I am almost sorry about yesterday. What a discouraging post! I say ‘almost’ sorry, because my goal here is to be honest about what goes on in my world, inside and out. I don’t want to hide my moods; certainly not the positive ones, but not the depressed ones, either. If I don’t watch it, my text drifts into the arid desert of analysis and logic, and away from the messy emotional compost that nourishes my more heartfelt writing. Personally, I find too much issue-dissection boring. Life is as much about what the heart feels as what the brain thinks. States such as passion, affection, sorrow, euphoria, fury, and desperation often look disorganized and senseless. If I am to be authentic, and open about my inner experience, sometimes I will sound wretched. (Another reason I’m not too regretful is that I received such nice, supportive comments!)
My feeling life gets tossed about by frequent typhoons of sadness and despair. Although the cloudiness alternates with brighter moods, including pressured winds of optimism and plans that soar high above firm ground, I never venture far from the shade. Until recently I called my storminess ‘bipolar disorder’, and my bleakness ‘depression’. At this stage in my life I find it more helpful to consider myself a bit temperamental, mournful, and sensitive, but to pitch the illness concept overboard. Whatever you name what I’ve ‘got’, however, I am never long on an even keel, and I spend a lot of time in the stagnant duldrum of hopelessness.
So if I am going to write with feeling, which makes more interesting reading than pure logic, there will be times when things sound a bit unhealthy. Self centered. Whining. Self pitying and immature. I hope the less uplifting posts will alternate with essays that climb toward ecstatic observations on the spiritual underpinnings of biology, or pieces that animate the possibility of utter contentment in the face of chaos and loss.
I could make the decision to censor ‘ugly’ material out; I could make myself always sound spiritually fit and possessed of wisdom. But I have given this thought, and my goal in this blog is to tell a story of life. Not just my own history, though that forms the basis of most of my ideas, but the larger story of life as a damaged human being. An injured person may have days when everything ‘falls into place’. On such days every insult, each wound, and the countless pangs of grief, are recognized as openings rather than cuts. The awareness blossoms that such fenestration widens the eyes so they can see more beauty, and expands the heart so it can offer more love. But most of us with hellish memories also suffer times when the vision clouds over, and the heart cramps into a lonely knot of muscle, unable to accommodate more than the thinnest stream of blood.
Even Jesus, we are told, had moments of doubt in the garden of Gethsemane. My spiritual development is as close to that of Jesus (or the Buddha’s, or Gandhi’s, or Mohammed’s) as a flea’s heart is to an elephant’s. So for me, at least, perfect and perpetual equanimity remain out of reach. I suspect this to be true of all but the most determined and fortunate of those who are raised deprived, assaulted and hated instead of nurtured, protected and loved. When children suffer overwhelming losses, they grow up with infinite feelings of want. When they are attacked, they learn to expect the worst. And when despised, they learn to hate themselves. Such lessons take a lifetime to unlearn. On the best days, one gets blessed with a radiant comprehension of life and its full panoply of emotions. One understands that joy, love, anger, and grief are just different directions that the same wind blows. One feels the uneven but never-ending currents of time, space and fate flow like God’s blood through the mind, body, and soul.
But there will also be days when it all looks like a lump. At those times the injuries seem too great, the loneliness too imminent, the joy too sparse, for life to be worth living.
I have my saintly moments. But they are not as common as my darker days. I am not offering a cure in this blog. I am not presenting my path to recovery as a method others can follow and find salvation. That would be a lie. My path has not proven to be direct and unerring in leading me to peace. My commitment to well-being wavers, and sometimes I just break down and cry.
That is the story I want to tell. The entire canvas, including the splattered and shredded edges that often get hidden when one uses an elegant frame. This is my life nailed to a tree. It is not hanging in the Met, or bound in the rare books section of a major library. It is a mess. But it is sometimes beautiful, often interesting, and it is all I have to offer.
My aim is not to lead people to think I always view life as a precious jewel, which I certainly don’t. Or that I am living the perfect story of recovery, which will never be the case. I choose instead to present the days as they strike me, the ideas as they arise, and the emotions as they crash over my bow.
Yesterday I was a shipwreck. Today I feel more like the transom of an ancient wooden fishing boat I once found on the beach in San Francisco. The varnish had at one time been shiny, and the wood had formed part of a stout and working vessel. What I found had turned into a labyrinth of splinters and warps and cracks. The paint that once proudly announced the boat’s name could barely be deciphered. But that piece of wood had an elegance it had never known when it was still functioning as a beam across the stern of a trawling watercraft. Time and catastrophe had etched it with a fineness that it seemed to want to share with me. So I took it home and put it in my garden.
This is my transom. It is wrecked, and not all of it will be beautiful. But I want to share it with you. Feel free to place it in some corner of your garden. Let the moss grow over it, and let the ants move in. Or burn it and toast marshmallows. It is my gift to you and to the world, if you want it. It will not always be attractive, or even inspirational, but I will try to keep it authentic.
So I don’t apologize for whining, even though I’m embarrassed. Yesterday, I was a lonely and discouraged child. Today I am an inept but enthusiastic poet. I am sometimes enlightened. I am often discouraged. But most of all, I am alive. And good or bad, upbeat or down, this blog is helping me stay that way. I pray that it helps you, too.
(I modified this post on 2009 August 28, c. 07:30 PDT, primarily in the first paragraph, but I changed a few other spots also.)

1
Milo at http://likopoliom.blogspot.com
Don’t ever apologize Will. I always thought that my “sad” moments make me appreciate the little things in life. and I really think that those are the ones that matter the most. like the things that people wished they had done more often when they get old and look back at their lives. In my dark moments of despair, I usually have a hard time admitting this…but i just so wished i could see this as a pure blessing and nothing else: to be able to understand, to be able to care for ones broken soul, to be able to connect to other people’s hearts. all these, kind of make me feel like… this is all worth it and i want to get up tomorrow,
and do it all over again!
sending you and Many all my love and best wishes,
Milo
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 7:53am.
2
Milo at http://likopoliom.blogspot.com
I know it is hard to say this is all worth it sometimes and I am so sorry Will if I offended you or any of your readers as i got carried away… so sorry.
Milo
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 7:56am.
3
Will at http://willspirit.com
Milo–
I can’t imagine you offending me or my small but valued readership. Your very concern that you might have caused distress shows how unlikely it is that you actually do so. And if you ever happened, by some miracle, to stumble onto something that struck a nerve with me, I already know you well enough to realize it would have been nothing more than an accident. Thank you for being concerned, but everything I’ve seen you write has seemed sensitive, kind, honest and brimming with good intention.
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 8:05am.
4
Wellness Writer at http://bipolarwellness.blogspot.com
Will,
Great post! We all have days (sometimes months) like you did yesterday, and I do believe that sharing the negative as well as the positive is an important part of blogging. And, I apologize if I didn’t make that clear.
Susan
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 4:23pm.
5
Will at http://willspirit.com
Susan–Nothing to apologize for; I have read your blog, and seen your honesty about where your experience and your moods take you. You and others who take similar approaches have been my role models in launching this enterprise.
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 4:32pm.
6
lostinamaze at http://inamaze.wordpress.com
When you write about who you are I see you as a human being which in turn helps me to see myself as a human being. I most often learn about myself through the experiences of others. This helps me carry on in my journey.
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 10:59pm.
7
Will at http://willspirit.com
lostinamaze–
thank you for the validation.
Posted at August 28, 2009 on 11:03pm.
8
robyn at http://thesuccessmentoringplace.com
I’ve read very few blogs and have never responded to one. I found yours through an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy list serve this morning. It reminds me of who and how I want to be as a human being. Thank you Will!
Posted at September 9, 2009 on 4:50am.
9
Will at http://willspirit.com
robyn–
One comment like yours makes the entire effort feel worthwhile. Thank you.
–Will
Posted at September 9, 2009 on 7:44am.
10
WonderingSoul at http://unattractivenavalgazing.blogspot.com/
You can make that two Will…
I have just found this blog and was astounded reading your post… astounded at seeing some of my own feelings and my own struggles written in the most beautiful words and images.
I struggle so much with writing from my feeling rather than cold logic. I struggle with the disgust I feel at myself if I write from feeling, the guilt, the need to apologise…
Thank you for writing what you have. It feels a little like looking in a very gentle, very careful mirror.
I’m so glad you are going to keep writing from your heart, and that you will do so without apology.
Posted at September 9, 2009 on 3:34pm.
11
Will at http://willspirit.com
WonderingSoul–
It seems tragic and misguided, but also unsurprising, that our culture has so successfully downgraded the organic mystery of feelings, in favor of the metallic utility of logic. As a former scientist and western trained physician, I don’t dispute that analytical reasoning has value. But a world where people feel ashamed, as I sometimes do, of being ‘too emotional’, risks limiting us all to only half-lives, or less. Thank you for sharing that understanding.
–Will
Posted at September 10, 2009 on 6:55am.
12
WonderingSoul at http://unattractivenavalgazing.blogspot.com/
A world where people feel ashamed of being too emotional keeps us in a prison. It is frightening to be in a place where all that is in you beats to get out but cannot because it will be met with disgust or scorn.
It’s shame that limits us to half-lives. The power of shame is limitless I find.
WS
Posted at September 13, 2009 on 5:59am.
13
Will at http://willspirit.com
Wonderingsoul–
Good to hear from you again. Yes. That is an important point about shame. As I’ve been writing this past week about society dictating that we all operate with strict affect governors, it did not occur to me to make the connection with the most potent tool used to beat us into our cramped emotional jail cells: shame. The subject demands a blog post of its own. Thank you.
–Will
Posted at September 13, 2009 on 7:08am.