The Chorus: Bodies (and Souls)

We are flooded with choices and starved for connection. Always and never alone. We change minds by sharing stories. We fight alone, together. Empathy is a victory.  Seven billion solo songs, and I want to start a Chorus.   - Amy Grace

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The beauty of running on scraps and thin air, is that you can survive on scraps and thin air. A drop is a feast. I was born hungry.

I used to do these monster runs. Twelve miles, fifteen, eighteen, I’d lose count. Believing in the finish line as transformation. A switch that could declare me strong, survived, ready. The safest drug that wasn’t. Healthy that wasn’t. My body needed rest and wanted distraction. Ironically, what I miss about them is the middle. Being lost in time, a limbo I chose, words finding me like magic, tears that were stuck channeled into burning legs, endorphins that felt holy. I could almost fly. Learn to be my own. Bodies show us what we feel before we’re ready to name it. This was a violence to exorcise the violence I’d known. Freeing anger to make room for peace. These days I forget my body as much as I used to torture it. Inhabit it before I can celebrate it. It’s a home. A way to touch what I want and need and love. Muscle and spirit at once. A struggle, too. But hunger is as complicated as we are. And hurting is more alive than being asleep. And outrunning isn’t living.

First flowers in February die by frost. Early blooming requires resilience no elementary school kid is ready for. I hated the bra I was supposed to wear, so I made it unnecessary. Starved out adulthood, coming for me too soon. Refused to feed it into existence. Kryptonite instead of boundaries, a trick I learned for life. My only defense against nature, that has none. Practiced, like some people find yoga or meditation, sitting in the hollow burn, transcending before suburban America caught on. I thanked hunger and paid it all I had, for protection - a deal with a devil that felt like home. Some kids looked for dirty magazines in their parents’ rooms. At ten, I weighed myself in my mother’s closet. Became addicted to single digits and subtraction. Memorized the calorie counting book in her nightstand, with a sewing tape measure I’d wrap around my slip of a waist. She couldn’t have known. We heard the grown ups wanting to change themselves, fed a steady diet of diets, it was normal and cruel and hard and easy. Middle school memories a mess of first loves and cigarettes, fending off fainting when the bell rung between classes, Grateful Dead bootleg tapes and friends like family, then all night leg cramps from electrolyte crashes. Home alone at twelve, running up and down stairs, my mind an endless equation of energy in and out. Later, my hipbones bruised from boys I wouldn’t let know me. It felt powerful, which breaks my heart now more than anything. Learning to be wanted, before we learned to want. Where did we learn that orgasms had anything to do with the outline of our ribs, or the twisting of our insides? I can hear my best friend convincing me to eat pizza: “It’s only bread and cheese”. She knows nothing, I thought, shocked. Vodka didn’t count, because it made you forget. But I still remember everything. Starving told the world not to ask. A forcefield, Teflon, warning, dare. Dodging polite adult concern that held silent fears. Steel willed, mastering the art of being ok. The only lie I’ve ever really told. (For decades.)

Hunger is a stand in for everything else, when it’s your drug. Food is the flip side, just as true. Approval is a beast with an endless appetite. Known is not safe. Gifts were pressure to perform. We change ourselves to fit the space and shape the world gives us. Empty ourselves out to make room for what strikes next. Read that we can be anything, but not as we are, not now, not yet, not here, not for him. Adjust, contort, hold breath, smile hard, accept, open, read rooms, read minds. We grew sideways, like trees on the coast, to meet the male gaze. Arching our spines, searching out mirrors in eyes to check ourselves. The irony and beauty, in all that giving up, fine tuning, reflecting back, was that we learned to want ourselves, too. A side effect to fuel the healing now. We paid to exist halfway, earned theoretical tickets into worthiness. Deprivation laced into desire, only in reaction to someone else’s. We starve ourselves to bear what’s unbearable. To excuse what’s inexcusable. To fit everything we didn’t choose, or chose us. We switch out the impulse for ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We shrink to satisfy egos of people we don’t respect but are taught to need. We make ourselves pure, untouchable, unflappable. We unmake ourselves. Hunger was holy. Something to accomplish by falling away, renouncing, disappearing into existence. It was a parallel world, always there like a movie I directed, flat and in wide angle honey light, my own design, waiting for me when I couldn’t be in my own life. A ghost of myself, haunted by myself.

My own hunger is still hard to talk about because I’m still in it. Bait and switch. Built into my autonomic nervous system like a second heartbeat. It’s a stress response, discomfort response, world on fire response, way of life. Becoming thin is a way of pleading “don’t hurt me,” like the preemptive “I’m sorry” we are collectively sick of saying and hearing. It’s some illusory version of safe that wears us out and expires in time. Hitting my forties woke me up to my own fairytales, embedded in my swallowed down sadness. Years of listening, being good, amounted to a silent prayer:  ‘Don’t criticize me, don’t push back, just let me breathe here in this package I’ve made for your ease. I won’t be difficult or different from you. I won’t ask you to accept me for what fills my heart. For my appetites and opinions and feelings and wants. Don’t hurt me or you’ll break me. Don’t you see it? I’ll snap.’ 

All the dancing that looked so free, was really begging for scraps. My wild spirit, trapped in a rule book. I tell my kids, my friends, my students: FILL YOUR SPACE. Because it’s a right and act of self love. Because we hear ourselves speak to others what we need to hear, ourselves. We can change learned instinct like we can change our minds - with hard work and epiphanies. I’m all soul. In dieting, I was all business. A secret life when secrets are poison. An alter ego when we all just want to be whole. Growing up with the Berlin wall through my spine, duality that tied my feet and taped my lips and asked me to sprint and sing. Without muscle or water. For an audience. It’s exhausting enough to type it. Only a tiny container for all the joy I still felt. Tidal waves of it, stuffed into a double zero. Happiness will never fit into a body that only feels itself. 

Pain is education; I’ve had cruel teachers and been my own. I’ve listened to it whisper and wail. It sings about what we are most hungry for. Begs to be fed so it can rest and grow into peace. Pain wants change. Changed minds in an unchanged culture creates friction that can start a fire. We learn to put it out against our own skin, when it’s time to let it spread and burn. An alarm we run from and re-channel and ignore. A recent text from a friend read: “If only women cared about the state of our souls as much as the state of our asses.” Funny and tragic and point blank true. Maybe we all do already, just feel we can’t. Wellness has taken on traits of sickness, everywhere I look. An addict knows a junkie. Acting on what we need is the ultimate act of healing, and rebellion. And the gentlest thing we’ll ever do.

The truth about bodies is that they keep our souls here on earth. I won a lottery of fate to still live in mine. They are our windows and keys and homes. Our physical interface with love, with each other, with pleasure we all deserve. “Do the things that make you never want to leave” - a mantra repeated to my kids. I’ve trashed it. And drunk last drops of it. Off and on, black and white, good and bad, never correct. Dichotomies defy our watercolor souls, our evolutions. And after near death and epiphanies and fatigue I’ll never sleep off, I live in the grey, turn it to color. After last ditch prayers when my heart was a rollercoaster. Confusing suppression with permission - tangled, showing up at once, and never belonging together. I know it now, and don’t have time to mourn when I didn’t. We find our strength in the living, not the pulling away. Slow death is still suicide, when its lies feel like protection. It’s an inside job to resist dog whistles, blown to sell things and sell us short. Today, hunger feels like a country where I used to live, with long summers and clear skies and sleepless nights. Cold dry hands while the world sweats. Right now is a messy wet spring, with mud and hay fever and sticky close air. My hollows filled out and filled in, with gritty truth and soft flesh. The cracked seed of me open, sharp shoots grown from my ravaged heart.

To love who we’ve always been, and despise our own flesh. Opposites that only make peace when we own them, call them out, take them apart, repair what’s left. Done endlessly fixing parts that were never broken. Learning to feed what for years wanted to grow. Blowing my own cover. Blowing yours, too. Whatever I feel now cannot be translated to the language of empty stomachs or disappearing flesh. It will be something new, and always known. It has shocked me with its simplicity - a koan, an exorcism, the new habit of letting go when I want to hold on. It has grown babies and nurtured life against gambler’s odds. It has burned its way out, thawed and flooded me, leaving green in its wake. Always hungry, for everything, all along.

by Amy Grace

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eff it, I said. I'm going to class.

in that first five minutes, I felt my body melt into the floor. hips, thighs, shoulders. elbows, fingertips, eyelashes. bones, blood, everything. five years I spent pretending I no longer needed this, five years I spent yanking at this core part of myself like a weed. 

in that first five minutes, I felt my head clear. for once, grief took a number, had to wait in line. just like everything else. for the next ninety minutes, I contemplated breath and weight. folded, unfolded, listened to the sound of commuter trains outside, moved through space as if underwater. reacquainted myself with that wildly specific vernacular, that modern dance language in which I used to be so fluent. your pelvis is a bowl. move in full sentences. unfurl your spine. live in the landscape of the lifted sternum.

live in the landscape of the lifted sternum. 

for a little while, I was home.

by Andrea Corrona Jenkins


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When I was a kid, teenager, young woman, 

I was scared to sit down without holding something in front of my belly to cover up. 

Fear. 

I was scared. 

To sit. I was scared to run in front of people, to jog, to skip. I had no idea I could be loved. Or touched. Or adored. Or taken care of. Or worshipped. I had no idea another person could grow with me in so many ways. Truly love me fully and deeply and unconditionally. That they could grab these pork chops and shake and jiggle them and that I’d be giggling along and loving it. That they’d love my body as it physically grows and expands rapidly and without bounds (finally). This isn’t a dedication to my partner (although I do appreciate him, adore him, and love him more than anyone/thing). This is a dedication to myself. A thank you to me for allowing the flood gate to open. For allowing myself to be loved (by me and by others). For allowing myself to be touched and adored and worshipped. And not just for allowing it to happen, but for accepting it happily and without hesitation. For ENJOYING IT. For no longer saying things like “I don’t understand how he can love me and love my body”. I do understand. Fully. It’s because I am the Universe.

by Cheyenne Gil

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I do not eat on airplanes. Ever.  Because that would combine two of my phobias — flying and choking — and that is too much for me to bear.  Food is a phobia.  Even more than the ever-present problems of being a woman in todays’ world and the worry about weight, food, sugar, how I look, what jeans I fit into and yes, I know what I wore and what I weighed at any age during my life, is the danger food poses for me.  Food is dangerous to me.  It can kill me. I could choke. I could be poisoned. I could have an allergic reaction.

I could write a novel on the why.  So many little traumas rolled up into one big phobia.  Things that happened when I was young and a teen. I remember choking on a hard boiled egg when I was home alone at about age 10? younger?   I remember panicking and picking up the phone but I couldn’t talk. I remember laying down on the couch so I could die.  But then I went to the sink and put water in my mouth and somehow that loosened the egg and I didn’t die.  I don’t know if I even told anyone.  There were other choking incidents.  

Then the poisoning fear.  The shame in the origin of that fear is intense.  Should I say?  Why not.  I was shooting up what I thought was speed in my bathroom at home at the age of 15? 16?  And as soon as the drug went in my vein, I knew it was not speed. It was different.  I was scared. The walls turned smooth.  I survived but the fear of the initial rush and the unexpected drug was imprinted.

And now food.  I don’t like chewy or hard food.  I don’t like any food that I don’t know exactly what is in it. I don’t eat MSG.  I don’t like chemicals or fried food or processed food.  I like simple food.  I like to eat what Im comfortable with or else I won’t eat.  I lose weight when I travel because I don’t want to try new foods or eat out.  I don’t like spicy or rich or gourmet or restaurant food. I love rice cakes. 

I joke with my husband that we cannot get divorced because I could never go on a date and try to explain this to someone new.

by Wendy Laurel

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I was at war. Pain and destruction. The mirror fought with lies. Over and over I listened and struggled to get ahead.

Truth was not my ally, no matter how hard I tried. Mistreatments on so many levels. The bullets kept coming and knocking me down.

It was complicated, so I told myself. The worst was yet to come. The best was yet to come.

An unexpected hero. Understanding, forgiveness, and strength all soldiers by my side. A future of acceptance and peace.

The mirror still wants to go to battle but I know better now. Never trust the reflection. The foundation is stronger and more powerful. The war is over.

by Deb Schwedhelm

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When I was young I used to draw. Self-portraits mostly. They were different from other kids’ drawings, and despite the fact that they always attracted unwanted attention I loved creating them. Teachers and classmates and anyone who caught a glimpse always had similar questions. 

“Why no mouth?”

“Where are your ears?”

“Where are your feet?” 

I drew version after version of a warped self-reflection, silent and detached, not even human half the time. I didn’t know why, especially because I was young, but I always felt uncomfortable sitting with myself. It felt painful, and my mind was always overwhelmed. Always anticipating loss, living through perhaps self-prophesized trauma, recovering from those self-inflicted wounds as well as the unanticipated ones. It hurt my mind to feel and I’ve spent half a lifetime trying to escape a psychic pain I couldn’t shake. A skin crawling panic that felt like something I should be able to change like my clothes at the end of the day.  

Consciousness, sobriety, pain, hunger. All just tools in my chest of invisibility. All work, but just briefly, until the effects fade and I am nothing but raw soul stuck inside of this body again. It leaves me feeling edgy, full and agitated. With a need to unwrap myself, like peeling the skin from a piece of fruit, to grow into something else. A constant urge to purge my cells and shrink to be as small as possible.

But through it all I’ve learned that I have somewhat of an exoskeleton.  No matter how many times I try to hollow out the insides the shell remains. 

And it’s lasted long enough that it was there to hold me up when I was ready to start growing from the inside again. As time passes it just grows thicker and stronger, and I start to accept that empty isn’t always safe. That it’s ok to feel the floor on my feet, to have a voice, to feel the skin on my arms. Feeling means I am breathing means I am alive means today I will be ok.

by Naomi Etcetera

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My kids may be mildly stinky, dino nugget eating, sometimes momentarily misplaced scrappers but they KNOW deep in their BONES that their worth has absolutely nothing to do with their appearance or bodies.

In a world that POUNDS the message into girls, starting from day 1, that they are bodies first and hearts second, I am constantly fighting like a mama warrior every single day to pump as much TRUTH into my baby’s spirits with the hope that I can fill them with real power enough for them to know they were made for so much more than just another pretty little princess.

Everyone else will tell them a million times that they’re beautiful. It’s my job to tell them that they’re more.

by Sam Kelly

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I want you. Every fiber, every string of DNA shivering in its own skin, vibrationally reaching like a flower to its sun. I look at the sky and see space, usually so freeing. Now it takes my breath. You are so far from me, your heart unrecognizable. I stripped away all I had left and bared all, showed you my scars, exposed my every last skeleton. You created a warm space I felt I could be, then swiftly went away. Why did you go? Why is it the shadows you call home? I reach to you, I see you, I feel you. Sometimes I want to crawl away to the shadows too, my darling, but life requires the sun. I worked too hard to claim my space here on this plot of earth to abandon it, though my heart wants to. Chemicals pouring a cocktail like it's happy hour. I have to remain grounded. Meet me here, if you like. I'll be here.

by Elizabeth Glenn

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Junior Year .

I was a failed bulimic.

What I mean is, I tried to vomit the food, but it didn’t work.

I was 16. 

And smart. 

And pretty. (I can say that now, but it still makes me wince.)

So I bought boxes and boxes of laxatives. 

My junior year, I hid myself on a toilet, a lot.

I hunched my shoulders to hide my too-large breasts.

I straightened my curly hair because it was too much.

I would eat and eat, because I was so HUNGRY. 

And the food gave me such PLEASURE. 

But I wasn’t supposed to feel pleasure, or hunger. 

Pretty isn’t eating a cheeseburger or having big legs and floppy boobs.

So I swallowed the pills, sometimes 8-12 at a time, and waited for the pain.

The doubling over cramps. 

Then the release.

My senior year, I was voted “best looking.”

(I can say that now, but it still makes me wince.)

I was so embarrassed and scared of it, we (me and the other boy) wore paper bags on our heads as a joke. It was not really a joke for me, though. 

It was safe under there. 

I was labeled a thing, but escaped needing to be visible for it. 

“Please, please, please stop looking at me,” I wanted to scream.

But also, “Please, please, please look at me and say I’m pretty.”

But also, “Please God, don’t tell anyone I told you this, but sometimes when I look at myself I actually think I’m pretty.”

….

I’m 42 now.

I don’t eat laxatives.

In fact, I worry that maybe I did permanent damage to my GI tract back then.

I still spend a lot of time on the toilet and have lost weight without trying. 

I went to a doctor a couple of years ago about it, but didn’t get great answers. 

I showed up with self-blame, and shame.

He did not reassure me that it was not my fault.

I didn’t return. 

But hey, now I weigh the same as I did my senior year now...

by Emily Robinson

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I resolved it, once and for all when I could finally take up nourishment in myself and allow it in. Such a simple act to allow life to be with us and give us life. 

Loving myself enough to be alive. Being alive enough to love life. 

Both/and. 

by Briana Cerezo

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Grace hides quietly in the shame we believed belong to us. 

It’s there waiting for us when we are willing to face them. 

It’s there when we surrender to our  human-ness , 

to the arcane universe and  the symphony it plays....

we meet it whilst sitting in a pool of contrast, when we realize we  are our own mirror... 

When tears begin to make their way from the bottom of the seas, grace rests within our hearts and demands we listen.  

That’s  when I realize perfection is the dance between chaos and serenity.

And this is where I find my resting place. This is where I rise from. 

I am a perfect dance saved by grace. 

by Ana Mar

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Up until a few years ago, I never considered it a problem that I could tell you exactly what I weighed at any major event in my life since the age of 14. It’s just what girls and women did, we’d get together, complain about our bodies, feel shame for eating something that tasted good, and be jealous of others who were thinner and who “had it all together.” 

I’m not really sure what changed in me, it was this slow shift, turned into an almost panic, that “I can’t wake up one more day hating myself.” I owe that to my kids, and everyone else that needs help in this area.  I was mostly kind of forced into it, a gift I never considered as such at the time.  Some stress, thyroid and hormone issues had me gaining weight fast, and I couldn’t starve myself and be the mom I wanted to be, so I kind of just gave up dieting, my body gave me this biggest “it’s not going to happen.”  It found me, because I couldn’t change what was happening to my body, and I noticed I felt some relief in not weighing out my food, not obsessing about food being “good” or “bad” and not being exhausted from a lack of calories.  Yet shame came knocking in different ways. Shame that I had put on weight, and “let myself go” when in reality, it was the beginning of the unraveling of a really messed up perspective. 

I’d be naïve to say this started at age 14, this started when I could understand the world around me, and what women (and men) did, and how they behaved about food and themselves. The cold harsh truth is kids pick up on it, the obsessions, talking about how bad you ate, how you have no control over it, how you are pig for wanting nourishment, the overall feeling of discontentment in our own skin. It’s absorbed in us as a culture, like math and science are taught to us, so is this shame filled uneasiness  to live out our genetics.  And I’m not mad at anyone for doing the best they knew how, and for living out what they were taught, they/we really didn’t know the impact living a disconnected life would have on society. Heck, even up until a few years ago, I didn’t know I was disconnected.

Now we know what this has done to young kids though, we know how eating disorders have been on the rise since diets hit the scene, we know that diets cause more weight gain in the end, we know it destroys our metabolism, we know size does not dictate health, we know mental health counts as much as physical health, if diets really worked, why are people constantly having to go back on them?  We know, we know, we know, so we have to accept that something has to change, and I’ll be damned if I knowingly play a damaging part in it. 

So how did I get here? Why has this felt like the biggest mountain to climb for me? 

 I was a chubby adolescent, in tears that I couldn’t live in this body for one more day. So, I started on a calorie deficit, one that would have been fitting for a sedentary 90 year old, not an active 15 year old. remember the headaches, I remember staring at my half a sandwich with turkey and mustard and thinking “this can’t be enough, I’m soooo hungry,” but I morphed from this chubby adolescent, into a slim 15 year old, and the world praised me. I had finally “hit my potential,” “got my shit together,”  because let’s face it, there was nothing worse to people than a pretty girl, who was so close to meeting society’s standards. What a shame for a pretty face to not have the matching body.

 Phew, no more embarrassment for this girl. So, I starved, or stared at toilet seats, and thought “I guess this is what I need to do to be accepted.” Now, I finally fit in. I didn’t know how to balance starving myself and using food to comfort me from all my emotions. It was a vicious cycle, and I spent 20 years spinning in thoughts about what I ate,  and how I looked for literally 90% of my days, and shamed myself for finding it so hard to keep off weight. It wasn’t until this past year that I realized that what was really at play was disconnecting from myself and my body, and I was going on auto pilot. 

It was a confusing time, shame slapping me in the face no matter which direction I turned,  shame for getting attention from guys, shame for being hungry, shame for liking food, shame for not having a handle on this, shame for liking the attention, and then absolutely hating it at the same time. I couldn’t figure out why I wanted to crawl out of my own skin. Every cat call, every man that grabbed at my body when I never asked for it, and with confusion I’d question “why do people want this?” Slimness had brought about a different kind of discomfort, comments I never asked for, attention that brought me to tears more times than I can count. Every time I went out I wanted to scream, men following me on the hwy, driving beside me in town making rude gestures, yelling at me when I went for a run, grabbing my body when I served them food, I couldn’t escape it.  I didn’t know why people wanted this, but I knew that shame would come if I put on more weight (as we have been taught to feel shame if we gain weight) , and the heaviness of that would be a burden too.  This is what we are taught, this is what we are suppose to be. Perfect, but not proud, tasteful, but sexy.  I felt absolutely trapped no matter which way I turned. 

There is this certain expectation that if you were once an attractive 20 year old, you better not change or age as the years go on. You need to look the same after having babies, your body can not change, your skin must stay plump, or you will be talked about in circles that knew you in your “beautiful” days.  

I have spent many years thinking about this, knowing that I will age, knowing that I can’t look the same after children, knowing that I can’t maintain what the world expects or wants from me. I’d ask myself, so “what happens when I no longer have beauty as my backup?” People never took the time to really get to know me, I was known for how I looked, valued for something to surface,  and it was never going to be something I could maintain in a way that satisfied the world around me.  It probably seems pretty rich to complain about being attractive in a world that only wants that, but it also messes with your mind as things you were known for (whether you wanted to be known for that or not) start slipping away. 

The last few years I have felt the shift, and it feels weird, because I have put on weight, and I’ve never been more comfortable in my own skin. I have connected with myself again, spent time slowing down and observing, asking myself why I’m reaching for food, what is the feeling I’m feeling right now, doing yoga, deep breathing, getting comfortable with stillness. It sounds so simple, but if you have been living fearing yourself, your body, and dieting (which screams, I don’t trust my body) doing the opposite feels very unnatural. Your mind doesn’t want you to do it, it will tell you it’s too scary to go there, that you are not safe, and  it has been a near 2 year fight to get here (imperfectly I might add). I’m finding I’m not as “hungry” as I use to be in more than one sense, I don’t feel panicked around food, I’m training my brain to believe that I can eat when I’m hungry, and to help calm my anxiety by reminding my body that I won’t starve it again. 2 years in, I think my body is starting to believe me, and I’m trusting it to know what it needs.  

There is a sense of relief to not have to maintain the unattainable, and the work of appreciating what you can offer the world besides your body has it’s own sweet rewards. But, it is a full time job to keep your mind on track. I’ve spend many days crying and accepting my new body, new face, and trying so hard to not live in my subconscious. I’m slowing down, actually learning to listen to my body. “Are you hungry, or are you just sad?” “Do you need to slow down?” “ Would yoga feel better than cardio? Can you accept that burning less calories is actually what your body needs today?”  “Why are you reaching for food if you aren’t actually hungry?” “What is the underlying feeling behind the comfort food has brought you?” “You are loveable to matter how you look,” “You are so much more than any of these things.”  I’m noticing, I’m observing, and slowly I can see that exercise is not a punishment anymore, it is how I deal with anxiety, how I feel strong, it is how I’ve started appreciating what my body can do, not, how can I punish it for eating something. I have slowed my thoughts down enough to wonder why I’m having them, and considering if they serve me well. 

It’s forced me to get to the core of who I am. I am so much more than what I ate, so much more than how I look, I am soft and finally not starving, and my kids adore every inch of me. And truthfully, I’m not a large person, and I’m not ugly, so life for me is easier in general, because the world accepts me more gently. A sad truth that is still implied daily in our culture. 

I am not promoting not taking care of yourself, but caring for ourselves can look very different from what the world tells us it is. It can look like nourishing your body instead of starving it, and moving your body because it feels good, instead of punishment. It can look like gaining weight, or losing it, but health does not mean being slim. I would hardly say I was healthy at my slimmest. 

This process is slow, and I do not do it perfectly. I still catch myself lifting up my shirt to look at my stomach when I pass by a mirror, missing my old clothes,  feeling shame around eating a cookie, or looking at my under eye wrinkles in horror, BUT, there are far more gracious moments with myself than there has ever been before, there are far less times I think about food. That has been one of the greatest gifts, a life not consumed by thoughts of my body and what I ate. I am graciously loving the girl and woman who dieted and lived a starved disconnected life. She did what she had too, what she knew how, and she had to do it to cope. I love her, and I’m proud of her.  The truth is, the less shame we have (even about our past), the less consumed our mind becomes by it. 

Every time I think about dieting again, I consider my mental health, and I look at my kids, especially my daughter,  and think, “nah, it’s not worth the cost.”  My goal is to teach myself, and my kids to connect to their body, to trust it, to take care of it, and to love it for all that it is and can do.  

Even as I write this, my heart is literally racing, probably from past experiences around this, and I’m telling her “It’s ok, it did impact you, your racing heart is showing you that it felt scary, and you don’t want to live that out anymore, feel that.” And as I stop resisting and slow down to feel it, my heart rate drops. “We’ve got this.”

by Kyla Ewert

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We must stop looking outside of ourselves and instead, look deep within. 

It's the place we'll find magic, gifts...all that we need. 

Don't rush the full circle. This year's seed is next year's fruit. 

by Anna Christine Larson

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To her I say, “I’m sorry.” I’m sorry for the moments when I spoke down to you. Called you fat and ugly and hid your imperfections thinking they made you unworthy of feeling beautiful or loved. I am not ashamed of you. 

To her I say, “thank you.” Thank you for standing tall with courage and resilience whenever I feel brave enough to face the things that scare me the most. You are so strong. 

And to her I say, “I love you.” I love you for being my home to a fiery, unrelenting, loving, tender but sometimes lost, soul. You deserve to be loved. 

by Becky Earl

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Six Inches

 Self. Body. Distortion. Food. Eating. Not Eating. Eating More. Wishing I’d stop / it’d stop. Pleading. Praying. Seeking. Hoping. Praying more. Darkness. Lightness. Greyness.

My story with me is one of skewed perception.

(( and a distorted way of seeing which adds 6 inches – three per side))

It’s led to a lifetime of connected disconnections. And a desperation for another shell Looking for a way through- reaching for a way out.Finding food as a way to dissolve and disappear. And in chaos, a means of self-control.

 Food offered a disguised comfort so…I ate. I ate more. Then I stopped. Then started. Latching onto substitutions. Up. Down. In. Out. Learning to mix my own blend to stop eating. Cigarettes  Amphetamines Green bud Blotter Mushrooms Hash Cocaine White wine More cocaine And more cocaine. Until I damn near died and came back. And was forced into new and dangerous tricks that cycled through many years and moves.

 The shame that comes along for the ride became louder – I could no longer trust myself with food. It didn’t last. If I had a little, I’d eat it all, and toss it all for a fleeting moment of freedom. Until the blackwash. And then a therapist explained the metaphor for the madness and while it didn’t radically shift my behavior, it did provide insights.

 While the cycles between the ups and downs grew longer, time passed. And I aged. I cared, then I didn’t. Then I did. So I modified again. Carbs, no carbs, no sugar, only white foods, only green foods, fasting, Atkins, small meals, no meals, Tae Bo, walking, exercise, yoga, meditation.

 Time still passes, and as I’m older the struggle is quieter. And the intensity more subtle. Though I understand the shadow a little more, m head still spins And at times, I’m dissatisfied and compare without rationale. But there is a quiet understanding that I distort.

 But the world is misaligned with mixed images. Eat this but look like that. No don’t eat that. In fact don’t eat. Fast. Walk. No, run. Run faster. Life’s too short – you deserve a treat. But look like this Fit into that. Love yourself. But please wear the new trend. Age with dignity. But look young. Hide those arms, and that neck. Wear spanx.

It’s endless.

 Sometimes I can shut it off. There are longer moments of peace. Walking helps. Walking seaside transforms. Yoga helps. But without these entwined with a routine I’m lost.

 And so… I still seek a contented vanity of peace and acceptance of the me I am.

And the you, you are.

by Pamela Joye

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I don’t remember much about my childhood or when I realised, or was told, that my body was a form of currency. Maybe I soaked that in like a sponge while my much older sister & Mum would stand in front of mirrors & pick out their faults, or when they went on constant diets. Maybe it was when I would go with my Mum to the Weight Watchers meetings in the hall at the back of the old Church in Footscray. We would catch the train & wear nice clothes. I always loved walking down the side of the building, it was always cool there, with the overgrown plants in the garden. I would sit quietly while the women were weighed & applause would break out when it was announced that one of the women had lost so many kilos, & I could feel the shame when someone stepped up & hadn’t lost any weight, or gained it. I was maybe three when we went there. 

Maybe I was about six when I first started hating my thighs. I was a dancer growing up & food would become a problem. In class when I was eight, each week the best student would be rewarded with a chocolate bar. By the time I was 14, we would be yelled at for being too fat. That’s why we weren’t any good, because we were too fat. Nothing I did could shake those thighs. I once saw a physio for a hip problem & he told me I was too fat to be a dancer. I’d have been lucky to be a woman’s size 8 at the time. 

Then I grew up & my boobs started to grow. Then I became body parts to everyone. I was boobs & bum & lips. At parties with boys, as they kissed me & slid their hands up my thighs I would cringe & feel ashamed because there was no way they were going to get to where they wanted to go with those thighs of mine. I would only wear skirts, not pants - I would say, ‘pants presented my legs as individually wrapped, there was no hiding them, but skirts, now they covered you right up’. Does it surprise you that growing up I don’t ever remember my Mum wearing pants. 

I learned that I was an emotional eater - eating to fill the big black hole that was always there. I remember berating myself that I was so useless I couldn’t even force myself to throw up after one day of having enough but not knowing how to fix it. There were days I would be starving & I thought it was for food but it was for love. I was starving for attention because I was not seen or heard. As I got older I worried about my prized pieces, my boobs, bum & lips, changing as they do along with the rest of your body. I remember thinking that no one would love me or pay attention to me now. I remember thinking that was all I had to give, that was my only value.

When my marriage ended & my anxiety would get the better of me as things would just keep crashing down upon my head, wave after wave after wave, I just couldn’t eat. I lived with my parents for a time & my Mum would quietly try to feed me. She would cook my favourite meals & leave me chocolate bars on my pillow. She did the best she could, the way she knew how to try to comfort me & help me. I would eventually take a bite or two to make her happy. I lost so much weight that my jeans were sliding down my legs. People would tell me how great I looked & asked me how I lost the weight. I would say anxiety & stress & they would laugh & say maybe they should try that. I didn’t laugh but I took some sort of strange comfort from their attention to my shrinking frame. From that & one day trying on a pair of size 6 jeans & finding that they were too big for me. Then as I found my feet, I felt fear that I would put on weight again. I would be fat, I was disgusted. All the while I would be saying to my girls that weight didn’t matter, eat healthy foods, look after your body; it’s your temple. All the while I was smashing mine apart from the inside. 

I think it will always be there for me, that complicated relationship with my body. The sum of what I’ve been told I am, what I should look like, what is good, what is bad, what is attractive, what I am worth & how that is measured. Even though I’m older now & I realise that there’s no fighting my Mediterranean genes. Even though I know that what I hunger for is not food. Even though I know I am not just body parts. 

by Natasha Kelly

The Chorus: Teenagers

We are flooded with choices and starved for connection. Always and never alone. We change minds by sharing stories. We fight alone, together. Empathy is a victory.  Seven billion solo songs, and I want to start a Chorus.   - Amy Grace

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The thing about teenagers is that they lie. And want you to know it, as they cover it with everything they’ve collected, everything you’ve given them. It will sit under piles of dirty laundry and borrowed boyfriend shirts, ticket stubs and dried flowers and stuffed bunnies they got at six months old. It will glow bright and warm, and your mother radar will seek it out in infrared gut feelings. You will have a choice. To open your arms and shut up. Or to release the fear in a stream of words that will sound like airhorns to them. They lie to protect a world so big and immediate and alive, we’ve forgotten the animal pull of it. (Maybe that’s a lie, too. It’s what makes chemistry dangerous, still. What could temp us away from everything solid and responsible for holding life.) Teenagers lie and it breaks their hearts and grows guilt like kudzu. They need us, to see that the tangles only bind us together in the same space. They need to hear, “I’m here” and know we choose this mess of a place over any other, because they are here, too.

I need you is the echo of leave me alone.

Teenagers are learning the wild. They navigate like sailors, following a compass and the wind, but have to do it hyper-connected, at light speed. Making a record of each trip up, sexual regret, blood rise comment, the thirst they’re all taught to crave and cover up. This is the intersection of no fear and barbed wire, NC-17 and the harshest inner censors. One long take of confusing, zigzagged, shapeshifting tenderness. They need our most updated satellite, with our strongest softest deepest reserves. They need us to say ‘no’ and ‘yes’, clearly, honestly. To help them know when to do the same. When I hear older people railing on their tender bud lives or judgement, I never bite my lip. They need defenders and mediums. They need everything they won’t ask for. Our best psychic powers. Our rearview vision. Our deepest memories of our most unflattering moments. Shared without blinking, pause, or filter.

They are reminders, to live. Now. Not to go quietly into any night, dawn, consolation, or acceptance. My daughter mirrors my feral parts, and my stillest. The howling at moons our bodies needed to do all along. The thirty years surviving on scraps before I made a bed for it. The teenage remnant in each of us is our hungriest part. Freudian oral and lit up like Christmas, brave and skittish, joyous and full of friction. Needing to drink blood from what you love, be devoured and wanted and wanting. Stripped down and opened up like full bloom orchids about to wilt. Last drop thirsty, first time hungry. Discovering words written exactly for you. Turning the key in the ignition of whatever used or borrowed car is your palace, the evening has an on switch. Pushing the lighter on the dash, firing up your solar plexus. Ready and willing as you’ll ever be to do anything; , always and never enough. Believers in whatever kind of becoming the quick of you still wishes for. We are them, they are us. We are worlds knotted, connected by an umbilical cord. Middle age and young adult share a common center of gravity. A cross section of yearning that could power a city at night. Immediate and too late and now or never. It’s a time travel movie, two stories parallel and faraway, crossing over, separate and alive together. Their future, our past, under a trance. Teenagers move into celebration as dangerous as wartime. Their hormones hypnotize.

Having a teenager means you’ve probably overslept the alarm. Past seeing what’s there to scare the innocence from you, yet again. What is this thing we do as grownups? Forgetting how it was, who we are because of it, the shredding, the bliss. Adults love to cover up. (As much as our almost adults do.) And cover ups can be life and death. Denial is a generational curse we can choke out with smoke, as we burn it. Let them be our wake up calls and interventions. For our own habits and autopilot. For their survival. They need us to stop soft focusing our families and frailties, and start telling the brutal, still beautiful truth. So that they will too. What we don’t understand, we can’t protect. When we won’t look, they’re lost. My daughter doesn’t drink, since someone’s drinking tore a hole through her life. The fallout kills the fun. With this she’s cursed and gifted. Tells her little brother he’s ‘allergic’ in the hope he won’t find out. “That isn’t your story”, I tell them both.

My girl lost a friend last week. Sweet bright wild-haired wide-smiled boy, tried mushrooms and saw what wasn’t there, but called him to play. He jumped off his deck and died on an ordinary Friday night. Whole worlds end. Possibility snaps. We get those calls we can’t believe could be true. Shoes drop infinitely, unfairly. We get sad, lost, and go under. They hold pressures gone exponential in a world on fire, and know it. They carry their babyhood into middle of the night sneak outs. They carry our fears, dripping with sweat, without knowing, everywhere. We cannot bear it, either side of the fence, and yet we do. We cry separately about the same things, on different sides of closed doors. We court each other like strained couples, anticipate and learn new, what seemed permanently bound. We mourn innocence and control at once, as the map dissolves more each year. Emotional contortionists, method actors, soldiers in the dark without night vision - trying becomes winning. Motherhood is love and terror, braided together, soaked in blood that never dries. This is when we feel it like a waterfall. This is our karma. This is our luck. To love them, to find grace for the parts of ourselves that still flounder and spill and search. The kind of togetherness we couldn’t have predicted in those sweet humid baby nights. The many little girl mornings the two of us listened to ‘Baba O’Reilly’ in the car. “It’s only teenage wasteland,” we’d sing, suspended from time. Before we knew the depths of exhaustion and love that would carry us all away.

by Amy Grace

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I recently took a deep dive into the old “baby blog,” you know the one I religiously updated throughout the early years of parenting, chock full of adorable updates for the east coast grandparents, and local friends who couldn’t get enough of my chunky ginger baby. The blog was titled with my child’s name, and oddly, his gender: girl. I remember the day the ultrasound revealed that I was pregnant with a female-bodied baby. I took the afternoon off work and went to the mall with a girlfriend to buy every last adorable pink ruffled ridiculous item. When I think back to that time I barely know who I was. What I do know is I like who I am now much better, nearly 13 years later. I’m not sure there’s any way to prepare for how much your children will teach you about yourself, yes, but more so about who they are separate from you. And all the ways in which we walk through the world with ideas in our heads that are just plain wrong. 

By the time my kiddo told me on the cusp of his 12th birthday, that he was, indeed, a boy, I wasn’t exactly surprised. He was expressing opinions about his clothing before his second birthday, had changed the spelling of his gender-neutral name to the male version at 7, had given up wearing dresses entirely by second grade, and had stomped on any and all gender norms that came across his path. (He once argued with a boy at the playground who had dismissed him presuming he played with “girl stuff”  -as if that is a bad thing- by shouting: I like dinosaurs, and dragons, and OUTER SPACE IS FOR EVERYONE!) But I had forgotten, until revisiting the baby blog, that his childhood imaginary friend was “a girl who looks like a boy,” and something about that fact made me wonder what other clues I’d missed along the way. But that’s just it I guess, we can’t possibly know all of the bits and pieces that make our children who they are, because they are not us. They wholly consume us, they are made of us, and we want to think of them as extensions of ourselves, but in truth, they are their own people and we are just here to hold space for them until they can manage their own.

by Posy Quarterman

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Like anything in life, true growth comes in the struggles & discomfort & down in the trenches. 

Those long, deep talks matter. Giving them the opportunities to fail matter. Loving them
unconditionally with no judgement, shame or guilt matters. 

Because...

When you catch your teen being brave and sticking up for someone, all the back talk doesn’t matter anymore. 

When you witness your teen giving a shit about something & pushing themselves past the point they thought they could go mentally & physically, all the side eye & UGH’s are forgotten about. 

When you have those raw talks about what it means to be a man or woman or human & they’re doing the talking & you’re just listening and asking questions & they talk about being a helper, fighting injustice, racism, the patriarchy, or saving the planet all the arguments over screen time seem a lot less significant. 

When you watch your teens love as big as they can or make the right choice all the frustrations & worries & tears & fights about raising little humans that are going to be contributors in the world leave you knowing it’s all worth it.

by Josh Solar

 

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Don’t blink. Just breathe.

Heartbreak is par for the course and it’s nothing like your first major break up or the way you argue with your spouse. Raising teenagers is a different kind of pain. It’s in borrowed time and learning to be unliked more often than not and living with the fear that we aren’t instilling all the necessary tools they need in real life. Not the high school musical version...or the version they have in their mind—because we have made so many of their mistakes and we know better. The kind that teaches them how to provide for themselves. The kind that you can’t teach or coddle into them... like strong work ethic and maybe some common sense. The things that help them maybe survive in the real world.

Because the growing up has a way of sneaking up on us. That is in itself it’s own kind of heartbreak.

And the scariest part of it all is I am often afraid I neglected to do enough or I made a mistake years ago that will have consequences now. I’ve always taught my children that most importantly, we care that they are good humans first and everything else is secondary. But what constitutes a good human? And what constitutes a good mother?

Am I present enough? Do I show how much I care? Because I care in ways they’ll never know. And because teenagers often suffer from feeling like they already have it all figured out already.

But the trying. I guess the trying is where it counts. Tender mercies and acts of love and forgiveness when it’s hard. When you’re the most vulnerable and tired and scared. You spend a lot of time afraid when parenting small adults, after all. 

It can feel like a downward spiral. 
And I wouldn’t trade it for anything... except the chance to smell their newborn heads and relive it all again for just a little while.

by Sarah Cornish

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I sort a mound of buried treasures pruned from the basement of your canopy bed 
The loam of retired stuffed animals, carnival prizes whose festival sounds buzz lightly in my hands pulling my lips into its music
Neglected night sentinels set in leftover slivers of glitter and steeled bubble gum chunks 
Hidden but not yet parted 
possessions

Recollection draws my eyes with warm sap spilling 
         summer 
               down my face 
A salted river of ripe love
fumes of memory dress my fingers shaped for mending and creating
tracing cheeks into sound sleep 

The LED lights burn a rainbow on the sky-blue walls cutting the cord of remembering 
My legs folded in surrender in the middle ocean of carpet, 
Billie Eilish’s triple size face branding the wall as your newest idol, her sultry vocals walk over child’s play in her ‘bad guy’ lyrics 

Two faces part ways in your gaze 
roundness melting as time molds you in it’s perfection 
my chin and nose climbing grooves of your reflection 
We laugh at our sameness 
inside a dam breaks with release 
I am letting g-o
as you step into 
becoming

The hallway echoes with bits of FaceTime conversation— remnants of myself imprinting your words break the quiet
Pride warms my insides with your attention, 
I think of all the selves we bury in search of the ‘true self’ rippled in contradictions to decipher in the landscape of examined time 
Unaware we are an appraised conglomeration of our history meshed with the myth of expectations and fated heartbreak

Teenage tidal waves strung in hormonal change tumbling through 24 hour seasons
A moment split open swallowing your whole world until the next moment arrives in its unexpected thunder 
Emerging convictions pool into a stretched body 
carrying a bed of lessons 
to unlearn the winters the world demands in its limitations 
hidden but not yet 
parted

by Jolene Bresney

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“So . . . how would you feel if I got a peace sign tattoo? I’m asking because Eva gave me one last night, but don’t worry--we used all professional materials.” 

Raising them now is all guesswork and hope and love. A constant, re-definition of what’s “okay” & who we are--to ourselves and each other. “Growing up is weird, dude.” (My daughter’s boyfriend summed it up perfectly.) 

I’m on the outside these days – there are secret worlds I’m not a part of. Group chats. Music Festivals. Being in love. Everything’s “sick bro.”  Billie Eilish, Talking Heads, Mac DeMarco, Jimi Hendricks. Flower crowns & air pods, old mixed with new. Déjà vu. The smell of burning incense seeping out from under a closed door. 

I keep flashing back to my own adolescence, remembering my own need for privacy and space. It scares me how easily I can bring myself back there. The restlessness, the rocks thrown at my bedroom window, hand-me-down vinyl collections, fringed leather, my fragile heart. I swear, there’s an 18-year-old in me who still lives. She wants to be at that music festival, too, but this time, to see her daughter take it all in. Maybe just for one song. 

There is  grief and beauty and heartbreak in watching them get older. That feeling of inevitability.  Like trying to catch grains of sand falling through your fingers. 

There are days we still fall on the floor, laughing. We pile our bodies up on the couch to watch TV, limbs intertwining, heads resting on shoulders. We have our own private jokes. We discover songs and movies and vintage clothing and art. We turn off the radio in the car to talk. They are still my best friends. 

On other days, they dig their heels in, slam doors, refuse to listen, pull away. Sometimes they are much wiser than I am, other times they can’t see beyond next week. I just wish I had more patience. 

What I’ll remember most are the car rides. Windows down, hair whipping in the breeze, radio on loud, their crazy teen energy filling up the atmosphere. So full of passion & belief.  Creators, dreamers, social justice warriors. If they save this world, it’s because they believe they can. 

Sometimes I get the feeling they’re keeping me young.  I wonder if I’ll grow old as soon as they leave. I feel like they are an extension of me and yet -- they are not me or mine, really. They are life itself, trying. 

I keep trying to remember that.

by Leslie Jones

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The freedom in your bare wild feet seems to be no more. The feet that lept forward with such unabashed wildness twist with doubt. Your eyes that once looked upward, always upward, unafraid to climb trees, mountains, buildings even, are clouded. The wild spirit that would battle those much bigger than you on a fallen tree now lies in wait. Your fingers that so deftly wielded knives, knitting and sewing and felting needles, pens, pencils, paintbrushes, fire, are now picked clean of skin. 

I have to admit, with your fierce spirit, I did not see this coming.

Your body is now pulled down by the seaweed it once glided over. It is covered in the growing roots of trees you once scaled. You are drowning in the dew of mornings. You twist this way and that pulled in an eternal uncertainty. 

Our words are landmines. We should stay quiet, but we never do. 

Your life has not been the one I wanted for you. I dreamt of such a different thing. So much uncertainty and loss were not planned. I wish for so much less violent winds and abrupt change occurred. For this, I take full responsibility. We are alone. I am afraid I was not strong enough, but know I tried, even if I failed. For this, I am very sorry.  

If I could take it all back, I might. I really might. Except for the fact that I truly believe you are destined for greatness. You have such a spark within you, it will kindle into a fire again.

Once you find yourself again. Once you hug your wild nature. Once you remember that you are loved. Once you remember that you are held. Once you remember that YOU are not alone.

You are a brilliant shining star. Your star will shine out through the darkness once again. I know it. You are still my wild child, full of love for so many things. You are still my wild child, full of love, light, and fearlessness. I see you in there, always. 

by Phyllis Meredith

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Remember when

I was your first best friend 

Secret keeper 

Knower of all things small and large 

One bedroom empty most of the time now 

Plans made and changed 

Quietly accepting 

Part of it right? 

Their growing pains 

My growing pains

(kept silent, because we have to let go)

They have to go

How is it 

runs headlong to me at the end of the day stopped?  

You needing me more than air changed to you breathing on your own 

When? 

Mama became mom

When? 

How ?

Can we have a little more time 

of me being your first 

Best friend

Secret keeper 

first to know 

First to ask on an adventure 

Motherhood is hard 

These exquisite creatures I’ve watched grow

I’ve tended the row 

I’ve nipped, snipped, tucked and

Cut. 

I’ve bent, I’ve coaxed , 

I’ve threaded, I’ve woven , 

I’ve pleaded 

and at times, 

I’ve Forced. 

Alas,

forced  

seldom worked at all I found. 

It made wily wilder

It made delicate hearts wither 

It made secretive souls retreat

It made poison spill from our tongues

spoiling everything in its path 

It made me learn the meaning of love more than life itself because 

our hearts once echoed each other’s beat

by Lara Austin Shoop

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I’m surrounded by them.

Literally. 

They tower over me. 

And it's two against one in our house. 

The realization that I could no longer physically pick up my son to comfort him fully seeped in as I sat next to all 6 feet of him curled up on the floor in the midst of a panic attack turned migraine. You think you’d know this when your kid is six feet tall but the speed of that growth was so quick that fact had yet to settle. I gasped the other day when I realized I only have 4 summers left with him and only a couple more than that with my girl.  My whole life oriented around parenting them and how swiftly that will change. The metamorphosis of a human from baby to child to teen to adult so swift and fast that I’m still back here processing elementary school.  What do you mean this isn’t forever?

I sit squarely in the midst of extroverted and introverted so understand both of my kids even though they exist in opposite realms. My daughter comes filing out of school at the end of the day with her friends swarming around her. Their hands intertwined. They look like an advertisement for a school. They are a group so tightly knit that you feel a bit like you’ve stepped into an alternate world and you are an alien when they are talking. You may understand about 20 percent of what they talk about. One thing that is abundantly clear is that they love each other and revel in the connection. A connection that is beyond their families. Their first set of chosen family. I sometimes wonder if they are the “Heathers” to the other girls. Unintentionally, of course.  She walks around saying “Madre, you’re so cute.” I think she’s picked up this phrase as a defense mechanism to keep me calm. I look down at my mud caked boots, oversized sweatshirt, unkempt hair and think to myself “Probably but, damn, I don’t care.” 

My introverted son has a vastly different school experience. Are the differences personality based or does he not want/need to fit as much as her? These are the things I think about constantly. In the outskirts, he’s learning empathy, kindness, not so much patience for people but a heck of a lot of humor. He thinks he yields great power over me because he can help his sister with her homework and I can’t. 

In these teen years so far they’ve taught me some important lessons. The illusion of control is just that.  As they step into their more mature selves, I have to give them room for growth and their own experience. Growth can be hard and scary but it also is glorious and full of expansion. I hope to be their safe place but I also realize I will never ever, ever always be the safe place. Unfortunately, sometimes that joke you made hits the wrong way and suddenly you are the enemy. You tread so carefully over/around and through their feelings only to realize finally as you head to bed that there was literally nothing else you could say. You were just being a person and they were, well, TEENAGERS. 

They are not you and you are not them. They will make sure to drive that point home over and over again (as they should… It’s completely developmentally appropriate). It still sucks. They currently think they know all the things. They do actually know A LOT.  They think you know nothing and are not sure why you keep acting like you do. Their version of the world is colored with less conditioning than ours but is so much more confusing without that breadth of experience behind it. Watching them becoming is an amazing and sometimes heart-wrenching thing to witness. I keep just holding my breath and hoping it’ll all work out. These are my favorite people after all. Fingers crossed. 

by Meghan McSweeney

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Magnets, Magnetism

We are drawn together and then repelled apart by unseen magnetic forces

The natural forces of nature and I want to honor that

I love the ebb and flow of our relationship as I do the phases of the moon 

We are fish in the same school

Birds in the same flock

Wolves in the same pack

Peas in the same pod

You have my eyes, strength, and independence and I have yours and more

by Tatiana Johnson

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Before I had kids, when I would imagine myself as a mother, it was never as the mother of a teenager. For some reason, when I pictured myself parenting children, these kids were always younger than ten years old. I mean, I could see myself very clearly as a mom with babies and toddlers. I had an idea in my head what that would be like which somehow made it easier—even when it was the complete opposite of what I pictured. I had some frame of reference. But, as my kids got older, the picture of what I thought parenthood was like got blurrier and blurrier. I had never considered what kind of mom I would be to teenagers. Even though, I clearly remembered being a teenager myself….for some reason, I could not picture my kids being that age. And, because of that, the idea of having teenagers scared the crap out of me. To make things worse, there were support systems in place when my kids were small. I had a moms group. There were books and websites and discussions about potty training, but as my kids got older those things all seemed to kind of fall away. My mom friends went back to work and, between extra curricular activities, school and work commitments, there just didn’t seem time to touch base. Raising teenagers it turns out was lonelier than raising toddlers. But, it all worked out somehow. As it does. I mean there have been challenges that I didn’t anticipate and we came through the other side of them. Lessons have been learned, but these lessons have been more about me than about them. Which I REALLY never anticipated…I never guessed that they would so clearly show me what I wanted from life. That they would somehow be my anchor to ground me so that I could go forward with more direction than ever before. Maybe not more direction…maybe just more focus on what’s important and a deeper understanding that there are seasons in a life and you aren’t meant to be in control and THAT’S OKAY. That raising in a child is in many ways a long lesson in letting go. Letting go so that you can find yourself once again. 

by Dana Pugh

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Teenagers always seemed like a foreign word to me until I had them. I began to resist them even before they came. When they were 8, 9, 10, childhood at full speed, my babies growing up, by 14 my kids no longer kids, by 18 my firstborn a grown man. I mourned the passing of my young children, my heart hung on tight until it finally let go. With letting go there was much more beauty and so much less fear. Awareness and presence fill my days now instead of looking back or forward, it makes the times when we bounce off each other easier to bear. As the separating moves forward, the people they are unfolding before me, the lessons I once tried to teach them have shifted into a knowing I still have so much to learn. We are each other’s teachers, and as I continue to help them grow, they continue to shape the person I’ve become.

by Leah Zawadzki

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Wearing your Dad’s hockey jersey, doing homework in this position, you are half marvel, half madness. . I tell you to sit at your desk; this can’t be good for your neck.

You tune me out.

When you are not looking, I try out this pose and my arms cannot reach the ground.

by Rohina Hoffman

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Strip, 2017

these two. moving out of my orbit, into bright lights, and casting shadows of their own.

I take comfort knowing they have each other's backs.

past. present. future.

by Niki Helley Ward

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In some ways, it is one of the loneliest roads in parenting, parenting a teen or multiple teens at once. When they’re young, all the moms are sharing photos of their cute babies, funny toddlers, smiling little girls and boys, trading stories, asking for help, bearing witness. But then your kids hit a certain age, maybe it’s 7 or 9 or 11, depending on the child, and they no longer want to be the subject of your stories or the source of your “likes” on IG. 

They want agency over their image and agency over what you say about them.

And so it is that the best photos, the best stories, often hit the cutting room floor. So be it.

It is here that perhaps is the greatest knot of all — at a time when a child, soon to be tween or teenager, wants to come into more of “their own,” to control their image and what gets communicated and shared, a parent probably needs more support than ever.

Stakes are higher. 

And the parent network starts shifting under your feet and feeling less and less available as an option. To share private details of your children’s lives with your friends (absolutely forget the internet and social media) might now breach the delicate parent-child trust, and that is a risk too big to take. As a result, most of what is calling to be shared or compared or asked about… is left unsaid.

Unlike the new parenting section at the bookstore, which is long and filled with books about babies and what to expect, the shelves for books about parenting teens are sparse. And even if you can find a book, it’s not the same as those conversations with your mom friends who are right there in it with you. Those conversations become more a thing of the past, more guarded and circumspect. 

There are certain things, certain details, that just can’t be shared.

(Or, maybe only shared with tried and trusted true friends whom you’ve known for your lifetime, not since you last moved. Finding the ones to trust is it’s own fraught.)

So, as the teens grow tighter amongst other teens, building their own community, finding a source of friendship and support,

the parents are left on their own a bit, not able to fully (honestly) communicate with their friends on parenting matters, not as they once did.

And yet.

And yet, despite circumstances creating a bit of an island of yourself, somewhat alone in parenting, you and your tween/teenager have each other, and that is perhaps the best of all. And maybe that’s as it should be. 

For all of it’s challenges, parenting a teen (or multiple teens at once), is a space for growth — emotionally, relationally, intellectually. It’s a place to be curious, a place to live your values, to teach them, to adjust your expectations, to learn something new, to listen, to be pliable and to be steadfast, all at the same time, all over one issue, all in one night, all in just one conversation. 

And you get to do that over and over and over again across many years.

And hope (pray?) that they listen more than 50% of the time.

And, finally, you can do all that 100% correctly and still not make a darn bit of difference.

They are 100% their own person.

The teenagers, if you haven’t figured this out yet, well, they help release you of any idea that you have any control over anything or any person whatsoever.

What else offers that kind of magic space?

It’s a gift with glimmers (and dents), the full value of which isn’t seen until the other side, called “The Twenties.” 

Carry on friends. Know that though you may feel alone, we are all right here with you, staying awake till midnight until everyone is home, having conversations with our teens, checking for glassy eyes, slurred speech, laughs that are too loud, watching the walk, and saying a prayer of gratitude that another night brought everyone home safely.

And the rest of it? We’ll deal with it in the morning.

Aileen Reilly, mom of 4 (ages 13, 16, 18, 20)

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A note to my son Jimmy, 13. 

No one stops to tell you these are the last few days of your adolescence and tomorrow you will be a man, however there are signs all along. It doesn’t happen over night but also it does. Because one day I held you in my arms as my baby not knowing it was the last day I was doing so. And I know for a fact that when I did all that love and warmth I felt in my heart is sustaining me now and I know it will for eternity, so that is comforting I suppose. It has been a gut wrenching transformation right before my eyes that I’m not really sure were open, all my fears are coming to be, that you wouldn’t be little forever. That days are long and years are short and I only have a few left with you here under the same roof before you are off on your own adventures and life. Please don’t resist when I still want to hold you. Here’s to the next 5 years of your boyhood, and know that I miss these days while they’re happening. I love you. 

by Holly Donovan

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14

threading some narrow needle towards belonging.

longing, like,

—heart, bump!

on screen, on reflection,

   on risking —me to be.

waking to, so what —

like, why?

literally,

my eyes locked

— online —

post, snap, see that!

emerging, up ‘n comer —

punk in my hyper try-hard swag.

i am who now,  ’til I’m found?

except —

       you’re not like them!

by Cate Wnek

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I'm standing in the kitchen, 

no shoes, 

wearing my pyjamas, 

as I cook brunch. 

It's no ordinary brunch, 

it's a sweet 16 birthday brunch. 

I'm flipping pancakes, tossing fruit salad,

stirring overnight oats, plus frying bacon and eggs. 

It's a birthday feast. 

Honestly, I'm not concentrating on what I'm cooking. I'm on auto-pilot.

I'm listening to the conversation around the table.

The jokes. 

the banter, 

the laughter, 

the sassiness, 

and their stories. 

My husband whispers to me "listen to the kids".

I smile at him, tears in my eyes. He is feeling it too. 

We both couldn't be more proud of the teenagers we are raising. 

by Cindy Cavanagh

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Do you remember that time you danced for hours, barefoot, under the stars...the air and the ground still warm from the August sun?  Your hair and skin, salty from the ocean mixed with sweat.  Dirt stained feet.  Head tilted back in laughter, singing along to the songs, off key but with such confidence.  You danced and sang with such joy...for a moment it seemed you had no cares.  And when the crowd thinned out, you ran to the ocean and jumped in.  Cool water and phosphorescence swirling all around you.  Light in the darkness.  

My hope for you, my darling, is that you keep collecting these beautiful moments and that they will sustain you as you walk deeper and deeper into the world.  You and I both know that life is not always this innocent and carefree, but rather at times, lonely, and sad and even awful.  

And God knows, we have made so many mistakes, and wrong turns and harsh words have left us both raw and cracked and aimless.  It was so much easier when you were tiny, and I just held you close and whispered in your ear how much I loved you and that was enough.  But don't they say, we learn from our mistakes and that we all fall apart?  Let's just keep breathing in the amazing and fill our pockets with beautiful moments...there is always light somewhere beating in the darkness.

by Bee Chalmers

The Chorus: Hope

We are flooded with choices and starved for connection. Always and never alone. We change minds by sharing stories. We fight alone, together. Empathy is a victory. Seven billion solo songs, and I want to start a Chorus. - Amy Grace

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I’m a moth at midnight; will find light when you blindfold me, box me in, tell me you stole the sun. This was my life, a debt paid in years. These words, wings grown from a new spine.

We find hope when we stop trusting. When we’ve screamed ourselves awake at night, legs shaking, adrenaline yet to be talked down. When it’s bound and shipped off and lost in another country, exhausted by survival and the effort it steals from joy. It finds us in the ways we are when we aren’t looking. In wounds turned to windows, bored with mirrors, forgetting our bodies except to let them do what they’ve learned. We find it when we catch a laugh escape in the face of someone who’s slapped ours. This is a hope I remember best - a literal thing, a fact, a fight. Wired to find it even in pain, unflappable. Hope is audacious. It talks back, it rises against gravity. It tears our nails and grip from what we’ve been conned into wanting, and spills white hot honey light onto the exit ramp we need.

I’ve starved it to make it holy. Almost died for it. When it’s caught in the net of every other feeling, hooked to IV’s and bleeding out for vampires, it beat thin odds when I did. I’ve run it to numbness and stress fractured fatigue; skin and bones and love and muscle. Swallowed it in pills that sat in my twisted gut, soft medicine and gunpowder, ready to explode in secret incendiary light. Hope is born in its own destruction. A new language we learn as the world burns. It cries out and takes its first breath as everything finished falls away, reset buttons covering our skin, ready to be touched and turned on like goosebumps. We find it when we give it up; it waits for us to let go. When we learn to shed the make believe who got to borrow its name. Hard won and harsh, yet requiring nothing. It can’t be muscled or bullied or forced at knifepoint. Hope is cliff diving at night.

Wisdom climbs from the rubble of earthquakes. The script we’re taught swapped with lines we improvise, terrified and alive as we’re meant to be. Answers we give without calculations, like heartbeats spoken. What we think we want and what our bravest and softest parts need, together. I’ve gotten it back choosing not to rearrange myself or the world, releasing wishes into the thin air they came from. Hope isn’t karmic parity, or drawing from a trust fund we inherit as people. There are no checks and balances to it. It’s stolen with no laws to protect us. This is where hope is truest - an epiphany, the consolation prize of new glasses and a candle, in a world gone fuzzy and black. It’s most alive when we pass it on. When we shut up and listen to a new generation know things we don’t. When our wishes turn to action and second winds. When we show up, put our kids ahead of ourselves, and make changes that break habits, bones, and hearts. We’ve forgotten how to eat but learn to grow their food. When the smiles we’ve flashed to protect ourselves, finally have a reason. When true love means a million new kinds no one talks about. Hope might be a person. It needs a host, a home. It needs a channel to play on. It isn’t the moment we break into a sprint, but when we break a sweat.

We can map out our lives in hope. Locked doors we knock on, confessions made on first sips of whiskey, “No” without explanation, hard kisses we lean into like home, handwritten pages we shred to start over, plane tickets booked on near maxed credit cards, payment plans chipping away sleep at 2am, telling someone “I’m with you”, and meaning it. It’s taking a needle and thread to all the ages we’ve been, to wear in one warm winter coat. The things we did despite and because of it. The faith we carry for the same reasons. The friction that is living, when we’re most awake to our bullshit. Electric cravings swapped for a pure hunger we honor. It is the water that leaks in when we’ve sealed ourselves into wishful thinking. The rock thrown through the glass of empty bedrooms and eggshell marriages and stories sealed in contracts gone cold. It is “I’ve had enough” and “I am enough.” The blood from the cuts we don’t even feel, while we hold what’s broken, old tears freed from the wrong kind of trying. A beautiful ‘fuck it’, starting everything over. Laughing a hundred times a day, still, always. The first lines of a new song that might as well be the first.

The essence of hope is “I’m trying”, on repeat. Flashing a smile with bared teeth, finding yourself in solutions to impossible problems, leaving fun at the shotgun alter, and running away with happiness. It changes with us, gets more real when we do, leans into meaning instead of ease when friction burns us. Flooded minds, drying out in the hot sun. Broken mirror shards cutting our bare soled feet, standing naked at the window on a full moon night. Not covering up. Never again. Singing brave and worn and secret smiling into the morning, thanking it, becoming it. It’s all the layers, and the space you’ve made for them, finally filling your lungs.

by Amy Grace

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it's hard to talk about hope without telling you about sinkholes. or, how a mayan guide taught me that killing a fear means giving hope a life. how even when you don't know what's below, what’s on the other side of beady darkness, the small brave voice that has the nerve to trust, that believes the bigger stories and recognizes what’s only thought, that moves us toward believing, can so disrupt despair.

by Amy McMullen

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My hope is sometimes covered by a basket. Hidden beneath, buried deep, shoved out of sight. 

Once lost it takes something strong to find it, unlock it, set it free. I didn’t know I’d lost it until suffering without it. Finding myself in the deep and dark crevices of self judgement I fear and avoid. 

It took strength to turn, facing the darkness without hope and walk straight in. As I fell I found the light. In small ways, collecting strength like a snowball. In his eyes, her words, my truth. 

Bright and burning it now hugs my chest. Keeping me afloat. Tragically imperfect but floating and gathering strength in my sea of unknowns.

by Sara Weir

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They give me hope, a change in altitude. And at some point I'll descend where clouds hang over our skin. But for as long as I can, I'll stay above. Elevated by love to enjoy sunsets over the storm.

by Cornell Watson

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It's late January and my body feels like an untended garden

the doctors appointments are taking up the time used for haircuts 

so we're growing our hair long

braiding it with hope

I'm a hippie in the hallow

I lie in the field with the goats

I whisper my secrets to them and they say nothing

they only smell of hot grass

the sun warms us through as my baby kneads my breasts like dough, like a kitten

I'm a hippie in the hallow 

a chorus of crows on my left and a pile of leaves at my feet

A slow fermentation until Spring

A mandala

A mother's magic

There is a dance here that is easily missed

I encourage you not to meditate it all away.

by Amanda O’Donoughue

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I have been told by many people

They don’t have a crystal ball.

It’s often said with sadness as though 

I would wish to know.

The diagnosis itself is cruel,

The stories of others reported clinically,

drained of anything human

If we knew how the story ended, would hope not vanish?

Instead of being dry statistics, probable,

We tell different tales even if we are not believed.

The fate of being predictable 

Is not one I wish for you.

Instead of being like a flower to emerge each spring, I’d like you to be like a sudden rush of wind, a surprise snowstorm,

Taking my breath away.  

by Nicole Lenzen

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The hope really is not in the seen. 

It lives in the unseen, the believed to be true and amongst the doubt. 

Doubt does not take away the hope. 

Surprisingly, it can sharpen the edges and bring into focus the unseen, the wished for and the willing to be true.

It makes the digging deeper and clinging longer.

I dwell in the Hope and the Hope dwells in me.

It pushes the living and joy.

That is the miracle.

There sits the gratitude. 

by Kristin Young

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I wake and breathe it in, almost choking on its plenty.

There were years spent starving for it, 

searching in the eyes of toxic men and crowded bars.

Hope is everywhere now. I place it lovingly on the table, 

pack it in my car, and hand it to my friends. 

I cannot change a tire, 

but I can forge hope in my own fire. 

The life skill nobody told me I needed.

by Ashley Keleman

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Hope is not thinking positive thoughts or succumbing to self-delusions to get though life.  Hope is action. Hope is motion. Hope is muscle. You have to use it to make it grow. Hope is moving forward every day even when your head is questioning if it’s worth it. Hope is sitting in the hard stuff and trusting that it’s all for a purpose. Knowing that things will get better…eventually. It’s knowing that in the hardest of times, you are right where you need to be. Pushing forward even when you want to quit. Hope is action. Hope is motion. Hope is muscle. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.

by Summer Murdock

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Hope is a fragile thing
An elusive thing
Sometimes the only thing.

When everything cracks in half
Bowels out
Strings and stuffing stick to your tongue
What’s left after the noise of your own shouts die out
And the kids finally get to sleep
A sliver of light 
At first the smell is smoke (but the good memory campfire kind)
Listen and later you’ll hear voices coming from inside yourself
They say NO. Or NEVER AGAIN. And louder THIS WAY.
This voice is your teacher. When the hawk visits she’s your spirit guide. She teaches you to listen more closely. 
You are her and hope is you. 

by Cathlin McCullough

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I have had a funny relationship with hope for the last few years. Directing it’s super lackluster powers into my business and personal life, convincing myself that I could hope good shit into existence or at least to a balance. But funny thing about hope that I have come to understand for myself, you don’t need anything to hope. But when you don’t need anything to start something you usually get nothing out of it. 

But...

Hope is what I have for my boys.

I hope that they take the lessons I try to teach them and they learn something from it. I hope that they see me fail and fail and fail some more, so that they know the fun and the story, at minimum the lesson, is found in the failing and not in the winning. I hope that the time we spend together camping and hiking and exploring the world is what they remember about me and what they choose to share with their kids. I hope that they forever choose what they love - in work, in others and in themselves. I hope that they know they always have a choice, though they may not like what choices they have in front of them. I hope that my boys know that back is always a direction, as is forward, through, over, under, around and together. I hope that they know that nothing is fair and that’s what makes everything fair. I hope that they know that being depressed will happen to them and it’s okay and normal and scary and alienating, but they will survive to tell the story and come out better humans for it. I hope that they know that there is no promise on forever, in love, in work, in fun, or in boredom. I hope that when they are older and they look in the mirror and think of what’s broken about them that they realize it is precisely what others love about them - assuming the brokenness isn’t being a sociopath. I hope that they know that as long as I have a breath, that I will be there for them in any capacity I can. I hope that therapy is part of their lives on very deep levels and that it stands for strength and not a sign of weakness or disability. I hope that they learn that it’s okay to be selfish, because if they can’t take care of themselves that they can’t take care of anyone else either. I hope that they discover that it is not their job to fix anyone, to make anyone else happy, or to save the day. I hope that they never settle. I hope that they learn to quiet their minds and find lasting peace. I hope that they know that they are not their emotions or their thoughts. I hope that they are honest with themselves at a minimum and then ideally with everyone. I hope that family is central to them - the ones you choose and the ones you don’t. I hope that their circle of friends is always strong, but they always have those two or three anchors that will be there no matter what and that they nurture those relationships. I hope that they learn that peoples rage is often projected and we are not who people say we are, good or bad. I hope that they come around to the idea that we are not all good and we are not all bad, and that every decision lamented on in the future was made with best intentions in the moment otherwise we would never have made it. I hope that they see there is no future, there is no past, that there is only right fucking now and I hope they stay in that as long as they can but give themselves grace when they inevitably do not (see above about failing). I hope that they don’t make the same mistakes that I did. I hope that they let music, Art, books and sometimes simply life bring them to tears and uncontrollable laughter. I hope they chase the dream first and let money worry about itself - though know that chasing the dream sometimes means eating shit for a while. I hope it all works out in the end for them. I hope I haven’t failed them.

Hope is what connects us spiritually to one another, I don’t mean to a god, though I don’t not mean that either. Hope is what we do for each other because we can’t live each others lives. Hope is a hall pass with a heartbeat. Hope is good intentions. But hope is no more than a wish without a birthday candle to blow out, a lottery ticket with no numbers. 

For me, I don’t hope anything for my life anymore. And that’s not some sad line. It’s lessons learned. We are either making things happen or we aren’t. A little luck never hurt and baby steps are the only sure fire path to anything. But if you want to throw a little hope my way, I’m glad to have it. And I’ll be sure to do the same. I hope you understand.

by Adam Chapin

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“Love goes very far beyond the physical person of the beloved. It finds its deepest meaning in his spiritual being, his inner self. Whether or not he is actually present, whether or not he is still alive at all, ceases somehow to be of importance.” 
― Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning

Love and hope are inside jobs and really independent of the circumstances of your life.  This is the surprising gift and news to me of being challenged by addiction and codependency in my life.  It is freeing when you really start to understand.  It doesn’t matter what the people I love are doing. It doesn’t matter what chaos is happening around me.  Love and hope and joy are all available to me at anytime in any circumstance.  I only need to go deep inside of myself to find it. And we all know this is true in the smallest and everyday ways of life. How you get happy singing in the car, watching a sunset, going for a run, holding a hand, being in nature, looking at light or color or even crying tears are all proof that love and joy and hope are always accessible inside. 

by Wendy Laurel

 

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screaming on the floor today

door open, willing anyone to hear

feels like the wrong place to start

to talk about hope

but i've been to the depths enough troubled times to know

clouds always give way to sun

especially when it feels you'll never hold light on your cheeks again

the breath lets out after a good cry

your feet pick themselves up for another step

and the swirl begins again.

by Brooke Schultz

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once a prisoner of brokenness 

dust and gray and empty 

resuscitated by the glimmering glow of

and swept up up and away by

the uncharted, the undiscovered

the everything that will come and

blow our hearts to smithereens

for as long as i circle the sun, and the moon crosses my skies, i will keep stitching, and stretching

by Britt Hueter

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The last 6 months the word Hope has taken me on a roller coaster ride. The heights of hopeful and the lows of hopelessness. 

Hopeful in the sense of love being enough, hopelessness in wondering if hurts run too deep. 

When your life sort of crumbles, you find out who’s there for you, and you find out who takes from you. A harsh reality when you’ve been ignoring the signs and living in an avoidance bubble. 

You discover where you need healing, and does that soul crushing process ever test who you are. And yet, AND YET, there is hope in that despair, a gift in realizing that hurts open you up to getting to the root, a spotlight shining on an ego that makes you take note of your reactions. That is a gift, even as it strips away at everything you thought you were, and reminds you of all the losses that shaped you into protecting yourself. Could this really be exactly what I needed? I could have never gotten to this level of healing, without facing the hopelessness. We spend our lives fighting our feelings, dimming what hurts,  and in turn make things bigger, and last longer than was ever meant for us. Sitting in the hopelessness is where I found my hope.  We are taught to only live in the light, but I think that only comes from sitting in the darkness first. We are conditioned to be scared and in need of a night light, a never ending cycle of changing out the bulbs. 

There is Hope in despair, oddly enough. Something I wouldn’t have believed 3 years ago.  In imperfect reactions, in forgiveness and in my screams that uses that ugliness that I would have kept at bay. Had Hope not been taken from me with just a few words from a strangers, my body would have kept tingling, my eyes kept blurring and my mouth left as dry as a desert. Stress was there in my bubble, but I was always ready to blame something else,   take it out on who I was, and wonder what was wrong with me.  I avoided the signs by sleeping, by escaping to where I felt loved, and carried around the emptiness that I stuffed into an overflowing suitcase. 

Hope comes in slices, even when I want it to be the whole pie. It’s sometimes plated as cherry when only rhubarb makes sense to me, it’s infuriating. It’s realizing that cookie could have been spelled cookey, and key, kie and still had the same end result, the story has the same ending, but it’s not a path I would have chosen had it not been forced on me.  It’s not what I have unconsciously become to know as truths, it makes my mind scream with injustice and begs to go back to the comfort of being the victim. I have stomped my feet telling others my way is the only way, believing that hope came in my answers and in mine alone, when it only comes forth in the questioning.  

Hope is there when I’m willing to go against what is so engrained, when I started to ask the hard questions, and sit in the mess of answers that test me.  It changes faster than I can keep up with, and keeps me uncomfortable, but it’s there none the less. It’s in a God that I trust, A God that is different than the one I once knew, and in humans that stumble and bring forth their best broken selves. I can know hope only because I’ve also known despair, love because I know hurt,  trust because I’ve felt betrayal. Hope is in our imperfect selves, and in a God that carries the brokenness for us. No matter the hopelessness swirling around me, Hope is there in love and in the trying, and surrounded in grace.

by Kyla Ewert

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Close at hand at all times.

Tangible, when rhythmic breathing fills my ears.

When eyes once seeking...

...strain no more. 

Soaking in the slivers that have been waiting. 

Seeping into every space with a vacancy...

...surrounding all of those without. 

Fuel for the path ahead.

by John Waire

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I look back on the last few months in both a fog and with a clarity only the uncovering of your own truths can provide. So much to sift through, so much buried pain. To see is to feel and to feel is to own and they’re all so intertwined it can be confusing, disheartening, overwhelming. Emotions twisting and turning, the changing tides. Millions of footprints embedded in the sand, washed away with one crash of a wave. Chapters end and chapters begin. My vision for my future fractured, blood running cold, hard, dry. Like cracked dirt in a desolate desert. And yet there’s a quiet thumping through it all. A slow but steady stream of excitement; like when you’re climbing to the top of a roller coaster and you can’t see anything in front of you and you know that at some point the breaks are going to release. That you’ll be free. That the wind will again carry you. It’s an integration, I’ve learned — bits and pieces of opposites that make us whole. The fear and the excitement. The sorrow and the release. 

Life is forever ending and beginning. 

by Ashley Jennett