some thoughts as we enter this holiday season when possessions and the increased accumulation of material items becomes the main focus of many...

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Fish Out of Water

Have you ever seen a tree growing on a boulder? Its roots exposed, reaching out; struggling to break through even the smallest cracks within the rock?  It is always seeking to find nutrients, water, even just a firm hold to protect it when strong winds blow through.
 
The flower seed that lands on concrete and manages to take root; it is no different. Its roots reach and reach, struggling to find purchase.  It eagerly soaks up and cleaves to each molecule of water that comes its way.
 
What of the plant that manages to push its head out from the asphalt, breaks through and reaches its limbs towards the sun?  Overcoming and conquering, in a world that says it should not exist.
 
Yet, somehow, life finds a way. 
 
And what of us?  What of those of us whom have struggled to overcome and rise above our circumstances?  Are we not any more amazing?  Can we not also inspire awe in those around us that have seen our lives, expect us to falter and hold their breath as we find yet another toehold in which to pull ourselves up?
 
Sometimes our lives do not provide the necessary elements for success, yet we manage to survive.  Sometimes there is a barrier that exists and it takes all of our strength just to move beyond.  Sometimes we are planted in a family, a community, a life where we are not understood--where we stand alone, not realizing that somewhere, there are others like us. 
 
Sometimes, we are planted alone, without the necessary elements and with barriers in place.  Here's to me.  Here's to you.  Here is to those of us that have never had it easy and probably never will.  We are the strong ones for all the fragility in our lives.  We overcome.  We conquer. We find a way, in a world that says we should not even exist.  Yet here we are. 
 
Smile and realize how far you have journeyed.  Smile and know that you are not alone.  Smile and know that you will overcome.  You have made it this far, yes? Here's to you and knowing that you will be okay.  Sometimes survival through the day is the most we can hope for.  Just remember to pause, reflect, and catch your breath when the trek seems to be all uphill--it just means the view will be all the more breath-taking when you reach the top...