1168: Refusing Rilke's “You must change your life” by Remica Bingham-Risher
1168: Refusing Rilke's “You must change your life” by Remica Bingham-Risher
Transcript
I’m Major Jackson, and this is The Slowdown.
Have you ever told what you thought was a funny story, yet struggled to get the timeline right? Or maybe you forgot who did what and when, and then had to double back? And when you lost grip, that’s when you sensed your audience becoming impatient, secretly wishing you would get to the punchline or point of the story, but then by the time you eased into your Aesop groove, the opportunity to charm vanished.
I never have that problem. Actually, I have that problem all the time, enough that I nearly enrolled in a storytelling class. I am afflicted with the idea that I must be perfect at everything, and thus, I go all out to achieve flawlessness: I read manuals, watch endless YouTube videos, enroll in on-the-fly courses. I measure my growth by my last failure. I am told this has to do with my astrological sign.
I live with Rilke’s famous line, “You must change your life,” in my ear on repeat, an earworm, as if something is less than stellar about who I am today. I move instinctively towards myself as though I were a massive project, believing I will someday, again in Rilke’s words, “burst like a star.” That this is how to be seen, to be loved, to be cherished. This quest has distorted my sense of what is important, sown constant dissatisfaction, and emotional states of being that pose health risks. Pursuing perfection has, at times, alienated me from those I hold dear. Not that I don’t love them or they me —- but that I get tunnel vision in seeking some heroic terminus.
Today’s poem invites me to consider the fact that I am fine just as I am, to take stock of blessings before me, to regard family, traditions, and cultural inheritances as stabilizing forces that settle my heart.
Refusing Rilke’s You must change your life
by Remica Bingham-Risher
6,000 books and counting. Large seashells in plastic bins collected by your daughter. A wooden spoon laced in scripture. Anniversary cards for old loves, cards for housewarming, for gratitude, one ivory program with raised lettering. Ceramic dishes older than you carried from your mother’s house, her mother’s house, whoever made them useful first. Unlaced shoes, beltless jackets, strapless gowns and satin robes. A wooden chest carved by hand telling a story not unlike the years of photos kept inside. Old concert leaflets, dental records, things you’ve been searching for and have misplaced—certificates, ironclad agreements, signatures that might save some if others are hampered by death or waste. A glasswork brooch painted over, a safe deposit box with no key or lock, a pair of baby socks and toys full of dust, a statuette— Black bride and groom—above the dresser filled to the brim with us.
“Refusing Rilke's You must change your life” by Remica Bingham-Risher from ROOM SWEPT HOME © 2024 by Remica Bingham-Risher. Used by permission of Wesleyan University Press.