This morning I finished a book called "When the Body Says No:
Understanding the Stress-Disease Connection" by Dr. Gabor Mate. I
ordered the book through an ILL system to read a chapter on Alzheimer's
Disease. Only one page from the end of the book, Dr. Mate wrote of the
value of cultivating one's creative self and reports how whenever he
actually slowed down his frenetic life, there had been a quiet, tiny
voice that encouraged him to write. Today during lunch at work, I met a
woman who is a writer. When I made some comment about the drudging
discipline of being a writer, she replied that the writers she knows are
much more compelled to write than forced.
When I was a child, I
wanted to be a writer. Other dreams came and went, but from the age of 3
when I started dictating my first stories to my mother, I wanted to be a
writer. By high school, my efforts were leaning towards other areas
but somehow this seed lived on, even as the wellspring of earlier worlds
and stories became lost.
Now 34 years old and two degrees in
music later, I find myself needing to write just to process what is
happening to my father. Yet this exploration is only partially about my
father and at least 95% about me, my struggle and my fears.
In
the past I have written of my frustrations with the research I've read
about the causes of Alzheimer's. None of the lifestyle or dietary risk
factors have seemed to apply to the four members of my family who have
been struck by this. The question behind the 11 page chapter on
Alzheimer's that drew me to this book is, "Could early life experience,
emotional repression and lifelong stress predispose to Alzheimer's?"
(p. 158) Dr. Mate goes on to talk about the few studies that have been
done that point to this correlation and then uses a number of case
examples to illustrate his suspicion.
And here I finally see
something that seems worth investigating. Emotional repression is the
one characteristic that all of my relatives who had Alzheimer's clearly
shared and the one quality lacking in those of similar age and gene pool
who kept their marbles to the very end. I used to tell my friends that
in the picture dictionary of adjectives, my dad's face would be next to
the word inhibited. He had such a hard time showing affection. He
only showed true and unabashed enthusiasm for politics and only showed
anger when in a terrifying once-a-decade-type rage.
At first I
think of how lucky I am that I am not like my dad. The illusion of
safety descends. Soon honesty comes a knocking and I know that I am so
much more like my dad that I might ever be able to admit. "Peas in a
pod" was a phrase one friend used to describe me and my dad together. I
know I have a lot inside me, so much emotion and so many thoughts
striving to break through, but does anyone else know this? How much do I
actually show this?
During my disastrous first teaching job
after some rehearsal where I had gotten particularly excited, a little
red headed tenor said to me that he was finally seeing who I really was.
Had I been completely hiding myself from them for the miserable past
year and a half? My voice teacher during my masters degree studies once
called me an "Ice Queen" and commented that bawdy songs could be
especially effective coming from me because of my general demeanor. One
of my early conducting teachers commented that my problem was not
technique, rather it was as if I were conducting from behind a veil.
It seems that in the eyes of others, I have quite a lot in common with my father.
Perhaps
my desire to write, that little voice inside me, pushing me to get back
in touch with myself, is pushing me to be honest with myself even if I
feel unable to do so with anyone else.
When I look at my life
and at the pursuits which have drawn me to them, these are always the
pursuits that require the most openness, the most expression and the
most personal and emotional risk. I do them again and again, falling
and failing, round and round. Somehow the pathway was always open for
me at the piano, but I didn't want the piano in that way. I wanted the
harder option so that I might struggle to become myself and to learn how
to let that person out in the ways that my father has never been able
to.
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