At the beach
Today, our two-week beach vacation began.  Around this time each year, a large group of us, biological family and extended family, converge on an eight-bedroom beach house.  We play in the ocean, on the beach, or in the house's pool, eat too much food, watch DVDs, and generally relax.  I look forward to it every year, but this year I really need it.  I've been more burned out at the start of some past beach trips, but not in a while.
Everyone is asleep as I write this.  I've tucked in kids, checked on others, turned off lights, and now I'm working at the dining area table.  I spent a few moments alone outside on the balcony, listening to the ocean and the howling wind and feeling very, very glad to be here.  I also couldn't help but feel alone in a crowded house, as I so often do.  I used to think everyone was this way, but I've talked to enough people over the years that I now accept the obvious: feelings on this topic fall along a broad continuum.
I'm often amazed at my own ability to wring loneliness from crowded gatherings.  The only saving grace is that the vast majority of the time I don't find being alone or even loneliness to be a negative thing; it's just another way to be.  If I were my therapist, of course (and for this discussion I'll pretend I have a therapist), I'd read those few sentences and figure I'd be charging this patient's credit card for many months to come.  Fortunately for me, I also feel (and am) a part of many groups, so I don't lack for social contact.  
I hope this week to go swimming at night, something I love to do but won't do alone simply for safety reasons.  We'll see how successful I am in persuading some others to join me.  
Despite what in my review of the above text read like whining, I do love this place.  I really do.
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