I am never alone in Asheville. I have two dogs that remind me they need food, water, walks, play time, and cuddles. I have a wife that reminds me her belly is hungry, she ran out of fruit and bread for her lunches that week, some bill came in the mail and she isn't sure what it's for, and oh yeah - I work and go to school too. I had friends and fun, but life kept me busy when extra curricular activities didn't. Greensboro has been a wake up call in that respect. The first week I moved here, I had no friends, very little time spent at work, and aside from settling into my apartment and resting up from the ridiculous amount of driving, packing, moving, unloading, unpacking, etc I had just done - not a whole lot to do. I have Milo with me, but one dog is significantly easier to take care of than two, not to mention he is much calmer than Lucy. If you want to talk about an emotion that didn't get exercised in Asheville, it was loneliness. Then all of the sudden, I move and I'm alone. That's where we find out how strong our emotions are when we aren't. My weakness gave rise to something I wasn't prepared for. I got really sad and I gave into the emotions which isn't healthy. This starts a cycle of negative feedback, but we can break it. We just have to choose to.
I chose to get up and take my dog to the park. It got me out of the house and away from the walls I'd been staring at for the past few days. We met strangers and even though they only stopped for a few minutes each to chat about how adorable and well behaved Milo was (proud mom moment), they talked. That human connection sparked something that said "I'm not alone, I just can't sit at home and expect people to come find me."
We have to acknowledge that our hurts, no matter what they are, what emotion we're feeling, and how deep they run, they don't have to control or consume us. We aren't alone. We aren't our emotion. But we can't change how we feel if we don't acknowledge the feeling and then seek to change it. We can't just try once - a commitment to wellness is what our lives demand. A commitment to wellness is specific. It is a plan. For example, I will walk my dog in the park once a week because seeing new faces makes me happy. I will take my medication every day as prescribed. I will eat dinner outside on Tuesdays in hopes of meeting someone that lives in my apartment complex. I will journal about my experience of trying to make new friends. Your plan can be anything that helps you achieve the opposite emotion of what you're feeling. But have a plan and stick to it because that will pull you through on the days you can't make up your mind for yourself.
All in all, emotions kinda suck. They're hard to cope with and even harder to challenge. We are wired to feel certain things and when we don't want to feel them, our minds and our hearts just don't understand why we're rebelling against the feeling it's given you to hold on to. But emotions are valuable and we can learn so much about ourselves from listening to them, allowing ourselves to feel them, and then moving into a positive direction.
So today might hurt. And tomorrow might hurt too. And yes, I'm still lonely dammit. But I know I won't be forever. And that's called hope. Hope is all we can ask for and all we should need.
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