Dear Tiffany,
For years and years and years now, you have been terrified to spend time alone.
There was that terrible time when you first moved into the basement suite, and it was going to be your first time ever really living alone, and the fibromyalgia was so bad at that point – that was around the time that nights were just constant aching, nothing helped, Dylan made you a self-care kit with magic bags and you heated each one of them up, every night, and put them on your shoulders and your hips and your knees, and it was awful.
And when you were alone in the house, you were petrified. You had to leave the bathroom AND the kitchen light on, so that there was never a gap of darkness to be traversed in the night. You were just so scared, all the time. And then Scott moved in, and you didn’t have to deal with that daily flood of panic.
You are still scared to be alone.
You don’t talk much about this because it’s embarrassing and shameful. You invite people over for work dates when you’ll be home on your own. Go out to meet with people. Keep the flow of social media and text communication open wide, all the time (when you sleep alone, you sleep with the volume turned up on your phone, so texts will wake you, so people will be there with you, present because you are accessible).
It’s weird and ridiculous and other insulting words.
You’re jumpy when you’re alone.
Your back tenses up, even more than usual.
You’re more open to your shame gremlins, too.
Once upon a time, you were great at being alone. You used to go on regular writing retreats to Canmore by yourself, and you loved them. You’ve gone to San Francisco and parts of Europe by yourself, and you’ve loved it. You used to be relatively good at being alone, and you’ve lost that.
You’re in Costa Rica alone.
Not the whole time – you’re here to visit, you’re visiting every day, most of the day – but in the evenings, and the evenings are always the hardest, you’re alone.
Before you left, you came close, so close, to begging someone, anyone, to come with you. You did, actually, beg a few people, tried to keep it chill, no big deal, certainly not panicking right now, desperate to not be alone, to have someone, anyone, there. To be in the room. Be there in the evening so that you wouldn’t be alone.
You were terrified to go on your own. Not for the understandable reason that this is an emotional trip and emotional support is so valuable, no… not for that reason. For the other, less speakable reason. The fear of being alone. Alone with yourself, and your fears, and your failures, and your stupid racing heart and your stupid broken body and every single thing wrong with you. All of it, in the room, with no-one to protect you from being present with yourself.
Mom offered to come with you, and the sincere offer settled it. The desperate desire to say yes felt like a less-best self in action. You said no. You came down here alone. That’s what you do. Feel the fear and do it anyway. That’s who you are. That’s how you survive. You are scared all the fucking time, and you do the thing anyway. Eventually. Mostly.
And it was time for this one. Time to feel this fear and do it anyway.
The first night, you slept with the bathroom light on.
The second night, you slept with the bathroom light on.
The third night, you fell asleep with the bathroom light on, and when you woke up in the middle of the night, you weren’t all that afraid, and you turned it off, and the streetlights from outside were enough, and I am so proud of you for that.
I am so proud of you for being here alone.
I am so proud of you for awkwardly floating around the bed and breakfast, sitting in a chair by the pool for ten minutes before feeling self-conscious and going back to your room. Finding a restaurant and fucking up the order and almost crying from the shame and humiliation and having enough self-awareness and compassion and intention to take those deep steadying breaths you recommend to your clients, and coming back to this room, and sitting on the bed feeling awkward. Walking up and down the stairs three times because you don’t know if you can handle working in the common room but you’re not really feeling more time in your own room, and inevitably ending up in your own room. Sitting on the balcony for five minutes before getting freaked out by… something, it varies… and coming back inside. God, you’re such a goof.
The moments alone are so awkward and you are just doing them. You are just present in those awkward moments and I am so proud of you.
I love you.
I love you even when you’re alone.
Love,
Me
#100loveletters