I get a weekly update on the visitors to my various Facebook pages. It reports the number of people who’ve looked at your pages, the number of people who “Like” you or it. The number goes up or down from week to week, signified by either a green arrow pointing up or a red arrow pointing down. If nothing changes, you get the green arrow. Thank you for the small vote of confidence.
I have always had an issue with being “liked”. Perhaps it was the vanishing of my father at the age of 9. I must have been something awful if my own father didn’t like me enough to stick around. To a child, these decisions are always about the child. There could be no other reason for the abandonment. It took some work but I finally accepted that I wasn’t to blame. Still, the question always lingers. Do you like me?
“Well, who the F*** cares if you like me?” I get to that epiphany on occasion. Interestingly, to me anyway, I give up the-need-to-know both when I am extremely confident and when I am feeling totally defeated. One comes out of a momentary sense of being okay; the other comes out of a sense that life has passed me by and I forgot to get on the bus. The enduring part of my psyche knows that one day will follow another and that somehow, someway, I will be all right. I won’t lose my home. I won’t have to eat cat food. My children will always love me and be there for me. I will see something of this world other than what I’ve seen so far. The other part ponders sleep. I’ve had enough. It’s just too hard. The mortgage is due; the credit card bill is too high; gas is over $4 again; everything goes up except the income. Then the phone rings and a friend offers me a job and I think, okay, I’ll make it through another year. She likes me.
Once upon a time I had a wicked stepsister. She probably wasn’t really wicked but she didn’t like me. She was six years younger than my mother and wasn’t thrilled that her Dad had adopted a new family. I can see that now. She was ready for him to be grandpa to her kids, not Daddy to a 9-year-old girl. Anyway, we never had a relationship and I’ve come to regret that now that Dad is gone. I used to get obligatory presents from her on my birthday. Once she gave me a silver scuttle and, when I open it, the card saying Merry Christmas to all her husband’s employees fell out. That was a fast elevator ride down from elated to crushed. But the reason I bring this up is that once she gave me something I really liked- a gold arrow that hung from a chain. I still have it. There’s only one thing wrong with it. The arrow is pointing down.
I hate those arrows.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
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