FROM LEARNING TO LET GO [Red Rover Style]

 “We need, in love, to practice only this: letting each other go. For holding on comes easily; we do not need to learn it.” ― Rainer Maria Rilke

You’ve never been the one to let go first.

You blame this on the game “Red Rover”. The game that capitalized your free time during recess in the third game. You would get in two lines, on opposite ends of the mossy green field, and stare at each other as if you were 300 pound linebackers getting ready to crush your opponents. Side by side you locked your fingers tight and pressed your palms together, with the girls next to you, as if you were trying to squish a penny between them. You no longer felt like an individual. You were part of the person to your right. You were part of the person to your left. So much, indeed, that your racing hearts and panting breaths synched up and began to sound like the roaring engine of a Ford 150.

And then, when it was time, someone would make the call, that was more like a shout–the kind you let out when you are not angry or upset but just want to make something clear, “YES MOM, I HEARD YOU”–one of those.

“Red rover, red rover, send Samantha over”

And just like that Samantha got suited up. She criss crossed the bunny ears of her shoe laces, fist pumped her team mates, lunged forward and took off. You see her coming at you. You realize you don’t have much time left. You simultaneously squeeze your palms against the palms of the girls next to you and twist your sweaty fingers together till they are all the way locked at the core.

Your heart begins to pound on beat with her approaching footsteps and that is when you close your eyes. Notice this about life. When someone is running toward you at an ungodly speed, you will, without a doubt close your eyes.

But you won’t let go.

Maybe, your fingers will start to pull apart, mayyyybeeeee, your palms press outward from the girl’s next to you, mayyyybeeee, you will start to wonder if supporting the full body weight of this 7 year old girl is really something you want to do for much longer.

But, you won’t let go.

The girl next to you starts to call it quits. She starts to yank her hand away from yours and you enter a side game of tug of war that you never agreed to when this game first started.

“NO,” you tell her. You won’t let go.

And then, some kind of law of physics that you just can’t understand in the third grade takes place from all the pulling and the pushing and the yanking, that you, the girl next to you, and poor little victim of the game red rover-Samantha-fall backwards onto the buds of wet grass.

You still, for some odd reason, don’t let go.

It is right then, it is right there, that you learn that holding on for too long is never a good idea. That there will always be a time, that you will be made aware of thanks to the butterflies that will swarm your stomach or the feeling of a large stack of bricks being placed on your heart, when you will know it is time to go on–get out of there–drop your hands and simply just walk away.

Oh, you will find that feeling to become all to familiar as the years go by. You stay past your welcome at a job that you just don’t like, you grow out of a dress that you spent some of the best nights of your teenage years in, you wrap your arms around people who squirm to get away.

One day you will get the hang of it.

But maybe you won’t. Learn not to be so hard on yourself–you are human and this is just one of those feelings that remind you what it is like to be alive.

Leggo my eggo! [I had to lighten the mood]!! Happy Friday, my friends.

I’m Jen Glantz. I’ve been a published writer for over 13 years, spilling my words into magazines (ranging from style to scuba diving), newspapers, websites and even this one time, a speech, for someone who didn’t speak a word of English. What drives my words, my site, my writing, is the power of relating to people. I find that many people, especially young girls, feel so alone and quite often they feel embarrassed. I want to shatter those feelings! I want them to read what I write and understand that it’s okay to be a little outside of the box, but most importantly, that it is okay to just be who they are.

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