Lost, Found, London

  I recently opened a box mailed to me from my mother back home in Hawaii that was sitting in her garage since the late 80's. I was more than a little nervous thinking about what was inside but I had an idea; memories I wanted gone but wasn't ready to abandon completely.Once I finally made the decision to leave the Waikiki stripping life after nine years, moving off the island wasn't just part of my plan - it was my only plan. I was an exhausted shell of a woman with dark circles under her eyes, over-processed burgundy hair and serious baggage - stuff that no twenty-something ever thinks of as real problems at the time.My predicaments included snorting excessive amounts cocaine, washing down handfuls of Molly (ecstasy) with vodka and a 300 calorie-a-day meal plan (on purpose). I was oblivious to the cloud of despair circling me like Pig-Pen's shadow in Charlie Brown.And those were the good days.I hadn't given this cardboard crate of history much thought as the years passed. Then Mom called. She was planning a garage sale and my stomach turned a bit, remembering what was stashed behind the lawnmower and potting soil. Upon her discovering my stash, she gave me two choices: toss the box or have it mailed to California, where I was trying to build some sort of a normal life."Just promise me you won't open it." I asked as she confirmed my zip code over the phone. Mom is aware of my past, but her reading my old journals was nothing she ever needed to do (journals are hand-written notes before blogs were blogs, and the internet was just the inside of a basketball hoop).After a few days, the box arrived. I ignored its existence for a week until curiosity unraveled my fear.Upon each new discovery, I vacillated between shock and amazement that I dared to live such a life, and gratitude wrapped with joy in that I survived.A little advice: If you have personal items from years ago tucked away somewhere, dust them off and buckle up. The memories are incendiary - in the best of every way.One of my favorite artifacts was a poem I wrote while traveling through Europe. Nineteen and elated to be so far from home, I marinated in the moment while scribbling on a piece of notepaper from Horniman At Hays.How amazing, to unfold corners of my mind after all these years:

Never think Before paper meets ink Just let it go Don't have to know Begin at the beginning and all will come out beautifully

Christine Macdonald - 1987

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Sometimes the answers live inside the person we were long ago - we just need to accept who we are now to fully appreciate who we were then.

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"If you don't get lost, there's a chance you may never be found." ~Author Unknown
 

 *Originally posted March 2008; edited 4/4/18.

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Power Strip: An Adult Extertainer's Backstory

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Living with Depression: Why I No Longer Feel Shame