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Let me pivot before I continue with this story. I probably should have put some of this stuff up front, but I can't edit what I've already posted (or can I?). Oh well.
This current season of my life, the one that's got me picking through the bones, autopsying everything, asking all these questions, started a few months ago.
I was a couple weeks in to another breakup from J2, the second of the "J's". J2. The second iteration. J2.0.
At first blush J2 was totally different from J1 in every way. And the me that came alive in that relationship was different too. I was vital. I was and open and ready and excited. I was alive.
So there I was. The day before my 45th birthday. I was in the Target parking lot having just bought cat food. Sitting in my truck. Listening to "Hear Me" by Tedeschi Trucks Band.
"I don't wanna live in pain. I don't wanna love in vain. Can you hear me?"
And I was sobbing. I couldn't breathe. I felt that feeling in my stomach and my chest. In my throat. Like someone was slowly squeezing my neck. Fvck.
It was the first of many panic attacks I would experience over the coming weeks.
I was holding my phone and my hands were shaking. My thumb hovered over her name. I wanted to hear her voice. I wanted her to hear mine. I hadn't spoken to her in a few weeks.
I was willing to trade dignity for connection. I knew I was. I had done it so many times before, what was one more going to hurt?
If my good can't make me real enough then maybe my pain is an acceptable substitute. I need to become undeniable.
By some miracle I didn't call. I chainsmoked and played all the Father John Misty songs that made me feel her again. Fun Times in Babylon, Goodbye Mr. Blue, Just Dumb Enough to Try, I Love You, Honeybear. The tears flowed. But I didn't call her.
I drove around some more, got a coffee. Then I called an acquaintance of mine, someone I knew from my days as a cop. He had been a firefighter and left to start a wellness practice geared towards helping first responders, veterans, etc. I gave him a quick rundown of what I had been experiencing somatically. I left all the relationship stuff out.
"You know this is PTSD, right?" he asked confidently. "But I'm not scared all the time. I'm not shell shocked. I don't have nightmares." "Not yet, you don't." His confidence was jarring. I knew then that I was exposed.
We only chatted for a few minutes but I was convinced. The way he laid everything out really made me think that I had hit a breaking point. The point where my body--my soul, even--could no longer keep floating checks. I couldn't outrun my life anymore. All of the guilt and anxiety, the fear and the worry, all of the bills were coming due. In fact they were past due.
My nervous system had been sent to collections. The notice came in the form of a weeping collapse in the Target parking lot.
That phone call started me down this path. A path that has me asking:
Why was I so good at surviving everyone else's crises, but helpless in my own?
Because these panic attacks weren't random. I was seeing them clearly now. In fact every panic attack I've ever had (J1 at rehab and one other) happened in November. And they happened in the absence of chaos. There has to be more to this. It was time I started figuring out who I am.
"Who am I?" It sounds so silly to ask, as a relatively actualized, attuned, self-aware 45 year-old man. Certainly I should have figured that out by now.
Not only have I never answered that question, I didn't even know it was a question I was supposed to ask. I never knew that I was supposed to have my own identity. I didn't know that I was supposed to have a border around me, something to distinguish me from everyone else.
So I started with the one thing that always felt unique to me. My own name: Matthew Vincent.
Since I was young I've been fascinated with my middle name. Vincent. Conqueror.
I was given that name in memory of my paternal grandfather: Vincent Raymond. Vincent is more common nowadays (my son is named Vincent), but when I was a kid it was rare. It felt special. Like I was born with a story, one that I had to uphold.
Except no one told me what that story was.
I never knew Vincent; he died in 1969 when my dad was 13. But even as a young kid I knew that I wanted to know him. I felt his absence. I knew that the answers were found in Vincent but he wasn't around to ask the questions.
So I asked my grandmother instead. His widow, the one who kept everything together when he was gone. Through war, his time in captivity, and after his death. The woman who received the telegram: "Missing. Presumed Dead." The same woman who received another months later: "Rescued. Still Alive."
The woman who never went on another date, never touched another man after Vincent. Surely Grandma will tell me who Vincent was.
Instead she guarded that man's legacy like precious jewels. Or like a dark secret that needed to stay hidden. She wouldn't--or couldn't--tell me who this man was. On the rare occasion that she even mentioned Vincent she wouldn't refer to him familiarly, i.e. "your grandfather" or "Grandpa".
She called him "my Vinny." He was hers and no one else's.
It felt like I was named after a man I wasn't allowed to know. Like I carried a secret that no one let me in on.
The same went for my dad and his siblings. They hardly ever talked about Vincent. Not sentimentally, not even anecdotally. I remember the rare occasions that they did mention him. My ears would perk up. Like I was about to be brought into the inner sanctum. I was about to be let in on the family secrets. I'd calmly rush in from the other room. I couldn't seem too eager, but I didn't want them to stop talking.
When they recounted these stories they called him "Daddy". These were grown adults, with children of their own, yet when they talked about their own father they became kids themselves.
"Daddy". This man has been dead since 1969.
I wanted to hear more. But you know, it's funny. They would shut down when I asked for more.
A story about Vincent coming home after work got me asking, "What kind of car did he drive? What was his job?" It's not that they would ignore me, nor would they get choked up and emotional. It was as if there was this secret that they decided I couldn't understand. Or I wasn't privy too. Or I couldn't be trusted with.
But I have his name. You don't. Why am I carrying not only a name, but a mystery?
I felt oddly close to this man who I never knew. My father's father. His male role model. I knew there was a connection, but I didn't know what.
I can look back now and realize that my father was raised by two people who endured unspeakable pain, trauma and uncertainty. I may never truly know the effect that had on him or his parents. But I have no doubt that it lives in me today.
I really couldn't discover Vincent in words, so I moved to objects. Trinkets and artifacts. His dog tags. Medals. Newspaper clippings. Anything with his name on it. That's what I asked for every Christmas. Oddly, my grandmother seemed to have no problem giving me those things. She could part with the mementos of a man that she never acknowledged was my relative.
I volunteered at our local historical society during that six-month administrative leave from the PD. I was working on a genealogical project and agreed to help them with sorting and cataloging in exchange for unfettered access to their archives.
I remember going through city records, old photographs, phone books, stuff like that. I just wanted to see my name. Our name. I learned where their businesses were located. I could go stand on the same spot they stood. I learned where they lived. I realized that a kid I played Little League with for years lived in the same house in which Vincent grew up.
I learned that many men in my family were painters. House painters, sign painters, even painters of cars. My first job was as a house painter. I'm one of the few people I know who loves painting.
I also found death and pain in those records. Suicide. Bankruptcy. Scandal. Addiction.
I found Census records. It wasn't the information therein that intrigued me. It was the vision I had of someone actually knocking on my family's door. Looking at those records, I pictured someone actually standing in front of my family and writing this stuff down. Someone actually talked to them. And here I am looking at the record of people who once lived, who were alive in the moment that this data was being recorded. Name, age, language, address. These were real people. These entries, in beautiful mid-1900s penmanship, were proof.
So where did they go? Where are Rose and Joseph and Terenzio and Vincent? Did they ever imagine me like I imagine them?
(Thank you for reading. I'll continue as soon as I'm able. Hopefully later today or tomorrow)
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