Sorry, but this may be a long one. IÂ’ve had a pretty eventful weekend with my quit, but itÂ’s been awhile since IÂ’ve had a reliable broadband connection. IÂ’ve had a lot of time alone this weekend, which is definitely not ideal early in a quit. My wife took my son to visit his grandparents this weekend. They left on Thurs and I got a hall pass to spend the weekend in the mountains of NH and Vermont. I used to head to northern NH almost every weekend when I lived in Boston, and IÂ’ve really missed it since moving to the urban jungle nine years ago.
Since my wife left Thurs and I didnÂ’t leave until Friday, I had Thurs night to myself. I donÂ’t remember where I first read it, but someone on this site once posted that if youÂ’re home alone, youÂ’re behind enemy lines. I used to have that as part of my auto signature. Anyway, I was anxious about sitting home by myself all night, so I stayed at work late and then came home and immediately strapped on my running shoes. I ran into Central Park, put my head down and just kept going. It was a great way to remove myself from temptation, but it was also a lot of time alone with my thoughts. I didnÂ’t even grab an ipod. It was just me and myself, alone in the dark, feet pounding, thoughts spinning, sweat drippingÂ…thinking about everything and, at the same time, thinking that my thoughts werenÂ’t worth thinking about. That my perspective is twisted, my aggravation and anger is artificial, my problems are numerous and my ability to solve them is questionable. And I ran and ran and ran and ranÂ…and finally, I couldnÂ’t run anymore. Unfortunately, I tapped out pretty far from home. That didnÂ’t matter, though. IÂ’d found an outlet for my anxiety and wore myself out. By the time I got home I was thinking a bit more clearly. I said fuck it to all the mountainous problems to which I lacked solutions and focused on the only thing I absolutely had to do that dayÂ…stay quit. Since I was so tired I could hardly stand, I hit the sack and brought the day to a close. Another day nic free.
Friday morning, I felt a lot better. It was 70 degrees and Sunny in the city. I bagged out of work early to get a jump on the drive up north. It felt like spring, like new life, like windows down, fresh air, sun on my face, spring in my step. It was a good day and I enjoyed the time alone on the open road with the ipod on shuffle. It was just me and Buddy Guy and Dr. John and Clapton and Taj Mahal and Junior Wells and they were all nice enough to let me sing along with them. I hit the NH border and had that same feeling I used to always feel when I crossed the border from Massachusetts. That weight falling away, the mountains calling me to ski their slopes, climb their rock faces, hike their woods, share their views. I was ready for some mountain therapy. And Jay Peak had gotten three feet of snow only last weekÂ…
Â…but luck was not on my side. What I didnÂ’t know was that Thurs night, while I was running aimlessly in Central Park, Jay Peak was blanketed with heavy downpours. The snow was saturated, and the nights were cold enough to freeze the wet snow into bulletproof sheets of ice. Arguably some of the worst ski conditions IÂ’ve ever seen. We checked ice reports in hopes of swapping skis for ice axes and crampons, but the warm days had aerated the flows in most areas. It would be like trying to climb a snow cone. So skiing was out and ice climbing was out. It was clear I would be denied my mountain therapy. I made the most of it with a little winter hiking and catching up with old friends at local outfitters and taverns. I tried my best not to lament my misfortune and told the mountains I would never hold it against them.
I packed up to leave in the early afternoon on Sunday. I had my quit strategy in full effect, just like I did for the drive up. I was stocked up with snacks, gum, etc, but needed to stop to load up with my favorite nic replacement…strong, dark, black coffee. I remembered a gas station off the highway in Lincoln, NH with a Dunkin’ Donuts in the station. I pulled in and was in the station before I remembered that they’d actually closed the DD counter and opened up a standalone store next door. I decided I’d just grab another bottle of water before jumping back in the car and heading next door. I can’t really explain why I allowed myself to actually walk to the counter of a gas station right before a six hour drive…it was just stupid on so many levels. Why not just walk right up to the sleeping dragon and punch him in the nose… So I’m standing there, holding a bottle of water, staring at the rack of tins right over the cashier’s left shoulder, thinking to myself “what the FUCK am I doing here? ” And the gas station attendant looks at me and says, “Anything else…?”
But then I thought DECIDE. It was so clear; I could almost read it on the wall in front of me. ThatÂ’s all that matters. Yes it was stupid to walk into this gas station, but it still comes down to a decision, and as weak as I am, the decision is still mine to make. So stop being a pussy, but the water on the counter, pay the nice man and get the fuck back in the car. DECIDE that you can operate a motor vehicle without a lump of turd in your lip. DECIDE that your word and your quit mean something to you. So I didÂ…and I walked out with my water. I drove next door, got the biggest black coffee IÂ’ve ever seen and rewarded myself with a chocolate donut.
So I guess overall, my efforts at escapism failed. My search for mountain therapy, my attempt to make the first weekend of my quit easier, my hopes of forgetting about my problems for a while…all failed. Then I got home and my wife told me that she wants me to do couples therapy in addition to the therapist I’m already seeing to help me with my quit. She said she had “trust issues”…FUUUUUUUCK!!! Just when I think it’s safe to straighten up a bit…another shot in the nads. That’s the killer about trust…so hard to build and so easy to destroy. All I can do is re-build it a day at a time. And despite how hard this weekend was, I kept my word for three hard days. Hard fuckin’ day. I gotta count that as a win. I have to.
The last thing IÂ’ll tell you about is an unexpected moment of peace I had during my drive home last night. I really kind of cherish the moment since I was really hoping for a whole weekend of peace and this is all I got. As I got off I-91 and started down the Merritt Parkway driving into the setting sun, the shuffle on my ipod picked up an Allman Brothers tune that really put my mind at ease. I felt a little tension release from the small of my back. It was probably the best I felt all weekendÂ…
Everybody`s Got A Mountain To Climb
Lyrics by Dickey Betts
Everybody's got a mountain to climb,
This road we travel gets a little tough sometimes,
Sometimes I know you feel like you can't go on,
Need somebody help you get back home,
Need a friend to help you find your way home.
Reverend Pearly Brown say there's peace out on the water at night,
Big sun going down, Lord it's a pretty sight,
Red and blue across the water makes a wonderful song,
Listen to it all night long.
Chorus:
Everybody's got a mountain to climb,
Don't be discouraged when the sun don't shine,
Gotta keep on pulling, you gotta keep on tryin',
Everybody's got a mountain to climb,
Everybody's got a mountain to climb.
Who'd cross the face of a little smilin' child?,
Take away the loser's one last chance?,
Who wouldn't linger down by the old river for a while?
You know the whole world loves you when you're dancin'.
So, hey let me tell you what I'm talkin' about,
You can't go around with your lip stuck out.
Life ain't all good but it sure ain't bad,
Anyway it's the best old life I ever had.
Everybody's got a mountain to climb,
Don't be discouraged when the sun don't shine,
Gotta keep on pulling, you gotta keep on tryin',
Everybody's got a mountain to climb.