- What tribes did I identify with?
- Where do my values come from?
- What have I done to signify my belonging
The questions kept coming.
- Why do we stay?
- Why do we leave?
- What happens when we leave our tribe.
- What happens when we stop believing in the magic of our tribe.
But then after I took out my bellybutton ring, I realized those ties run much deeper than I had realized. I've had that hunk of metal in my navel for 16 years. I didn't realize how tied to it I had become. Something clicked today - I didn't feel like I needed it any longer. It was a marking that I was alternative. I looked at it and felt the ties to my raving day, to burningman, to all the odd things I've done. But I'm not doing those things now; I don't see a space for them in my future so I felt it was not my marking any longer. I didn't think it was a big deal. Yet ever since I took it out, I've been in a bit of a daze.
Hilary and I got our navels pierced in a bonding endeavor just before going home on break during our first year of college. I recall my mother's horror and dismay when I showed her my stomach. I had left my family tribe and declared my allegiance to the young, alternative and wild. I still recall when Hilary told me she had taken hers out years ago. I felt sad and a bit violated. She had walked away from our ties. Our doing it together in the basement of some lesbian in Northampton had meant a lot to me, was It no longer meaningful for her?
I thought all that had faded. I didn't think I needed that badge any longer. I'm not part of the uber-hip tribe any longer. I don't go to raves, push fashion boundaries or live on the edge in any way. I grow veggies, compost with worms and culture my own yogurt. It seemed right that I leave behind that symbol. My life orbits different values now. I have no interest in raves and can barely tolerate bars now a days.
Taking it out and looking at my stomach, I felt as if I was looking at my body for the first time in years. I could see the contours of my abdomen in a different way; the sparkle of the metal didn't distract from my flesh. I was unadorned, truly naked. Washing in the shower, my hand didn't knock against anything, instead it slide on past my bellybutton without a notice.
The connection to the tribe goes deeper than I believed. I spent the afternoon reflecting on what I had done. I realized I was taking off the symbols of my former tribe. I had been leaving slowly for the last few years. Yet I didn't join a new tribe. I have no strong identification with any group or demographic. I'm an occasional social element in a dozen different groups. I don't identify with mothers or young professionals. I'm not tied into a sports activity or team. I try to connect with my family, yet with my cousins grown and brothers married, family feels more like a diasporia than a clan. I'm barely more than an acquaintance with anyone at work. I come and go. Partly I realized my wounds from breaking tribal taboos still smart and I avoid initiating myself into any tribe as a preventative measure. Partly, I don't see any tribe that encompasses me entirely - I distrust all group think.
I once believed that we had evolved with our Science. That we were beyond the ancient, as we now toy with space travel, nanotechnologies and the sublime Martini. Yet today I deeply realized how tied we are to our culture. My inner-self craves a marking of this passage. I don't know how to acknowledgment that I've moved on.
3 comments:
And I cannot believe you didnt know that you should never start a sentence with the word "And"... :)
Dear Mr. Smarty-Pants,
I am expressing myself in a colloquial style which reflect my inner dialog. While I do edit down my thoughts into nearly complete sentances and avoid the half-baked run-on concepts that frequently explode from my lips, I do prefer to keep the essence of my thoughts intact. I do realize that many of my readers might be shocked to read what I'm saying, as when I have shared these same ideas in a spoken conversation, the sounds hits them with such velocity and with so little enunciation, as to render much of the message meaningless.
Thank you for your concern. I appreciate your input.
Sincerely,
The Daily Oyster
What's with all this I and me business?
Given your retort, and having read your oh so enamoring response, please see the edited version below which is written in true "Oyster" style:
===============
AND I am expressing myself in a colloquial style which reflect my inner dialog. AND While I do edit down my thoughts into nearly complete sentances, avoidING the half-baked run-on concepts that frequently explode from my lips, I do prefer to keep the essence of my thoughts intact. AND I do realize that many of my readers might be shocked to read what I'm saying, as when I have shared these same ideas in a spoken conversation, AND the sounds hits them with such velocity with so little enunciation, as to render much of the message meaningless.
AND Thank you for your concern. AND I appreciate your input.
Sincerely,
The Daily Oyster EDITOR
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