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Amanda B. Hinton's avatar

About eight months before the pandemic, we moved to a veritable mountain paradise. Our cabin home was built quite literally into the side of the mountain. We drove past exactly five houses spread out on their own parcels of mountain land to get to ours—end of the road privacy that had pines and aspens and a few outlooks all around us.

I had orchestrated the *exact* outer circumstances to make my inner dialogue (and yet undiagnosed autistic, dissociative identity disordered needs) unavoidable. Moving there forced me to confront that there was nowhere I could escape being me, not even paradise. I had to acknowledge that this had been my ideal solution my whole life: to escape and split myself.

Of course when I tell people about our life in the mountains, and that we moved back to a suburb of Dallas last summer, the shock in their response is the same. (Why? Why would you give up that serenity? That peace?) And the short answer I give is that solitude isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, especially if you become a mother for the first time.

But I do feel nervous about letting them down with the truth that their ideal escape won’t help them like they hope it will. It might be a stepping stone to somewhere more honest. But it won’t be a gentle ride. I don’t suppose the road to belonging to yourself ever is.

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Allison's avatar

It’s weird for me to answer how I show up for myself “first” because one of the ways I show up for myself *IS* by surrounding myself with the right people and investing in my deep, intimate friendships. When I was single and dating, I needed these friends to love me and remind me what I was looking for when my vision got blurred by the hellscape of dating apps. When I had to leave behind a job I loved for a much less fulfilling role, I needed these friends to help me sketch out a life in my new position to see if it would be bearable or if I needed to pivot. Now I have an almost-1 -year-old and I need these friends to remind me who I am outside of this small yet all-consuming human. The keeping of the friends *IS* the self-care. I validate their emotions and they validate mine. I try to solve their problems and they try to solve mine. Caring for them *IS* caring for me.

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