Sunday, February 03, 2008

Why do we fall?

"And we do we fall, Master Bruce?"
No answer.
"So that we might better learn to pick ourselves up."
From Batman Begins

I cried today.

Nothing substantial, just a few brave pioneers leaving the comfort and safety of their homeland, expanding out over an ever-changing terrain of nose, cheek, hair, and chin, only to be wiped out of existence with the brush of a hand, or to dry up in alien territory.

The Patriots lost. For them, it may have only been a game, but for me it meant something more. I am aware that it is only a football game of minor significance, but for me, the near-perfect Patriots were the crux of a season-long metaphor.

In some consequential way, I felt that I needed the Patriots to win. I have been following the Patriots most of the season and have based Sunday afternoons and nights around their games. I wanted to believe that perfection was possible, that extraordinary achievement is within the grasp of ordinary men. Tonight, the broken pieces of a dream scatter my thoughts and feelings. Their failure just accentuates my failures and unrealized potentials all the more.

I wrote many months ago of A Raisin in the Sun, about Langston Hughes's Dream Deferred. I've never had many hopes and dreams for my own life; I haven't figured out what I want to be when I grow up. I'm 28 years old. I feel like a tiring pugilist with too few tallies on my scorecard and too few rounds left to change anything.

I started working again recently. I make air clutches for an agricultural company in Ames; my job title is product assembler. I robotically grab appropriate pieces from storage boxes as fast as I can and put them together to fabricate, also as fast as I can, a small range of slightly different products. An image that runs through my head during work is of the giant machine-operated assembly lines of automobile plants. I pretend I am one of those machines, dulling my senses to baseline levels of being to steel myself against the relentless onslaught of a pedestrian existence.

Lana asked me what work was like. I told her that I died a little inside each day. I hope she doesn't believe me, I am only joking about a subpar situation, but make no mistake, I don't exactly well up with pride when I think of my job. I would almost rather tell friends and family that I am unemployed and have them think of me as a deadbeat than answer their questions about my work.

It does get to me though. Last week, on one particular day of which I can't properly remember the date of, I was fighting tears all day. I am not even sure why. I got up in the morning and simply felt hopeless. I struggled to not break down in front of Lana, struggled to keep it together on the way to work, and struggled to keep my composure during the eight hours of the day. I was reminded of an incident from my childhood that I just couldn't shake.

It was either fourth or fifth grade and a game of football was being played during recess. I was not an athlete, but a skinny, awkward, and unconfident player on any sports field. In fact, it was probably difficult to judge whether I was an on-field spectator or team contributer. One day I start getting some passes thrown my way...and I caught them! I was riding high off of an as-of-yet unknown wave of confidence and schoolyard glory. The player guarding me became embarrassed. After one fateful reception, instead of two-hand touching me, he rushes at me, sidesteps me, and somehow elbows me full-force in the side of the neck. I fall to the ground in a daze, get the wind knocked out of me, and recover to a state of excruciating pain in the muscles of my neck. I realize I have been crying unbeknownst to myself, then look up to see the perpetrator, crying himself. I always wondered why he was crying. I was in no state to fight back even if I had wanted to, which I didn't particularly wish for.

I spent the rest of the school day staring at the minutest details of my desk, focusing on trivial aspects of my surroundings to drown out the throbbing pain in my neck and head. When I lost focus, the blinding pain would return until I could trick myself into finding that tiny spot of infinite oblivion that was available on my desk. I didn't cry, though the makeshift dam in my mind was strained beyond any preconceived worst-case scenarios. Walking home increased the blood-flow to the injured area, and I could feel each and every systolic pulse as if there were a bass drum in my neck. I said hello to mom and walked straight upstairs to my bedroom where my dog, Ceaser was lying on a bean-bag chair. I shut the door and the levee broke. Hugging my dog, I sobbed until there was nothing left but the mucusy choking sounds one makes when they have exhausted the capacity to cry.

That is the way I felt at work on that particular day, like I would hold the tide of emotions in all day until I could just get home, hug one of my cats, for Lana would have been gone, and just cry until it was physically impossible to continue. But I didn't. I'm sure during the day my eyes grew red and glistened from an imminent outburst, but by the time I got home, I didn't feel so bad anymore. I suppose I'm not a kid anymore, maybe I'm no longer capable of such a range of emotions. Maybe adults just aren't supposed to wear their hearts on their sleeves, certainly men aren't encouraged to make their emotions so salient and observable. Yet, maybe kids are onto something. When do kids show their truest emotions? All the time! I know when my nephew is happy to see me, when he is thrilled to get a present, when he isn't happy about something, when he doesn't want to go to bed, when he is scared, and when he is sad. When do adults show the most emotion? When somebody is born or somebody dies.

So, I cried on the way home today. I doubt Lana even knew, it was dark and we weren't talking anyway. I wasn't crying because the Patriots lost, but because in their failure, my own felt significantly amplified. I certainly know that my lot in life is in no way attached to the success of a football team, but for one magical season, I seemed to staple my hope to the continued pursuit of perfection unparralled by any team of my generation. I still maintain hope for the future, as I've already coped with and begun to dissociate from a football game barely two hours over.

I believe a mainstream shoe company or sports drink company or something of the like would have us believe that "impossible is nothing". Well, impossible is something, indeed. But it is the challenge of besting "impossible" that makes life worth living; it is the ever-present foe, the unseen, worthy adversary that must be battled everyday. Loss is inevitable, but it is the fortitude needed to rise again to meet "impossible" that separates the eternal fighters from the footnotes.

Why do we fall?

So that we might better learn to pick ourselves up.

8 Comments:

At 6:09 PM, Blogger jsa said...

Hi Kevin-

You don't know me, but I'm also an ultimate player who grew up in Ames.. and I found your post incredibly moving and inspiring... and that's not the first time I've had that feeling reading your blog. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts and feelings.

Jayadev

 
At 5:00 PM, Blogger Seth said...

good post, Kevin, though it might have been better if told as a story around a fire in my parent's backyard. at the very least, everyone would have laughed instead of having to experience any real emotion...

 
At 8:08 AM, Blogger Warrior Princess said...

..and of course, at Seth's a Crave Case would be involved, which would make it that much sweeter.

Don't forget you have friends, Kev. Friends that want you to succeed, which for you mostly just means being happy & being comfortable with who you are.

Be your best person you can be. Do the most to make the best of what you have while looking for something better. I know, cliche, but there are many good things in your life; don't blind yourself to them.

 
At 5:32 PM, Blogger mom said...

To my favorite son-in-law, Kevin,
I am really hurting for you. Mostly, because I have been where you are at. I have "fallen down" and gotten up more times than I can even count. Probably because I am REALLY old! I have cried so hard that I have shaken uncontrollably, thrown up, and my eyes have been so swollen that I couldn't see. But each time I have grown. I am 53 years old and I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up. In 1.5 years, I am going to retire from the only career I have known and I will have to figure out what I want to be again. Let me digress here. As everyone who knows me is aware, I have no sense of direction whatsoever. So for Christmas, I asked for a GPS and got one! It is the most fantastic invention ever. I will never get lost again. If I get on the wrong course, it gently recalibrates for me and heads me back where I need to be. It isn't pushy or mean, it just lets me know that I have taken a wrong direction and shows me the way to get back on track. Jesus has done the same thing for me in life. He doesn't force me to take the direction he knows is the right one. He lets me be stubborn and controlling until I "fall down" and then he gently recalibrates for me and gets me back on the right course. When I listen to his still small voice and take his direction for my life, it always sets me on the course I need to be on. His plans for me are so much greater than any I can imagine for myself. After I screw up by taking my own route, I always ask myself what I was stinkin thinkin. His GPS gently leads me to where I need to be. Let Jesus be your GPS in life. He won't ever steer you in the wrong direction. And he will always be there to guide you back on the right path when you veer off on your own and don't listen to his voice. Mark and I pray for all of our kids, (and you are one of them) every night and I know He hears our prayers. He has great plans for you and Lana. Plans more magnificent than I could ever imagine. I completely trust him with both of your lives! Let him be your GPS and see where he takes you! It will be a fantastic ride. You have soooo much potential. You can do all things through God who strengthens you!
Love you,
mom

 
At 8:51 PM, Blogger ellsworthless said...

LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE! LEAVE!

 
At 2:02 AM, Blogger Joel said...

I just stumbled across this page by accident. I hope you know you are a fantastic writer. I wish I had an english teacher like you during my education. I am in college and I am trying to figure out what I want to do also. I want to do something in business however I want to help people out. Have you ever thought about being an english teacher? Many students could benefit from someone like you. If you can present yourself anything in life like you did in this blog then I dont see you having any problems in finding a brighter future.

 
At 11:37 AM, Blogger Melissa Jo Gibbs said...

Just in case Lana hasn't seen this poster ad on campus I thought I'd send you the info since I know you're a Simpson's fan:

"The Simpson Family Values"
-Thursday March 6, 8pm Great Hall, MU

Mike Reiss, writer and producer of The Simpson's.... [will be talking about the show.]

Somehow I just got a sense that you wouldn't want to go but I thought I'd throw the option out to you.

 
At 7:10 PM, Blogger mlrgrl said...

I read this blog today - your blogs surpise me so much of the time. This one in particular. I don't picture you as one who cries because you always seem so stoic and emotionless. I know this isn't true because I have seen your face in good times an bad - but still...my memories of your childhood are so foggy because I wasn't around and didn't pay too much attention so when I hear you tell some of your memories, they trigger feelings in me that I don't like to dwell on. I feel sad or upset that you were hurt. As you look back on episodes like the one where you cried with Caeser (You were really good to him) you explain with such vivid detail the state you were in and I remember times when I felt similar. I tend to think a lot about ME - most people who know me, already know this about me, especially if they knew me 15 years ago - but I want to think more about others. When I was younger, I thought I was the only one that felt stupid out on the soccer field and worried about how I might succeed or fail. Your blog reminds me of how I failed as a sister - could I have noticed that day you were upset and given you a hug or asked what was wrong, or just asked to hang out with you? But it also makes me appreciate that you are my brother and I can hang out with you now and tell you that if you are EVER upset - I will drop EVERYTHING and come running.

 

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