Leaving an Old Identity Behind

What else is left to us but to drown the past to save the future?
— Hassan, an Egyptian construction supervisor on the Abu Simbel project*

In the 1960’s the two temples built by King Ramses II during the 12th century BC at Abu Simbel had to be moved out of reach of the rising waters of Lake Nasser. The temples were carefully deconstructed, moving the most important and most precious parts of the temples to higher ground, and then flooding the rest of the site. And so it is with our own identities. There are parts of us, that should come with us in to the future. And there are parts we must leave behind.

I have been thinking a lot this week about identities. Partly because a young friend of mine is having a hard time and part of her struggle, as it often is, is about leaving an old identity behind. And the reason I could see her struggle so clearly is because I too am in the same place: struggling to leave an old identity behind.  Even identities that have helped us, or maybe even especially the identities that have helped us: my identity as a ‘survivor’, or my identity as a ‘fighter’, or my identity as the ‘good girl.’ These identities helped us get here, but often they hold us back from getting to where we want or need to go. They stop us from our continued growth.

Sometimes the identity was created in reaction to trauma or to struggle or loss. Or sometimes it’s just the identity that went with the time of life. Parenting is a great example of this. Your identity shifts when you become a parent, and then as a parent you are asked to shift identity all the way along the process: the identity of a parent of a toddler isn’t the same as the identity of a parent of a ten year old, or seventeen year old, much less the parent of an adult. Sometimes a new circumstance or role catapults us in to a new identity: manager, caretaker, widow, retiree. We are aware of aspects of ourselves because of what others expect from us, or what we have expected from people in a similar role.

It seems simple when you see it. Of course I need to grow in to that new thing, that new aspect of myself. And even if I want the new skills, the new experiences that this identity is allowing me it can be hard to make the shift, let alone in those times when we didn’t choose the moment of growth.  The old identity is such a security blanket. In my better moments I feel strong enough to walk away from it. But when any darkness comes in, any stress, any fear, I instinctively reach for the familiar, for what feels comfortable, even if it really no longer fits. I seek to lean on the self I know, rather than the self I am getting to know.

It’s so hard to let go of that part of us that helped us survive. And it seems that no matter how many times I learn this lesson, and no matter in how many ways, the learning feels brand new every time I have to learn it again.

We talk a lot about the fact that growth requires learning new things, but we don’t talk as much about how growth also requires us to let go of old things. And how hard this process is, and how many iterations it takes. We see it in kids: how they can march forward into a new developmental stage and then slide back in rough moments. But they don’t yet have a concept of themselves in the same way adults do, so they are constantly and excitedly reaching forward. There are a few kids who can feel the loss of their growth—kids who realize that learning to read themselves might mean less time sitting on their parent’s lap being read to. But most don’t. Most forge ahead.

But adolescence and adulthood are different. We begin to really understand that a move forward is a loss of some kind. We can’t always express it. Or name it. But we can often feel it—and it can feel out of place. And it can make us feel out of sorts with out a way to say where we are.

The me-that-I-was needs to give way to the-me-I-am-becoming. This is the trajectory of growth. This is true of very young children and it remains true for all of us until our last breath. But it requires stronger and stronger muscles as we get older. Growth, I am learning, doesn’t get easier with age—in fact it may be the opposite. When we are older we have more invested in the people we believe we are. Children have a particular identity for a couple of years, we have that particular identity often for a decade at least. Its not that old dogs can’t learn new tricks. It just turns out that it takes an enormous amount of strength and patience and compassion to let go of the old tricks.  

And why is it so hard? Well there are a few reasons, but one of the biggest is some fear of living in this in-between space, no man’s land, the land of the lost. This place is hard because it isn’t familiar. You don’t know the rules. It feels awkward. It feels messy. But most of all, we anticipate this space as lonely. We imagine exile.

Our identities don’t exist in isolation. We are not so much individual selves as we are, as Jean Baker Miller described it: Selves-in-relation. We believe who are are is connected to how people connect to us, and we fear that if we change we will lose people. They like me because of who I was, and they will never like who I am becoming. And honestly, there is some truth to this fear. When we grow and change, people do have to get used to our new selves and our new views, as we do when they change and grow.

But the biggest support to this trajectory of growth from me-that-I-was to the-me-I-am-becoming is the ability to be held, witnessed and supported in the place in between them. Not only is growth not about isolation, growth requires relationship. We are designed to grow in relationship. It was a a multi-country, multi-agency partnership that worked together to take the temples of Abu Simbel apart block by block with precision and care. It took years as the temple was neither rooted in its past location, nor safe in its new one. Growth requires us to be in a space that is neither here nor there—it a space where you often don’t know—where you need the conversation—where you need to contradict yourself, in order to find out what you do know, what you need to learn. You need to be able to held both parts of yourself at once, and in order to do that, someone needs to hold you. It is one of the most important jobs of a parent, or a therapist, or spouse or friend, this work of being with someone in the space between. When you have let go of one shore and are not quite at the other.  So change is not just about moving forward, it is also about what you need to leave behind. What parts of your temple do you want to move to higher ground? What parts of your temple do you no longer need and need to let go of? 

© 2024/2015 Gretchen L. Schmelzer, PhD

*Gerster, G. (1963). Threatened treasures of the Nile. National Geographic 124 (4), 587-623.

Women's Growth In Connection: Writings from the Stone Center
By Judith V. Jordan PhD, Alexandra G. Kaplan, Irene P. Stiver, Janet L. Surrey PhD, Jean Baker Miller
Buy on Amazon

A Constant Need

A Constant Need

The footing was more

unsteady at the top

than Sisyphus imagined

he always thought

it would feel lighter

than the rock

he had pushed

uphill all those years

but that labor

was familiar and

this new heaviness

hung on his heart

as an ache

 

standing still beside

his rock—a distance

growing between them

Sisyphus cried out

‘what happens now?’

 

no one answered

it had always been

just him, and his rock

and gravity bearing down

 

years of pushing

meant he never

had to learn how

to reach toward

or hold on

 

he only knew gravity

as a pressing force

a constant need

and now was jolted

as the rock

was drawn away

 

he began to cry

 

he knew how to

bear the weight

of the burden

but not how

to let it go.

 © 2024 Gretchen L Schmelzer, PhD 

zinnias, hummingbirds, and grace

A hummingbird descends from the pine tree and drinks from a large red zinnia.

I want to start this story at the end because I want you to have that beautiful image in your head as long as you can. I want you to know that magic really can happen anywhere.

This story begins in July when I returned after months on the road. I spent a weekend in the garden weeding and clearing the raised bed. Acknowledging the reality of my schedule, I decided that rather than many sorts of vegetables and flowers, I would buy two flats of zinnias and pack them into my raised beds and borders. The next day I left again for two months.

Actually, let’s start the story years even before that. In the summer of 2020, my garden was the place that absorbed and soothed my Covid anxiety and my cabin fever from lockdown. It was the place that helped me --a country mouse-- feel at home in a city. It was a big enough plot to challenge me and a small enough plot to not overwhelm me. It was a harmless place to let my desires and wants run wild—with stacks of seed catalogues and trays upon trays of chubby green seedlings. It is hard to describe what a lifeline of hope my garden was during that time. And how much it taught me to look for love in small things.

There were years of presence in my garden –where I was planting seedlings, growing vegetables, and cooking dinners for friends from the vegetables I grew. Radishes and butter. Fresh pea soup. Roasted eggplant.  And there were years of absence—where I was recovering far away from home with my legs in casts, or far away working with groups. These years of absence meant that I needed to get help in my garden—which meant that it was cared for and tidy—but it ceased to look like my garden—with a new lawn, smaller borders, and fewer plants. It felt like a home that had once been filled with children and dogs and now sat empty. It was respectable, but it didn’t feel like mine.  

Which brings me to yesterday. When I returned home two days ago to teach a class, I peeked out the window to my garden. I saw lots of green, and not much else, and I couldn’t make myself open the back door. I wasn’t sure I could face the loss of what the garden had been or face what it might have become. I didn’t have the energy to manage the disappointment I anticipated and decided to wait a day and do it after a good night’s sleep. A lot of difficult things in life are better (if it all possible) if you wait a day and get a good night’s sleep. So yesterday after teaching, some lunch, and a bit of a rest—I put on my green overalls and headed out my back door into the garden.

It was all very green, and things were overgrown, but not horribly so. And the lawn was tall, but mow-able. I pulled out the reel mower and mowed the lawn first, so it would already feel a bit more contained--which helped me feel less anxious. And then I began to pull the tall and tangly weeds from my raised beds. Crab grass. Morning glory vines wrapped around the plants. Clover. Chickweed. Grapevine.

But most remarkably, the garden was filled with color. Zinnias stood nearly my height, covered in blooms that were bright and clear. Pink. Red. Orange. Yellow. They filled one raised bed and they bloomed in the midst of a morass of leaves in my perennial border—flanked by pink spirea and purple butterfly bush.

I worked my way through my garden, pruning branches that blocked the common alley way, and pulling grapevine from the border, until I got to the raised bed filled with the zinnias. I bent low, pulling weeds and trying to free the area around their base so that they could get air, and rain, whenever it came. Finally, I stood up, and I looked at the flowers, free from the distraction of weeds among them, colors clear and bright in the late afternoon sun.

Words feel too small to say how grateful I was to these flowers for holding vigil over my garden these many months. Like helpful neighbors or loving aunts—beings who swoop in bring love when its needed. For bravely carrying on in my absence. For being so radiant and cheerful. For welcoming me home in a hard week.

And I was still reeling in gratitude, trying to catch my breath from the hard work of weeding and the immensity of appreciation I had for gift of the flowers when suddenly a hummingbird descended from the pine tree, and I watched it dip in for a drink from the big red zinnia. It hovered for a bit, sunlight catching its wings, turned toward another flower, and flew away.

I burst into tears.

To witness wildness and beauty is one thing. To watch it bring its tenderness to something you love and care about is something different. The moment was fleeting. So full of light and motion. So small, really, in every way. But huge. Grace, unearned, changes you. Yesterday, I walked into my garden one person. And I walked back into the house, another.

© 2024 Gretchen L Schmelzer, PhD 

 

Everything happens at once

Everything happens at once

Nothing really changes

for the boat rocking

gently on its mooring.

 

It doesn’t matter if

the tide is coming

in or going out.

 

A seagull perches

on the faded buoy

and stares out to sea.

 

The dingy slaps the water

and the halliard’s

metal clasp on the mast

of the sailboat

sings in harmony.

 

How can motion and stillness

happen at the same time?

 

High tide is round and dark

and full and lush with ease—

until it’s suddenly gone.

 

And in it’s place, an expanse--

a low tide that’s wide and

sparkles with sun on shells—

seaweed covering rocks

hiding and revealing everything

at the same time.

 

The heron fishes

and the osprey screams

and there’s a swirl of fish

in the distance. Everything

is beautiful. Everything

is harsh. Everything

always happens

at once.

© 2024 Gretchen L Schmelzer, PhD