"I went out in the world and tried to find places of my own to live. I was always anxious about it. In some ways, this anxiety was a terrific motivator. Fear made me resourceful. And I had some extraordinary adventures as a result.. I will cherish the memories of these escapades forever. In other ways tho, I became more codependent than ever. On the surface, I appeared to be a confident young go getter, but my inner life was, as it had always been, a tremulous fearscape. I was neither mature, or emotionally secure, and hidden beneath my apparent ingenuity was a terrified child, constantly asking, Who’s got me? Who will keep me safe. Where do I belong? And thus began my lifelong quest to make other people into my home.
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That relationship blew up because all my relationships blow up. Like a thief in the night, I left that good man behind, running off to California with someone who did not belong to me. And for sure someone should have been worried about me because that relationship swiftly blew up too, I remember making desperate phone calls in San Francisco, looking for places to stay, back to New York City I came, and I slept on my friends sofa on 14th street for 6 weeks, sobbing in silence and shame, night after night, and then I ran into the next relationship and the next living situation, and the next, and the next, and then the next, I once estimated that between the ages of 20 and 48 I lived in approximately 28 different homes, and that is not everywhere I stayed, that number would be incalculable, its merely everywhere I lived, everywhere that had my actual my name on the lease or the mortgage and I never lived alone, I couldn’t bear to be alone, I couldn’t bear being alone with the open wound that was my own mind. But also I couldn’t bear the chafe and strain of intimacy. I couldn’t last anywhere and I couldn’t last with anyone. So I came and went. Colliding and separating, Roaming the planet, constantly looking for places to land and people to merge with. I sometimes used to call this behavior being a free spirit, but my wild instability was quite the opposite of freedom because I had no agency in the matter, only urgency. Also, if I was so free, why did I always end up feeling trapped? It’s because my moves were motivated by desperate situations in which I was running either towards somebody, or away from somebody else. I constantly found myself in stories that started out with passion but ended up with shame. So much shame in fact, that during those years, there were entire geographical regions I had to flee at top speed because my behavior had created dramas that made it impossible for me to remain there for another day."