It takes years to understand the bits and pieces of our
lives that make us complete, a completeness only imagined because this
understanding of how the pieces fit together is only individual perception,
isn’t it? Sure, there’s a collective consciousness, but each one of us could
have approached the puzzle differently. But I guess this is the catch-22; we
all arrive at the completed puzzle no matter how we choose to get there.
Once the pieces have been jumbled together, not fitting into
pre-cut curves and angles, but mushed together like playdough or dough dough
(like bread, y’know?,) we realize we have just spent years creating new boxes
of pieces that hopefully, hopefully, our experience with the first pieces will
help us sort out and mash together. With less struggle, with more cohesion and
fewer cracked and dried bits around the edges. Good God. Did I just write that?
Ok then, whatwhat? We’re all looking for cohesion, a flow in
our lives. We want things to make sense. The puzzle box is my favored analogy
(today.) You have this beautiful picture on the front of the box of a mystical
unicorn, a big strapping, er, horn, on it’s head, riding a vividly-hued rainbow
bridge into a warm tropical ocean, or what the fuck, a Siamese cat licking it’s
paws, the picture isn’t what matters, only that there is one.
Anyway, here’s this picture of what the puzzle should be, but when we dive into the box we are stuck with all of these pieces. Where do we start? Which ones go where? What is the optimum strategy for maximum time efficiency with minimal labor output? And of course, is this puzzle piece more important than the other one?
Anyway, here’s this picture of what the puzzle should be, but when we dive into the box we are stuck with all of these pieces. Where do we start? Which ones go where? What is the optimum strategy for maximum time efficiency with minimal labor output? And of course, is this puzzle piece more important than the other one?
No, they are all puzzle pieces. They will all contribute to
materializing the indifferent Siamese cat licking itself when you finally
figure out how they go together. The pretty pieces, the ugly pieces, the blocks
of bland and vivid color, the incomplete pieces. They all count.
If I were to use this analogy to describe parenthood,
especially being a stay-at-home Dad with former/better than they were/it comes
and goes insecurity issues, I might say that the box is ever full of new pieces
and the picture continues to change. OR, I might say that the puzzle represents
so many years of fatherhood, say 0-5.
BAM! You’ve finished it, but a new one is ready for you,
this time with a picture of your own precocious, mischievous, curious 6-9 year
old child on the front; or Pikachu, it could be that little yellow lightning
bolt throwing pen splotch, or God help us, Dora or Barbie.
You’ve faced down the early years and with them, self-doubts
about surviving parenthood (the first year,) concerns about creating a future
for your child, a child without anger/biting/sharing/inappropriate
touching/constant tantrum issues (and who also doesn’t like to hurt small
animals and dismember Barbie dolls. That’s important too.) A WELL-ADJUSTED
CHILD DEVELOPING APPROPRIATELY FOR THEIR AGE.
Right. Now, after
five years, you’re gaining confidence, and if you’re like me, far too many
glances into the dark pit of your soul that gapes wide open and shows you just
what a monster you can be.
But back to the puzzle. You’ve made it through the first
five years. Now that they’re starting to comprehend shit, how are you going to
start explaining your actions? Past Present and Future? I started by first
explaining my actions to myself, then, like tossing the meaty carcass of
yesterday’s roast chicken, I stopped trying to get any meat off those bones and
moved on. It’s a nice illusion, anyway.
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