My heart is not on my sleeve, it is in my eyes. I have the opposite of poker face, I cannot hide. And so yesterday, the tears fell at will; I let them fall.
At 1:15 I was still in my pyjamas, I hadn’t done yoga and was staring at the sky. I shook myself and instinctively called Le Violette; Corinne answered. When she asked, “Ça va?” I replied, “No, I am tired and sad. I know it is late but can I come for lunch?” “Of course. We will wait for you.” I can get ready very quickly these days, shower to makeup and dressed in ten minutes. I felt trembly in my hurried steps out the door, little under a big blue ahead.
I jokingly call Alex “my fiancée.” It is a running gag that we share. Half-Sicilian, half-French, he wants to work in the States. I want to be sure that I can remain here. So we have decided that a wedding would solve our problems, this despite his being 25 (making me definitely old enough to be his mother). He is a ferocious flirt. When I walked into the restaurant, his face narrowed, “What is it? Love?” No, I shook my head. “I hate to see you like this,” (it is rare that he is this serious) “I will punch whoever did this to you. Do you want me to do that?” I shook my head again but with a smile, my lips pursed tightly to hold back the tears.
They spilled over when Corinne gave me the bises and we agreed that this eclipse was shaking us from the inside out. Nicholas, her usually stoic husband, admitted that he wanted to throw a chair he was so full of unlikely emotions. When Alex delivered my plat du jour, I didn’t care about being the crazy American crying over tandoori chicken. The room was full of regulars, as I am too. They had to come out, those crystal little drops and so they did.
It was the same later in the day, the record on repeat, when I took myself to the salon for a blowout, a once a month treat. Sabrina retracted from her smiling hello quickly. “Oh, vous avez un petit mine.” It is slang. To have a sad expression. The opposite of having “un bon mine.” “I can’t talk or I will cry. I just came here…” “…pour changer les idées?” She finished my trailing sentence. Again, all I could do was nod but still the tears fell. All through the shampoo and often through closed eyes as I sat in her chair. She did a wonderful job. She always does. She doesn’t mind if I don’t talk. I tip.
Even though it is now the day of the eclipse, they are gone now, the tears, having run their course. I feel more solid and will do that yoga that was ignored in a bit. Root to rise, as they say. And the why of them? There was a reason. Some not so kind things had been said and it opened up that gaping yawn of questioning about the future and what am I doing? And where will I go? Yet again, it wasn’t linear and it never ceases to surprise me what buttons can push others, hidden.
I am trying so hard to harbor trust that all will work out for the best. And to not knee-jerk look outwards for approval but within. I keep running up against the challenge of patience, as I want change to happen now. But I have to participate, to do the work on my end, both practical and dreaming in order to arrive. And all of this in my manner for there is none others that matter, no standards to be heeded. I forget that. Sitting in the sun at a café post lunch yesterday, I scribbled in my journal about a gesture that I had offered: “It came from the heart. I come from the heart…I come from the heart.”
*These photos are from a singular extraordinary door in the Marais. I could have stayed longer in the looking. May whatever doors feel closed in front of you open willingly under the bright light of this Blue Moon…