24 February 2015

Quitting vs. Making Sacrifices

My heart is heavy. How often do you hear a person say those words, these days? I have a fondness for antiquated phrases, including “tickled,” which is used to express delight, glee, and other giddy feelings that frankly make you feel like something is actually tickling your insides. Euphemisms don’t just come out of nowhere, you know. Ah, but I digress. My heart is heavy.
                The weight is displaced and redistributed with the weight of my cat in my lap or my baby in my arms. Still, though, there rests an anvil atop my heart, its weight pressing down but not quite crushing the organ that so diligently pumps blood throughout my body, supplying blood to every last piece of me from my lungs, so close to the heart itself, to the tips of my temperature-temperamental toes. An anvil made not of any kind of metal, but rather formed by the truth of reality and adulthood seems to weigh more than any Acme product and I find myself wondering if I’m truly being honest with myself. Do I feel this weight in my heart because I am realizing now that reality is nothing like what I had hoped I could make of it, or does this weight rest so persistently within my chest because I suffer from depression and I haven’t taken my anti-depressant medication in days, if not a week?
                Why can’t I have it all? Why is it that there is only a finite amount of time in a day, a week, and I am terribly bad at managing it efficiently? This probably sounds very much like I’m complaining, like I’m sitting here whining “Oh, woe is me,” “Poor me,” “Why me?” But the truth is, I wanted to have it all. I wanted to make my life something amazing, something epic, and I wanted to manage things in a way that kept me busy and happy and also making money while I took care of my family. I wanted to have my cake, eat it, and show off to the world how amazing it was. Then, I was slapped with a realization that was just as cold, wet, clammy, and generally unpleasant as a recently-dead fish smacking you across the face when your brother decides it’s a good idea to start a fish fight in the little sailboat your dad took the two of you out in to do some fishing to try bonding as a family.
                It was all an illusion. The idea that I could juggle three full-time jobs and maintain happiness and sanity as well as order and whatever else you can think of was as illusionary as seeing an oasis in the middle of the desert when you’re dying of thirst and haven’t had water any time in recent memory. Only, for me, that mirage was shattered suddenly by the appearance of a small, yellow envelope from the Olympia Municipal Court, fining me for parking too long in a roadside parking space whose meter would only allot me two hours at a time. According to the slip of paper inside this crucial yellow envelope, it was not only the meter, but the space itself, which held a two-hour limit, and I had surpassed that time. It wasn’t the first time, either. In my mind’s eye, this yellow envelope fell upon a pile of yellow envelopes, collected over the course of perhaps two months, at most, and used as an effigy of sorrow and misery at the fact that I could not catch a break with parking in the city!
                I was accepted into a 90-day trial period as a tattoo intern. I was going to learn all there is to know about tattooing, the industry, the art styles, famous artists who have paved the way and pivoted change in the history of tattooing. Then, during my internship, I was going to start college and go to school for a fine arts’ degree. During these two endeavors, I also planned to be able to take care of my growing baby often enough that my husband could get his homework done for his own college classes. With the appearance of this final parking ticket was sparked a discussion with my husband about how many parking tickets I’ve accrued and, ultimately, how I’m going to be able to juggle my time between an internship, being a full-time student, and still managing to be a wife and mother at home. I can’t do it. I won’t be able to do it.
                When this realization hit me, as a train without brakes might hit anything in its path should it suddenly be derailed, I knew that I had to give up on something and there was only one thing that sucked money out and gave nothing monetary in return. That was my internship.
                I was scheduled through the weekend and had all intentions of completing that time—before I ended up sick with chest and sinus congestion and felt too much like death to go in for my last two days. Being an intern to become a tattoo artist required me to drive 35 minutes nearly every day, pay for parking in a city that increasingly seemed to have it out for me, and help take care of a tattoo shop wherein I was not allowed to touch actual tattooing equipment (yet) and most of the time, it was dead, so I sat around doing my drawing assignments and wondering how the hell I was going to come up with another 2,500 words to add to my essay about Old School style tattooing. Yes, it was stressful, but there was more to it.
                The requirements were strict and sometimes seemed overwhelming, but I spent my days doing the one thing I have always, always loved to do: Drawing. I was allowed to go half an hour away from home to spend time in a friendly shop where the artists only do custom work, the walls are decorated with paintings for sale by local artists, the Internet connection was pretty reliable, and there wasn’t a whole lot I had to do aside from drawing and writing. It was perfect for me. I loved it.
                Almost immediately after giving up the apprenticeship (internship—fucking state pedantics), I felt a kind of relief. It was as if a weight had been lifted from my shoulders. Suddenly, I had all the time in the world between now and when I start college and I could use it to get the house cleaned up the way I want (since I clearly couldn’t rely on my husband to do any of it right), take care of my baby and let Randy get his schoolwork done, get laundry done, and cook every so often. I didn’t have to worry about the gas I was using during my 35-minutes-each-way commute. I didn’t have to worry about whether or not the parking meter would expire or if I was parked too long in a space, anymore. I no longer needed to keep a shop clean in which I contributed almost nothing to the mess—even though cleaning the shop was never, not even once, a weighted point in the consideration of whether or not I could keep up the internship.
                People say that sacrifices have to be made in life. Have I made a sacrifice? Have I sacrificed my internship in order to give the other things in my life more meaning? Have I sacrificed the internship in order to be a better wife and mother and, soon, student? Or, have I quit on something that made me happy? Have I quit on something that would have made me a living no matter where I was?
                My heart is heavy. I miss the routine. I miss getting up for the day and choosing something nice and classy to wear to “work”. I miss being in the tattoo shop/art gallery. I miss having drawing assignments, because the gods know that unless someone gives me an idea these days, I can’t draw for shit.
                Indeed, my heart is heavy. But I think that most of the weight making up the anvil resting within my chest actually comes from the idea that the instant I said I couldn’t do it, I was replaced. I thought that my time in the shop mattered. I thought I was making meaningful relationships and I felt as though I mattered, at least a little bit. Then, while I was emailing the owner, she asked me to effectively show the ropes to the new intern. So, am I caught up over the semantics of whether I’ve quit or made a sacrifice, or does the weight in my heart come from a feeling of betrayal?

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