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16 2014 MARCH/APRIL UNITY MAGAZINE One woman’s story of leaving her world behind in order to come home to herself

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Page 1: One woman’s story of leaving her world behind in order to come … · 2014-04-07 · One woman’s story of leaving her world behind in order to come home to herself. UNITY MAGAZINE

16 2 0 1 4 M A R C H / A P R I L U N I T Y M A G A Z I N E

One woman’s story of leaving her world behind in order to come home to herself

Page 2: One woman’s story of leaving her world behind in order to come … · 2014-04-07 · One woman’s story of leaving her world behind in order to come home to herself. UNITY MAGAZINE

17w w w . u n i t y m a g a z i n e . o r g m a r c h / a p r i l 2 0 1 4u n i t y m a g a z i n e

In February 2012, I loaded up my Honda CRV with my dog Duke and the few material possessions I cared about and headed west to Colorado. In doing

so, I left behind my second marriage, my two adult children, my 6-month-old grandson, countless friends, my Unity community, and Iowa—the state that had been my home for all but one of my then 48 years.

The decision to drive a thousand miles away from most everyone and everything I knew and loved had landed on me during a walk on a labyrinth the previous August. I’d stood at the labyrinth’s entrance, pushing my toes into its sandy path, crying and in despair. In my hands I held a notepad and a pen, ready to take dictation from the wisest part of me.

What came to me during that walk was the impossible realization that my seven-year marriage was over. On its heels was another improbable notion: that I no longer fit in my hometown. Before long it became crystal clear that I was to move to Colorado, specifically to the small town where I had recently attended a writing workshop. And I was to move there alone.

When you make major life decisions on a labyrinth, it separates you from the majority of the population—at least where I’m from in the Midwest. It takes “normal” off the list of adjectives most people will use to describe you. For my decisions, I was called both “courageous” and

“selfish.” I owned both. Despite what others were saying, I couldn’t turn my

back on the calm that washed over me that day on the labyrinth. Remembering that peace trumped everything—every negative comment that came my way, every

By Annie L. Scholl

When you make major life decisions on

a labyrinth, it separates you from the majority

of the population … It takes “normal” off

the list of adjectives most people will use to

describe you.

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18 2 0 1 4 M A R C H / A P R I L U N I T Y M A G A Z I N E

suggestion that I was acting hastily, every worrisome thought I had. My soul had given me marching orders. I felt as if I had no choice but to obey, no matter the consequences, no matter who was hurt by my decisions.

And so I left —and gratefully, I left with the full support of the two people whose opinions did matter to me: my children. My son told me it was time to live my life for myself, not for him or his sister or their stepdad. My daughter, who had just turned 20 and was a new mom, wrote me a beautiful letter, telling me she was proud of my choices. “You’ve always been one to do more for others than yourself, and as much as I love your kind heart, I’m so glad you are putting everyone aside and taking time for yourself,” she wrote.

I didn’t need their support to go—but having their support made it easier. Having my daughter’s words on paper, to read again and again, helped drown out the voices—my own and others—that told me I was leaving her when she needed me the most. I took solace, too, that on the night I said good-bye to my infant grandson; he laughed while I cried. It felt as if he were telling me, “Nana, I’ll be just fi ne.”

Answering the CallWhen I fi rst moved to Colorado, I lived in a remote

log cabin in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains (Spanish for “Blood of Christ”). When a friend from the writing workshop off ered to rent it to me for just $500, I took it as a sign that I was on the right path. Th e cabin and its timbered setting were postcard perfect. Her husband had built every square inch, right down to the door hinges and handles. It was adorned with

her art, as well as that of others, and it was even fully furnished—including any and every kitchen utensil I could possibly need.

I spent most of my time working on my freelance writing while sitting at the small kitchen table, or curling up in the chair in the living room, drinking hot tea or a glass of wine, while reading, writing, and watching the “big-screen TV” that was the wall of picture windows. My favorite shows: the snowfalls and the birds fl itting on the pine trees. I watched, hoping and not, that I would see the bear that had

left marks on the screen door it tried to unhinge before my arrival. A blow

horn sat right by the front door, just in case it showed

up again.At night under the moon and the tapestry

of stars, I would walk my dog and gather fi rewood. Building my own fi re, something I had always left to my husband, made me feel strong and

confi dent.But beyond those

peaceful moments, I remember being very

cold—and very sad. I frequently did what I had

always done—I phoned a friend. But eventually, like that day on the

labyrinth, I would stop talking and start listening. I would answer the call from my inner wisdom to “come inside.” Bundled up in a wool blanket next to the woodstove, I would sit, pen and paper in hand, and be both student and teacher in my classroom of one. My assignment: getting at the truth of me.

My schoolhouse would change. For various reasons, I moved from the cabin to an effi ciency apartment on a horse farm and fi nally to a one-bedroom apartment in a mansion on 44 acres that sat empty most of the time. Th e latter is where I lived for seven months—the Sangres stretched out on one side of me, the Wet Mountains on the other.

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19W W W . U N I T Y M A G A Z I N E . O R G M A R C H / A P R I L 2 0 1 4U N I T Y M A G A Z I N E

Th roughout the 10 months I lived alone in Colorado, I would oft en skip class, even for weeks at a time. At Easter, I drove to my sister’s house in eastern Nebraska and then was grateful that, when my dear friend’s mother died, I could continue on “home” to attend the funeral. A second bittersweet opportunity presented itself when another friend’s dad died. But eventually, I would have to go back to Colorado and take a seat—alone.

Self-StudyAt times, I tired of my subject matter. At other

times I was quite fascinated. Th e history lessons—taking deep dives into my childhood—were particularly diffi cult and revealing. Looking back, I could see all the ways I had looked to others to tell me how to “do” life. When I was younger, I turned to schoolteachers. For much of my life, including my early years as a mother, I turned to my best friend. In my mid 30s, I began reaching out to psychics, astrologers, Reiki masters, and other intuitives, as well as looking for answers at workshops and in books. I also turned to Unity. I was always looking for someone or something to tell me how to do this thing called life “right.”

In Colorado, I came to see more clearly the people-pleaser, the peacemaker, the person whose basic assumption in life was “there’s something wrong with me.” I had one-on-one interviews with the girl who was afraid of holding a fl ashlight “wrong” while her dad worked on a car engine, the one who was convinced she could have said or done something to keep her mother from drinking and trying to destroy herself. I studied the overachieving senior class president, honor society student, and homecoming queen candidate who presented as a confi dent leader but who most days secretly felt inadequate.

I sat down with the builder of not one but two

white picket fences to look at why creating the image of a “perfect” family was so important. I did research on the spendthrift who racked up credit card debt again and again, the fi rst ex-wife who stayed four years in a marriage she knew was over, and the second ex-wife who bolted from her marriage, leaving behind a devastated husband and in-laws. Much of my studies revolved around researching the sexuality of my nearly 50-year-old subject, looking for a defi nitive answer to the question, “Is she a lesbian?”

When I look back at my time in “school” in Colorado, it’s a lot like looking back at my time at the University of Iowa. I loved it and I hated it. I’m incredibly proud of my decision to go—and

incredibly proud of my decision to stick it out. I studied what I wanted to study—not what others thought I should. I learned a lot, and I recognize that I have a lot yet to learn.

I had a sense when I moved to Colorado that my

“sabbatical,” as I had come to see it, would be just a year or two. About eight months in, I began to feel my time there had come to an end. Two months later, while back in Iowa for Christmas, I made the decision to not return. I had a friend back

in Colorado box up my belongings and ship them to me. My next stop: Brooklyn, New York, to be with the woman with whom I had fallen in love.

Even though I’m not alone in school anymore, I return to my classroom of one frequently. I know it’s the place where the real learning about me takes place. In times of trouble, I wish I could say I start there, but I don’t. But at least I’m now aware that my angst is rich research material indeed. And while I still hang out in the hallways, talking long aft er the bell has rung, I’m only tardy by minutes instead of months or years.

Although I don’t always live it, I know that in my classroom of one I’ll fi nd my answers. I just have to be willing to show up, take a seat, be quiet, and listen.

I came to see more clearly the

people-pleaser, the peacemaker, the

person whose basic assumption in life was

“there’s something wrong with me.”