Sunday, November 20, 2016

There's Beauty in the Breakdown




I quit my job recently. It seems simple enough. You aren't all that satisfied with your job, you dream of doing something else, you find that something else, you're pleased, you leave, you start the new job. I was ecstatic about the new opportunity. It was everything I wanted. 

Except I tend to struggle with change. And forget that I struggle with change. Struggle is probably a bad word for it, because only recently have I come to realize that I have an acute biological reaction to situations like this. Even as it's happening, I can look at it and say "that's my body reacting to this change, the world is not exploding" but I can't stop it. It's like having an allergic reaction, looking at it and saying "those are hives" and then thinking you can stop it with your brain.

I left my old job with no regrets, took a few days off, ran a fun race with friends and I wasn't even anxious on my first day. About a week later, the small nagging feeling started in the pit of my stomach. Did I make a mistake or was this just that part of me that I forgot about? The part of me that reacts to change? What if this feeling wasn't just an allergic reaction? What if it was a sign that I had done something wrong, that I had made the wrong choice? 

I kept asking my family and friends to reassure me. I stopped sleeping. I tried to think of other things. I exercised, I read books, I tried to distract myself but only succeeded in exhausting myself. 

I have always been this way. Growing up, I rarely slept the night before a new school year. I made myself sick worrying about a small slight from a  friend and stayed home a lot just out of fear. 

After I had my daughter, I experienced horrible postpartum depression that led to me having panic attacks when I was alone with her. I was convinced that something was going to happen to her and that I was going to be unable to stop it. I was convinced that I was the crazy one, that I might be the thing that was going to happen to her. Once, I had such a fierce panic attack, I had to run out of the house into frigid winter temperatures to throw up, hyperventilating and then checking myself into the hospital. I had never loved anyone so much, and I was so fearful of that. My mind is trained to go to the worst possible scenario, and when you're a mother, that scenario becomes a house of horror. 

The best way to describe what anxiety feels like is to tell someone to imagine standing in a crowded room, screaming at the gunman in the corner while everyone else politely sips their tea. They look at you like you're crazy. You point at the gunman, and they don't see him. You're pumping more adrenaline through your body than your heart can handle and they say "please pass the sugar."

The next several weeks, I was on a roller coaster. I'd feel great, love the work I was doing, and then I'd wake up in the middle of the night feeling like I was on an island where nothing was familiar. All the while, no one but those closest to me knew I was struggling. That's the thing: most people with anxiety problems are funny, high-functioning, rational, creative beings. You can't see the hives.

I had a particularly rough weekend, and I found myself sitting in my neighbor's backyard watching several children jump from a tree fort onto a trampoline. Several Skyline kids were doing it, just hopping over the railing and taking the plunge with glee, disappearing into a pile of leaves someone had gathered inside the trampoline. 

My daughter watched for a while and then walked over to try it. Then walked away. Then walked back over. Struggled. Began to cry. She asked my husband to go up there and help her get over the railing, but when he climbed up, she didn't want to go over the railing. She cried, she yelled at herself. She finally got over the railing, and then just stood there. Suspended in pain and fear. She climbed back over the railing and let other kids jump. She tried again. And again. Through tears, anger at herself and panic. 

When she finally jumped, I cried. The other kids kept jumping. She went back up and did it again, still crying. Forcing herself to do it over and over again. The littlest of the group, a four year old, finally got permission from her parents and jumped without hesitation. Claire kept having to push herself, but she jumped more than any other kid there.

Later, I asked her if it was fun once she tried it. She said "Not really, but I had to keep going so I wouldn't be scared anymore." She  cried when she recalled how hard it was for her to jump, and yet a four year old could do it without blinking. I told her she was brave, she was fierce. To jump was so much harder for her, the fear so much bigger. Her body telling her so much. But she did it anyway. She overcame that fear and kept pushing through it. I was so proud of her, because I know how that feels. The monster lurking at the bottom of the trampoline that no one can see.

I told myself to give it time, that reaching the peak of this roller coaster meant that it was coming to an end. Sure enough, my body has let up on the proverbial hives. I love my new job and it was the right decision. When I start to falter, I remember that little girl jumping. I give myself permission to take some time, take a deep breath. Keep jumping. Let go.





Mankato Magazine

Just wanted to post a link to an essay I wrote for the Mankato Magazine that is based on my last post. I am proud of myself for letting this one out into the world.

It is missing the last few lines: The difference with this race is that I’m finally realizing that it’s ok to feel that way. Not everyone loves races. But I am still a runner. And I am still strong.

And I am.

Check it out, starting on page 22. Also, the editor's note on page 6.
https://issuu.com/dhabrat/docs/katomag_10_16





Tuesday, May 31, 2016

For Those Who Don't Enjoy the Race



That's me in the back. Hating life. It is not a moment I want to remember, nor is it a moment I want to repeat. The photo was posted on Facebook by the race. I tagged myself and saved the photo because I figured I'd have to face this and write about it eventually.

About a year and a half ago, after finishing my second half marathon, I decided to have surgery on my foot to repair several issues. Whether this was a good decision or not is now up for debate, I had a doctor that I no longer trust telling me it was. That's a different blog post for a different time. The point is, I took last year off from signing up for official races so I could give the foot a year to heal.

Beginning in January, I decided it was game on. I signed up for my third half marathon in June, started working out almost every day, and found a few wackos to sign up with me to ensure that I would stick to a  rigorous training schedule. I was feeling great. I had never felt better and more in shape. I was digging our training runs and the camaraderie I felt with the girls I ran with all the time. Note the past tense. (That's called foreshadowing.)

Part of our training included a small fundraiser 10K on Memorial Day. I really didn't think much of it. Sure, I have a track record of choking during these things and I hadn't participated in an official race in more than a year, but the weekend before, we did 15 miles. I thought it would be just like a training run. Sure, I was coming off a week of work travel and a crappy long run the day before, but I would have my buddies with me and it wouldn't be so bad. I went to bed pretty cranky and upset. (That's also called foreshadowing.)

When the race began, my competitive running buddies happily sprinted off (why were they so excited?) and I was paralyzed. I tried to keep up for a while but they were lost in competition land going 2 minutes/mile faster than I had planned. I'm happy for them, I'm glad they felt great, I love them with all of my heart. I wish I could bottle their race day enthusiasm and shoot it into my veins like the heroin it most certainly is.

I don't like to compete. I don't like crowds. I don't even like sports. I don't get the "race-day adrenaline rush." I don't know if you understand yet, so I'll say it: I HATE OFFICIAL RACES. My race day "plan" was to pretend like we weren't really in a race. I was just going to pretend like the trails were crowded that day! BECAUSE I HATE OFFICIAL RACES.

I run alone often, in fact, until this year, I ran almost every training run alone. However, I prep for it. I listen to music, podcasts, plan my route, stick to a pace based on how I feel, and tune out the world. I didn't even have my headphones with me yesterday. This was going to be 6 hot miles of me and my self-defeating thoughts.

First, my watch didn't start when it was supposed to, so I never really knew where I was on the route, which those who do these stupid things understand will kill you. Next, I got to the second mile and my brain told me I had to walk. And cry. Really, I was crying after 2 miles. Why was I crying?! This is the chick who did 15 miles the week before. This was not a good omen. I had to push myself through every 1/10 of a mile for the entire race. I would find a decent pace, pass someone, and then end up walking, only to have them pass me later.

I saw my friends at the end cheering for me and I wanted to hide. They came over and I dissolved into a puddle of tears. I told them I never want do this again, and I left. And I cried in my room for hours. Right now I'm trying to convince myself to even run the race I signed up for so many months ago, the one that I did all of this for, the one that I felt so prepared for. The one I know I'm physically prepared for.

I finished the race at about 1:03, a time that I wouldn't have been ashamed of a few months ago, but I know I had it in me to do so much better if it hadn't been for my struggle with myself.

So what happened? Why am I telling this personal story to strangers? Why did I save that stupid photo? I don't know, I'm just writing this to get it off my mind. I don't have the answers. It has been 24 hours and I can't even talk about it without crying. My running buddies asked me to do 4-5 miles this morning and I COULDN'T EVEN RESPOND. I don't know why I feel like this and I don't know how I'm going to get over it. I can't believe I'm sharing my humiliation on the interwebs without even knowing why I'm humiliated. It comes down to this: I am scared to run.

For now, what I can do is list the reasons why I sign up for these damn things if I hate them so much in the hopes that I can find my way back to the love I have for running before June 18.

1) Fitness. This is really the least important one on the list but I thought I'd get it out of the way. Signing up for official races that I DREAD MORE THAN DEATH keeps me motivated to do the training runs that keep me semi- in shape. Period.

2) Chasing the dragon. That I just used a drug reference is not an accident. I love how (sometimes) I feel like I could run forever like Forrest Gump. I hate getting out of bed to do it, but I always love how I feel when training runs are over. I feel accomplished, happy, and unable to conjure feelings of anger and anxiety. That's the dragon I chase. It's cheaper than anti-depressants, and I like the side effects a lot more.

3) Friends. I have made some really great friends and have had the opportunity to see my already great friends much more often as a result of the grueling training schedule we put ourselves on. We hold each other accountable, we push each other when we don't want to go anymore and we laugh while we're doing it. There is really no better way to start my day than with these people and that feeling.

4) I can. Many people I love can't run. They don't have to worry about stupid race day anxiety because they don't have limbs or they have bad hearts or they have cancer. Or they are dead. It's morbid, but come on. The only thing keeping me from running is my...brain? I feel like such a whiner.














Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Journalism, Law, and Adnan Syed

I double majored in English and Journalism in college and my favorite class was Mass Communications Law, hands down. I have a deep fascination with the way the law has shaped journalism and the way journalism has shaped law.

True crime has always intrigued me. I don't like scary movies and I often become fearful when reading about true crime stories, but I can't look away. When I started listening to Serial during season one, I couldn't tear my ear buds away from my head. It wasn't just because I was intrigued by the case, it was because this was a totally new way to be a journalist.

Unlike many of my fellow soldiers in the Serial army, I was not new to This American Life or podcasts. I love music, but on monotonous long runs training for a couple of races I stupidly signed up for, I would get bored of my playlists and turn to audio books or This American Life.

There's something about the podcast movement and Serial's epic rise that says so much about how things have changed and stayed the same. It was like we had all been transported back to the early days of radio. Its simplicity as a medium combined with the technology used to deliver it to 5 million people per week was a game changer. I'm thankful to Sarah Koenig for that, although I know it wasn't on purpose. She had no idea this was going to happen.

Fast forward to last week when the post-conviction relief (PCR) hearing to determine if there is enough evidence to grant Syed a new trial begins. Since Serial ended, I have done what I always do when I become intrigued by something: I read EVERYTHING, watch EVERYTHING and listen to EVERYTHING that I can find on the subject. I assumed that a good portion of the Serial army did as well.

They didn't. I wasn't the only one listening to Undisclosed, the podcast started by family friend Rabia Chaudry (the one who begged Sarah Koenig to take on this case) and two other lawyers, Susan Simpson and Colin Miller, who got sucked in by Serial and couldn't stop researching it (just like me, only smarter) and Truth and Justice, another podcast started by fan Bob Ruff, but there certainly weren't 5 million of us listening.

Going from Serial to Undisclosed and Truth and Justice was like going from elementary school to graduate school in one leap. Much of what Sarah uncovered or took for granted was called into question and, often, disproved. It's not that Sarah didn't work to uncover new information, it's that she a) isn't a lawyer and b) didn't get to benefit from the massive attention her podcast had on the rest of the world and, amazingly, potential alibi witnesses. That being said, there really is no excuse for her elementary-level coverage of the PCR hearing.

As someone who donated money to Serial to keep it going because I believed that they were bringing justice to Hae's family (because justice for Hae does not involve convicting the wrong person with no physical evidence) and that Serial would continue to do this important work to fight the radical indifference problem we have in this country: I am disappointed.

I now know more about the case than Sarah does, and her coverage of the PCR hearing was, in a word: embarrassing. Still, it didn't bother me too much until I realized how many people were relying on her to deliver the ending they so desperately wanted. The dream we all hope for, the happy ending. The 5 million plus people who listened and waited for Thursday mornings every week were now waiting for her to provide closure. They felt that if there was more information to share, they would get it from the person who seemed so addicted to finding the truth. Unfortunately, it seems as if she stopped caring about Adnan the minute she posted the final installment. Her clueless calls to Dana from the closet in her hotel room were filled with the indifference that I hoped she would eradicate.

Sarah did a lot for Adnan's case, so I'm not going to continue to harp on her current lack of interest, because I also think we are seeing yet another evolution in the way this PCR hearing is being covered. There are multiple amazing sources "live tweeting" from the hallways of the courthouse, feeding the hungry masses who haven't hid their heads in the sand since Serial ended. There is still an army out there, and they are anything but indifferent.

Lawyers from all over the country providing background on PCR hearings via Twitter and their blogs, journalists suddenly doubling and tripling their followers on Twitter because they are covering the case, podcasters and random lawyers from Minnesota using Periscope to recap the day's testimony and average Joes like me getting likes from Rabia and her brother. This is a movement of the people, for the people. This is a drastic shift in the way journalism can bend and shape itself to continue to be not only relevant, but integral to providing justice. This is a new case to be covered in that Mass Communications Law class, and we are making history.

#AdnanSyed #JusticeforHae #FreeAdnan