Brain and Heart

heart brain fight (2)

“My brain and heart divorced a decade ago

over whom was to blame about how big of a mess I have become

Eventually,

they couldn’t be in the same room with each other

Now my head and heart share custody of me

I stay with my brain during the week

and my heart gets me on weekends

They never speak to one another

– instead, they give me

the same note to pass to each other every week

And their notes they send to one another always say the same thing:

“This is all your fault”

On Sundays my heart complains

about how my head has let me down in the past

and on Wednesday my head lists all of the times

my heart has screwed things up for me

In the future, they blame each other for the state of my life

There’s been a lot of yelling – and crying

So, lately, I’ve been spending a lot of time with my gut

who serves as my unofficial therapist

Most nights, I sneak out of the window in my ribcage

and slide down my spine

and collapse on my gut’s plush leather chair

that’s always open for me

~ and I just sit sit sit sit, until the sun comes up

Last evening,  my gut asked me

if I was having a hard time being caught

between my heart and my head

I nodded

I said I didn’t know if I could live with either of them anymore

“My heart is always sad about

something that happened yesterday

while my head is always worried about

something that may happen tomorrow,” I lamented

My gut squeezed my hand

“I just can’t live with my mistakes of the past

or my anxiety about the future,”

I sighed

My gut smiled and said: “in that case,

you should go stay with your lungs for a while,”

I was confused

  – the look on my face gave it away

“If you are exhausted about your heart’s obsession with the fixed past and your mind’s focus on the uncertain future,

your lungs are the perfect place for you.

There is no yesterday in your lungs

There is no tomorrow there either

There is only now

There is only inhale

There is only exhale

There is only this moment

There is only breath

and in that breath

you can rest while your

heart and head work their relationship out.”

This morning, while my brain was busy reading tea leaves

and while my heart was staring at old photographs

I packed a little bag and walked to the door of my lungs.

Before I could even knock, she opened the door

with a smile and as a gust of air embraced me

she said:

“What took you so long?”

Credits: John Roedel.