My life lesson: learning to accept things as they are instead of trying to change what I can't.
I had a very dear friend, an older woman, June, one of my creative writing Professors at Northeastern University who since died. She taught me one of my greatest life lessons, a necessary fact of life, and I'm grateful for the painful, albeit it the necessary insightful bit of knowledge. When I was threatening to leave my husband and filed for divorce, thinking that I'd have the moral and emotional support and a shoulder to cry on with my friends, I didn't. When I needed them the most, they weren't there for me. Professor June, as I used to call her, was my confident.
By their lack of concern, understanding, and insensitivity, I struggled with the way my friends, at least those who I thought were my friends, treated me. Their blatant disregard and uncaring hurt me, made me feel rejected, and saddened me. As if I no longer existed, they virtually ignored me.
I would have gotten more attention from them had I died instead of just gotten divorced. At least they would have attended my wake, gone to the church, and said their good-byes at my funeral. Instead, after my divorce, with me thinking I'd be married until death do us part, the worst time of my life, as if rats deserting a sinking ship, one by one, they all disappeared. Some friends they were. As long as I was putting out booze and food, they were happy to come to my house and pretend they cared.
Immediately, the calls and the texting stopped. When I e-mailed them, my e-mails went unanswered. The only time I saw any of them is when I accidentally bumped into them at the mall. In one fell swoop, I lost my husband and all my friends. Not fair. I was alone. I was sad. I didn't understand. None of it made any sense.
"Susan, it is what it is," said June raising her eyebrows, rolling her eyes, and giving an unsurprised shrug as if she had been through this many times before.
It is what it is? Where have I heard that before? It sounded like a copout to me. It was something a guy would say when caught cheating on his wife or girlfriend, or what a burglar would say when caught stealing.
"It is what it is," I said. "Perhaps that's a modern day adage of Murphy's Law," I said with a sad, little laugh. "After anything that can go wrong, does go wrong, am I to say, it is what it is?"
She looked at me and laughed.
"Trust me, it works," she said.
With her there to help me through my divorce, I suddenly looked at June as if she knew all the answers to all the secrets of life, especially to my life.
"Is that supposed to comfort me? Is that supposed to satisfy me with what happened? Am I supposed to be okay with all that's happened to me by just giving up and not even taking the time to reflect by just saying, it is what it is?" When she didn't answer me, I responded. "I may as well just say fuck it!"
She looked at me and smiled at what I assumed was my innocence and naivetΓ©.
"Yes," she said with a laugh. "You could say that. Instead of saying it is what it is, you could exchange that phrase for fuck it."
I smirked my disbelief.
"Unbelievable," I said. "Yet, somehow I prefer 'It is what it is,' to fuck it. Fuck it sounds more like something a guy would say. It is what it is sounds more what a Monk or a hermit would say when falling from his perch atop a mountain."
She put her hand on my shoulder to comfort me in the way that a mother would comfort her daughter and in the way my own mother never did for me. I looked at her as if she was the mother I never had.
"I know that you wish things were different, but hoping so and wondering why they're not doesn't make it so and doesn't make anything better for you. Starting with perhaps your expectations of others that may be too high, it's time that you understood that we have no control over what others do or don't do. The sooner you learn that, the more peaceful and happier you and your life will be," she said making me feel that I was in college again and she was lecturing me again.
Yet, something that my mother should have taught me as a teenager, my creative writing professor was teaching me a valuable lesson of life as a 35-year-old woman. Looking back on our conversation seven years later, I'm still grateful for her help.
"Thank you for that," I said meaning it. "I get it. I do. Now it makes more sense to me why my friends would just abandon me in my time of need," I said with sarcasm. "It is what it is."
She frowned at me in the way she did when I didn't understand something she was trying to teach us in class.
"You are the only one who has any control over your life. Even then, in the way that the government controls you, peer pressure coerces you, and parents, friends, and relatives interfere with what you need to do to soothe your soul, the control you think you have over your life is limited. In many respects your life may not even be in your control. In many respects your life may at times seemingly even be out of control."
I was stunned by the simplicity, the honesty, and the insightfulness of her words. She was a wise woman indeed. At the same time, as if having one of those 'Duh?' moments, I felt as if I had been hit over the head with a sledgehammer.
"It is what it is," I said again. "Seemingly that makes sense to me now. That one simple phrase helps me to understand more about those unrealistic expectations that I put on people."
Perhaps a bit naΓ―ve, I had never heard that expression before and June's words kept ringing in my ears over and over again.
"It is what it is. It is what it is. It is what it is."
June was surprised that I had never heard the expression and we had quite a conversation over what it would mean for me if I could accept this very important principle as part of my internal monologue.
"I thought you were a New England Patriot's fan," she said.
"I am," I said.
"Coach Belichick uses that expression all the time in reference to his team and whenever he doesn't want to give away anything to reporters," she said.
As soon as she said that, I recalled him saying that.
"A man of few words, I seldom heard him talk," I said with a laugh.
Going beyond teaching me how to develop characters, write dialogue, and insert imagery, description, and tension, suddenly she made me feel more like her student than she did her friend. With her having an undergraduate degree in English with creative writing and English literature minors from Harvard University and an MFA degree from Emerson College, she suffered through decades more life experience than I had. I was glad for the six word encapsulated lesson. Still, it was a bitter pill to swallow to just chalk it all up to, 'It is what it is.'
"Just because it is what it is doesn't mean that you give up on everything and everybody. It means that you must accept the things that you cannot change. It allows you to not only understand why it is what it is but also to be okay with that you cannot control and what people do or don't do."
Everything she said made sense. Everything she said helped me cut through the bullshit. Everything she said enabled me to get on with my life without having to rehash things over again in my feeble attempt in trying to understand the lack of caring of others.
"I get it," I said nodding my head as if she had morphed from my creative writing teacher, to my psychologist, and to my friend. "I must accept things that I cannot change."
Only her way of teaching, she beat me over the head with what she had to say again.
"Surely, you've heard of The Serenity Prayer by Reinhold Niebuhr."
I couldn't help but think of the Seinfeld episode where Jerry's father looks to the Heavens and pleads, "Serenity now! Serenity now!"
"I have but I have a feeling you're going to refresh my memory," I said with a laugh.
She returned my laugh with her patient smile before she recited the prayer.