by Ames S.
amess@sober24.com
I recently spent
some time down in Florida
where if the temperature falls below 75 degrees people start referring to the
weather as "freezing." Even the pool at my mother-in-law's condo has
procedures in place to roll a tarp out over the water when the temperature
drops below 70.
The pool is surrounded by a waist-high chain link fence that
even a three-year old could scale, yet when the alarum sounds and the tarp is
activated, a huge padlock and chain are conspicuously looped around the
entryway to the pool as if it were a high-security restricted zone.
Out of deference to
my mother-in-law and the regulations of the condo, I resisted the urge to
simply step over the fence, peel back the tarp and go for a few laps.
Nevertheless, this situation did make me think about how important it is for
people, myself included, to set up a scale of propriety, regardless of how
silly it may seem to others. I did this in my drinking.
Former New York
Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan used to talk about the practice of
"defining deviancy down," wherein things that were once unacceptable
are constantly redefined as "okay." For me, that's exactly how I
operated. When I began drinking, there was a well-defined scale of "right
and wrong." It's okay to drink in the evening, but not during the day. As
soon as I started drinking during the day, I changed the rules to being okay to
drink during the day but not in the morning. When that soon fell by the
wayside, I devised other rules. Smoking pot is okay, but no cocaine. Cocaine is
okay but no heroin. Heroin is okay, but just snorting. Etc., etc.
It seems as silly
to me now as the temperature lock-down at my mother-in-law's pool, yet I needed
the illusion at the time that I was still within the acceptable zone with my
drinking and drug use. So long as I could point to something unacceptable
outside myself, my behavior, no matter how destructive or hurtful, didn't
register on the sliding moral scale I used to evaluate my misdeeds.
In sobriety, the
scale has stopped sliding. I’ve come to understand what is right and what is
wrong and don’t need to keep redefining what I know to fit the actuality of
each situation. This doesn’t mean that my morals have hardened to the point of
inflexibility, as I’ve been known to lift a few extra pencils from work or be
less than entirely forthcoming on my taxes, yet on emotional issues I’m pretty
clear. Unlike the process that accompanied my drinking, when I was constantly
lowering my standards, in sobriety I’ve had to work hard in the other
direction, striving more fully toward moral integrity and emotional balance.
I’ve always been
drawn to the outlaw life. In fact, I thought I was living it when I was
drinking. However, I’ve come to realize that I’m actually living it more fully
now, in sobriety. And it doesn’t have anything to do with breaking the law.
There’s a line in “Absolutely Sweet Marie,” a song by Bob Dylan, that says, “To
live outside the law you must be honest.”
In my drinking,
living outside the law meant doing whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted to.
Today, in sobriety, living outside the law means something quite different –
like living beyond other people expectations of me, of not getting caught up in
what others think, but relying on my own intrinsic emotional gyroscope to keep
me in emotional balance.
Every so often, on
the subway on my way to work, dressed in my usual conservative garb, I’ll be
sitting there minding my own business when a person will get on and sit
directly across from me, a person, say, with a Mohawk or pink hair, or some
other clear sign of rebellion, of outlaw status. And I can see, as they look at
me, that I have fallen into that autonomic categorization of “old person,” “square,”
or whatever other mental compartment they might have for people who look like
me. As I sit, there’s a part of me that wants to connect with that overt
rebellion, to show that I too, once lived on the edge. But, I know that nothing
I can say or do in that moment will communicate the arc of my personal history
from overt rebellion to inner outlaw, so I simply nod, smile, and look away.
When they closed
down my mother-in-law’s pool, I went to the beach instead. It was actually a
little chilly – far from freezing, though -- with the wind blowing up swirls of
fine white beach sand and the azure waves pounding the shore unceasingly,
leaving trails of white foam like shaving cream on the sand.
I sat for a while,
hunched against the wind. An outlaw indeed.