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Created on: June 25, 2009
Letting Go, Living and Finding Balance
I talked with a friend the other day about skiing. I don't ski never have, and really have no desire to. I don't think I was designed to have part of me on little wooden slabs, propelling down a mountain. I am sure I would be holding on tight to the poles, screaming all the way, much like I did one time I went on an amusement park ride.
I can remember riding on these big swings that turned you sideways and went faster and faster, higher and higher. I was holding on to the chains so tight that they dug into my knuckles. I was also screaming to the guy to let me off. He didn't hear me, or chose to ignore me. Too bad, because unfortunately I got sick while flying through the air. I never did something like that again.
I was looking at pictures of Heather in her office of her skiing hey-days. She was good. Could have skied professionally. She shared with me how it felt, the sheer joy and freedom of letting go and flying free. She described the balance needed to ski, and thrill of knowing exactly how to hold on and let go simultaneoulsy. It was like an art form, she said, the perfect moment, where she just knew when to let go and fly. She expressed such joy in the telling of this brief story, and I could see the exhilaration in the picture of her at that exact moment when she let go and took off.
I think stuttering is like that. I can hold on so tight sometimes when I should really just let go. I am talking about both the actual stuttering what is heard and seen and the emotions, that lie beneath. I have often held on so tight to fear of judgement, fear of ridicule, fear of punishment that I become paralyzed and unable to let go. So those feelings stay buried, and they get pushed deeper and deeper until I can no longer identify them.
Its all about balance. We need that. I need that in my life. My stuttering needs to balance with the rest of my life. It is better to let loose and let go, and just stutter freely. Holding on so tight creates tension and distress, which then has to be relieved somehow. I notice sometimes that I try to hold in a stutter and not let it out. Then, I get the unnerving tremor, spasm thing. My lips purse and tense, and I can feel my self holding on when I should be letting go. The tension then moves a little bit, as I have noticed that when I am fighting the stutter, I have also been squeezing my left eye shut. I have mentioned this a few times before. It's involuntary I don't know I am
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