"What's Next?" by James Aschbacher |
2019 was like that for me.
My five days at Dominican, and the aftermath, spread over the next two weeks (grab bars in the shower, walkers, rollators, PT, etc), petty much wiped out all my good intentions for the new year. After losing that first month, I feel like I was never able to catch up.
Each new season took me by surprise. Celebrations and holidays raced by, barely blips on my internal radar. By the time it finally stopped raining, it was summer. The next thing I knew, Halloween decorations were going up. Christmas? Hah! Despite the mailing list of 100 recipients that Art Boy and I honed over the years, I didn't send out one single card. If he had a grave, my sweetie would be spinning in it. This is not the way he would have done things!
Where did the time go? Where did I go? I still have no idea. This has been my lost year.
Since I haven't racked up anything in the way of accomplishments to point to over the last 12 months, I have to start looking at the old year from a new perspective. Let's not think of it as slacking. Let's say instead that I've been incubating. Temporarily diverted out of the mainstream of life, I've been in a holding pattern, taking take stock of where I am. And, what's more important, with the new year looming — what comes next?
It's like I've spent 2019 wrapped up in a chrysalis, waiting to see who or what will emerge on the other side.
What's incubating inside that chrysalis? |
It's clear that somebody has to take over the reins of this life, and, sadly, there's no one to do it but me, a daunting prospect without my co-pilot. Did I say co-pilot? Oh, please. James was not only the driver, he built the coach, groomed the horses, and paved the road. I was just the passenger. The idea of moving up into the driver's seat now, by myself, is one I greet with a resounding gulp.
So I have to hope that whoever is incubating inside this chrysalis is up to the task. I can't let another whole year slip through my grasp while I sit on the sidelines, fretting. The past is prologue, as Shakespeare says in The Tempest, and I'm looking forward to the next act. It's got to be an improvement over the last one!
Let's hope I can get a grip in 2020. No more excuses!
(Above right: Little Love Bugs, by James Aschbacher)
Honest, lovely, and full of inner strength - that's not only your writing, it's you! May 2020 bring you all good things!
ReplyDeleteOh Lisa! You say it SO WELL! Love your honesty and hope that things will perk up...WAKE up in 2020. Love you gal!
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