Personal Stuff, SOML, Writing

At Least I Won’t Die In Ohio

Daily writing prompt
What place in the world do you never want to visit? Why?

***Disclaimer: this post mentions thoughts of suicide. If you or a loved one have suicidal thoughts or feel hopeless or lost please dial 988 or text HOME to 741741***

Ohio is a fine place.

I’m sure Cleveland is great–never been, though. I didn’t do the whole upper half of the state, although, it’s a shame, because I realized living up there, far away from my Ihops and my Waffle Houses, that we were pretty close to Niagra Falls.

We never went.

Cincinnati was nice. I kept calling it “Cinny” instead of “Cincy” and people would look at me sideways, wondering if I was joking or just really stupid, and maybe feel sorry for me for a minute.

We loved the big murals everywhere and that one park next to the Opera house. I’m sure the economic disparity was not so fun for the natives, but hey, we were just tourists having a good time.

Yellow Springs, also very cool. Hippy town. Super liberal. First Antioch college which then became the bigger one in California which is still accredited where the flagship, the one in Ohio, is not. But it still attracts adorable, rainblow-clad rich liberal kids who love organic lattes and T-shirts with local art printed on it.

Those days I felt happy. The sun was shining. There was some kind of art fair. We talked to some sweet young girls with a tongue-in-cheek liberal T-shirt stand. One had the Tea Party snakes twisted into the shape of a uterus and Fallopian tubes and said “Don’t Tread on Me.” Another had a big pair of lips with a tongue hanging out that said “Don’t tell me to smile.” I got that one. I always get comments on that T-shirt.

The city we lived in wasn’t too bad, either. There were cool restaurants. Fantastic donuts. I mean, if you want some good donuts, go to Ohio. And pizza on every corner. Donuts, pizza, and bars. The fucking stuff of life.

We could drive ten minutes to a cool bar with big, floppy reuben sandwiches, good music and delicious organic chocolate beer. It was called “Tanks.” We’d ask our hip young waitress:

“What is this place called?”

“Tanks.”

“You’re welcome!” I’m sure they thought it was funny every time.

Fifteen minutes to my favorite local grocery which included a cafe, where I joined a writing group which literally kept me alive. An hour to IKEA or C-I-N-C-Y or Columbus. Two hours to Indianapolis or Louisville. As long as we didn’t have to go the one place I really wanted to avoid–home.

Home, which was still full of boxes and furniture put in the wrong place. Home, where every night my husband made dinner and we went and sat in front of the TV in the basement. That futon was like a mother, holding me, an overbearing mother, simultaneously suffocating me, saying no, no, I can never let you go.

I’d lay on that futon during the night when I couldn’t sleep in the long winter months watching videos–anything with sunshine. People walking around in LA. People waking up to normal mornings getting normal coffee having normal conversations. Not wanting to kill themselves.

Home, where the squirrels scratched on the walls and the roof and the cats followed me, followed me, followed me, always meowing, pawing at me. Please, please, please, we don’t even know what we want. Just give us something.

Ohio is a fine place with lots of fine people. Great people, actually. People who friended me and saved my life every single day just by acknowledging that I existed. People I’ll never see again.

It’s a fine place. Just don’t ask me to go back.

Personal Stuff

The Cold.

Everything was so quiet. Snow does that–muffles sound. The night wasn’t so dark with the streetlamp right next to my car, not to mention the shopping center on the other side of the parking lot. When I stepped outside, the cold fell on me immediately. I could see my breath. I could feel my life seeping away.

Because that’s what cold is. Transferring heat–much needed heat–away from you.

But the quiet was still so serene. And the realization of death was awe-inspiring. I also had my car, right there, with the engine running. There wasn’t an actual fear of death–just stepping on the threshold and peaking over to the other side. Taking a moment to feel delicate.

It was snowmageddon 2014, Birmingham, AL. Like many people, I was stranded in my car overnight. Luckily I had snacks from an earlier trip to CVS, and enough gas in my car to run the engine all night. There were other options; nearby businesses, public shelter at the fire dept., and that strange but nice lady who had asked if I wanted to stay at her house. But the cold was trying to tell me something. I wanted to go on this journey alone.

Also the Fire dept was over a mile away. That lady was weird. And the nearby business in question was full of children. No thanks. I’ll stay in my car.

At that time in my life I seemed to have everything: a great career, a wonderful life partner, tons of friends, and a …. decently fulfilling spiritual life. But the cold was telling me something. My life was cush. It was cozy. And I was getting weak.

The truth is I put minimal effort into everything and enjoyed many comforts. I could feel this in myself, but honestly I didn’t know how to change it. No one wants unnecessary suffering. If we are offered comfort, we take it.

Well, I made it home, of course. The cold went away and I continued my cozy life. How do we foster growth in the deepest, darkest parts of ourselves? How do we impose loss upon ourselves when we have everything we need and more? I thought about going on a spiritual retreat, having some kind of ascetic experience, but of course I never followed through.

Now we live in a different city and all those things are gone. I never wanted to rely on comforts, I always wanted to be the type of person who sought challenges and even struggles. Boy, did I have some misconceptions about myself. The older you get, the harder it is to break old habits. I suppose I have some work to do.

Me and the cold are getting to know each other.