Monday, August 25, 2014

The Most Important Lessons I Learned in My Undergraduate Career

          I’ve been doing some thinking the last few days, thinking that I suppose will occur this time of year every year. I’m coming up on the second anniversary of my father’s death, and I never thought the journey over the last two years would lead me to where I am today. In reflecting on the things that have occurred in my life during my undergraduate career, I find myself extremely blessed to have met the wonderful people who helped me tap into my own potential and realize dreams I never thought possible. I’m blessed to have gone through the difficulties that I have gone through because my own past has helped me help others. I will never be able to truly express how thankful I am to those who helped me make sense of the chaos that is/was my life over the last few years, but I believe I’ve expressed my thanks enough so that they know who they are. Out of all the lectures I’ve received, the books I’ve read, the essay’s I’ve written, and the tests I’ve taken, the most important lessons of my undergraduate career did not come from a classroom; they came from the battlefield, the minefield, the place we all find ourselves in at one time or another in life. For me, that time was during my last year and a half of college.
            I was blessed in my second semester of college to have a professor who saw something in me that I didn’t see in myself: potential. The foundation that she created in me that semester was a stepping-stone to the rest of my college career. I believe God knows the things that are just around the corner, and I believe He places people in our lives to prepare us for things to come. You see, for me, that professor recognized my ability to write. And because of her encouragement, I began writing outside of school. I sent her never-ending diatribes on what I was thinking and feeling. I wrote stories about the trauma I had witnessed, about the things that haunted me. And she read it all. In a way, she was my diary: words on the page that needed to be read by someone who had no personal stake in the matter, someone who would just let me talk without interruption, someone who never ridiculed or questioned how I felt and why I felt the way I did. I poured my heart out on the page, sometimes not even understanding what I wrote, just knowing that I felt I had to write it. I had to write it all. My emotions bombarded me, and she let me write. Slowly, I began to realize that the writing allowed the wall I had built around myself to begin crumbling. I started to trust more. I started to love more. I started to be thankful more. I started to feel blessed more.
            I’ll never understand why she allowed me to write the things I did, what it was about her that made me trust her the moment she read my first draft, what it was that made me feel like I’d known her my whole life and could tell her anything and not fear rejection the way I had most of my life. The only thing I know is that she had such a positive influence on my life that I began to see the beauty within myself. She laughs when I thank her for saving my life, as if what she did was just her job. But she did save my life. She saved me from myself. The writing helped me deal with things: it helped me see my past through different lenses; it helped me decipher the coded images in my brain. The writing made me pliable for what was to come, a future that only God knew was in store.
            I once read an interview by Vietnam Veteran poet Yusef Komunyakaa. In the interview, he stated that writing was not a means to escape his past; it was a way in which he could confront his past so that he could remain a peaceful person. When I read that, I knew he was right because I, too, had felt the same way. Writing saved me from the person I used to be. It kept me from turning back to the bottle as way to drown out my past, the memories that haunted me.
            When my father died, it was my writing and the way it had changed that made my professor realize something was wrong. It was my writing that worried her. It was my writing that caused her to plead with me to seek counseling. The thing of it is, if we would have never forged the relationship we had the prior year, she probably wouldn’t have noticed anything was wrong, just like everyone else. She knew me, but that was only because I allowed her to do so, because I trusted her, because I respected her, because I loved her. And regardless as to how uncomfortable that may make her, I’m so thankful and blessed to feel the way I do.
            When I finally sought counseling, it was only because I trusted and respected her enough to take her advice. If someone else would have suggested it, I don’t think I would have been receptive. My plan was to go once and that was it. Almost two years later, I’ve formed a tight bond with my counselor that will never be broken either. I had never really had counseling for everything I had been through, for the trauma I suffered as a child and while in the military. My counseling was in the bottle, in a new assignment, a deployment. Each assignment, each deployment, and each drink were ways for me to run from my past, ways for me to reinvent myself. On my first counseling session, I told my counselor how I run when things get difficult, but I promised her, for the first time in my life, I wasn’t going to run. And I didn’t. I told her things I had never even admitted to myself, things I tried to bury so deep so that they wouldn’t affect my future, things I was ashamed of, things most people will NEVER know.
            I realize that I could have never told her any of that without the writing. Writing had become such an influence in my life that I was beginning to write non-stop. Writing it made it easier to say aloud. And when I couldn’t tell her how I felt or what her question triggered, I wrote it to her. At times, I avoided answering certain questions because I really needed to think about my response. And, when I had thought about it, I wrote to tell her my answer. And we would pick up from there the next week. I don’t think I would have accomplished the amount that I accomplished in counseling had I only had the hourly plus session each week. I don’t think I would have progressed the way I did.
            As I learned to cope with the notion that I would never really know who my father was, why it seemed he didn’t love me enough to understand who I was, and why his drinking was a problem for me and our relationship, I began to realize that the more I tried to understand those things, the more upset I became. I began to realize that dead men don’t talk, and I would never really know the truth about many things. The only truth’s I know for sure are this: even though he never really showed it, I think he loved me and was sorry for it all. The look on his face on his deathbed told me so. The other truth that I know is that I know more about him in death than I ever knew about him in life, all of which I found out about him eleven months after he died when family I had never met or knew anything about finally found me. Understanding the boy he was helped me understand the man and father he became. That understanding helped me find some closure to that chapter of my life; however, there is a part of me that wishes he was here to tell me those things himself, to answer the questions he would never answer, to love me for a lifetime the way he did in that moment on his deathbed.
            You may be asking yourself, what does any of this have to do with lessons I’ve learned. Well, here they are. During everything that was going on, I found myself struggling with keeping up with school and regular church attendance. But God, He is ever faithful, even when we falter. He blessed me with three amazing, Christian women during that time. And from them, I learned some valuable things. First, I learned that I’m worthy. So many times in life I’ve been so far down in the gutter that I’ve not felt worthy of anything. Even now, every time I start to question myself, I hear the small, shy voice of my professor saying, “You’re worthy. You’re worth it.” She’ll never know just how important that was in building my self-esteem, in helping me understand my true value despite what others believe. Secondly, I’ve learned that in order to function, sometimes we have to shift the feelings of the heart to the thoughts of the mind. Once we take emotion out of the equation, we are able to think rationally about a situation before shifting it back to the emotional side of things. Our emotions typically cause us to make rash decisions or say and do stupid things that we can’t take back. Lastly, there is nothing that I went through or will go through that God does not already know the outcome. Even when I feel like the world is crashing in on me, when I’m smothered by the naysayers, when I feel like I’m at the end of my rope, I can always ask God for a bigger knot to hold onto, and He will provide.
  I’m so thankful to God for the blessings He placed in my life during that time of my life. I don’t think I’d be where I am today, about to attend Graduate School at a school I never thought I had a chance to get into, with a Graduate Assistant position that pays my tuition and then some. Graduate school starts tomorrow, and I’m a bit nervous about that. It's funny how I used to crave change, how I used to try to reinvent myself for each assignment or deployment, trying to run from the demons that inevitably followed me. For the first time in my life, I don't want to reinvent myself. I don't want to be someone different. I suppose that is because I'm finally happy with my life and who I am. Granted, my life is by no means perfect, but, for the first time, my life at LSUA allowed me the opportunity to be surrounded by so many positive people. I felt like I found a place where I fit without trying. It just was. And now, I have to find that balance all over again. Whereas I used to crave change, I'm not looking forward to that change. A part of me is nervous about not having these women in my life to guide me. But, at the same time, I realize the memories and lessons they taught me will always be a part of who I am so long as I never forget. And even now, hundreds of miles apart, I know I’ll cherish these lessons for a lifetime. As a child, I always wondered where God was when everything bad touched my life. Looking back, I now understand He was with me every step of the way, and it is because of Him and the people He has placed in my life that I am right where I’m supposed to be.