The Night I Opened the Door

After years of being terribly codependent on every man I ever loved, tonight is the night I finally grew up, and finally learned independence.

Tonight, something subtle but powerful shifted.

I opened the back door of my apartment — a door I hadn’t touched in months — and stepped outside. The night air wrapped around me like an old friend, and I realized how long it had been since I let myself breathe beyond the walls of waiting.

I looked up at the stars, knowing that soon I’ll be seeing them through my own telescope — my first one. I even found a local astronomy club, in which this inspriation came, and for the first time in a long time, I’m excited about something that has nothing to do with anyone else. Just wonder. Just sky.

It used to destroy me when he didn’t call. The silence felt like proof of absence. But this time, I was steady. I’d made peace with the quiet — and then, like clockwork, the phone lit up.

He did call.

And the night that began in stillness ended in laughter and heat — Scooby-Doo, Wishmaster, for our spooky season of shows and movies, the teasing that felt light and alive, and the love I finally wasn’t chasing, falling apart over, or being desperate about. He told me he wanted to be next to me, and I could feel that softness, that spark, still alive between us. He told me how much he liked how much I teased him, and I could feel his needing and all his wanting again.

But this time, I wasn’t clinging. I was choosing.

I wasn’t waiting by the door — I was standing outside it, finally seeing the stars.

Something in me reopened tonight.

Not just the door. Not just the line between us.

My whole life.

Daily writing prompt
When was the first time you really felt like a grown up (if ever)?

 

Relationships Get Better with Age

I have realized since being in my 40s, I relate to people a lot better than I did when I was younger. I can set boundaries today, I can pull back when needed to, and I also know exactly the type of people I want in my life, and what people I don’t.

Toxicity is rampant in most relationships these days, and I feel as you get older, you get better at weeding that out. Of course, this varies per individual, but you get what I mean. I find that especially in the relationship I am in now. I love my boyfriend so much, but I am aware that in order to make a relationship work, we need to allow a certain amount of space for each other to grow. We need to be two “whole” people, instead of pieces of one trying to stick and paste to each other. He has specifically told me that he doesn’t want our relationship to be a codependent one, and I respect him so much for this. Me and my husband were incredibly codependent and toxic, and I don’t want to repeat past mistakes at all. Being with someone that has a certain sense of responsibility has been a real bonus for me in this relationship.

Having healthy relationships is also true for friendships as well. Have you ever had a friend just call you and vent for hours, but when you need to vent, they are nowhere to be found? How is that healthy? Do you know to remove these people from your life, or have the strength to?

As I’ve gotten older, my relationships have gotten older too. People that I knew when I was younger have grown into parents and elders and have matured as well as I have. It has been hard to maintain some of them, as my bipolarness alienated me from a lot of people of my past, but those that have stuck around have been closer than ever to me, and our bond has never been stronger.

But I think, personally, that the older you get, relationships with people just get better and better. Just look at how well seniors bond. Did you ever wonder why that is?

Just something to ponder.

Stay Tuned.

Daily writing prompt
What do you think gets better with age?