Memento Mori - Remember You Will Die, So Don’t Forget to Live
The Stoics have a saying - Memento Mori, “remember you will die,” so don’t forget to live. This is a story about aging, love, loss and hope. Tribue Honorem.
I was just shy of 40 years old when my optometrist turned to me after my eye exam and said, “Your eyes look great. Your prescription is pretty much the same. Plus. I’m giving your glasses a little bump!”
He said this like it was a little treat. I wanted in on the fun.
So I said, “Great! What’s a bump?”
He kept charting away and wheeling his chair between me and the counter with his laptop. He said, “Well your vision is great far away, but when you read, you could use a little extra support. So I put in a bump. You can’t see it on your lenses. It’s just a little transition when you look down to read where your lenses have a little extra magnification.”
I said, “Wait a minute, Doc. Did you just give me BIFOCALS?!”
As he spun his wheely chair back to me, he said, “We don’t call them that anymore. It makes people upset.” Then he wheeled back to his laptop and kept clacking away.
I laughed hard and said, “I don’t think it’s the word, Doc, but I’ll take ‘em.”
And that was the day I realized I was aging.
Since then, so much has happened. I immediately left the eye doctor and joined my gym’s version of CrossFit. It’s a rite of passage for some of us moving into 40. I got Botox and lashes. Started intermittent fasting. New makeup. New clothes. One last reach for youth before it slips away…And then COVID came and, well, you know. The world literally ended as we knew it.
Since then, I’ve been processing so much about living and dying, grief and love, meaning and purpose. And I’ve made just about every mistake and error you can make along the way.
When it comes to growing older, I had a full crisis. It wasn’t just about the way I look. It was about my place in society. It’s about belonging and worthiness in a world that currently cares most about image, status, youth, selling yourself, and a personal brand. I tried. I tried so hard to be smooth. And I found that I just couldn’t do it without burning myself to the bone.
So what’s the other option? Fade out of existence? Step away from society? Walk into the woods and let the wolves have me? Become a hedge witch at the edge of the wood offering herbal remedies and transformational experiences in the margins? I considered it. A LOT.
I went full-fledged panic about death and the idea that Chris, my husband of 25 years, will die one day and probably at a different time than me. Full panic for months. I’d wake up in the night and jolt my hand out to feel the warmth of him, his chest rising and falling as he was still breathing. It’s the closest I’ve come to when I brought my son, James, home as a newborn. I couldn’t sleep for months. It felt like my eyes on him were the only thing keeping him breathing, and I was terrified he’d slip away.
Love always ends in loss. It’s a truth that’s shocking and hard to swallow at first. Is there a way to avoid the crushing blow of separation? A way to protect our hearts and souls from the terror and despair of losing what matters most? I’ve tried…I’ve protected myself, I’ve pulled inside, I’ve controlled and managed and demanded and begged and bargained…and all it did is make me feel more afraid and less available to my own heart and relationships that matter most.
Love is worth the risk. That’s what I’ve come to know in my bones. It’s rich and full when we can accept the loss that’s inevitable as well. It reminds me of the Stoic philosophy Memento Mori - remember you will die. It’s a perspective shift. Of course we will die.
Don’t forget to really live.
Which brings me back to aging. I want to grow old. I want to have beautiful crinkle lines at my eyes and sun spots from being outside. I want to have a soft belly to snuggle grandbabies. I want to have silver streaked hair. I want to look like I’ve weathered these storms. I earned every scar. I lived all my stories. This body is a badge of honor. I will care for her for the rest of my life.
What if my weird old crone self is part of the whole alongside beautiful innocent maiden and exhausted caring devoted mother?
Aging is an act of integration. All of me is welcome here, stacked within myself like Matryoshka dolls (see image below). My mother had a set when I was growing up and I think of them often. Each little doll was like the larger one holding her, and yet she was different at each size, too. Aren’t we all scaffolds of ourselves, different, but whole?
What if I allow life to have her way with me? What if Love is surrender embodied?
Let the years come.
Let us love with reckless abandon.
Let us throw our arms wide and welcome it all.
Tribue Honorem.
Secure Attachment is a Privilege
Secure attachment is a privilege.
Secure Attachment is a Privilege.
Secure attachment is a privilege. We don’t get to decide which family we are born in to, which family system we belong to, which society we enter in to, which neighborhood, which religious and spiritual affiliations we inherit, the systems and powers that operate at every level of our being from before we are born, which is when our attachment systems are forged. Our cells, which exist in our grandmothers in part, become our being now. Our societies, our peace or war, our hunger or satiation, our safety or threat all become the way in which we see our world and ourselves.
To try and heal our attachment systems on our own is to try and heal a systemic issue on an individual level, which we in Western civilization are trained to do. “Work harder” “Try harder” “Self-starter” are phrases that imply if you’re hurting, it’s on you to heal. And that is true - in the context of a much larger system.
Jim Coan, neuroscientist and brain researcher at the University of Virginia states in his book Perception that to study a human being as an individual is to study a human being at a deficit. There is no such thing as an individual. There is only an individual in the context of that person’s relationships. D.D. Winnicott, Object Relations Psychologist and human attachment researcher says that “There is no such thing as a baby. There is only a baby and a nursing mother.” And Sue Johnson, world-renowned attachment theorist and researcher, creator of the APA’s gold standard for couples therapy says “Relational wounds heal in relationship.” and all wounds are really relational wounds per Judith Herman, PTSD researcher and author of Trauma and Recovery.
To look at a person’s attachment strategy and to weigh and measure that person based on it is to judge a human being rather than the system that human being was raised in. If a person has an attachment strategy of anxiously pursuing by asking lots of questions, we should be able to see that this person grew up in a system where it wasn’t safe enough to trust that they would have what they need when they need it, and instead,, safety comes from pushing for information with urgency. Compassion comes from understanding the root of people’s issues, not from blaming them for those issues. A better question than what’s wrong with you is why does that behavior serve you?
Secure attachment is a privilege. If you hit the genetic, social, and societal lottery of safety, comfort, exploration, risk, and acceptance, you’ve got the privilege of a calm nervous system, accepting of self because you’ve experienced acceptance from your family, peers, society, etc, willing to risk and have courage because you’ve received comfort and encouragement whether you’ve succeeded or failed, able to overcome triggers because someone in your life helped you learn to regulate your emotions so you can self-regulate your emotions now. All that we see as moral high ground is nervous system privilege. Does this mean that we are stuck with what hands we were dealt? No. But it does mean we aren’t all at the same playing field and it does not cost us all the same thing to move toward attachment security. Nor are we all destined to have it.