This is topic It's ICARUS's 1000th post--OF COURSE it's long! in forum Landmark Threads at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
I’m probably a fool for posting this at night when half of Hatrack is gone...it’ll probably be off the front page by morning, crushing my delicate ego... *sniff* Ah, well. I suppose I can’t put it off any longer...

I’ve been debating for the last two months or so whether or not I even wanted to do a 1,000 post thread when the time came. I felt at first that it was too soon, since notable threads have been created by people like Papa Moose and Bob_Scopatz, and how do you follow either of them? I had pretty much made up my mind to wait until either my one-year anniversary or my 2,000th post...but then I thought it was kind of pointless if the only people who shared themselves were people who had been around a long time...wasn’t the purpose here to get to know each other better? In Chaeron’s thread, Papa Moose said,

quote:
I like the fact that most of the stories are shared by people who have come to feel as though they are members of an online family here. For some people that happens at post #3, for some it may not happen by #5,000. Tough to tell why and how, I guess. Anyone have an opinion on that?

I agree. I think the fascination with the number 1,000 is that 1,000 posts (in many cases ) seems like a milestone that indicates you are committed enough and regular enough to really be considered a part of the community, but one that you don’t have to wait several years to hit. Kind of like a Hatrack Bar Mitzvah! No reason it can’t be a different number, especially if one leans very far in either direction on the quality/quantity spectrum. *grin*

Anyway, here goes nothing...

WARNINGS:
In this post, I talk quite a bit about my childhood and my parents. I feel guilty about this, because, of course, they aren’t here to defend themselves, and yet, it seems apropos here, because knowing where I came from connects with knowing who I am. I’m talking about my experiences, and other people are part of my experiences; I don’t have the time to send waivers out. I hope I’m not doing wrong. If I am, I apologize. I guess this thread is self-indulgent, but then, how could it not be?

It’s also ugly at times.

If any of that, or the fact that it’s bound to be grotesquely long--since I am a verbose poster under the best of circumstances--scares you off, you may flee now (or skip around).....

Still here?

My parents were both born in Cuba. My father’s mother’s family had been a very influential family centuries ago in Spain. There is noble blood on that side of the family (hence, my aunt’s deafness, and the high incidence of other hereditary disorders in my family), and my grandmother used to have in her possession a deed given to her family by a former King of Spain granting them much of the land that Cienfuegos (I believe) in Cuba and Santiago in the Dominican Republic currently sit on. As soon as I can kick those darn squatters off of my land....! My father’s father and grandfather were university people. I believe my grandfather, who died before I was born, was a professor of agronomy originally. Eventually, he became a politician, and ended up heading one of the parties that was opposed to Batista. Unfortunately, his was not the one that won. For a family opposed to the dictatorship of their land, my father’s family had a remarkable amount of, um, leeway? As the son of a politician, for instance, he did not have to stop at customs when he reentered the country after his many trips to the United States. Seems strange and naïve now.

My father had one sister. As I mentioned, she was deaf. In Cuba in the 1940s and 1950s, there were not a lot of educational resources for deaf people, so my grandmother moved with her to the United States, while my father and his father stayed behind. Since his father traveled a lot by this point, my father actually was cared for by a relative of his...I’m thinking it was his uncle, but I’m not positive. It may have been his grandfather. While my father is generally the stoic kind and will not talk about it, it is clear that he harbored a resentment of his sister and perhaps his mother for abandoning him. I have also heard that when they did live together, she was always given the benefit of the doubt in disputes, because she was the poor little deaf girl, and she played this to the hilt.

Back in Cuba, however, he was allowed to become a wild teenager; a motorcycle riding hoodlum with lots of freedom. When Castro took over, with some help from the United States, my grandfather came to the quick conclusion from some of the speeches he was giving that, despite his claims to the contrary, he was leaning toward communism (or at least toward playing off the balance of power between the US and USSR, much as England did with its more powerful European neighbors centuries before), and moved with his son to the United States, reuniting the family again.

My mother’s family was much more blue-collar. Her father worked as a bag boy, a bus boy, a bartender, a waiter, etc. He had a fierce work ethic and a legendary tightfistedness. He was the type to work 80 hours a week, and spend absolutely nothing on himself (or his family). As a bartender, he saved up enough money to start buying property, and became reasonably wealthy as a landlord and as an investor in property.

When Castro took over, he did not have the foresight to leave while he could. Shortly after Castro closed the routes out of the country, however, Operación Pedro Pan, an airlift of children-only organized by an American Catholic priest, took place. My grandparents had the opportunity to send one of their six children to the United States. They chose their youngest, my mother. Not having been there, and trying to see things in the best light, I interpret this as a decision on their part to send the one who had the fewest ties to her homeland, the one they thought would be most resilient and least traumatized by the whole thing. I know that her siblings in later years resented the fact that she got to escape the oppression while they didn’t. My mother believed that they sent her because they were the least attached to her, they could bear to lose her more than their other children, and they didn’t really love her.

My mother spent a few weeks in a processing facility for Cuban girls in South Miami, and then was placed with a foster family in New Jersey. She felt that they were very mean to her and made her feel inadequate and unloved. She went to a Catholic school, where she was taught by the legendary nuns of yore. She was always a devout Catholic, and wanted to be a nun when she grew up. Allegedly, however, a nun told her that she wasn’t smart enough or good enough to become a nun, so she gave up on that dream. (As you will see, anything my mother says must be taken with a grain of salt. I say this not to dispute whether these things actually happened, but just to be fair and honest.)

After my mother had spent several years in New Jersey, as a foreigner living among strangers, my grandfather and her cousins managed to escape Cuba. I don’t have the details of how it is that he left but his wife and five other children stayed behind. One of my mother’s older sisters was married to a Communist and living quite well; it may be that my grandmother didn’t want to leave her oldest child behind and her other kids didn’t want to leave her, but that’s just speculation. There is quite a bit of dysfunction on that side of the family, so it’s hard to know for sure. So my mother went to live with him until college.

Since he was penniless and in a new country, my grandfather went back to working three jobs as a bartender and a waiter. True to form, he eventually saved up enough money to buy a house in a poor neighborhood outright, to buy a stake in a famous restaurant, and to put heaps of money away in the bank. He almost never spent a dime on himself.

My parents met in college and were married. I was born while they were in graduate school; I was a broken thermometer, the prize in rhythm roulette. It seems clear in hindsight that my mother decided to marry and have a family because she believed she was inadequate for being a nun, and so this was what good Catholics did if they did not have a religious vocation. I think my father had a sense that you dated one kind of girl and married another. You dated the loose kind, and married the stable kind, the Catholic kind. She was the bearer and raiser of your children. My parents’ marriage seems to have been a compromise for the both of them.

I don’t know why I was such a screwed up little kid. The easy answer would be to blame it on my parents’ dysfunctions—which were extreme—but I seem to have been messed up before they hit their worst, and before I could really understand what was wrong with my family. As a little kid, I never fit in, and was prone to violent rages. I was always in trouble, and very nearly kicked out of my elementary school. I was always unhappy, and overly sensitive. I always felt like a target and an outcast.

Learning to read was definitely the best thing that ever happened to me. I don’t want to reduce the value of reading to simple escapism, but when I was little reading allowed me to engage my mind and my creativity and get beyond the frustrations of my life. The best thing my parents ever did for me was encourage this habit. We were poor; my father was a teacher and my mother was often unemployed. Clothes came from Goodwill, clearance stores, and, finally K-Mart. But there was always enough money to buy books. No matter what. Whatever I wanted to read, not just stuff in the kiddie section. And new books. I eventually figured out that I could get even more if I got used books, but that was my own realization and my own decision. By the time I was in 6th grade, I was reading on a college level.

My parents weren’t exactly nurturers. Having kids is what people did, but back then nobody taught parents what to do with kids once you got them. My parents tended to treat me like a little adult. For me, this had its ups and downs. As I mentioned, nothing was censored when it came to reading. I’ve also mentioned elsewhere that my parents took me to whatever movies they happened to feel like seeing, regardless of the rating. We had almost no family in the US, and they darn sure weren’t going to pay for a baby-sitter. So I saw some pretty intense movies as a kid. Looking back, it almost seems like my parents preferred R-rated movies. I had no bedtime. Nobody made me eat my vegetables. Nobody made me do my homework. Nobody made me bathe or brush my teeth. If we went to a restaurant, which was common during the portion of my life when both of my parents were working and working nights, I ordered whatever I wanted. I was expected to “clean my plate,” food being money, after all, but what went on my plate in the first place was really up to me. The only real rules were that I not waste money, and that I not interfere with their lives.

My father in particular didn’t know what to do with me as a little kid. I wasn’t old enough to relate to him in the only way he knew how to relate: peer-to-peer. He was very frustrated at the trouble I was always getting into--now that my own kids are constantly in trouble at preschool, I’m getting a taste of what he went through--and he tried his hardest to beat the devil out of me. He would slap me, hit me with his fists, and hit me with a belt. Sometimes I was naked for the beatings. I was frequently bruised up all over my body. Each day at school, I had to get a note from the teacher telling how I had behaved. If the note was not good or if I had “lost” it, I got beaten. One day, when I had gotten into trouble at school, I became hysterical and begged the teacher not to write me a bad note. When I gave my father the sealed note, I was surprised when I didn’t get the beating I expected. I assumed the teacher took pity on me and wrote a favorable report.

Oddly enough, I was never beaten again, even when I got into trouble. hmmm...

My parents did provide for my needs, including books. And they also pulled me out of public school and sent me to private school when I got mugged as a third-grader. The school where I went from 7th to 12th grade was pretty expensive, and they both worked day and night to send me there, until my mother became unemployed again during my senior year.

As I got older and more able to share interests with my father, we began to chum around a little more. He read the books I read and would talk to me about them. He would tell me stories of his youth. We went to football games together. I started to really enjoy his company most of the time. But he could be a jerk at times, if something made him furious.

I don’t know whether to organize this chronologically or thematically, so I guess I’m just rambling at this point...

When I was seven I was molested by a teenager (18 or so) in the neighborhood where we lived. Over the course of 6 months or so, I was molested in the alley behind my house (hidden from view by a wooden fence), in a three-foot crawlspace under a bridge spanning a nearby canal, and in his bedroom when his parents weren’t home. I wasn’t physically forced; I went willingly. I enjoyed the attention from somebody older. It made me feel important. I also sensed that what we were doing was sinful, though, and he resisted my efforts to end the situation. So I ended it the most effective way I could think of. I stopped going outside to play. I had my books, why did I need to go outside? I guess this is when I really threw myself into reading.

[I have told almost nobody about this. I told my first Serious College Girlfriend, my wife (before we got married), two psychologists I saw back in college and grad school (when counseling was free), and the social worker who handled our adoption. Now I’ve told dozens (hundreds?), some of whom I know IRL. Before I started writing this thread, I decided that I would unload this here; I wasn’t particularly nervous about it. Now my heart is beating like mad, like it was each other time I told somebody. Who would think that something you write could have such an effect on you? Who would think that twenty-five years later it would still be scary to share my deep, dark secret? Is this the first thing people will think of when they see my name attached to a post from now on?]

I was raised pretty devoutly Catholic. When I was old enough to understand some of the Church’s views on sexuality, but still young enough to be confused about my own role in what had happened to me, I learned to despise myself. I had had sex with a man. Willingly. I was a young fornicator, and evidently a homosexual to boot. As a Catholic and as a Cuban, I thought that there was little I could do that would make me more sinful. When I started having actual sexual impulses, I was pretty freaked out. I thought nobody else was having the same feelings as I was, and that they were proof once again that I was evil. I was certain I was bound for Hell.

When I was 14, I attempted suicide. It was a pretty lame attempt. I swallowed one of just about every pill I could find in the house (which was a lot, but that’s a different part of the story), many of which were expired. Nobody even noticed. I got sick as hell for three days, puking and having diarrhea at the same time. That was the best I could do. *sheepish grin* I’m a pretty intelligent person; we had a shotgun in the house. I figure if I had really wanted to kill myself, I could certainly have done a more effective job! I suppose one could call it a “cry for help,” except that I never told anyone either. Maybe I was too embarrassed by my ineptness, or maybe when confronted with the reality of what such a cry would entail, I no longer wanted to go through with it. In any case, while I have indirectly criticized my Catholic upbringing elsewhere, at this point it saved my life, albeit in a perverse way. I was certain beyond any doubt that I was going to hell. This life, as bad as it was, was better than that. So I decided it was better to stick around. There would be time enough for perdition later. Nothing like fear as a motivator for living.

Meanwhile, my parents were going through troubles of their own. Maybe it was chemical, maybe it was genetic, maybe because of her insecurities from her own childhood, maybe because of stress over unpleasant job situations and a child who was falling apart, but my mother started showing signs of mental illness. It began with paranoia, and the belief than anything that happened was about her. My father was too weak to confront her about it and try to get her help, and I was too young to know better. So as a child, I believed we had listening bugs implanted in our house, because my mother told me so. When a friend of theirs got mugged, she was sure it was agents of her enemies. When I was a teenager and my grades started going to hell, she was sure it was because my teachers were friends of her enemies. They thought that by giving me bad grades, they could discredit her. I was happy enough to accept the offered excuse. [We need some sort of shrugging, bittersweet smiley. I have often wished for just such an emoticon.] When she could no longer keep her job and she could not find a new one, she felt she was being blackballed by her enemies. In a sense this was true; I’m sure her references cannot have been good by this point.

That’s the thing about paranoia. Eventually your fears become true in a way. You make them true. She often raged at my father because she felt he was trying to turn me against her. She constantly saw signs that I didn’t love her, and attacked me for it. She was right. Eventually I stopped trying to love her.

She also obsessed with things that she thought could bring happiness to her life. At one point, when they were both working overtime, it was shopping. By the time I began high school, my parents had worked their way up to middle class. They were working 80 hour weeks to do it, but they were pulling down some decent money. When they weren’t working, we were shopping. To my mother’s credit, she developed an awe inspiring ability to root out good values. She bought and bought and bought. It didn’t matter if we needed something or not; if it was a good deal, she bought it. The rooms in our house piled up and up with crap that we owned that did not fit anywhere. We had Mikasa service for 40. We had virtually never in my life had anybody over for dinner. We had tons of storage devices to help her get organized. They were all in a pile in the spare bedroom. We had pre-recorded beta videotapes of movies I had never even heard of, but hey, they were cheaper than blank tapes when she bought ’em. And the clothes...oh, the clothes...

Where was my father when this was happening? Once in a while, he would put up a fight, but it was always a weak one. Even when she lost her job and took out credit cards, he would rather back down and live in relative peace than say, “No. We don’t need this and we have no money.” He worked himself harder and harder, and still fell further and further behind on the bills.

Mercifully, she eventually cooled off on the spending. Then she turned to religion. My mother had always been devout, but now she moved from devotion to unhealthy obsession. Can a religious obsession be unhealthy? She had stopped buying things for the house, but now she spent thousands on every religious book she could find, on every cross or postcard or other little thing that might bring blessings into her life. She took trips to Conyers, Georgia and had visions. Her faith was so animistic and talismanic (Wear this scapular; if you happen to die while you’re wearing it, you’ll go to heaven. Lucky I never believed that one! Say this prayer nine mornings in a row and you’ll get whatever you’re asking for. Keep this card in your wallet. It will bring you good luck. The reason everything is going to badly in your life right now is that you are too sinful. That must be why everything was peachy keen in hers.) that she was starting to scare the old cronies in her women’s guild. They thought she was involved in some kind of brujería or santería. So eventually they kicked her out.

This so enraged her that she stopped being Christian. Since my father’s mother went to the same church that she had gone to, she became convinced that she had been instrumental in what had happened. She told anyone that would listen that my grandmother had been poisoning her water, and that was why my mother never bore any other children. She accused my grandmother and my father both of “stealing her children from her.” And then she moved on to her next obsession: homeopathy. Again, it was this talismanic belief that a potion or a pill could solve all your problems. Take more shark cartilage. Take cod liver oil. She became the best customer that GNC and Vitamin World ever had. Have you noticed that they have a whole lot more locations lately? That was due to my mother. (Actually, she creeped them out, too, to the extent that she was banned from some stores and had to travel miles out of her way to other stores.) It’s hard to give a sense of perspective here. She easily spent over a thousand dollars a month on pills. Who knew what these things were doing to her in the combinations and dosages she was taking. I have some disgusting stories, but this ain’t her thread. It’s mine, so I’m going to close this door and move on for now.

By the time I was a teenager, my father and I had grown to be really good friends. Our relationship is nothing like any father and son relationship I’ve ever seen. I don’t call him “Dad,” and we don’t say “I love you.” We never had anything like that to build on. Instead, we started from scratch, and arrived at friendship. I go out with my father as often and as happily as I go out with friends my own age. We go to jai-alai or to the movies, or we go have a drink, and we have a good time together. You may think it’s sad that we don’t have a more traditional parent-child relationship, but I think it’s a happy ending. Think of how much worse it could have been.

As soon as I could, I moved away. I know this made life at home harder for him, but I needed to get out. Actually, I moved away three times, and was sucked back in twice. I left junior year of college, and went to work in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, but I returned to finish my bachelor’s degree and moved back in for a year. Then I moved to South Carolina for graduate school. I really intended to stay there and build a life there, but the economy got tough and teaching jobs of the kind I wanted for an inexperienced teacher were few and far between. I knew that in Miami I would be much more able to find a job with the contacts I had, from going to school and from a couple of part-time teaching gigs. I moved back to Miami in late August, after all the jobs were gone, and was able to land a pretty decent job in October. I stayed at home for a few more months trying to lower my outstanding debts, and finally moved out for the last time around March.

It was at this job that I met my future wife. She was an English teacher and a science-fiction fan like me. I had a legendary collection of signed Star Trek photos in my classroom, but she stayed away from me in any romantic sense due to a misunderstanding. I’ve always had a lot of female friends. I stupidly referred to one of them in conversation, and she assumed I was dating her. We MET met at a mutual friend’s birthday gathering. We went to celebrate her birthday, and were inexplicably drawn to each other. We spent the entire afternoon pretty much ignoring everyone else, including the birthday gal, and getting to know each other. That night, we went out on our first date. Sort of. I had already had plans for that night with my best friend. I didn’t want to cancel those plans, yet I wanted to spend more time with her. So I did both, and we went out as a threesome. :snicker: I had a chaperone!

About a month before she met me, my future wife went to a fortune teller in a Renaissance festival with some friends. Among them was a guy she was somewhat interested in. The fortune teller took her aside and told her to forget those guys, nothing was going to happen with any of them. She told her that, instead, she would meet a teacher within a month, a math teacher with a background in computers. She would be engaged in three months and married within a year. She scoffed at this absurd prediction.

We first dated in February. We were engaged in April. We were married the next January.

My wife and I share so much, it’s bizarre. We’re both writers, and specifically writers of science fiction, we’re both readers, and particularly readers of science fiction. We’re both fans of Star Wars and Star Trek. We both have some drama background (some college, high school, and grad school productions for me, tons of professional opera experience for her). We’re both major Disney fanatics.

And her father told her she would never find anyone who shared her silly interests!

Our wedding was the most amazing and special event of my life. We now have kids, and my kids mean the world to me. Having kids was the most life-changing event. But that’s as an ongoing thing. As far as single events go, nothing beats our wedding night.

Our wedding was about a month after my mother threw my father out of the house he paid for. He stayed with us for a week or so, and then moved in with my aunt and uncle for several months.

Although she was invited, my mother chose not to attend our wedding. She did, however, send a gift: a video tape on finding the G-Spot and a funny-looking unpackaged massager.

My father stayed with my aunt and uncle for a rather long time. I was starting to wonder if he had plans to get an apartment. He was stuck in neutral, thinking that sooner or later, things would blow over. Eventually, I helped convince him to move on and leave the abusive marriage he’d been living in behind. Divorce was not something that Catholics or Cubans were supposed to do, but it was really for the best here.

He felt so guilty that he gave her the house and all that was inside, an RV, and the contents of his 401K. Probably a good $60,000 in money and assets. He paid off his credit cards before giving her the rest of his money, but he kept nothing else for himself.

It was not our intention to abandon her in her illness, but to limit whom she could bring down with her. We tried to get her to accept help, but I wanted my father to be able to move on with his own life.

My mother had gotten to the point where she could not go anywhere without creating a raving scene. She was verbally abusive to virtually everyone, and accused people of all kinds of horrible things. With my father gone, she also had nobody left to enable her. Nobody to pay off her bills, nobody to drive her places, nobody to make or buy her food. She had long since reached the point where she could not drive, could not put gas in a car, could not cook, could not clean or pick up. With my father out of the house, she started losing weight very quickly. It was clear she was not eating or bathing. We tried to convince her to get help, but she didn’t think she needed any. It was the rest of us who were evil and insane; she believed there was nothing wrong with her but the problems we had inflicted on her. She wasn’t going to let us trick her into getting put in an institution where she would be lobotomized.

What do you do when someone who needs help won’t accept it? We tried to have her Baker Acted. I’ll never forget standing in her house while the police tried to reason with her, and finally gave up and dragged her away, kicking, screaming, and handcuffed. And knowing that I gave the order to have it done. After three days, the psych ward released her. They released her to my custody when I came to visit, without warning me that this was their intention, and despite having told me that they planned to commit her. They released her because they did not consider her to be a danger to herself or anyone else. She was filling her body with grotesque amounts of homeopathic supplements (she was easily taking 30 pills a day), she was not eating or bathing, she was living in literal filth, but she was not a danger to herself, and could not be forced to accept help. When things got a little worse, we tried again, and the same thing happened again.

Then she got Baker Acted by the police when she passed out on the street, because she had messed up her electrolyte levels with all the crap she was taking. Bingo. She had demonstrated that she was a danger to herself. The psych ward tried to commit. I testified at the commitment hearing. That was another experience I will carry with me forever. The DA was not given the photographs of her living conditions I had provided to the psych unit. In fact, the DA knew nothing about the case except what was in the file before her, which she had seen for the first time that day. Her court-appointed lawyer said that she wanted a second opinion from a psychiatrist of her choosing, and the judge agreed. My mother asked to be evaluated by a homeopathic psychiatrist, and the court adjourned for two weeks so that one could be found. Two weeks later, she had been unable to find a homeopathic psychiatrist--no surprise--so another two week adjournment was called to give her more time. At this point, the psych unit decided that this case was costing more money and effort than it was worth, so they dropped the motion.

What the hell is a homeopathic psychiatrist?

Although my father had left her lots of money, my mother would not pay her bills. Within 6 months, her house, which had been about 2/3 paid off, was foreclosed upon. She then lived in her RV in a KOA, until she was kicked out for not paying. Most of her possessions were lost with the house. The rest were lost with the RV. Many things that were of sentimental value to me or my father, artifacts of my childhood, were lost when the house was lost. After being kicked out of the KOA, she roamed the streets for a while.

Eventually, she found herself in a halfway house, and we had reason to hope. For several months, things were looking up. They were paying for her to share an apartment with some other women, and giving her classes so that she could again function in the world. They even offered to file disability papers for her so that she could draw disability money. This was a big sticking point because she did not want to admit to having any sort of problem. Eventually, she decided that these people who had paid for an apartment for her and given her an allowance, and who had given her classes and everything else, were just using her to try to steal her money (what money?), so she just walked out.

I never saw my mother again.

My father eventually got his own apartment (I’m jumping back and forth in the chronology, but I can’t seem to tell this story in a straight line). He started dating again. I just about never saw him happy in the time he lived with my mother. It was neat to see him be able to enjoy life again.

At the same time as all this with my mother was going on, my wife and I were trying to adopt. We had to take parenting classes to be certified to do this. Nobody in the class knew my story, but one of the two teachers was my social worker, and she did. I got pretty hot under the collar one night when a student suggested that men who had been abused as boys should not be allowed to adopt, because studies most often showed that abusers had themselves been abused. (That’s bad math, but I won’t get into it here.)

Anyway, after a year or so of trying, we finally were matched up. The adoption process through the state is a process of getting your hopes up and having them dashed over and over and over again, until you give up or you get the placement you want. It’s also nothing nothing nothing nothing BANG, you’re a parent. They had said that there was going to be a period of getting to know the children before they were placed, but then they were in a hurry to get them placed and finalized, so as soon as they got the go ahead from us, they placed the children with us in less than a week. I remember the day we went to pick up our new daughters. I remember wondering what the hell I had been thinking when I started this process!

It must have been hard on our relatives as well. They knew we were trying to adopt, but when someone is trying to get pregnant, you have nine months of anticipation and accommodation after they finally succeed. Instead, overnight, my father and her parents were grandparents. That night, my father came to our house and met the girls. He seemed uncomfortable around them, and he seemed to struggle to think of them as his “real” grandchildren. He had had a bad cough for several weeks, so he didn’t get real close to them. He just stood around and watched us try to deal with two one-year-olds who wanted to know where there foster parents were.

That night he went to the hospital and was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. He had to have a quadruple bypass, and didn’t leave the hospital for at least a couple of weeks. So here I was taking care of new children, whose special needs were turning out to be rather more than I had been told, while my father’s life was in the balance in the hospital. He entered surgery having only seen his grandchildren once, from a distance, for about a half hour. The surgery went fine, but the immediate recuperation in ICU was touch and go. As I recall, some patients can relax as they come out of it, and some fight it and send their hearts into a frenzy. This was his case.

I left the ICU and went for a walk on the hospital grounds. I called my wife. With the help of Nighthawk, she had taken the girls to a scheduled doctor’s appointment. On the phone, she told me that the doctor had been very concerned with how developmentally delayed the girls were, and thought they might well be retarded. I have described the tactics that the social workers used when placing the girls with us elsewhere on this site, so I won’t go into it here. But they had specifically reassured us that the girls were not retarded, and now it seemed that they were. I looked into my future and saw myself dealing with their needs for the rest of their lives. No recitals, no little league sports, no family game night, no boyfriends, no growing up, no graduation, no getting married, no grandkids. [I hope you don’t think me terribly selfish for despairing. I was prepared to love them through all of that. But nobody who has a child the natural way wants this for their child, why should I feel differently about an adopted child?]

I also saw my father dead. [One of my coworkers, on hearing of my father’s surgery, “reassured” me thus: “Don’t worry! My father had a quadruple bypass and he lived another 8 years!” Can you think of a stupider reassurance than that?!?! I don’t want him for 8 more years! I want him for 30! At least!] My life looked to be a shambles, and I broke down and wept right there all alone in the hospital. My father and I were never demonstrative. We never knew how to relate to each other in that way. But I knew right there that I loved him, and that losing him would be devastating.

He pulled through, and came to live with us while he was recovering, because living alone in his second floor apartment was out of the question. I now had my house full all of a sudden. My children and my father, and both needed taking care of. My original plan had been to take a week off from work and then return to work, but it soon became obvious that that was impossible. So I took family leave to take care of my family.

This was good for the girls because, young as they were, they knew they had been uprooted, and I was able to bond with them. This also allowed me to drive them to speech and physical therapy, to try and overcome some of their delays. Finally, it allowed them to bond with my father, and vice-versa. It goes without saying that they love him; children are so generous with their love. But I saw him come to love them too. At first, he resisted being called “grandpa,” but he came to accept and even love it. He’s learned to be so sweet with them. They’ve brought out a side of him I never got to see as a child. I think his life is finally getting rounded out in his old age.

Eventually, he was able to return to his old life. He met a wonderful lady, fell in love--I think for the first time--and got married. And they lived happily ever after. My wife finally has a real mother-in-law. My girls have an abuela.

About a year ago, it was discovered that some of his arteries were clogging back up again. He had a partial angioplasty--they eventually stopped because they were too afraid to continue--and his doctor strongly urged him to retire. He did, and they moved up to Kissimmee to live near us. He owns nothing; they live hand to mouth. But we see each other all the time, the girls have him in their lives, and he and his wife are pretty happy. They have that cute geezer love thing going on. I only hope he lives long enough to enjoy his life, now that he finally has something in it to take joy from.

In the regrets thread, I said:

quote:
There are other things I almost put on the list, but I decided not to because, if this or that unfortunate thing hadn't happened, some other good thing in my life wouldn't have either. For instance, if I hadn't moved back to Miami, I would not have met my wife or had my kids. I guess that adds perspective, though. We should try to make the right decisions when we have the opportunity, but we shouldn't beat ourselves up too much over regrets. Even the mistakes we make or the bad things that happen to us make us who we are and lead us to the things we will value in our later lives.

I spent a lot of years during my late teenage/early twenties period filled with maudlin regret and angst and anger about my “lost” childhood. So many experiences that others took for granted that I never had: birthday parties, friends over to my house, dinner at a friend’s house, sleeping over at a friend’s house, reassurances from my parents that I was at least a “happy” accident, some sense of comfort when dealing with the opposite sex... Until I realized I was quickly losing another whole period of my life! Whom was I going to blame for my lost twenties?

Thankfully, I finally got over this feeling. Maybe I got mature, or maybe time finally started to heal over those old wounds. I don’t particularly refer to myself as a “survivor” anymore, because I think there is so much more to me than what I have survived...I don’t want to define myself by what other people did or did not do for me. I am a dad, a husband, a son, a friend, a teacher, a writer, a kid (at heart), a giver, a carer, and a thousand other things, and also a survivor. I have tried to make up for lost experiences when the opportunity presented itself, like the time in grad school I tried to fly a kite, or when my college girlfriend taught me how to ride a bike. But I have tried even harder to not miss any more.

I can’t bring myself to regret some of the negative things I experienced, because I believed they played a part in making me who I am. Would I be as sensitive, empathetic, or artistic if my childhood had been different? I can’t say that these are qualities I saw modeled in my family, or that were particularly well thought of, for that matter. Would my life have taken a different course, perhaps away from my wonderful relationship with my wife? Would I not be my daughters’ Daddy?

Lessee...loose ends...

The girls are not retarded, just delayed. And the doctor was an idiot for telling new parents their children might be retarded without performing anything like an adequate amount of evaluation. She has been dropped. Next year the girls will start kindergarten. Then we will enter the world of IEPs etc. But they will be in a mainstream environment.

My father and I still aren’t demonstrative. That’s just how we are...or rather, how we are not. We developed a comfortable way to relate, why change it now? I think we each know how the other feels.

I prefer to think of my mother as deceased, instead of wondering where she is, or having to explain why I couldn’t ride to the rescue. My father has a wife, my children have a grandmother. Nuff sed.

My wife and I will celebrate six years together in January.

The girls turn 5 in March.

My wife and I have each completed novels which we have not succeeded in selling. We have each begun our second novel.

I met Bob Scopatz at an OSC signing last year, and he suggested I check out the forums on Hatrack. Last time I had checked, all that there was was an RPG set in Hatrack River Township. That was not my thing, so while I frequented the website, I had not explored the forums again.

[Incidentally, Mr. and Mrs. Card were both very gracious to us at the signing. When we mentioned that we “wanted to be writers,” he asked “Do you write?” When we told him that we did, he said “Then you are writers!” Didja hear that? OSC said I’m a writer! ]

So anyway, I lurked, and then I delurked, and then I addicted other people. The cycle continues!

More on What Hatrack Means to Me

I now do much less writing, much less reading, and much less schoolwork. Thanks, guys!

But I have also met a lot of great and interesting people, most of whom have also been very nice to me. I expected to get chased out right away when I started my “I didn’t like FOTR” thread, but I wasn’t. Heck, people were even polite and not mocking when I wrote about my quirky little town!

I have come to feel like a part of the community, like I would be missed if I were not here. I hope it’s not presumptuous of me to think so.


And now I would like to continue the tradition Feyd Baron started in his thread, where he started an “Ask Feyd” section.

If you have any questions, Feyd will answer them.

j/k

Anyway, thanks if you actually read all of this...it’s pretty heady to actually have an audience for it.

Sheesh! This is about as long as a short story! I could have been writing something somebody might pay for instead!!

um, what’s the record for longest post?

Now, if I could only bring myself to hit "submit"...

 


Posted by Troubadour (Member # 83) on :
 
Congrats, Icarus...

I'll read the whole text shortly, but presently I'm too drunk.
 


Posted by Vampyr18 (Member # 3694) on :
 
ummm...congratulations(?)
 
Posted by Ophelia (Member # 653) on :
 
Wow, thank you for sharing so much of your life with us (I read it all), from the worries (not a strong enough word, but my brain is fried) of your childhood family to the joys of your current family. I'm glad you overcame it and were brave enough to share even your "deep dark secret" with us. I'm glad you're here and hope you stay for thousands more.
 
Posted by Zevlag (Member # 1405) on :
 
I'm not sure congratulations are in order, but is great to have you here. I remember your first post here... I am glad you have lived to enjoy many hundred posts at Hatrack.

I am thankful that you decided to share your story with us. I appreciate it.

~Zevlag
 


Posted by dkw (Member # 3264) on :
 
Thank you for sharing your story. It must have taken a fair amount of courage to write it, and I'm very glad you worked up the nerve to hit "submit reply." Your family is lucky to have you, and Hatrack is lucky to have you too.

*raises glass* Here's to your next 1000 posts!
 


Posted by Toretha (Member # 2233) on :
 
congratulations on your 1000th post, and thank you, for sharing all that. You're a really amazing person, to manage all that
 
Posted by Belle (Member # 2314) on :
 
*hugs*

You are pretty darn cool.

I'm glad you're here, and I think we all owe Bob a big thank you for bringing you into the fold.


 


Posted by Ralphie (Member # 1565) on :
 
If you left, Icarus, I would miss you terribly. As Patrick has become the big MIA goober that he is, you are currently my Favorite Person to Tease™. That makes you an intrisic part of Hatrack in my opine which is, of course, all that matters.

That took a lot of chutzpah, but then when I think "Icarus" I think "chutzpah."


 


Posted by Nighthawk (Member # 4176) on :
 
***BUMP***

Let the record show that *I* was the chaperone on their first date... I did a hell of a job, didn't I?

I'll admit I remember that night rather vividly. I spent most of the time trying not to be the fifth wheel on the bicycle because I saw both of them as a perfect match. It was an awkward situation for me - in the first ten minutes of conversation between them, I couldn't help but know they were made for each other, so I couldn't help but wonder "what am I doing here?!?"

As time progressed and we all became closer friends, it wasn't a question of IF they were going to get married, but WHEN. Like I've mentioned to them before: it's not a question of whether they have the same interests or not - the similarities are so remarkable that it looks as if they share the same brain.

So when they told me they were getting married, and asked me to be their Best Man, I kept thinking "it's about time!", and then was honored to take on that responsibility. Because I was so close to them, in their house on an almost daily basis, they became my home away from home in a time when I desperately needed a different place to be. For their hospitality, I'm eternally grateful.

One thing I must say, and I'm speaking directly to you, Icarus... I've known you for a long, long time (seventeen years? Eighteen? Heck, I lost count...), and although I knew your life and childhood may not have been the most pleasant (mine wasn't either, as you may know), in retrospect I wish there was more than I could have done for you. But hindsight is 20/20, and now I feel to some degree that back then I might not have done enough as a friend. For that, I apologize.

It took a lot of courage to post what you wrote on a public forum such as this, and I admire you for that. It takes a lot for a person to be so open on a forum visited by so many.

So enough of all this seriousness!
 


Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
Nighthawk, 9 minutes is not exactly a bump!

Icarus = chutzpah, huh?

Ralphie, do you still persist in this notion that you have succeeded in teasing me?

Bring it on! I ain't afeared of you! You don't even know "opine" is a verb! Nyah nyah!

Nighthawk,

quote:
in retrospect I wish there was more than I could have done for you. But hindsight is 20/20, and now I feel to some degree that back then I might not have done enough as a friend. For that, I apologize.

I can't think of a time when you weren't there for me, even when I was a pretty crappy friend at times in middle school. I even talked about this at our senior (junior? I lose track) encounter, and without my saying your name, people in my group knew I was talking about you. Ninth grade was the worst year for me, and you were always there when I needed a friend. In fact, I have come to feel in recent years that I ask for more than I give. You wrong yourself.

So now let's break out the champagne and liven the mood!
 


Posted by Nighthawk (Member # 4176) on :
 
I know, I remember that. But it's unavoidable thinking "I could have done more," regardless of what I actually did.

And, hey, I told you I'd keep this on the main page for a bit! It's the least I can do!!!
 


Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
And thank you to everyone else for your kind thoughts. I put this whole post in the box and then swicthed windows before hitting submit. I checked out the other threads on both sides and GreNME, I read the 6 new OSC articles, and I checked out the three forums again before finally submitting. Then I lurked around for another half hour or so, trying to decide if I had made a mistake and should delete the thread quickly!

Zevlag, you remember my very first post!? I don't!! Was it memorable for its wit and insight, for its newbiness, or for sheer vapidity?

Anyway, g'night Hatrack. It is far too late for me to still be up!
 


Posted by ginette (Member # 852) on :
 
Thanks Icarus! Your story is one of those that make me happy, because it shows that we are born with our very own individual strength that no one can ever steal from us and by which we can make the best out of terrible circumstances.

Edited to ask: How would you describe that inner power?

[This message has been edited by ginette (edited December 12, 2002).]
 


Posted by Jaiden (Member # 2099) on :
 
Thank you for sharing
 
Posted by Xavier (Member # 405) on :
 
Someone is saving these right?

I haven't had time to read one single biograhical post since Papa Moose's first one.

I would like to just read them all sometime when I have nothing to do. It would be a shame for everyone to know eachother really well, with me in the dark.

Would someone be willing to put them up on a website? I will when I get a chance (with permission of course), if one of you guys sends me all of them in a word document or something.
 


Posted by JuniperDreams (Member # 3471) on :
 
Thaks for the warning... I heeded it.
 
Posted by Nighthawk (Member # 4176) on :
 
I can host them on a site if everyone wants, but don't ask me to create the website. I'm a programmer, not an artist. Unless you do want it to be miserably stoic in nature...
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
I must admit that I haven't even read this yet...just wanted to bump it to help protect your fragile ego.

You contribute alot to my reading experience at Hatrack. Thanks!
 


Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Wow. Thank you!! This is awesome!!
 
Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
Icarus...

I am floored. I really don't know what to say except that such a beautiful post had to have come from a beautiful soul. I look forward to getting to know you and Cor (and the whole family) more over the coming decades.

For those of you who have yet to meet him, I have to add that Icarus impressed me immediately as a gentle man. A person who has a good heart and who isn't afraid to show it. I was actually worried that he'd be one of those demonstrative friends that need hugging all the time, but that's not really what I mean by this "impression" of him. It's more like he knows what he has to share and is willing to share it. Himself.

And this post proves that, doesn't it.

I think you have taken your life and made something remarkable out of it.

And I bet you are a darn good teacher, father and husband too!

Thanks for that post!

(I give it 5 "Papa Mooses")

[This message has been edited by Bob_Scopatz (edited December 12, 2002).]
 


Posted by Eomer (Member # 2921) on :
 
Thank you for sharing your story. Maybe one day, when my posts get a little higher and people know me better, I tell my story. All I can say is that reading about your mother was very hard, as I am dealing with the same type of paranoid, anger driven mother. I've never met ANYONE who could even begin to comprehend what I've been through, and it lightens my heart to hear that, even with the past, you were still able to make it to where you are now. You give me hope...thanks.

On a lighter note ... Happy 1000th post! I hope that there are many more to follow!
 


Posted by Noemon (Member # 1115) on :
 
Wow, Icarus, thank you so much for sharing all of that with us. I feel very...I don't know...touched? honored? that you shared this with us. I'm very, very glad to know you.

I was a bit startled when you said something about hoping that you weren't being presumptious in thinking that you'd be missed if you left Hatrack--there are some people who very quickly penetrate to the core of what Hatrack is to me, and you're certainly one of those people.
 


Posted by zgator (Member # 3833) on :
 
It says a lot about you Icarus that you overcame the adversity in your life and became such an upstanding guy. I'm still looking forward to meeting you in real life, so if you and Bob ever do the jai-alai thing, let me know.
 
Posted by Baldar (Member # 2861) on :
 
Wonderful post Icarus. Been to Cuba a couple of times myself and found the people there to be charming, even my "minders".
 
Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
Baldar, yeah, but have you been to Miami???



 


Posted by Baldar (Member # 2861) on :
 
Definately, including South Beach, our Latin American Regional Business confrences were held there. I also took more than my fair share of trips down there in the 1970's.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 


 


Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
Thanks twinky--that about sums it up! (Talk about verbose! It took me 8,000 words to say the same thing!)

Thanks again to everyone for the nice comments--my delicate ego is safe, and my finger is far from the delete button!

I definitely want to try again for jai-alai! Next week is finals week for me. After that's done, I can start having a life again! We need a manly sports/betting/cheap-beer outing!

Eomer, feel free to e-mail me if you ever want to vent.

Ginette, I don't know that it's the same for everyone. With me I think it was a sort of pragmatism, like not "throwing good money after bad." I'm just lucky I survived long enough to have that insight. I discovered Sylvia Plath after the worst was over, and read some of her prose (as well as her poetry, I mean) and some interviews with her, and I felt so sorry for her, because the answers were there, and they were easier than she thought, and she just couldn't bring herself to believe them. I guess depression is a forest-and-trees kind of thing. Moving on is really as simple as deciding to move on. But it's not a verbal decision, it's not something you can say to yourself and POOF, you're better. But when deep down you have actually internalized that decision, you gain the perspective you lacked when you were depressed.
 


Posted by Kama (Member # 3022) on :
 
I don't know if this was the longest post ever to appear on Hatrack, but it sure was the longest one I've ever read. With interest.

A difficult childhood is often an excuse for not living your adult life they way you should. But at Hatrack, thanks to people such as yourself, I learned that you can grow up to be a good, caring person, a loving husband (or wife) and parent. Thank you, Icarus.
 


Posted by Vána (Member # 3262) on :
 
Thank you, Icarus. Thank you so much for sharing that with us.

Wow.
 


Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
You are now my hero!

You've taken a life full of darkness and despair, and not only turned around to find a way out, but have taken the courage and time to carry others with you--Your children, your Father. You're despair is for those who you were unable to carry along. The effort alone should award you hero status.

Thanks for the post. Thanks for the strength to open up to us.

Have I said you are my hero?
 


Posted by ludosti (Member # 1772) on :
 
Wow Icarus! You made that flight towards the sun, only your wings did not melt, and, instead, sent you flying higher than imaginable. You're a courageous and good man.
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
Icarus,

Thanks for posting that.

Your story is a very inspiring one.

Randy
 


Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
I still haven't read it all...I'm just in awe of the shear length of it.
 
Posted by Baldar (Member # 2861) on :
 
Ever think of visiting Cuba again?
 
Posted by esl (Member # 3143) on :
 
Happy 1000th post Icarus. It was great.
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
I actually have never been to Cuba.

I would definitely visit, if it were possible to do so without economically supporting the current regime. Someday...

I would never move there. I am culturally American. But I would like to explore my roots, much as other Americans can go to Europe, for instance, and say, this is where mmy ancestors lived, this is where they came from.
 


Posted by Baldar (Member # 2861) on :
 
Well, you know, Cubans are Americans too. And some of the best business men (and keenest) I have ever run across. I do agree that going there does support the regime (of course an argument can be made that the same action also undermines it).
 
Posted by Papa Moose (Member # 1992) on :
 
Now that was a long post! I'll never have to put a warning on one of mine again -- If anyone complains, I can just direct people here and say that mine was shorter.

Icarus, thank you so much for having the courage to share such things with us. I both laughed aloud and cried while reading the tale. (When OSC said you were a writer, he was right!) You've lived an incredible life so far, and to come through it to be the person you are now is an amazing feat. I've always thought of you as having a gentle soul, but there must be some serious steel under the surface. I'm glad to know you.

Side note -- I was keeping all the "Landmark" posts, but they started appearing too fast. I think having someone host them on a website is a great idea -- we must make sure they all get bumped occasionally until this happens, so they don't get lost in the 6-month cleanup.

--Pop
 


Posted by Sal (Member # 3758) on :
 
Icarus, I don't really know how much healing is involved in the ability to finally talk about traumatic things. But I sure hope that somewhere you've gained something for yourself here, just from telling us. It would only be fair.

But, man, after reading this post, "Icarus" certainly has gained many more dimensions in my imaginative world of Hatrack's personalities.

<-- glad to know you!
 


Posted by Nighthawk (Member # 4176) on :
 
I went to Cuba in 1980, but I don't remember a whole lot about it. I remember I had my first beer there (I was nine at the time), and looking out the window of the plane I asked my father why there were so many rows but no cars on them.

It's a beautiful country that's been hit hard by politics and economics (but that's a whole other discussion I don't want to get in to). In the city it's depressing to see what it's resulted in, but get out to the country and it's a totally different world in some places.

*EDIT* Since I'm new here, I don't know where all the milestone posts of interest are. Can someone point me in the right direction? If not for letting me read them, at least for letting me collect them.

[This message has been edited by Nighthawk (edited December 12, 2002).]
 


Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
Nighthawk:

Check out this thread:
LandMark Threads Thread

Pay special attention to my anniversary and 7,000th post threads as they are almost too good to pass up.

Papa Moose's 1000th started this whole tradition and he even got an OSC post in there!!! Very cool.


 


Posted by Pixie (Member # 4043) on :
 
Congratulations! Thanks for sharing!
 
Posted by Nighthawk (Member # 4176) on :
 
*BUMP* Just doing my job...

So, do you want those hosted elsewhere? I might be able to save them as HTML to save the entire thread content. If you people are interested, let me know and I'll see what I can do before these posts disappear in to the ether.
 


Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
Yeah! Do it!!!

I don't think you really need anyone's approval. Unless you expect to be paid for your efforts... LOL!
 


Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
I think interest has definitely been expressed. It's a shame there isn't a way to keep them current with responses...or is there?

For my part, I'll go and bump old threads next week just to make sure they don't disappear.

I assume there're no copyright issues here, right?
 


Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
Icarus,

I shared your post with Aura. For many reasons and on many levels it touched her deeply. Your courage and triumph is indeed inspiring.


 


Posted by Chess (Member # 3125) on :
 
All I can say is:

Beau...ti..ful.

It is amazing that you feel that you can share such things with us and I hope to see more and more of your posts as I continue and you continue spending time at Hatrack.
 


Posted by aka (Member # 139) on :
 
Icarus, I am awed. Thank you for that post. It made me laugh and cry both. I feel privileged to be sharing this board with you. I hope you stick around for another few thousand posts, at least.
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 

At the rate I've been going, I'll hit my second thousand by New Years! I all but stopped posting during the days leading up to that post...I guess I was postponing/gathering psychic energy...I've been making up for it with a vengeance since then. I've got like a hundred posts in two days!

I guess I was going for a "Speaker for the Living" kind of thing, but I was really afraid people would feel I had been too personal or too unpleasant--though I did try to balance my portrayals and show how many negatives had taken positive turns in the long run. I was so relieved to find that people seemed to not be put off by it!

So, to turn the conversation in a perhaps interesting direction...Ginette (if you are still following this thread), do you have an answer for your own question (or does anyone else)? I think people often don't survive hardships, so the real question, as I see it, is what makes the difference? Why do some survive? And don't say "strength." That's circular reasoning--where does that strength come from? Where did it come from in your own life? I'm sure there's more than one right answer.

We've had threads asking why people get depressed. Why do people get better?
 


Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
quote:
Why do people get better?

Because they can.

Dumb answer, but I think it's largely true. The human body in general has an amazing ability to repair itself. The mind arises from physical structures in the brain and I think the self-repair idea works very well.

Of course, there are some things that the body usually can't fix by itself (metabolic disorders, genetic disorders...lots of things).

But recovering from childhood trauma, especially, is possible because of our built in repair functions. And probably also because we retain some flexibility at younger ages too. That means that a positive influence over a reasonable period can have an affect and help to correct the problems caused by a negative influence.


 


Posted by ginette (Member # 852) on :
 
I wish I knew the answer!

I am not going to give my own full story on your thread Icarus, think I'll wait till my 10000 post, but what I can say is that my therapists consider it a miracle that I didn't end up as an addict of some sort or an absolute nuts case.
Bob is also right when he states that human beings have an amazing capacity to repair themselves. Yet I think there is some more to it. There are times you are really vulnerable, and I feel I have had some good luck to meet the right persons (or books!) at the right time. OK, maybe that's part of this amazing capacity....and it isn't good luck after all.

I also think you were right when you said it might not be the same for every person. I know the 'keep on moving' thing you talked about, I used that as well, but I have also had some glimpses of light and hope. And a very strong, concious goal: I want to die without having serious regrets about my life. First I thought I could accomplish this by never doing something wrong. I am sure you can imagine where this leads to .
Despair.

Being out of despair now, I still have the same goal. I think it's not important what you accomplish, but it's the whole process of what you are doing, why you are doing it (very important) and how, that is important.

And thanks for keeping this question going, I like it.

 


Posted by Eddie Whiteshoes (Member # 2951) on :
 
For one of the first times in my life, I can't think of anything to say.

Your life is, at the same time, somewhat similar to mine and yet far worse and far better. I envy you your experience, the good and the bad -- and the wisdom you've obviously gleaned from them. You've won a great deal of my respect™ simply by living the life you have and coming out a better, more intelligent man than those who've lived easier lives have.

I was thinking of a 3,000 post. After reading this, I realize just how little I've actually lived. If I ever accomplish a quarter of what you have, I'll consider putting it down.
 


Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
That's what I'm thinking, Ginette. That there's some element of luck, like meeting that positive influence that Bob describes. But I don't think it's enough for that positive influence to be there. There is also a mental step that must be taken within a person, and perhaps that's why some people never heal, despite having loving people around them trying their asses off to be that positive influence. They are not making the last jump, the final connection--a shift in perspective, kind of like how at the end of The Sixth Sense, you see everything you saw before again, in a new light. Only, in this case, I mean a perspective shift for the better! <IMG SRC="http://www.hatrack.com/ubb/forum/smile.gif">

When you described my thoughts as "keep on moving," I was a bit dissatisfied with that phrasing, even though I myself used the phrase "move on" several times. I've been sitting here trying to figure out why that's not quite right, and I've come to the conclusion that it sounds like surviving, like going through the motions, but not really like healing, except insofar as it's important to be able to keep going through the bad times, to survive until healing can take place.

Thinking about it some more, what I'm talking about is not so much "keeping on," as in not giving up and going through the motions, but rather, seeing the balance in life. There were times when, by only focusing on the negatives in my life, I was not only failing to appreciate the positives, but actively making my life worse. For an example, I was costing myself friends. Who wants to be friends with someone who is always depressed, and who is not even trying? So the more negativity I looked for, the more I found.

When I started seeing the positive things in my life, I stopped shooting myself in the foot. I also gained perspective for when something went wrong, that there was more to life than this particular disappointment. It's not something I perfected overnight, by any stretch, but starting to do this was starting to heal. It wasn't until I stopped being pissed off that the process was close to completed. That whole process took a good ten years, but things were better as soon as I started making myself acknowledge the blessings in my life.

There was a point in graduate school when I realized I was lonely and missed the friends I had left behind in Miami. It caught me by surprise when one day I realized I recognized the feelings I was having. But having better perspective then than I had had as a teenager, I responded differently when I realized what was wrong. Instead of further isolating myself, spending my free time in my apartment sleeping, watching TV, and eating, I acted. I called a friend from Miami and paid to have him come up for a weekend so that I could enjoy that again for a bit, but then I threw myself back into the friendships I was developing locally, and the activities that were rewarding to me: activity at my church and my volunteering as a Big Brother.

There was a legitimate problem: new friendships don't give the same comfort as old friendships. But this time, I could see that there was a lot of happiness in my life, and I could look for ways to enjoy it instead of giving in to unhappiness.

It's easy to be cynical of a prescription to "focus on the positives." That's what I was referring to about Sylvia Plath, some cynical comments I had read by her about how the people trying to help her get better just couldn't understand. I also thought at a point in my life that nobody understood. Now I realize I wasn't quite that unique. There's definitely more than a bit of narcissism in depression. I know how contradictory that sounds, but while you think you're worthless, you're also convinced that you're more perceptive, and that nobody else can understand just what you feel.

How well does that jive with your thoughts?

Eddie, I don't agree with the conclusion you seem to be reaching. I hope the purpose of landmark threads doesn't become to compare bad experiences or to compare accomplishments. As I understand it, this tradition we've evolved--and it's a neat one! Other forums don't have this!--is about getting to know each other better, and it brings the community closer together. From your posts, I already know you're a Latino, you live on the West Coast, you lean toward the left politically, you have some angst about what will make your life worthwhile once it's over, and you're concerned about your weight (but things don't sound as bad as you make them out to be <IMG SRC="http://www.hatrack.com/ubb/forum/wink.gif"> ). That's a fair amount, but it's still a flat photograph. That's a collection of character traits, but it's not a person. Each of these landmark posts I've read has made the poster come off the screen, and become known to me in a way that s/he was not before.

That being said, if everyone were to go out and post a bio at the same time, it would be too much to absorb. That's where the round number thing comes in...not as a clique-former, but as a way of putting a little bit of separation between these.

I hope you change your mind, and I look forward to your 3,000th (or 2,000th, or 1,500th) post. Even if nothing's happened to you, or if you only tell us the parts of your life you are comfortable sharing...heck, say you focus not on your past, but on describing your present in detail, or on describing your future as you see it in detail...when you talk about your own life like that, I get double insight into you, because I see not only what you reported, but, through your writing, how you feel about it.

My own post had a lot of Bad Things because, for one reason, they were pivotal in the development of some parts of me I think key. Another reason was more selfish: to see just how comfortable I truly was with myself and where I had come from. How could I think I had moved on if there were parts of my life I was unable to discuss? Well, nobody wants to hear (or read) somebody constantly detailing unpleasantries of his or her life, but in this context it did not seem inappropriate, so I also was challenging myself. I was seeing if I could make myself hit the submit button.

But I'm not the bad things that have happened to me. If my contribution to this tradition turns out to be making it into a hard-luck contest (or killing it by making people think they have to have done more before posting) I will be saddened. <IMG SRC="http://www.hatrack.com/ubb/forum/frown.gif">
::wishes once again there was a bittersweet smiling smilie::

[ March 31, 2003, 12:57 PM: Message edited by: Icarus ]
 
Posted by Nighthawk (Member # 4176) on :
 
And I can't help but think that I have 740 posts to go... It'd be so much easier on my forums (where my post count is in excess of 10,000) but that is definitely a different audience.

Day by day, when the time comes for me to reach that milestone, I will feel comfortable in posting here what I may not be able to post elsewhere.
 


Posted by zgator (Member # 3833) on :
 
Icarus, you have a wonderful way with words and I hope I get to read your book someday. I was like Eddie and about ready to scrap posting anything for my 1000 mark. I feel like I've had a pretty boring life compared to a lot of people here. But I'll go ahead and do it anyway.
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
Cool! I'm sure I'll meet you IRL before too long anyway, if we can ever work it out, but I look forward to getting to know you even better this way!
 
Posted by Fael (Member # 3015) on :
 

Icarus,
I saw your long post and didn't have time to get to it until now. I printed it out so I could read it at my leasure.
congratulations on your 1000th post.

I am glad you are here and admire the fact that you did work through the negatives in your life to create something positive.

I hope to see many mor of your posts.

[This message has been edited by Fael (edited December 23, 2002).]
 


Posted by MyrddinFyre (Member # 2576) on :
 
I think there's nothing I want to say that hasn't been said, so just
 
Posted by Designated Bumper (Member # 4487) on :
 
::bump::
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
eek!

Papa, thanks for the inadvertant reminder! I don't want this falling to oblivion either!
 
Posted by Zotto! (Member # 4689) on :
 
WOW. Just...wow. Great post.

Icarus, you're certainly an integral part of the Hatrack experience to me , if that counts for anything! [Smile]

Um, yeah. I think "WOW" pretty much sums it up!
 
Posted by littlemissattitude (Member # 4514) on :
 
Icarus...I wasn't here yet when you first posted this landmark thread. I'm so glad that it got bumped up and I got to read it. You had an unusual childhood to say the least, and while my childhood was not anything like you describe yours in almost all ways, mine was a bit unconventional as well, and there were things you wrote which I recognized in a deep way.

Thank you.
 
Posted by newfoundlogic (Member # 3907) on :
 
Icarus, I actually think it is more than probable that I know the "DA". Not that it matters, I just think its weird.
 
Posted by Shan (Member # 4550) on :
 
Thanks for the open and honest sharing, Icarus. That really took some courage -

(psst - I'm glad you bribed me all those months ago - I hope you weren't offended that my sense of honor wouldn't allow me to accept the actual bribe [Smile] , just the spirit in which it was intended)
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
[Smile]

I'm glad you stayed.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
And nfl, you've got me more than a bit curious . . .
 
Posted by Kwea (Member # 2199) on :
 
I remember reading a few things that long before....I think.....how many pages does "War and Peace" have again???

Great post, and I'm glad that you seem to have come to some sort of peace with your past. Moving on isn't really the same as surviving, IMO, but just a way of expressing the maturing process.

I think I said something on another thread about love being what we make of it, as well as what it makes of us. Sometimes it makes us fools, sometimes kings, but my point was that it affects us, and changes us, and what we become. I am happy to hear that there is still love in your life, and that you have changed it for the better.

Kwea

[ July 21, 2003, 03:11 AM: Message edited by: Kwea ]
 
Posted by newfoundlogic (Member # 3907) on :
 
I know the mental health coordinator at the Miami-Dade State Attorneys office, I'm pretty sure she actually does most if not all of the cases herself, but even if its not her I still might know "DA" because I know quite a few people who work there. We are just acquaintances really, but I know her and she knows me. This is all assuming you were still in Dade when this occured.

[ July 21, 2003, 10:09 PM: Message edited by: newfoundlogic ]
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
Icarus, I have been away from the 'rack a lot lately, and just now had time to read your landmark post.

I don't know what to say, except that I am honored to know you and Cor. Yours is a compelling and inspiring story. *hugs*
 


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