Tuesday, January 1, 2013

重新開始: Fresh Starts


Admission is no easy thing.  Confessions are not written simply. Because I struggle to separate my decisions and actions from my sense of self, admitting my faults often feels uncomfortably close to culling myself.  Maybe that’s something I need.  So I have words to share with you, and I can’t keep silent anymore.
I struggle with keeping in touch.  Many of you know this firsthand.  So before I left for Taiwan in late July, I swore to myself that this time would be different.  It hasn’t been.  This past summer, I reasoned that I’d grown and realized how deeply friendships and family bonds run.  I guess I haven’t. 

For a number of days, maybe even weeks, I had convinced myself that new starts in life are a simple matter of choice, willpower, and opportunity.  Even if fresh starts operate this way for others, they never have for me.  This past several months have been like few times in my life—I say that with immense joy and yet great yearning—for what, I don’t know.  I do know that I am convinced that beginning anew is not the panacea it seems to be.  Nor is it easy.  I have found myself in unfamiliar places surrounded by unfamiliar people, prompting me mistakenly to assume that amidst new circumstances, the self can be recreated (as from a blank slate) through sheer will.  Try as I might, my foibles remain firmly entrenched.

Among those shortcomings, my persistent incapacity to keep in touch with loved ones once proximity’s convenience gives way weighs heavily on my mind.  A bad habit for one living halfway around the world.  I say “habit” because I must retain liability for this deficiency.  Too often, “I’m bad at keeping in touch” is furnished as grounds to excuse oneself from doing so and to dampen others’ expectations.  At least I have been guilty of such semi-conscious moral calculus. 

And I’m very sorry.  For being silent these past months.  For ignoring the efforts of those who’ve tried to keep in touch.  And most of all for taking for granted the affection, esteem, and patience of all those who I claim to love and care for.  Really, I am.

Not emailing, updating the blog, or Skyping is not something that occurred intentionally.  Some of the faults we are slowest to see are those that occur through no overt effort on our part, but through our busyness, our inattention, and our remarkable tolerance for letting things adrift remain adrift.  For too long, I have contented in allowing the busyness of teaching, language study, and traveling to distract me from sharing these joys and aches with you.  So I’ve carried these alone, sometimes even convincing myself that this displayed a perverse sort of strength.  But that only partially explains my reluctance to speak. 

More than busy, I have been afraid.  I have been afraid of being unable to articulate the experiences that I have faced in a way that you will find relatable and engaging.  I have been afraid to practice the reflection necessary to sift through the layers of meaning and confusion that mark too many of my days, and which rattle me more over than I should care to admit.  I have been afraid to admit that I feel lost.  And  I have most feared is that after writing, I would look at the words and see that it is not good.  Not true.  It has been so much easier to lose myself in the frenzied productiveness of my first full-time job and the host of new experiences lying just beyond my front door.  My eyes have been so fixed on hiking Taiwan’s landscapes (both literal and cultural), that I had all but given up on acting as cartographer for my year here. 
But the time has come to resume those grapplings for meaning and perspective.  With the start of a new year, I choose to allow the infectious optimism this day brings (with its ‘fresh starts’) to overshadow the possibility that I will again renege on my intention to keep in touch.  So I won’t promise anything concrete, either to myself or to you. 

Yet for the time-being, I am pondering these thoughts again, in the only way that I know—by writing.  In a letter to Marcellinus of Carthage in 412 A.D., Saint Augustine writes, “For I am the sort of man who writes because he has made progress, and who makes progress – by writing.”  On one level, these words are convicting.  Perhaps a major reason I feel I haven’t made the progress I want to is because I haven’t written and because I have repressed the thoughts that lead to such writing.  On a second level, Augustine comforts me by presenting the possibility that writing may help clarify my confused ideas of self and place. 

More reassuring still, Augustine touches upon the salve-like truth that our written words need not (and indeed will not) be beyond reproach.  Disseminating them may indeed put our thoughts and words under heightened scrutiny.  Nevertheless, Augustine quietly reminds us that putting thoughts on paper can be a means towards further understanding, and that such words may be as flawed in substance or presentation as the thoughts that give rise to them or the person behind them.  And that that imperfection is okay.
So here’s to another year of imperfection, another year of pondering, so long as it be another year of growth.  In Mandarin, the word 重新開始 (chongxin kaishi) means ‘to resume’ or ‘to start again’.  A fresh start.  One that doesn’t hope to leave the past behind, but to build from it.  That’s what I want for the new year.  I hope you’ll join me.