On the Couch With Bill O'Reilly

Last night after our traditional family Christmas drama, daddy referred to something I had mentioned in passing--that I see a therapist. The second he asked about it, I regretted it. Actually, I thought he knew; my mom has known for months, so I assumed they had talked. No. So, he asked me about it. He asked me why I'm going to a therapist. "What are you going for?" he asked. Two things here: If I knew why I was going to therapy, I wouldn't need to go. And also, it's none of his business why. I thought everybody in the world knew to have enough tact not to aske this question. It is right up there with age and weight. But my daddy does not mind asking questions.

So, despite spending the previous hour processing Xmas drama by using tools from the past year's work, I knew I might as well give him some sort of reasonable sounding answer. He asked me specifically if it was for anger, which gives me pause because I don't put that reason high on the list despite being asked about it by 3 other people including the therapist. Maybe I'll bump it up. Anyway, I talked about needing confidence and tools to trust my decision making ability. I said I wanted to be more productive and explore why I avoided writing, when it is something I really want to do. And, I said--which is the highest actual reason on the list--that I wanted to explore what it was about me that had made me succeptible to losing myself as a young woman in a marriage that I just barely escaped. I still have dreams that I haven't yet, and it terrifies me. Whatever I said, daddy nodded, but I could see the situation was just beginning to gel in his mind. This was not going to be the end of the matter. He asked me whether it was loneliness. "Would living closer to family help?" I had to restrain myself not to say "GOD no!" He kept looking for the "Big Issue." There isn't always a "big issue." When my voice started to quiver because I was breaking up in spite of myself, we turned our attention to anything else.

Tonight, while reading Bill O'Reilly's book on Lincoln, he said, "Hey, talkin' about your therapy, is your therapist, a Christian or a athiest, or do you know? I'm just reading here, you know Lincoln got down during the war and he said the Bible was his best solace and counsel. Of course, I don't understand." I know what it is. Daddy is afraid I'm searching for something. Happiness. The Meaning of the Universe. What's It All About, Alfie. So I told him; I'm not. And, I don't exactly need a moral compass or spiritual strength. I am really truly a Bible believer. Already. So I told him my therapist suggested prayer and the Psalms, which seemed to be enough for tonight.

A year ago when I told Mother I was seeing my therapist, she thought about it and then over coffee one day said, "If you'd just get back in church you wouldn't need a therapist." I didn't have a good reply to that either. But then, 6 months ago, she had reconsidered. We were talking, like we do, about nothing in particular and everything all at once. I said that I always felt like they didn't know quite what to do with me. And she said something I will never forget; it cut right to it. "No, we never did know what to do for you." That kind of changed everything. Then she ended with, "I want you to keep on going to that therapy." I'm thinking back on this, now that I am coming out to my daddy as a therapy patient.

I know Lincoln fought his demons, which is how I consider depression and meloncholy. Lincoln was a quipper, and he had a public persona and a private self and he was expert at keeping them separate, most likely even from Mary. Or maybe especially from her. Yet, he spoke--and I think really believed in--the better angels of our nature. I like this very much. Faith and hope that came from somewhere very deep. When Bill Clinton was physically moving into the White House, he said he was going to set about doing what every new president must: "get in touch with his Lincoln." I've been doing that a little too. But all of this I cannot express to Daddy.
More on this later.

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