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our last college grad (Julie, 2018); I'm smiling through my tears... |
This week I celebrate finally learning the name of something I’ve been living with forever (no, not Steve, I THINK I have my hubby's name down). I’m talking about the way I can--and do—often feel two contradictory emotions at the same time. The word is “dialectic.”
Here are some dialectics...
"I love you and I'm upset with you." Now that I think of it, this DOES apply to me and Steve. Love him a lot! Often very upset with him!
"I want to stay the same, and I want to change": Example--I want to be 30 lbs. thinner by summer, and I also want to continue down the rich and caloric culinary road I’ve been traveling. Corollary: I do not want to take a weight-loss drug, because I’d prefer the hard-but-satisfying work of slimming down on my own--but I really DON'T want to actually do that work. Therefore, I will no doubt stay the same this summer. But I won’t be happy about it.
"I am capable and I need support": The M.O. of every toddler on earth (also known as “Me do it myself!!!” followed by torrents of tears when Mama doesn’t immediately come to Me’s rescue.) In the grownup world, this translates to: “Why didn’t you automatically sense that I needed help, and why didn’t you subtly provide said help without undermining my capability?” (see above: Steve love/upset with).
"I am so happy for you, my grown-up kids! I hate that you’re leaving the nest and embarking on your own lives!” I truly am both. I am equal parts proud and devastated when my offspring launch.
“I’m relieved to have retired from my job. I wish I still got complimented for what’s going on at work.” I observe my successor at church, and have no regrets that I am no longer scurrying around madly, as she now does, every Sunday morning. But I’d love to still be lauded for every single good thing that happens there.
“I love a very clean house, and I will go to zero effort to keep my house clean.” Lacking funds for a housecleaner, I’ll just leave this dialectic right there. Over by the junk piles.
Mixed emotions? More like “throw all those emotions in the Cuisinart and turn it on high speed.”
From whence did “dialectic” spring? Credit for the original concept goes to pre-Socratic philosopher Heraclitus, famous for that meme about never stepping in the same river twice (accompanied by a photo of--wait for it--a river). Heraclitus posits that the universe is one big messy glob of opposites that are constantly bumping into each other (sorry for getting technical). According to Socrates years later, we need to argue/have a dialogue about our differing POVs to get to the truth nugget (not to be confused with the chicken nugget. Because the Socratic method is not for the chicken-hearted.)
There you have it.
Agree? Disagree? Agree to disagree?
All of the above?
How very dialectical of you!