I tried another way for just a couple minutes

I rode my bike home tonight. It’s been a tough week at work. Noth­ing colos­sal hap­pened, but I’ve had to remain present and solve some prob­lems and deal with some oth­er prob­lems being out­side my abil­i­ty to solve, and be around my boss when he’s been hav­ing a very dif­fi­cult week and not par­tic­u­lar­ly want­i­ng to hear that I could­n’t solve the things that I can­not solve. Espe­cial­ly because the stuff I can’t fix has left the project I work on with­out the abil­i­ty to col­lect rev­enue for a lit­tle more than a week now.
Build­ing for a while I have been more and more over­whelmed by con­fronting the details of my last rela­tion­ship. I’ve done some writ­ing to iden­ti­fy my resent­ments and my parts in it all. On Sun­day after spend­ing an hour or so writ­ing I stopped and went home. On the bus I just felt exhaust­ed and drained and sud­den­ly I wondered:
What is the point of all this? Am I look­ing to get healed and move on? What is the point of that? So I can jump in and get destroyed all over again? No, of course, it’s more like so I can go in and not make the same mis­takes again. Yeah, right. I don’t believe it’s pos­si­ble. I don’t have that faith that the next time it will be better.
Isn’t it bet­ter then just not to have a next time? Isn’t it bet­ter for me to be bit­ter and lone­ly than to risk going out there to do bat­tle again?
Act­ing as if. Act­ing as if it actu­al­ly will be bet­ter for me to heal and move on. That’s what I’ve been told, so that’s what I get to do.
Then I get instruct­ed to go and have fun this week­end. It’s a blow to my ego that I have to be told to have a good time, and I’m a lit­tle scared that I’ve let any­one close enough to know that I have no social life. But Sam fig­ured it out. It seems like a bur­den. Once again, it’s eas­i­er for me to just stay here, rent a movie, do my laun­dry, and go back to work on Monday.
Give me my cocoon back, already!
So the tapes were run­ning full speed on the way home tonight, of course. Where am I going to find a date for Wednes­day, nev­er mind make some sort of social plans for tomor­row or tonight? and What about going to the gym and pun­ish­ing myself all day until I’m too raw to move? Does that count as social?
Then the guy in the mini­van made the right hand turn into the gas sta­tion direct­ly in front of me. I was close enough that I had to pull in to the gas sta­tion myself in order to avoid slam­ming into the minivan.
I shout­ed at him. I had the rage in my bel­ly and I let it out at him. What the fuck were you think­ing? He got a few choice words thrown at him and I saw his pas­sen­ger — his girl­friend or wife — look­ing back at me, afraid. He slowed and I rode around and back out to the street, where there was a red light and I let myself stop.
I was shak­ing and breath­ing hard. The adren­a­line wave was whip­ping through me, although I’d stopped. And in an instant, I saw myself as this fierce ball of rage lash­ing out at this guy who fucked up in traf­fic. I looked back and the words I read some­where once came to me: «Putting out of our minds the wrongs oth­ers had done, we res­olute­ly looked for our own mistakes.»
I dis­mount­ed from the bike and walked it back toward the gas sta­tion. I took my hel­met and glass­es off and went back toward the mini­van. The dri­ver was pay­ing, and I stayed far from the vehi­cle. I could see his wife watch­ing me from the pas­sen­ger seat. The dri­ver turned from the cashier’s win­dow and saw me. I stayed still and did­n’t get close because I did­n’t want to alarm him.
I apologized.
I told him that I had no cause to call him names or use the kind of lan­guage that I had and that I was sor­ry. He apol­o­gized and said that he had­n’t seen me and did­n’t know that I was there until I’d yelled. I thanked him for his apol­o­gy and he asked if I were all right. I told him that he’d giv­en me quite a scare but that I was unhurt. I told him to have a good evening and I got back on and rode away.
And I did­n’t stop sob­bing the rest of the way home. Stripped of my rage, I had noth­ing left but the rem­nants of my fear, and not even any more shout­ing to push it out.
I don’t expect any­one else to under­stand it, in fact, I expect sev­er­al of you to think I’m a sap for not going back and beat­ing him up or break­ing his wind­shield or some­thing. But I could­n’t let myself get away with it.
And now I’m just tired, and the music is playing:

tak­ing a jour­ney
trac­ing a mem­o­ry
as long as the world keeps turn­ing
your secret is safe with me

and I won­der: who will keep my secret safe? Who will take that journey? 

7 Replies to “I tried another way for just a couple minutes”

  1. Thank you for going back to
    Thank you for going back to the mini­van. Not because it helps me in any direct way, but because it was such a fuck­ing decent thing to do. Thank you for trun­cat­ing the rage.

  2. Thanks for shar­ing. So ya
    Thanks for shar­ing. So ya know, for what­ev­er rea­son, as I read this, tears welled up and start­ed rolling. More because I know the feelings…and part­ly because when I hear you say things … cer­tain quotes, I am remind­ed of my dad who I miss so much. I’ve told you this before but the best and clos­est times I had to my dad, were when I went to his AA meet­ings with him for 6 months. More for me. I gained so much strength from oth­ers in what was one of the hard­est times in my life ever. And maybe I cried, because I haven’t cried in a real­ly long time. For any­one or any­thing. And I wish I had moments of stregth like that when I could put aside my pride and hum­ble myself enough to real­ize that I’m not per­fect, I’m not even close and I should not always demand my own ways, nor should I assume that when some­one does some­thing (like cut me off) it is per­son­al or intentional.

    Sor­ry for ram­bling in your journal.

  3. Y’know, I live in per­pet­u­al
    Y’know, I live in per­pet­u­al fear that I’ll make a turn or lane change into a cyclist, because most of the time, I just can’t see them.

    Larg­er vehi­cles, like my truck or I guess this guy’s mini­van, are more dif­fi­cult to see out of, espe­cial­ly when there’s some­one in the pas­sen­ger seat. Not mak­ing excus­es, but for a cyclist, it’s some­thing to be aware of. Trucks, vans, treat them as you would a strange, growl­ing dog, or high-volt­age AC.

    I’m sure the guy near­ly shit when he real­ized that he almost turned into your vehicle.

  4. Hey!
    I’ve been rack­ing my

    Hey!

    I’ve been rack­ing my brains out try­ing to fig­ure out where I’ve heard the song you ref­er­ence in your Novem­ber 22, 2003 entry … 

    tak­ing a journey
    trac­ing a memory
    as long as the world keeps turning
    your secret is safe with me

    I don’t remem­ber where I heard that song, and I can’t fig­ure out who sings it. As I remem­ber its a down­tem­po tune with female vocal. When I search Google for the lyrics, the only result that comes back is your jour­nal entry. You are my only hope! I’m pulling my hair out! Arg!

    1. Valen­cia
      «Valen­cia» by Rachid Taha. I have it on the «Arabesque» Com­pi­la­tion on GUT/Restless. It’s just as you describe, a love­ly song.

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