Year That Trembled and Reel'd Beneath Me
Year that trembled and reel'd
beneath me!
Your summer wind was warm enough, yet the air I breathed froze
me,
A thick gloom fell through the sunshine and darken'd me,
Must I change
my triumphant songs? said I to myself,
Must I indeed learn to chant the cold
dirges of the baffled?
And sullen hymns of defeat?
(Walt Whitman,
Leaves of Grass)
Well, yes, he is writing about the Civil War. Still,
the new Terrence Malick movie, The Tree of Life, gives us permission to
understand our pathetic little lives in cosmic terms. So the Civil War as
analogue for the struggle of the middle-aged woman for mental and physical
equilibrium - maybe it isn't quite so outrageous as it seems. Anyway, we have
been borrowing from Walt Whitman to think about female mental anguish since Now
Voyager.
Exiled from my own body, afraid to be alone, go to bed, take a
shower, remove my shoes, afraid of anything that might force me to touch my own
skin that does not respond, to feel dead flesh. Sitting seems to pinch the
nerves running down my legs, teasing little tingles in my toes, creating a
hypersensitive spot on my ankle, and other horrors. I am afraid to sit. I am
afraid to lie down. I am afraid.
These are past pains, the fears of
2011. I have been nutty with pain and fear this past year.
However, this
is the New Year. In 2012 I am part of my own body: I am with myself, in myself,
integrated with myself. My breath is a bridge, connecting me to myself,
connecting me to the universe. My fingers massage the pressure points in my
legs, establishing harmony. My body is not an alien thing, but a perfectly tuned
instrument that I play with my breath. This is the New Year, this a new
world.
This is simply menopause, right? The dizziness, detachment, sense
of doom - this is all part of it, right? I am not truly dying, right? No, no,
all will be well. This is a new year. A year of getting better.
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