How many lives have you lived?
I was listening to a podcast the other day, as I often do when I am on a long drive in the car. Marc Maron, comedian/actor and host of WTF, during an interview, said, “That was another life, I’ve had many.” He was referring to a period of time early in his career when he was performing as a stand-up comic traveling a circuit of gigs in New England.
I thought about my life. I have had only one. I understand Maron was speaking metamorphically, but it doesn’t feel to me like I’ve had different lives. It is all of a piece. I imagine that for someone who has had very different careers or lived in different parts of the country or world, or perhaps has been divorced, it might well feel like different lives. Nothing that dramatic has happened to divide mine into definable segments.
Other than living in Pittsburgh for 3 ½ years, I have been a resident of New York my whole life – less than half of it in Brooklyn, the rest in the Capital Region. I have been with the same partner for over 40 years. I have held a variety of jobs, but all were in some aspect of public policy. These are threads that bind the tapestry of my life.
In a way, I feel jealous of those who have had more variety. Sometimes I’m restless; I want a change of scenery. I remember being on vacation in San Francisco, enjoying the natural beauty and cultural offerings, and wondering ‘why do I live in Albany?’ I’m fully aware of the downsides of the city by the bay and the upsides of New York’s capital city but I felt a sense of longing, for a different climate, new surroundings, something new. I’ve never seriously considered moving, not with all that would entail: Gary starting a new practice, uprooting the kids, being so far from our families who are almost entirely located in New York and New Jersey.
There’s a group on Facebook that I am part of called ‘View from My Window.’ Folks from all around the world post pictures from a window in their home. Many have fabulous views of mountains or oceans, but there are mundane views, too: An ordinary tree in the front yard of a suburban home or an up-close look at an apartment building exterior with fire escapes and windows. I see those pictures and imagine if it was my view. I have no complaints about the one I look at most often – the window above my kitchen sink that looks out at our backyard. The same view I have looked at for almost 30 years. As lovely as it is, I crave something different.
I’m sure others, who have moved around a lot, would envy my stability.
For some, like Maron, phases of their lives may be demarcated by periods of sobriety and addiction. That, too, is foreign to me. I can imagine that, perhaps more than any of the other changes mentioned above, living life sober would be different on a very deep level as compared to being in the throes of addiction. Perhaps one almost feels like a different person in recovery, before and after, on the wagon or off – I’m just speculating. I am happy not to have gone down that road.
Living in different places and having different careers holds appeal. It seems so much more colorful. One of my colleagues in a writing group has lived in far-flung places in our world, not to mention different regions of our country. It sounds so much more exciting than my path.
If I am honest with myself, there is a reason my life hasn’t been that exotic. When I was younger, I was afraid of change. In college when some considered studying abroad, the idea intrigued me, but I was too insecure to do more than read through the explanatory pamphlet. I told myself I couldn’t afford it, but I don’t think that was actually the case. Looking back at it, I don’t regret it, I wasn’t ready. In some ways I wish I could go back to college now; I would be so much less tentative, more willing to take risks. Someone said youth is wasted on the young. I see the truth in that now.
The question is what will the future hold? Will Gary and I make a ‘new life’ if he ever retires? I suspect, whatever we do, it will still be of a piece with what has gone before. That’s just who we are, even with my pangs of restlessness.
Do you feel like Marc Maron does, that you have lived multiple lives? Or is your experience more like mine. I’m curious to hear if you are willing to share.
Some people like jazz. Others classical. Still others follow the owner’s manual. I have enjoyed jazz.
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Does that mean your life has been improvised more than planned? I appreciate the analogy, either way. Thanks for commenting.
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Yeah, I understand when one talks of “another life” . Although not using the wording of another life to describe my personal life points I do have them (eras?). I have my school age life. My BC (before children) life. There’s my work life and now my retirement era. Looking back on my life these at a high level describe the different eras that looking back have defined my existence.
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Yes, I can see those divisions in my life, too.
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I wonder sometimes if we all have a little bit of “the grass is always greener on the other side” syndrome. I don’t know, maybe that is too easy and is settling for less than what we could do. But I also wonder if we don’t value some of the blessings we have been given as much as we should. I have worked for the same group since 1991. I’m pretty well sure I know how to get to work, where the lunchroom is and who is most likely to help me when I need it.
Thank goodness one of us is restless enough to get us to do some exploring.
thank you for the outstanding blog post.
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I think you are quite right – the grass does look greener on the other side. I’m also very glad that after more than 30 years you know how to get to work – though if we are honest, your office has relocated three times in the course of those three decades and yet you have managed to find your way. 🙂
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Remember, there is no place like home. You have found your happiness in your own backyard.
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I should have predicted that you would leave a Wizard of Oz reference, UT. I think it is true – especially if one defines home as where your family/loved ones are with you.
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