I am
the protagonist in my own story. I am also a sister, neighbour, friend,
colleague, aunt, and life partner. I play “random stranger” in countless other stories,
too. Sometimes I forget and try to solve another person’s problem, but ultimately,
and as difficult as it is when I would take someone else’s burden on myself, I can’t
walk a path set for someone else. I can only walk alongside.
The
path analogy is certainly not new, but it became more clear to me during a flânerie some weeks ago. It was a
gorgeous sunny day in the urban forest. The light was gloriously dappled a
dozen shades of green. I was surrounded by towering firs and abundant foliage,
yet I plainly heard other people’s voices all around me. Strangely (or maybe
not, to those who know me), I thought of those who have gone before, the unseen
souls whom I have loved and who yet linger to help me navigate my way through
this weighty, challenging, fleeting and paradoxically interminable third
dimensional existence. I felt their combined presence beside me on the spongy
cedar path, but when I glanced around, I was alone.
I
didn’t feel alone, though. That was comforting ... to a point. I realized
facing front that even if I can’t see them, they stay a step or two behind
because the path before me is mine. My
hand will not be held and the obstacles removed before I encounter them. I have
to test the footing and trip over the roots and choose which way to go when I
reach a fork in the trail. The best they can do—the best any of us can do—is
lend support and encouragement from the sidelines.
It’s
a hard lesson. I can’t imagine what a parent feels like when their child falls
ill. My mother blamed herself when my arthritis was diagnosed; she thought God
was punishing her through me. I distinctly remember telling her this was not
so, that my bones were my challenge.
She felt the ripple effect, as did the entire family to varying degrees, but in
the end all she could do was help me while I tackled the problem.
So it is with life. Each of us has a map to follow, sometimes with company, sometimes not. People come and go according to their own maps, and when all is said and done, a magical story will have been told.
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