This is my favorite photo of me from my recent trip to
Barcelona. Usually, I cringe or cry when I see myself frozen in time, but this
pic is different. My features were surprisingly devoid of the stress and
anxiety usually etched across them. My countenance was joyful and confident, my
complexion radiant next to the colorful mosaic tiles of Casa Batlló. Obviously
relaxed, inspired, and dare I say happy as my windblown, salt and pepper hair
framed a beaming smile and twinkling eyes.
When I first saw this pic, I was stunned. Not because I thought I looked beautiful, because I never did, but because I looked like ME. Not the me who has grown discontent, plagued by grief upon grief, anxiety, stress. Not the me waiting for the next horrible thing to fully crack me open and leave me a shattered, writhing mess unable to put myself back together. No, I look like the real me few people see or know. The me I actually like.
And then I simply could not do it anymore. I needed a reset. A soul
holiday, so I chose the place I wished I had visited when I was in Spain 13
years ago and booked tickets to Barcelona. I have gone to Europe many times and
returned with clarity, albeit exhausted, each time. This trip needed to be
different. It had to be less sightseeing and more resting to allow my tired
brain and wounded heart to come out to play again. I wanted to
experience who I could be instead of who I had become, to like myself again.
Things fell seamlessly into place: I used points to fly for free, found the perfect AirBNB overlooking the Mediterranean, and easily coordinated a visit with a friend who retired in Valencia, but still I waffled and almost canceled a few times. Self-sabotage much? And then I was almost derailed by the government shutdown (I initially mistyped that word with an i instead of u - fitting!)
The anxiety intensified and I was angry and worried, but I stuck to my guns and went 2 days after the government reopened. The whole trip was satisfying, peaceful, and self-indulgent and the magic of Barcelona invited the truest parts of me to reemerge. Even though I will protect her from most of the world, the gift of reconnecting with myself was priceless. Walking alone as the Mediterranean crashed around me, acutely aware of my smallness in the context of this universe broke through my cynicism and gave me the freedom to make peace with the God who brought life to me. I settled into the reality that my life is different from most people's. I did not marry or have children and that is often a heavy grief to bear in a world that favors couples and families. But it does not mean I cannot thrive on my own.
"I used to thing that the worst thing in life was to end up alone. It's not. The worst thing in life to to end up with people who make you feel all alone."
—Bobcat Goldthwait
In a world that favors fleeting, physical beauty, I found real beauty, definitely not staring
back at me in the mirror or in the buff bodies at the beach, but in art and nature. In kindness, grace, and mercy.
In the big, blue Mediterranean. I left with the resolve to let go of who the
world tries to force me to be and instead become who I want to be, who I was
created to be. And only in that am I found.
