EXCHANGING OLD SHELLS FOR NEW
You recognize the terrible tingly feeling that runs through your entire body as you feel the shell begin to molt. Begin to gently and somewhat painfully pull away one micro millimeter at a time. There is fear present. Smacking its gnarled teeth around the edges of your consciousness. There is excitement too. Quietly bubbling just beneath the surface. Expectation and hope keep each other company in matching armchairs on the porch of your mind. Waiting with a bowl of popcorn and some fizzy sugary soda between them. They’ve come to watch the entire sorry process. To contextualize it and give it some semblance of meaning.
And there you are, miserable, sorry wretch. Impotent, uncomfortable, wary, wriggling because you know that if you don’t work with nature, nature will work against you. The shell must come off. And you must sit quiet and vulnerable, trying to hold yourself together and not go stark raving mad through the entire process.
The shell must come off because as comfortable and homey as it has become it’s no longer roomy. It has become somewhat constrictive, somewhat confining. The shell must come off because you know that if it doesn’t that very shell that smells like fresh bread and vegetable soup and momma’s love; yes that very shell that has smacked of delicious comfort and love and protection; that shell that has become the very epitome of everything good and just and sacred; yes THAT shell will crush you. It will kill you slowly, imperceptibly, gently, like a warm bath that sits over a gently surging fire. It will kill you and you won’t even know it.
You know this instinctively not because anyone has sat you down and told you but because the still small voice in your heart is telling you that it is so. You know that it is time to allow it all to gently slough away and give rise to something better and bigger and brighter and roomier. You just need to keep this entire spiel in the center of your mind’s eye as you go through this process though because the endgame is always enticing but the process can be brutal. Well, fear not little crab-ling, this too shall pass and you will soon have a new house on your little back and it will be the best thing you ever did for yourself. So close your eyes, tighten your resolve and let this one go. The best is yet to come.