At the time of publication of On Writing Mr. King had spent twelve years clean and sober. When he walked away from alcohol and cocaine in 1988 he choose his family and his life over what he was addicted to--he claimed his agency back.
Stephen King describes Misery, the story of a nurse imprisoning and then torturing a writer, and Tommyknockers, where aliens supply "energy and superficial intelligence" (97) in exchange for your soul, as metaphor's for addiction.
I am an addict. My addiction is connected to food and relationships. It is essential that I recognize the part I have played in my own life. Was I responsible as a child--no. But somewhere along the way I learned that handing over the responsibility to others in exchange for my agency made life "easier." The addiction to food closely followed, as I filled in the hollow places left behind from the pieces of me I exchanged for peace, love, attention--a sense of control.
It is when I recognized these coping skill that I became responsible for them. And I am pretty sure that those times when I seemed to "see the possibilities" were moments of recognizing there was a way out of the addiction.
It is difficult to write. Even more difficult to look at lost opportunities. I tell my son we are not our past. He misunderstands, and therefore points out our past experiences create who we are. I explain that any moment I can decide to change who that is if I no longer choose to be that person. I take what I learn, but as Charlie says in Perks of Being a Wallflower says, "...even if we don't have the power to choose where we come from, we can still choose where we go from there."
And as I meander about in this blog it is becoming clearer this is what I am doing. I am choosing where I am going and resetting the route...it is not as immediate as reprogramming a GPS. Instinctively I knew moving from the familiar path to a new one, through healing down to the molecular level, is a slow process.
The few years I spent attending Codependents Anonymous I became familiar with the Twelve Steps. Steps ten, eleven and twelve are rather a "lather-rinse-repeat" procedure:
This change is a continuing process. Stephen King wrote that he was convinced when he chose his family over drugs and alcohol he was giving up his creativity. But he kept at the writing and, "Little by little I found the beat again, and after that I found the joy again," (99).10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God, as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out
12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these Steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics, and to practice these principles in all our affairs.
I am afraid I will make a mistake. I don't trust myself much, because it is next to impossible to authentically present when I am trading me for the payoffs.
But I miss me. I have a picture of her. I've seen her peek at me from time to time and then a difficulty arises and I lose view of her once again. I am tired of trading her off. I want to see the world through her eyes again. I want to throw my arms wide open and own every part of her.
The founder of the slow food movement, Carlo Petrini, said, "You have to give time to each and everything." Will it take seven years? I am not sure, however it gives me the sense that I am aware it is a slow change movement and have time to attend to "each and everything."
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