Welcome to my world: A world in which I am still finding my way and my voice; where the language is laced with dry humor; where stilettos and football games go together like peas and carrots; where happy hour starts long before 5; where I make mistakes, get angry and laugh my ass off; where I will never love anything as much as I love my cat; where no one knows your name and you like it that way; where comments are welcome and where strong women who fight for what they believe in are always adored.
I tend to see the world
through an Ansel Adams photographic lens, that is to say, “black and white”.
While I keep attempting to inject a wider spectrum of gray into my two toned, “right
vs. wrong”, “love vs. hate” world, it’s been consistent uphill struggle.
I believe boundaries to be an important part of life.
Comfort zones. Deal breakers. The disclosure of privileged information. Whether
they indicate the point at which a relationship reaches the end of its
emotional tether or simply the line that, once crossed, lands you swiftly in an
Iranian jail and resulting in years of imprisonment followed by equally scary Lisa
Ling interviews upon release – boundaries, if not clearly marked, can be
precarious places.
My therapist likened
healthy emotional boundaries to the idyllic image of a house surrounded by a manicured
lawn and bounded one each side by a picket fence. The fence is a clearly
defined, yet semi permeable structure erected to keep undesirables at bay (i.e.
negative pressures, cognitive trespassers, basically the in-laws of the
emotional community); while still allowing for the option of admittance of
positive emotions, constructive monologues and affirmative influences, (i.e.
the puppies and kittens or free range hens romping about our mental yard).
After describing this Zen-like
state of mental health to which she recommended I strive, she took a deep
breath. Scarlett, at present your “house” is surrounded on the north, south and
west by a 10 foot high brick wall, laced with barb wire. The east side,
however, not only is void a wall, but any clear demarcation of property
whatsoever. Moreover, you have posted a neon, blinking, “open-house” sign out
front exposing the lawn to many an unwelcome trampler.
That is to say, either you
go to inexorable lengths to keep people out, or you lay out the red carpet all
too quickly, consequences be damned. A situation very much in need of
modification.
I took issue with this image for a
number of reasons not least of which being the necessity for an immediate
change of setting from a suburban, “Leave It To Beaver” avec picket fence to one of a urban
penthouse condo with a 24 door man. But that’s besides the point.
Whether we’re talking about 24-hour
door men and alarm systems or brick walls and picket fences, both images denote unhealthy extremes, the hallmark of a
black & white worldview. Either I’m walled up like Fort Knox, or I am
constructing an emotional superhighway for which I have not even thought to
charge a toll. More often than not I frantically switch between the two exhausting
both myself and those around me.
All this to say, I met
someone. He’s kind of great. I like him. Comfort zones have been pushed.
Boundary lines obscured. Needless to say, I’m more than a little bit freaked
out and those brick walls with their height and strength and ability to obscure
look mighty appealing in the face of vulnerability. And so up and down I go in on the "he loves me, he loves me not", "I'm safe, I'm going to get hurt." yo yo.
Its painfully elusive,
this emotional balance. Can a boundary line be redrawn once crossed? Do I permit him to wander unchecked about upon my emotional real estate? Do I change the locks just
in case?
Or do I stand here and
first let my eyes adjust to the newly emerging shades of gray?