Saturday, January 3, 2009

Leap of Faith

I've been scanning in the negatives to our wedding pictures.
As always, I seem to bring on the pain by looking at how happy we were.

By the time I met Mark I had mapped out my life. I was going to pour my passion into work and changing the world as a lawyer. I was going to lead a life of the mind, not of the heart. I had been dating, but nobody posed a threat to my "plan". As soon as I met Mark I knew that he threatened everything. For two months I wavered. After our initial meeting at the bookstore, and our subsequent marathon conversation until 7 the next morning I was too frightened to see/go out with him again. I stood safely on terra firma, saw the potential happiness on the other side but I focused on what would happen if I fell. Mark was understandably upset and hurt...but I remember he said that he was "infinitely forgiving".

To borrow from Kierkegaard, I finally took a leap of faith for Mark. In retrospect, it seems like it should have been a safe bet. In nine years, I managed to get him to yell at me once, and I worked really hard at it! He just didn't have a mean bone in his body. I knew some of that right away, but if you are going to truly love someone, truly give them your heart it takes a leap of faith. Kierkegard used this term for religion. I'd argue that love is a bigger risk than religion. If you take the leap and believe in religion, you don't find out that you were wrong until you die. Leaping for love exposes you to a living hell if you're wrong. I lept, left my life plan behind and found true love...the kind of love that makes your heart flutter when you spot him in a crowded store, and the kind of love that allows you to be comfortable "showing your ass" to them. Mark used this expression for the ugliness that exists in all of us that we hide from most people. I showed my ass to Mark, and my heart fluttered when I saw him.

I was talking with my friend Lilly yesterday. She knows about taking "the leap". Like many people she has lept and the person on the other side let her fall when she most needed him. Mark and I were devoted to each other. Some people didn't understand this. They didn't understand why a man who wouldn't "take crap" from anyone would take it from me. They didn't understand why he would choose to stay in bed with me when I felt ill rather than to be with others that he loved. There were people that also didn't understand how I could stay with Mark through some of his rough spots. I never would have put up with the same behavior from earlier relationships.

There's just one answer. Love. Love does not exist only in good times. That's easy. Love is proven when it is most difficult - when every rational fiber in you tells you that it is in YOUR best interests to run, but you remain because love knows only devotion. It will not abandon you when you're weak, ugly, sick, crazy, or in jail. It also can't be ended by death. True love never packs up and leaves.

I will never be one of those widows who deifies my late husband. I don't do Mark justice by doing that. Mark was not a saint. He had flaws, just as I had and continue to have. The most serious "flaws" are now explained by his tumor, but nonetheless Mark was real. The key was we were devoted. People have told me repeatedly that our devotion to each other was remarkable. There was never any resentment when one of us needed from the other. Mark used to have a very simple way of explaining why he would do anything I needed. He said "You are me".

Without devotion, love is just a fad. With devotion, love even survives death. I still love Mark. I will always love him. Not just because I choose to (although I do), but because loving Mark is who I am. As far as Mark was concerned when he "saved" me, he saved himself too. I felt the same way about him. There was nothing I wouldn't do for him. Having lost him, that devotion eats away at me. I'm the one that could have saved him. I have a million "if onlys". If only I took him to the Mayo Clinic. If only I would have woke up two hours earlier. They go on forever. It makes life painful.

But now, as I look at those wedding photos I see the happiness on our faces. You can't fake those type of smiles. It truly was the happiest day of our lives. We made that leap, and we landed together. We stayed together.
Love isn't something you can play safely. Make the leap, and stay there.

Connections

I've been hiding for over a month. I'm not sure who or what I'm hiding from. I just know that I've been hiding.
I have heard people claim that we are the sum total of everyone that we've met in our lives. I'm not sure that I wholly agree with that...I'd like to believe that there is something unique in each of us that can't be simply molded by our experiences. However, when I think of who I am now, versus who I was when I met Mark, I think maybe it has some truth.

Mark and I spent nine years together. We lived together, slept together, we loved, we fought, we expressed our biggest fears, kept a few secrets - but our hearts were always an open book. He has affected me more than anyone else in my life. We spent more time together, one on one than I spent with anyone else. Some of those hours were spent just huddled together sleeping - but even then we were connecting. I always woke up when he left the bed. Part of me must have known something was wrong. If he wasn't next to me sleeping I'd wake up and find him usually in the bathroom. Now we know that he woke up frequently because of his tumor. After he left, I couldn't sleep for over three months because my body sensed his absence and refused to allow me to rest without him. All I knew was that he wasn't where he belonged...next to me. He never will be again.

You don't need candlelight dinners to connect. Open yourself to the multitude of connections that everyday life offers. Don't pass them up - they may never occur again.