Skip to main content

The Scrambler

I'm in the Orlando area this weekend. I've spent a delightful few days surrounded by and laughing with loved ones and am now soaking in a few hours completely to myself in my favorite coffee shop in Kissimmee.

Spending the afternoon in the town where I lived for the majority of my married life is a bittersweet feeling. So much has changed that I barely recognize the street corners. At the same time, no amount of real estate development can strip the landmarks etched into my memory of the life I lived here.

While stopped at a light in front of Old Town, I felt an unfamiliar twinge in my heart. I know that place well because for a few years it was the source of one of my few joys. In the darkest days of my marriage I would drive out to Old Town, buy some tickets, and ride the Scrambler. As I was thrown from side to side in the carriage, lights strobing around my eyes, I would laugh. No matter how crappy I felt inside, I could laugh sitting there.

So I would ride as much as possible.

It was here that I finally reached bottom about four years ago. I was alone at home on a Friday night, my mind churning with the misery of my marriage. I went to ride the Scrambler. I'll never forget the sheer desperation I felt as I rode my favorite ride. Over and over and over. The lights flashed. The carriage rocked. I let myself be thrown with every turn.

My life was scrambled and out of control. And I decided that if I ever decided to kill myself I would have to ride the Scrambler first.

Reaching the point that you even allow the thought of suicide to enter your mind is a scary moment, even if you know beyond a shadow of a doubt that you would never follow through with the process. I scared myself. I knew then and there that something HAD to change in my life. It did...in a very different manner that I ever anticipated.

It's funny to me now in that peculiar-not-haha way. I am finally at peace in my life...the peace I looked for for years. That storm is behind me and the pieces of myself I've discovered amaze and amuse me. Still, the sight of that ride made me realize just how my life and heart were ripped apart. That's a truth I have not really stopped to consider in the last few years.

I won't say it's been easy. I won't end this post with some hokey positive message. The truth here is that life sometimes sucks. For all of us. The scars life leaves in our hearts and minds will be around for a very long time. And it's all part of the process...the way it's supposed to be.

Comments

Christy said…
Thank you for not ending with a hokey positive message. Reality seldom ends that way, and I like reading things that don't.

Popular posts from this blog

Pardon the Interruption

It's 10:00. My race clothes are laying across the top of the dog crate. I've already consumed my all-natural sleep aid. The alarm is set for 4:45 in the morning. I should be sleeping, but my mind is spinning at an unnatural rate. Remember this poem ? The subject of that poem married just a few weeks ago, and I just finished looking through his wedding photos. It's a strange feeling. Not one of loss. Or Regret. Or even wistfulness. I'm thoroughly happy for both of them in a way that will seriously not make sense to most of the people I know. I suppose there will always be an odd sense of knowing in a situation like this. I know the feel of those lips. I've seen that look in his eyes. What I felt for him was real and pure and drives the feeling of satisfaction that is currently overwhelming me. I love knowing that he's in love--even if it's not with me. I even saved my favorite photo to my computer because the image stirred something in me that needs to be sti...

On Muchness

A dear friend confessed to me last night that he had lost his muchness and found it again. I confessed the same and even admitted the ridiculous series of events that recently sapped my own muchness. That little confession seemed to do wonders. It's so easy to fall out of step with myself. In fact, I do it quite naturally. Growing up in a Christian home, I took to heart the instructions to love my neighbor more than I love myself. Oh, wait! I just checked the scripture. "Love your neighbor as yourself." I may have been doing this the wrong way. I ended 2010 with the resolution that I would no longer make decisions out of fear. I am starting 2011 with the resolution to make decisions based on what I want. I've struggled with this because I've always believed that I should consider the needs and wants of others before my own. I'd like to think this is a valiant approach, but the truth is that it only leads to martyrdom...and I don't think I was given the opp...

TMI and Tidal Waves

As usual, it's been a busy week around these parts, and none of my activities this week involved running. If my grandmother could hear at the moment and complete a sentence without hacking up a lung, she'd ask me what's wrong. I'd have to confess that my eczema has flared up in this oh-so-cold-there's-ice-on-my-car south Florida weather, and my skin is so itchy that I have bruises up and down my limbs from all the scratching I've been doing. There are some days I'm relieved to know men with calloused hands. (Before you take that last comment too seriously, remind yourself that I am writing this at 9:30 on a Friday night.) Anyway... I met up for coffee with someone last night who proved to stoke my creative juices. I'll spare you the details of the conversation, but I did have to stop him mid sentence to point out that that particular conversation will most definitely become part of "La Isla Encontrada." Fortunately, he agreed to it, and I fully...