"It's always
darkest before the dawn." Those were the words that struck me in this
song. They struck me because 2 days before I had first heard this song, I wrote
those exact words down on a piece of paper and carried that piece of paper with
me everywhere (in my bra if we want to be truly honest here, next to my
heart). Then I heard this song, and I
had to laugh. Because if we can't laugh at our circumstances, all we'll do is
cry. The irony.
Anyway, I was
carrying those words with me because I've had way too many "drinks in the
dark at the end of my rope" over the past year and a half. I was just
starting to feel like I had strengthened after I took the left fork in my road
instead of the right, when, in the past few weeks, things started to crumble
yet again. I've questioned my
choices, had my workload double, and seen a shuffling old man get run over by a
car.
I had that stanza in
my bra for a week or so. Heard the song. Laughed. Felt strength. Felt like I
could move forward into the future as optimistic as I've ever been. Had a
wonderful night with my sisters, listening to amazing music in downtown Denver,
dancing off the Devil with a smile on my face and my sisters surrounding me.
When I wake up, all I see are beautiful fall branches through the skylight,
swaying with the wind (I have a thing for trees, so just bear with …) and I
felt happy. Regardless of the stress, the heartbreak, the everything that can
be what life is, I had a moment of true happiness. We laughed and recapped the
night, then headed out to some Pho shop
way across town. The best in Denver according to my lil sis. As I sat at the
stoplight behind her, with my big sis in the car with me (to ensure I didn't
get lost, I'm sure), I saw a hunched over man shuffling oh so slowly across a
the busy Denver intersection not 20 feet in front of me. The word "awwww"
had just come out with my breath and it happened. I don't want to explain it. I
see if 50 times a day in my head and have to shake it off with a shudder. I
wish beyond wishes I could forget it.
But my point is
this: I embrace the philosophy of live for now, but is that what I'm doing?
People always say "live like you're dying" but have they really seen
someone live their last second of life? They're still living for what's
practical. That's what I'm doing, no matter what I say, or whatever ideals I
feel like I embody. Seeing that old man being hit haunts me. It's paralyzed me.
Because if I lived for me, for today, I'd be on a plane to another country.
I remember when I
was nine I told my mom I would change the world. I truly believed I could. I
wanted move love. Everywhere. She looked
at me earnestly and said, "Stephanie, one person can't change the world, sweetie."
It was said with such love. And you know what I said back? "Mom, do you
have a crystal ball in front of you? Do you KNOW I can't change the world? No?
Then don't say it. One person can do it." I was such a snot. But I still
believe that. I'm no Ghandi, but we can all do something that enacts some chain
reaction. I still truly believe that. I've been so involved in my personal
labrynth that I've forgot what I wanted at 9, which was to make some change on
this crazy ass whirling dirvish of a planet.
So, let's go. Let's
do this thing. I will.