How We Wrestle Is Who We Are

Image of the Week
Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
Image of the Week

I remember pacing hospital and house and hills, and thinking that his operations would either work or not and he would either live or die. There was a certain clarity there; I used to crawl into that clarity at night to sleep. But nothing else was clear. I used to think, in those sleepless days and nights, what if they don’t fix him all the way and he’s a cripple all his life, a pale thin kid in a wheelchair who has Crises? What if his brain gets bent? What if he ends up alive but without his mind at all? What then? Who would he be? Would he always be what he might have been? Would I love him still? What if I couldn’t love him? What if he was so damaged that I prayed for him to die? Would those prayers be good or evil?

I don’t have anything sweet or wise to say about those thoughts. I can’t report that God gave me strength to face my fears, or that my wife’s love saved me, or anything cool and poetic like that. I just tell you that I had those thoughts, and they haunt me still. I can’t even push them across the page here and have them sit between you and me unattached to either of us, for they are bound to me always, like the dark fibers of my heart. For our hearts are not pure; our hearts are filled with need and greed as much as with love and grace; and we wrestle with our hearts all the time. The wrestling is who we are. How we wrestle is who we are. What we want to be is never what we are. Not yet. Maybe that’s why we have these relentless engines in our chests, driving us forward toward what we might be.

Eventually my son will need a new heart, a transplant when he’s thirty or forty or so, though Liam said airily the other day that he’s decided to grow a new one from the old one, which I wouldn’t bet against him doing eventually, him being a really remarkable kid. But that made me think: if we could grow new hearts out of old ones, what might we be then? What might we be if we rise and evolve, if we come further down from the brooding trees and out onto the smiling plain, if we unclench the fist and drop the dagger, if we emerge blinking from the fort and the stockade and the prison, if we smash away the steel from around our hearts, if we peel the scales from our eyes, if we do what we say we will do, if we act as if our words really matter, if our words become muscled mercy, if we grow a fifth chamber in our hearts and a seventh and a ninth, and become as if new creatures arisen from our shucked skins, the creatures we are so patently and brilliantly and utterly and wholly and holy capable of becoming…

What then?

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the notion that how we wrestle is who we are? Can you share a personal story of a time you evolved after wrestling with your heart? What helps you grow a new heart out of the old one?

Moved by this reading? Join a live Awakin Circle to discuss in community.
Join this week
More ways to connect

Add Your Reflection

11 Past Reflections
PH
Mar 28, 2023
Reading this again, I'm wondering how Brian's son is doing today. I know what it is like to be haunted by actions of the past, and I guess most of us experience "haunting." This is such a powerful piece of literature. I hope Brian has gone forward with his writing, and I hope his son is doing even better than expected.
DE
Debbie
Dec 8, 2022
Teen jenifer
Shemale prostate cum handsfree
May gee
ggg der agent
Yasmin solo
Have sex with my boyfriend while sleeping
Goldie blair smothering
Pnp0200
nenita por webcam
Mary legality
GE
Genie
Dec 8, 2022
find best ewp over 11 meters training australia licence in below
RSA Training
DM
Donna M. Rudiger
Dec 7, 2022
I absolutely love Brian Doyle, followed his writing for years and was deeply saddened when he passed unexpectedly. Brian has a unique ability to help us look as ourselves and find new ways to process life's experiences, all the while maintaining independence and dignity. Thank you for sharing this piece and the optimism it provides.
DE
Deanne
Dec 6, 2022
I loved this piece for many reasons including the memories of the wrestling I have done during crises in the lives of my children when I felt helpless and scared and hated myself for not being confident and sure that things would work out. I also lived through many health issues with my husband including open heart surgery, implantable defibrillators, eventually, a heart transplant followed by the good fortune of twenty-two more years together. I want to put my arms around this father and tell him that there is hope and that others like me have gone down this road and can tell him that there is magic and hope to help with the agonies and fear.
RG
Dec 6, 2022
'How we wrestle is who we are' is an excellent reminder that often we focus on reaching the end or the desired destination and forget that it is the journey that matters. I should think that living each day mindfully with cheerfulness despite the obstacles would be a wonderful open-hearted and lovingly expansive experience. Something that I am aspiring for.
NB
Norma Bourland
Dec 6, 2022
This is beautiful! My wrestle to keep my hope for my own hurting son and not lose it like the setting sun every night keeps my heart soft and clear from the plague like build-up of cynicism and resentment. But the wrestle, though holy, takes vigilance and determination and resolution, and that is who I have become!
Thank you for this clarity, poetically written.
MA
Dec 5, 2022
What then? We become Christ-like. We are love. We are peace. We are wholeness. We are light. We are equanimity. We are joy. We are aliveness and unity and nurturing and tranquility and health and ... all that we are meant to be for ourselves and for the world. For me, it's that simple. And so immense that I don't even try to comprehend what it means, or looks and feels like. That unknowning is what keeps me motivated to continue moving towards it.
TE
Dec 5, 2022
As long as we are seeing only through limited eyes of separation, then death and life are opposites, there is struggle, fear, and suffering. Though it may seem obvious that in-breath, and out-breath are "opposites", but the Truth is that they are inextricably linked, parts of the same whole (just as we cannot fully inhale twice without exhaling between), and so it is with every bit of duality and karma. When sight is clear, then right thought, and right action for each moment of now are just as obvious, and Love is recognized as being primary behind every fear. That heart has no limit, no old or new, and does not suffer, though compassion for the suffering of duality is unlimited.
DD
Dec 2, 2022
I believe how we wrestle especially in live or die situations is who we really are, and they may bring out the best and the worst in us. A major wrestling with my heart occurred when I was 21. I was on a career path that was known and secure for me but no longer was right for me. To change was to go against what I had thought I wanted for a long time and go against mother's wishes and go against the expectations of some significant others, and it would be a step into a scary unknown. My heart was telling me to make the change, and my head and fear and wanting to please was telling me to stay put. I went through several weeks of agonizing gut wrenching anguish and wrestling within myself, and the life or death of my spirit was at stake. I followed my heart. I took a big leap and once I made the decision I quickly knew I made the right decision for me. I didn't grow a new heart -- I grew a new me, that is, a me that was more self and heart trusting and more clear and strong as to... View full comment
JP
Dec 2, 2022
There are two sides of the Self: selfish and selfless; greedy and genreous; sinful and sinless. When we are born There is pure self. As we grow we are conditioned by outside sources which create an imbalace between me and the other. The innate oneness and wholeness is fractured or divided. So we wresle with ourselves, between the wrong side of ourselves and the right side of ourselves. We live in a divided inner house which drains our energy. When we wake up and see the light we see our Real Self-beyond dualism, beyond boundaries. And that's who we are. We become ' mewe'. Life is a journey with ups and downs. There have been times in my life when I lost the dynamic balance and harmony in my interpersonal relationships and cause suffering in me and in others who loved me. I learnt the right, the whlesome way of relating to me and to others close to me. There is HOPE for evolution and transformation. It is an intrapersonal and an inetrpresonal dynamics in relationships. Look within wit... View full comment