Thursday, January 03, 2008

Solitary Gratitude

I am alone and, for that, I am grateful

For three hours tonight, I sat in a hot bath tub until it turned tepid. Each time it did, I would let some water seep out to be replaced with scorching, stinging-hot liquid. I read my latest love, eat pray love by Elizabeth Gilbert – a gift I received from my Aunt at the infamous dinner a couple weeks ago. I read, for the most part, the entire middle section – 31 of the 36 chapters contained therein. I surprised myself by finishing that part of the book and feeling tears stream down my face as I did so.

I am alone and, for that, I am grateful.

My daughter is at her father’s house, probably snuggled in her covers and drifting off to sleep as I write this. My father and his wife are serving their God down at the Family History Center doing what my father says is the decisive factor (divisive?) in the ultimate rightness of the Only True Church on the Face of the Earth. He is emotionally demonstrative when he tells about the miracles in leading throngs of people – LDS and non-LDS alike – along paths to find their Old Uncle Joe or Great Aunt Mims. Dad says that, because the LDS church searches for, and then does the temple work for, long-deceased ancestry, it sets them apart from everyone else. He says that the extraordinary and outrageous stories that run rampant through the genealogy field occur because those souls are on the other side, impatient for their work to be done. Thus, The Church.

However, I digress. That is not the reason for my writing tonight. I am writing because I am alone and, for that, I am grateful.

The bathroom is a sweaty, steamy place now with the tangy smell of “processing” clinging to the moisture. (If you have ever been in a room where “processing” has taken place, then you know the smell. If you haven’t, it’s hard to describe. Imagine... sweaty socks on mushrooms.) I feel lighter than I did when I went in weighted with the day and worries and questions. It seems that somewhere in the steam and the tears, something released.

Midway through the 29th chapter I had read tonight, I suddenly realized how still the house was. I stopped, startled by the silence and the profound stillness of nothing. I almost stopped breathing. And, inside me, I felt the thing move that started forming when I stepped into my brother’s house. It pulsed alive and I looked at it, all sparkling and vibrant. There, in the bathroom, alone and feeling grateful for the serenity, I realized, yet again, my profound need for that very thing - serene space. I realized, yet again, that this year is about creating that.

I am alone tonight and, for that, I am grateful.

3 comments:

J.M. Tewkesbury said...

Love this post! So real and accessible. I know that steamy, process-y feeling and smell and it's wonderful.

I think you've just targeted one thing you need in your new home: a bathroom with a big, deep tub.

Years ago, when I was finishing up my thesis and in a roommate situation that was just BAD, I had a friend (still have her as a friend) who called me one day and said, "I'm going away for a few days. Would you mind housesitting for me?" She lived in this lovely, quiet, semi-secluded home in the hills around Orinda, California, with a bathroom that had a deep, deep jacuzzi tub that looked out a huge picture window onto the surrounding hills and scrub oak.

I spent an entire weekend in the peace and quiet of that house, soaking in that luxurious tub and being renewed. It was wonderful and healing.

Here's to more quiet moments in the weeks and months ahead as you transition. And if you take your ex up on that cottage, make sure he installs a tub worthy of the moments you cherish!

Cele said...

I love processing but my hot water heater rejects my attempts at longevity. Ergo, I'm half processed an eighth of the time. I need me that hot tub I have promised myself for the last three anniversaries running.

Everybody needs to process, dump the crap, and grow. It is best done in peace and quiet (I agree) solitude is part of the solution.

And everything Tewkes said in her final paragraph, because she is so wise that way.

Angie K. Millgate said...

JMT ~ Funny! Yeah, I realized that a good, comfortable tub is what I need too! He and I have actually talked about the tub, already. There is space for a deep, old-fashioned tub or a modern jetted thingy. I am actually leaning more toward the old-fashioned to keep in with the theme of the cottage.

Cele~ I am laughing so hard... "half processed an eighth of the time" I get that! That is how it was at my last apartment. Water heater could never keep up with my demands.

And, thank you, BOTH of you for the energy you have put behind my dream. I am open to receiving!!

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