“Rolling in the Deep”
And Rolling and Rolling and Rolling
Dancing with Abandon
Living Without Abandonment
From 21 by Adele
“The scars of your
love, remind you of us.
They keep me thinking that
we almost had it all
The scars of your love,
they leave me breathless
I can't help feeling
We could have had it
all
Rolling in the deep
You had my heart inside
your hand
And you played it
To the beat.”
I danced riotously,
joyfully, without limits, having no fear of anyone watching. Rocking out.
Another person was present, but enveloped in the emotion of her own
dance, she wasn’t watching, and I continued my own.
“We could have had it all. . . .” At the song’s end, she added
a name, a single name of the person who had her heart inside [his] hand . . .
.” I, too, sang a name aloud, but didn’t stop at one, and added at least a few more,
going back to ____, who “played my heart to the beat” when I was 16.
Failed love—a failed
relationship—left singer Adele at age 21 rolling in the deep. Here I am at 60,
looking back and seeing how I placed my heart inside too many hands, the wrong
hands, and rolled in the deep far too many times.
“We could have had it all
Rolling in the deep
You had my heart inside
your hand
But you played it,
You played it,
You played it
You played it to the
beat.”
I stopped that roll ten
years ago and said, “I’ll take my heart out of your hand, thank you very much,”
and started my own roll away from that deep, dark place of another failed marriage,
another heart played to the beat.
Hearing, feeling,
Adele’s words awakened that anguish from years ago, and it was re-felt, re-experienced. Voicing those names also made me pause and led me to question why I gave my
heart so often to those who “played it to the beat.”
In answer, I realize that
it’s a mistake to give one’s heart over to another and allow it to be “played
to the beat.” From this vantage point, scanning the horizon of the past, I know
it’s an error to give one’s heart over. A wiser course is to open one’s heart; and rather than let someone else “play it to the beat,” the more heartfelt path
is to find someone with whom one can listen to the beat, and sing together, rather
than make separate songs.
Adele’s 21 CD can be found at Amazon.com, where
you also can listen to part of “Rolling in the Deep.”