December 5 – Let Go.
What (or whom) did you let go of this year? Why?
(Author: Alice Bradley)
Fair warning, I’m thinking this is going to be a length entry.
Recommended playlist:
- All American Rejects - It Ends Tonight
- Dashboard Confessional - Vindicated
- Relient K - Who I Am Hates Who I’ve Been (Acoustic)
When I first read this prompt, I thought “Man, I’m going to have a lot to say about this.” Now I wish I’d written my thoughts down sooner, because two days later I’m straining to recapture that same passion.
Sunday I was tired from not enough sleep, too much sun (this is Florida, what’s a ‘winter’? I got burned) and too much social contact. Part of me loves being social in groups, but prolonged and sustained time together can wear on anyone I think. I’ve read how necessary it is to always take time after a new experience to reflect on the results in order to grow, and I think that’s part of the social cycle.
In any case, I was cranky and one of my cranky thoughts was how close I’ve come to just letting go of all my ties, walking away from my family and my closest friends, and just trying to start anew elsewhere. (I’m stuck in a geographical rut) When I’m cranky and antisocial it seems inviting, but even two days later I can see how sad and unhappy that choice would leave me. It can be so tempting to walk away from problems and responsibilities, to stop putting in the effort required to either accomplish or avoid commitments, but quitting has costs too, and those costs are rarely immediately apparent.
Often, when we’re upset or frustrated, we lash out at those around us. I think as a parent you have to overcome this pretty quickly, because your offspring is so helpless, but as an non-propagating adult I haven’t learned those lessons in patience yet. But even without children I have learned to try not to lash out at those around me, because most of them are trying to support me, help me, and need my help too. We’re all only human, even the people we admire most, whose talents or virtues tempt us to instill a double standard.
This leads me to a tough subject, one of the hardest things I’ve struggled with letting go of this year. I decided this year that I had to let go of my connection with my best friend, because I was relying too heavily on one single friendship, and it wasn’t healthy for me or for him.
You might think, “But you’re best friends, that’s what friends are for!”
That could be, but I’ve never been convinced that I’m good at friendships so maybe you know better. I do know that over the years my best friend and I have been leaders, friends, roommates, and brothers. All of these shared experiences have lead to a strong bond and a strong understanding, but also problems. When we were roommates I would often get frustrated or upset because unspoken expectations went unfulfilled, or something innocuous was mistaken to be an intentional slight, and the result was a lot of unfounded animosity. I had anger with my best friend that I had no outlet for, and who could I talk with about it?
Over the years people have remarked how we share a relationship akin to romantic partners or at least married partners, but the irony is such a relationship would have been easier in some aspects I think. At least a romantic partner is able to use physical affection to express themselves, and at the end of the day there is a root attraction that keeps a romantic relationship together. With a friend, the attraction is on an intellectual level, you’re attracted to qualities in a friend that you wish you could adopt in your own life. Aristotle put it better than anyone else I’ve ever read, but basically writes that the best friendships are based on finding the best in someone else and doing what we can to promote it.
So why would I need to “let go” of my best friend this year? Well I don’t mean that we completely cut all ties and parted ways, but instead I’ve been struggling to let go of my unrealistic expectations I’ve developed for our friendship. Our modern society teaches us that relying heavily on the emotional and social support of one person is ideal; We must find one partner to share life’s joys and struggles with, but this is not called the friends forever model, it’s called marriage.
I realized in our friendship, we were filling a social void in each other’s lives that was intended for a rewarding romantic relationship. Which was unhealthy. Going places and doing things with a friend is nice, but if you go everywhere and do everything with that friend, how can either of you hope to be available to new connections?
Over the summer we had been roommates for the second time, an arrangement that was mutually convenient, but after I moved home again I realized that not only was I leaning too heavily on my friend, but I was hindering him in the process. Our friendship wasn’t an agreement to bear such a burden. From Aristotle’s standpoint I had stopped being part of a friendship that was “useful and good, based on admiration of one another’s virtue”, and instead was enjoying a friendship of utility, where I was abusing a bond into acting as a crutch for my benefit.
I know my friend well enough to hear his argument against my thoughts already. He would argue that from his standpoint he gains equally from my acquaintance, that our shared experiences are consensual (how suggestive that sounds! I mean here experiences like going to a comic book store, or playing video games), and that as an adult he would speak up for himself if he felt the need.
Perhaps it is arrogant of me to think that I know what is best for someone else, and the “for their own good” aspect of my “letting go” is condescending and pompous of me. Condescending and Pompous are certainly in my repertoire, just look at the language I use when I write defensively above, lol.
But even under a strong counter-argument, the fact remains that I think I’m disabling myself from growing, from moving on, from finding greater happiness. I don’t have too much modesty, except when I think of a prospective employer reading this, so I can openly admit that I enjoy physical affection. I’d say being physically close with another person in an intimate way that conveys trust and admiration is in my top five favorite things to do in the whole world. (Perhaps also Reading, Eating pasta dishes, and Snowboarding)
The idea that I am denying myself that pleasure is painful. I think that kind of “pursuit of happiness” is something that all people strive for, it’s certainly a freedom that can be denied to someone even if it’s not constitutional right (It’s in the US Declaration of Independence, which is not Law). There are people in the world who are constrained by class, wealth, health, and the oppression of others such that they can’t pursue the things that make them happiest.
I’m not one of those people.
While wallowing in my frustrations, self pity, doubt, and other minor tribulations I’m limiting myself, because I do have the freedom to pursue my joys. No one has ever said directly to my face “you cannot do that, even if it makes you happy, I say no” (well I couldn’t eat ALL those cookies anyway Mom). We build our own prisons, impose our own limitations, and this year, under the auspices of letting my best friend go, I started to let go of my prison.
I’m not done yet, there’s a lot of internal and external walls to go. Social constructs and childhood lessons, perceived pressure to succeed, to excel, to conform, and to perform. All kinds of walls that have been put into place to govern thought and behavior. We adopt them from our parents and peers, and from within ourselves. I don’t fault myself here, we each form these walls to protect ourselves and to learn to “fit in” to our societies, that’s normal human behavior. However, I think it is a serious issue in modern American society that our influences create too many boundaries and limitations, whether they’re public schools, the industries of our career fields, our familial traditions, or our religious institutions.
I warned that this would be a long entry, and I decided not to include ancillary people or habits that I’ve let go. I’ve given up fears, dreams, opportunities, and pent up anger… but I have to make one more point.
If you’re participating in Reverb 2010 as well this year, perhaps it’s because you feel lost. You feel the need to reflect and grow. Have your own imposed limitations become so great that this opportunity immediately spoke to you? If so, I hope you continue to reflect on what you can afford to “let go” of in your life, and see how much bigger the world can be afterward.