I was sitting at a table amidst a group of smart, charming and interesting people. It was an introduction that had come about through this blog as a few of them read along. There was a surprising breeze on the outdoor terrace perched next to the Rhone in Arles. It played with the wisps of our hair and lifted the conversation to and fro. But honestly, I was talking a lot – quite the rarity as I have grown nervous in groups during recent years. I think it was born out of the delight and relief of being amidst people roughly my own age and culture (highly unusual), a kind of letting go, on top of the fact that I had already been talking for hours while giving one of my walks through Arles. Maybe it was the heat running over my forehead but I could hear my voice beside me as if the words were spooling outwards trying to catch the breeze. Or it could have been the rosé that was generously being poured. But there was a moment, just the tiniest of ones, when I happened to catch – literally – the glance out of the corner of an eye of one of my table-mates. And somehow I instinctively knew that it was – enfin – a recognition of something that they had been hoping to see in me, based on what is written here.
Those of you that have been reading a very long time know that I moved around quite a bit in childhood – every four years or so – and the result of that can be a push and pull within me of wanting very much to be liked or the reversal on a dime of “I don’t need anyone” (but you, Baby). Like a lot of people who lived through such moments of blur and constant newness, I adapted. But that left me a bit rough around the edges. I didn’t always know where the extension of me ended and where my absorbing the company around me began. That survival tactic ended quite abruptly – or so I thought – during my young adulthood, something that I wrote about a few years ago, hence this is a “part deux.”
But here is the thing. I recently reread that post – written in 2011 – and I have a different perspective on both it and myself now. Since then I have mused a ton about the shifting and shedding of personality. The cult of it too in our society. I thought that, especially in these past few years where so much has happened – where we have down-sized twice and moved out into the silence of the country – that I was stripped down to the bone, left with only the essentials. So much gone but also so much gained. What it might be like to be a white bird in the snow. But that side-glance was like a tiny prick in a balloon. Enough to let out the air but not to make it pop. I have been chewing on the questions it awoke in me ever since.
Who are we when we make our way through the world? Where does the how of it come from? I want to ask these questions again. Is that always an extension of our inner selves? I don’t know if it is. Or maybe it is for most people but not necessarily for an adapter like me. Actually, during that conversation at the table I told an anecdote about when I was an actress and not wanting to do film anymore after seeing my face during the rushes for the first time and thinking, “But that isn’t me, that face doesn’t represent at all what I feel.” That and I had a memory that floated down like a feather from nowhere last week. It was of the head costumer at the Yale School of Drama saying, “Well, it is for you because you are a girl that knows how to wear a gown.” Just that. And I haven’t been able to shake that sentence because he was right, I did. And I do? It certainly wouldn’t appear so as I am today in tank top and shorts, legs crossed at the angle of a number four. With all of the weight that I have gained in the past few years my body feels heavy. Quite masculine.
And where does that come from? Well, here is the answer I have from some of those questions – beyond the weight which is my own – I think it comes from Remi. Or, to be more precise, in my not, finally, being so reduced to the essential as I thought but – without thinking – picking up on his way of doing things, of moving, of expressing. Truly, when I had that thought earlier today I was like, “Oh come on, really?” but it makes sense and not just from a “couple who have been together forever” standpoint. Me, still a chameleon then, still adapting. Is that a bad thing? It hasn’t always been as that flexibility helped me be a decent storyteller. And while I have definitely become ultra aware of that roughness around the edges – certainly since that conversation – maybe I can use that to my advantage to make the changes that will make me feel…better. And then I can redefine that feeling as something more akin to…porous?
Remi and I will be celebrating a big anniversary (that I am quite proud of) in a few days and I have a birthday around the corner so I imagine this post is coming right out of that pressure of time passing and hoping to get some truth from it. I hope that doesn’t sound too pretentious, I don’t mean it to be. As I have been writing I have been trying to put these pieces together – not only for me but for you as well just in case it rings a bell. But does it? In reading the comments of that earlier post, it seems like this is an issue that most of you tidied up long ago. And while many of us have been writing about the changes to our appearance mid-life (can I begin to tell you how I loathe that phrase?) that isn’t really what I am trying to roast over the fire either. For me, it seems like I am not always connecting the dots between my inner and outer self. That is good to know. More to learn then and the best part is…as far my inner self is concerned? That feels mine and true and as solidly delineated as a child’s roughly shaped drawing of a heart.


In some ways, now, I don't know how I could have ever hoped for those rushes to show "me" but I was younger then. It was crushing. And "sketched" is the word! But I am very moved by all of the wonderful responses here…I never would have imagined…
I am not sure if I have fiction in me but I will let you know if I do. And I agree that it is the experience that matters…
Tit for tat because you gave me so much here to think about. Thank you too. I am fascinated by your idea of a shell, something that I was always really aware of while living in NYC especially but it is still here, more than I realize. In writing, at times, I can set it aside. Sometimes. And that Anais Nin brings tears to my eyes, no matter how many times that I have read it…
Rosie, I must have read your response five times already – there is so much in it that I just adored. And thank you for the initial compliment – it drives me absolutely bananas that there are so many books out there written by folks who have only visited here…
Like the millenials, I am fascinated by your youth. I moved to Manhattan at the end of the eighties when I had just turned 18. I didn't know anyone so made friends with all of the institutions that you mentioned -starting with going to the Met once a week, paying with the change in my pocket. I went to art openings in Soho by myself (would they even let me in these days without an invite?), concerts at the other Met and operas but also downtown at CBGBs. At least a movie a week. I was a sponge! And it was as important as an education as my bachelor's in acting from NYU.
When we moved out into the country last July, it took me a while to figure out that the reason why I felt so off-balance – this despite our renting a really beautiful house – was that I missed that energy, that possibility – even Arles always has something going on to see. So maybe such a move as you did with your Husband might be in order at some point. Or maybe I just finally need to learn how to drive! 😉
Welcome to the blog. So happy to have you here!
Thank you for this, very much. That actually rings quite true about an unwillingness to engage – I am sure that Remi would have something to say about that in terms of my reluctance to make friends since living in France. As for me, my Mom is still my best friend, so we had each other to hold on to during those moves. Alas, I am both artistic and ridiculously sensitive so each little skip in the record takes time to digest.
I am so curious about your leaving Languedoc for Provence and wish you ALL success in your new business venture!
Merci, Jackie. Your beautiful books are right here on top of my desk. I like to keep Hudson's spirit and your conveyance of beauty in my sight-line. Good reminders. And oh to be "recognized"! I could go on about that one…and certainly from an expat point of view where I often feel utterly invisible…
Gros Bisous.
What your Husband says really goes along with what I was reading during the writing of the White Bird in the Snow post. The past is past and what are we doing right now? I did have three years of CBT in Manhattan before moving to France and loved it but I understand what you are saying too…I don't think about the age itself (yet) too much but rather how I am doing and feeling…
Ebb and flow…Judi I have been thinking about that phrase since you wrote it. So thank you…yes, and the reminder to be gentle too!
Honestly? I think that I am still not always trusting myself! But it is through moments like this that help me to wipe away a bit of the fog on the window that help me think that it is ok, I can.
No, it doesn't seem to stop! And I have friends who are much older than I am who feel the same way, although I think – and in reading some of these comments here – some of the issues fade away – I am so looking forward to that!
Although we have a lot in common in regards to this issue, I have to say right up front that I am NOT bien dans ma peau right now. I am trying to be cool with this version of me but I have to say that the weight gain is a big part of it. I wish that it wasn't. Again, trying to find the balance…not always easy…