Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim
Because it was grassy and wanted wear,
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I marked the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
Robert Frost
We all come to times in our lives when the path we are on splits into two possible decisions. Go left and a series of events unfolds. Go right and a completely different reality is at hand. It's scary when we arrive at these moments in our lives. This is where I find myself today.
I've always hated change. I hate uncertainty and trying new things. I hate being forced to make a choice when I can't completely weigh all my options. I hate that feeling of regret that creeps into my stomach and my mind and tells me that no matter what decision I choose, it will ultimately be the wrong one. I hate not being able to turn to anyone for advice because everyone has their own opinion and bias on what I should or should not do with my life. But what is my opinion? How do I figure that out?
So what's the decision that is plaguing me this time? The decision of where to go to here. What path do I walk down this time? 3 years ago I made a choice. I was sick of this town I had grown up in. I was sick of feeling caged and held back by all of the familiar settings that had molded me into a shy, introverted hermit. I was 21 years old and I knew names, but not people. Faces, but not the stories behind them. I wanted to not just say I was alive and young, but actually feel it. Finally, this feeling boiled over inside of me and I found myself on my school's website applying for admission. I can see myself sitting in my living room figuring out the admission process when my mom came down the stairs and asked me what I was doing. When I told her I think she was surprised, and maybe a little sad. She sat there with me though and walked me through the process. She didn't let her opinions or fears or feelings hold me back. She just helped. That's one of the things I miss most about her. Her selfless desire to help me at any cost.
Weeks passed and I got the acceptance letter in the mail. This was happening. The girl who had been afraid to sleep over at people's houses was going to move across the United States without her family to a place where she knew no one. It was terrifying and exhilarating all at the same time. My life had been painful to this point. I was bullied mercilessly in school and it had beaten me to the point of self doubt. I was afraid of everything. I was afraid of people. I questioned everyone and everything. I still do. But this decision at the time I was certain about. I could move across the country and recreate myself. I could start over. I didn't have to be afraid of my own shadow and everyone else's anymore. I could be me...whoever that was.
It came time for me to pack. I remember going through my clothes with my mom and trying on almost every outfit in my closet. My mom would sit back and tell me how things looked and we just talked. I knew she was sad I was leaving. It didn't sway me though. I get angry at myself now looking back at those moments because, although I was unaware about what events would unfold in the next couple years, I was selfish. Mom helped me pack my car and soon my dad and I were on the road. All I could think about was that my life was finally beginning after 21 years.
Dad and I arrived in Boston 5 days later. I remember coming over that bridge on Memorial Drive in Cambridge and seeing the skyline for the first time. It was new, even though it was old and it was beautiful, even though it was a little rough around the edges. I felt at home. Mom flew to Boston and met Dad and I at the hotel. I can close my eyes and still see Mom standing at the drop off by the front doors of the hotel when we came around the corner. I was so happy to see her. I needed her.
The days that followed found Mom and I driving to the school that I had blindly applied to and setting up my dorm room. Sometimes when I drive up the windy road leading to school I think about my mom and I being in the car together and seeing that sign for the first time. I remember the excitement. I can still see mom and I parking the car at the top of the steps in front of the dorm and carrying my stuff inside while mom unpacked it for me. I remember it like it was yesterday.
I was fine until some of the first ice breaker activities started to happen. I found myself falling back into my same patterns. I was scared to put myself out there and talk to these strangers that I didn't know. Old habits die hard I guess. I remember going back to my new room (that looked like a prison cell) and crying. The next morning I drove back to my parents hotel. I can still see myself standing on the balcony outside our room convinced that I hated it in Boston and I wanted to go home. Dad was ready to pack the car up and start our journey back. Mom on the other hand, as always, was my voice of reason. Mom took me aside on the balcony, out of earshot of my dad, and told me I should probably give it more of a chance. She told me that if I really wanted to go home, she would be elated and they would pack the car and we'd go, but she didn't want me living with regrets. She didn't want me getting home and realizing I didn't try hard enough and always wondering what it would have been like if I had stayed. (Mom if you can see me writing this now, know that I love you and you're the only reason I took that step).
I decided to stay. I remember hugging my parents in the car garage at the hotel for the last time and driving away. As I was driving out of the garage I can remember looking up to where our room was and seeing them standing out on the balcony and waving at me and my mom blowing me a kiss. And so my journey began.
My first year in Boston was amazing. I met some incredible people. I did amazing things. Went places and traveled around the east coast. It was a dream. I was living a fairytale. I made friends. People liked me for me. It was something I had rarely felt in my whole life. I wanted more. At the end of the year I didn't think I was going to be able to go back to Boston. My heart hurt. I didn't want to have to say goodbye to all the people who had finally accepted me for who I was. I had finally started to learn my place in this world and now I was being ripped away. It didn't seem fair. What I didn't realize at the time is that everything happens for a reason...and God has a plan.
A month after getting home my mom was diagnosed with Diabetes. It was a complete life change for her, but she knew that she needed to take better care of herself so she started taking measures to switch up her diet and the activity in her life. Around late July I made the decision that I had to go back to Hellenic. I had to continue my journey that I was on to self discovery and happiness. My journey wasn't complete. Then complete disaster struck.
August 4. 2010- Mom was diagnosed with cancer. Our family doctor wasn't 100% sure that the mass that showed in the ctscan was cancer, but most times when there is a mass in the pancreas, it is. Right then and there I knew I wasn't going back to Hellenic. My mom's health was WAY more important to me. She had been my rock, my support, my guiding light my whole life and now she needed me. I was not going to desert her. Many months of surgery, recovery, chemo, radiation, and ups and downs later, mom was determined to be cancer free in April 2011!!! We were all so excited. She went back to work, and life seemed to carry on as it had before she had been diagnosed. It seemed the nightmare was over.
Then I fell apart. My whole purpose for months had been taking care of my mom, and now, I had lost my purpose. I started to get headaches every day at a certain time that made me feel like I was going to lose consciousness. I stopped being able to drive cause I would get too dizzy. I barely left the house, or got out of bed. It was the scariest thing that has ever afflicted me. I was in a tunnel and I couldn't get out. Mom finally took me to her doctor. I was diagnosed with severe anxiety disorder. The doctor gave me medication to help with the anxiety.
The first day I took the medication I have never been more sick in my whole life. I felt like I couldn't breathe. I was nauseous beyond belief. I couldn't see straight. I was hot then cold then both at the same time. I thought I was dying. The next day it was a little better, but then something came over me. What was I doing? I didn't want to be a slave to a pill for the rest of my life. I wasn't doing this anymore. I made the decision right then and there that I was not going to take the medication anymore. I stopped the next day.
I don't know if the pill changed my brain chemistry for a bit after that or what happened but I had really strange thoughts and dreams for a while. I was in a dark place and I had to fight my way out. I went back to Boston in May to visit my friends and it all came clear what I needed to do. I needed to finish my journey. That's where I would find happiness. Mom was better. This was my time. In August 2011 I made the trip back to Boston for school. I was so happy. This is where I was meant to be. Then the beginning of October my mom called with bad news...the cancer was back. I cried in my room for hours. This was a nightmare. I needed to go home. I couldn't leave her. But she wanted me to stay in Boston.
She came and visited me for my birthday as she was going through chemo and she was so sick. But she fought through it to make me happy. I can't go into details cause I'm still in denial and I haven't accepted or faced a lot of my memories, but that time I shared with my mom in Boston I will never forget. It was a memorable trip for a lot of reasons. It was a changing time of my life. A friendship I had was beginning to blossom into something more and my mom's approval to take the friendship to the next level was asked.
The relationship happened. It was through that relationship that I was able to cope with the next months of my life. It was through that person that I was able to not fall apart. Regardless of where life takes me I will always be thankful for that person and what he did for me. I needed him. When my mom passed away on April 28, 2012 my life screeched to a halt. Everything changed and I didn't realize it at the time.
I think I went into shock. I went into auto pilot and was just going through the motions of life. Summer came and went and it was time to go back to Boston again. By the end of the summer I didn't want to leave Utah. I had people who I had counted on who I knew were looking forward to seeing me. I couldn't let them down. When I got to Boston something just didn't feel the same. I felt out of place. I felt like I didn't belong. I felt old.
I missed my friends and family in Utah. Eventually a month after school started my relationship ended. Unfortunately friends who I thought I had left with the relationship as well. I was alone. I had a few good friends who stuck by my side, but even the person who had gotten me through everything would barely give me a hello back when I said hi. Things ended on good terms. Why was this happening?
So now, as I sit in my bedroom at home and think about going back to Boston on Wednesday, I just don't want to. I have to and I will....but I don't want to. I feel like Boston served a purpose for me. Boston was part of God's plan. He knew I needed support in my life for what was to come. He knew I needed to find myself and I did. I feel like Boston's purpose has been served and I need to move on. I can live knowing my mom was proud of me for making the decision I did. She told me she was happy I discovered who I was and got beyond my comfort zone.
But now, I don't know what to do. I'm holding on to strands of memories of what Boston once was for me, but it will never be that again. I'm living in a world of shadows that dance around me everyday. It's not fair. Where do I go from here?
A month after getting home my mom was diagnosed with Diabetes. It was a complete life change for her, but she knew that she needed to take better care of herself so she started taking measures to switch up her diet and the activity in her life. Around late July I made the decision that I had to go back to Hellenic. I had to continue my journey that I was on to self discovery and happiness. My journey wasn't complete. Then complete disaster struck.
August 4. 2010- Mom was diagnosed with cancer. Our family doctor wasn't 100% sure that the mass that showed in the ctscan was cancer, but most times when there is a mass in the pancreas, it is. Right then and there I knew I wasn't going back to Hellenic. My mom's health was WAY more important to me. She had been my rock, my support, my guiding light my whole life and now she needed me. I was not going to desert her. Many months of surgery, recovery, chemo, radiation, and ups and downs later, mom was determined to be cancer free in April 2011!!! We were all so excited. She went back to work, and life seemed to carry on as it had before she had been diagnosed. It seemed the nightmare was over.
Then I fell apart. My whole purpose for months had been taking care of my mom, and now, I had lost my purpose. I started to get headaches every day at a certain time that made me feel like I was going to lose consciousness. I stopped being able to drive cause I would get too dizzy. I barely left the house, or got out of bed. It was the scariest thing that has ever afflicted me. I was in a tunnel and I couldn't get out. Mom finally took me to her doctor. I was diagnosed with severe anxiety disorder. The doctor gave me medication to help with the anxiety.
The first day I took the medication I have never been more sick in my whole life. I felt like I couldn't breathe. I was nauseous beyond belief. I couldn't see straight. I was hot then cold then both at the same time. I thought I was dying. The next day it was a little better, but then something came over me. What was I doing? I didn't want to be a slave to a pill for the rest of my life. I wasn't doing this anymore. I made the decision right then and there that I was not going to take the medication anymore. I stopped the next day.
I don't know if the pill changed my brain chemistry for a bit after that or what happened but I had really strange thoughts and dreams for a while. I was in a dark place and I had to fight my way out. I went back to Boston in May to visit my friends and it all came clear what I needed to do. I needed to finish my journey. That's where I would find happiness. Mom was better. This was my time. In August 2011 I made the trip back to Boston for school. I was so happy. This is where I was meant to be. Then the beginning of October my mom called with bad news...the cancer was back. I cried in my room for hours. This was a nightmare. I needed to go home. I couldn't leave her. But she wanted me to stay in Boston.
She came and visited me for my birthday as she was going through chemo and she was so sick. But she fought through it to make me happy. I can't go into details cause I'm still in denial and I haven't accepted or faced a lot of my memories, but that time I shared with my mom in Boston I will never forget. It was a memorable trip for a lot of reasons. It was a changing time of my life. A friendship I had was beginning to blossom into something more and my mom's approval to take the friendship to the next level was asked.
The relationship happened. It was through that relationship that I was able to cope with the next months of my life. It was through that person that I was able to not fall apart. Regardless of where life takes me I will always be thankful for that person and what he did for me. I needed him. When my mom passed away on April 28, 2012 my life screeched to a halt. Everything changed and I didn't realize it at the time.
I think I went into shock. I went into auto pilot and was just going through the motions of life. Summer came and went and it was time to go back to Boston again. By the end of the summer I didn't want to leave Utah. I had people who I had counted on who I knew were looking forward to seeing me. I couldn't let them down. When I got to Boston something just didn't feel the same. I felt out of place. I felt like I didn't belong. I felt old.
I missed my friends and family in Utah. Eventually a month after school started my relationship ended. Unfortunately friends who I thought I had left with the relationship as well. I was alone. I had a few good friends who stuck by my side, but even the person who had gotten me through everything would barely give me a hello back when I said hi. Things ended on good terms. Why was this happening?
So now, as I sit in my bedroom at home and think about going back to Boston on Wednesday, I just don't want to. I have to and I will....but I don't want to. I feel like Boston served a purpose for me. Boston was part of God's plan. He knew I needed support in my life for what was to come. He knew I needed to find myself and I did. I feel like Boston's purpose has been served and I need to move on. I can live knowing my mom was proud of me for making the decision I did. She told me she was happy I discovered who I was and got beyond my comfort zone.
But now, I don't know what to do. I'm holding on to strands of memories of what Boston once was for me, but it will never be that again. I'm living in a world of shadows that dance around me everyday. It's not fair. Where do I go from here?
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