I love a big, bright, luminescent full moon. And sometimes,
just sometimes when I stare at it for too long, I can feel a bit of loony-ness
come out in me. I laugh a little louder; sigh a little deeper; talk a little
longer; create a little wilder; and believe a little stronger. I like the full
moon because it gives me license to do all those things. That is – as if I
needed a license – NOT!
Recently we had a full moon. I think there is an
after-affect. Maybe a kind of glow that lingers after the moon sets and the sun
rises. Maybe there is a kind of “full moon craziness glow” that lasts for days
after the full moon. That would explain a lot about both mine and other people’s
actions.
I had an awesome Easter Sunday with my family. I laughed so
hard my sides ached; I talked until my throat was sore; and ate more than
healthy amounts of every tasty food served. Then I went home (really just downstairs)
and crashed into bed at an extremely early hour. I don’t know if my excesses
were a result of the full moon and I don’t care. What a wonderful day!
Riley chose a different sort of day. He stayed in his room
and watched NCIS re-runs and played with a visiting dog. Gander is a golden
retriever who is too old to just run around in the backyard with the other
visiting pups. He is quiet and gentle. Both Riley and Gander enjoyed each other’s
company. It was a good way to spend the day for both of them.
Riley and I were presented with several paths through our
day and we each chose a different one. Neither path was wrong, crazy, good or
bad. It was just a route of our choice. It was what worked best of each of us.
It’s my experience that life is a little like that. There
are lots of paths we could take and we make our choices based on information
available at the time. Sometimes we take a path that is well worn by others who
went before us. Sometimes we pull out our machete and carve a whole new path
just for that segment of our life. No path is right or wrong. Sometimes there
are detours. Sometimes a bridge may be washed out and we must go back and start
again.
The interesting thing about these paths is that they really
don’t lead anywhere. They are just routes that provide scenery, opportunity,
joy, sorrow as we go through our life. There’s an old saying that goes like
this: Life is not a destination. Life is a journey. If that’s true then what is
important is not where the path leads, but what is found along the way.
Riley’s path is different from mine. He prefers certain
things that I would avoid at all costs. It’s his path and his choice to follow
it. It’s not my place to carve the path for him. However, if his path puts him
into quicksand, I can chose to reach out the branch that pulls him out so he
may continue in whichever direction he wants. Or I can choose to just do
nothing.
My path is one that has ugly, dangerous thistle bushes mixed
in with the beautiful gardenias and camellias. I know they all have a purpose
and I appreciate their beauty even in the ugliness. I encounter many different
people and they are each on their own path. If our paths cross, we may converse
for a while, share a cup of coffee, exchange ideas or we may simply ignore each
other. Sometimes people join me as a walk down my path. It’s their choice to
walk beside me or to go their own way. I may offer my opinion on how dangerous
it may be to walk through an alligator infested swamp, but if that’s the path
the person chooses, well, so be it.
While walking down this path as Riley’s caretaker, I stop
and try to gain every bit of information I can so that I can make informed
choices about my direction. I talk to him. I talk to other addicted persons. I
talk to other caretakers. I talk to my family and friends. I get their points
of view, but at the same time, I remember that their points of view are just
“their points of view” and don’t have to be my point of view.
Riley makes his desires very clear to me about the path he
wants to take. He wants to not be sober. That doesn’t mean he wants to be
drunk. But he doesn’t like sobriety. This path he is on at the present time is
not a path he would have chosen willingly. It was the only route available. It’s
like having to get over a mountain when all but one road is washed out.
Sobriety is Riley’s mountain and he just wants the fastest way out of it. It
would not be my choice. But, it’s not my path… its Riley’s.
In my opinion, Riley’s quality of life is pretty good right
now. I don’t know why he would want to change that. But the fact remains that
he does want to change it. He wants off this path and change the quality of his
life because for him this life doesn’t have the quality he wants. For him, if
this is the only life-quality he will ever have available to him, he would
rather get off the life path altogether.
It is hard for a non-alcoholic person to understand why
anyone would want to live in a hazy, crazy world of inebriation. As I sip on my
occasional (once or twice a year) glass of wine while having dinner with a
friend, I am careful not to enter that place of having one-too-many. I hate the
feeling of being personally out of control and so I avoid it as often as possible.
Riley is the opposite. He loves that feeling of euphoric floating
through any event. He doesn’t care what the consequences are; he only knows
that the feeling is what he covets. It
is the path he will choose at every opportunity. If he can’t take that path, he
will take the path to his room that ends in his rocking chair in front of the
TV. He’s not really comfortable there, but he is as comfortable as he can be
sobriety.
My point to my readers is this: You don’t have to walk my
path. You don’t have to agree with the path of my choice. You are entitled to
walk your own path. You are welcome to express your opinion about the path I
chose. However, no one is asking you to read about my journey. If it upsets you
or is incites personal anger, maybe you should read a different blog. If
my point of view is offensive, why bother to read it at all? I’m sure there are
other blogs out there that would intersect in a more agreeable manner along
your path.
No matter what path you choose, my path will continue even if it is lighted by the full moon craziness glow.