Feb 28, 2018
Atomic meltdown
Today started out with lots to look forward to. Steph had her appointment downtown and we were going to go and have lunch together, then in the evening we were going to meet up again at the T-Network gathering downtown.
I had been under a bit of stress both from work and personally lately. One of my big worries was that I had stopped working out as much as I used to and was starting to feel the effects of the backsliding, mainly in my level of physical stamina. It was another one of those feelings that represented (in my mind) a horrifying return to the former me - overweight, unmotivated, less-than-happy, and worsening on all three fronts. Conversely, I wasn't feeling motivated enough to get out to yoga class, go bike riding, or even go for a walk, thereby exacerbating the feelings of losing ground.
At work, I had been beating my head against a brick wall in one of those situations where, no matter what I did, I got pushed further and further away from a solution.
I had hoped today would be a nice day, and it was. We even got to meet up with a friend for coffee and share with each other what has been going on in our lives lately.
As the day wore on, the notion had crossed my mind to just blow off the T-Network thing that evening and go home, but I knew Steph was going to be there and I had missed the last one as well. It was at a place downtown that I had never been to but had an idea where it was. With about a half-hour to spare, I left work and headed downtown. That's when things started to go wrong.
My first mistake was letting the map app on my phone be my sole guide to the location. It took me to completely the wrong place. Of course, I was close enough to downtown to be trapped in that particular urban hell, the levels of which are marked with numerous signs that read, "ONE WAY", "NO PARKING", "NO STOPPING OR STANDING". The stress started building.
The app on my phone started malfunctioning, which meant it probably needed a reboot, though I couldn't stop anywhere to sort of regroup and get my bearings. More stress.
No matter which way I was pointed, all the ONE WAY streets might as well have been marked WRONG WAY. More stress.
I got Steph on Messenger, voice-only through the bluetooth in my car and found that she just got parked over by where we were going. Then, I almost ran head-on into a truck that was going around some other cars. Even more stress.
My voice started to crack and eyes got moist. I told her that this is probably the last one of these I'm going to go to downtown, though I was thinking I wasn't going to make it to this one at all. Stress upon stress upon stress.
I pulled into the entrance of the library parking garage, trying to find a place to get my bearings, only to find out it was $10 to park there. That's when the dam started to overflow. I told the lady at the ticket booth that I didn't want to park, I just wanted to get out of here and now I have cars behind me, blocking me in. She gave me a special ticket and, in a bored voice completely oblivious to any evidence of my distress, instructed me to go up and around and down to the exit on the other side. At the other side was an equally bored parking attendant who took the ticket I silently handed to him and after a few seconds the gate went up and I was free to return to the rest of the cars being squeezed almost involuntarily through the city streets like so much sludge through a digestive system.
By then, I was in full-on meltdown mode and there was not only no stopping that, but also no stopping anywhere in the area to just have my "lady minute" and get myself together. I just chose a direction I knew would get me out of that unbearable place. "I can't do this," I sobbed into the phone, "I'm going home." I don't think Steph heard me at that point, so I punched the disconnect button and kept wailing and driving.
Shortly after, I found a place to park along the side of the road. Gratefully, I pulled over and stopped. That's when the flood really got going. On and on and on it went, with no real end in sight. I texted Steph and said, "I'm sorry, I can't do this."
She asked if I need her to come and get me and I thought about that for a brief moment. I'd considered saying "no" because I didn't want to ruin her evening, which is what my previous self would have said. Instead, I replied. "I don't know how good company I'd be. I'm a total wreck right now. If you're okay with it, I think I could use a friend. I don't know what's wrong with me."
The reply I got was, "On my way. Eight minutes. Galaxy Girl to the rescue".
I sent her my rough location and continued to dampen tissue after tissue, wondering briefly if passers-by on the sidewalk could hear my wailing. I don't think I've ever cried this much in my life and really couldn't understand why I was doing so now.
I realized afterward that I had had another worry about backsliding into old habits and behaviors. Specifically, the way my old self was so antisocial. I thought about how I really knew very few people in that group and tended to just talk to them - a sort of comfort zone I suppose. Maybe this far along, after all I've done, after all the boundaries I've pushed past, falling into this sort of comfort zone is one of those things that subconsciously terrifies me. I can see myself falling back into those old habits because they were easy. They were comfortable enough. I think that's what really wrecked me. I was so determined to make it to this social gathering that as I got more and more frustrated, my physical state deteriorated rapidly to a point where I didn't feel at all presentable to folks, many of whom I had perceived as "rockstars" of a sort - who were already successfully transitioned back when I was just dipping my toes in those waters. I couldn't bear the notion of presenting myself to them in such a wretched state. Of course, that only made my state worse, in self-replicating, ever-increasing cycles.
Minutes later, Steph arrived and sat in the car with me, and with a gentle hand on my shoulders and the loving concern for her sister, she helped pull me up out of the pit of my own making.
She's my rockstar!