complications…

I was an avid fan of both Sex & the City, and The Good Wife. In each series, I noticed I had a sensitivity to the roles actor Chris Noth played. While other women I knew were vehemently Team Big, I found infinite reasons why he was not the man for Carrie. It would be well past the lifetime of the first series, and likely two-thirds of the way through the Good Wife before I realized that Noth reminded me of my stepdad. It wasn’t that they shared the same mannerisms or voice, but there were similarities in their appearance.

It reminded me of the first time I watched the Super Bowl. I was at a youth group party and there was some screen time with John Elway which would be the first time I ever recall being triggered. While also not identical twins, there were parts of his features that reminded me of my stepdad.

Stepdad is a funny term. He was actually the only “dad” I had growing up. I called him daddy. In truth, my mom was his (not so secret) mistress and he wasn’t really any sort of dad to me at all. He was someone else’s dad. Plus, he was my abuser. It was complicated…

While you may look at photographs of Chris Noth and John Elway side by side and think they look nothing alike, I see something in them that reminds me so much of him. I’m not going to say that this is any indication of the guilt regarding the allegations against Chris Noth, but I am going to say I wasn’t surprised when I heard them. And maybe that isn’t fair because it isn’t his fault he reminded me of my child molester.

It also isn’t my fault that I cried when Big died, in the reboot. I cried because though I struggled to not associate him with my “stepdad”, I also had grown to love him too.

Just like with my stepdad.

Like I said, life is complicated. At any rate= Believe women. Yes, sometimes they lie, but even in those lies there is going to be some shred leading to a truth.

the whole package…

When we moved into this little lakeside cottage those three years ago, we questioned how the padding feet, laughter, and voices of visiting loved ones would fit. We didn’t know, as we unpacked boxes and found creative ways to make this space our own, that those were questions we wouldn’t have to worry about. With one tumultuous Christmas and several months unraveling beyond that, this family size would shrink. No more little bare feet mornings or laughter-filled family moments.

Woven throughout the unfolding of three years, this space has become so much a home. A home shared because within its walls dreams have come true and lives have been lived. I think back to the two people we were that day, tired from driving and anxious about life. I think of who we are today–stronger, confident, capable.

Even with the unraveling of a family and over half of our time here being consumed by a pandemic, we’ve had so many loved ones in this home. We’ve had friends and relatives fly out to visit, friends drive over from the west coast… We’ve held wine nights in our sunroom, movie nights in our yard, and game nights around our table. We’ve created space here, with new people. Around candlelight, women have confessed struggles, meditated, told embarrassing stories, and connected.

Nearly from day one, we’ve had to consider the possibility of my mother joining us here. With advanced Alzheimer’s and wheelchair-bound, this small, cozy space was not a fit for her. The conversations went round and round during the intense seasons of legal battles, as we tried to think of how it could possibly work if it had to.

It couldn’t.

As impossible as it would have been, a secret part of me deep inside may have wanted her here. I wanted to hold her hand and love her without facility walls. I wanted to brush her hair and put her to bed. I wanted to play her favorite records and make her favorite soups. I wanted her to remember a home.

This afternoon a delivery man pounded on my front door, despite the sign urging him to go around the corner the door we actually use. I moved furniture to carve a path to get to him. I knew he wouldn’t wait.

I knew why he was here.

He came to bring my mother… to bring her home. Not to any place she’d ever laid eyes on, but this space is a home (and one that I deeply love) all the same.

Work had been busy, so it was a slow cooker dinner consisting of chicken and pasta. He and I sat across from one another as we ate. Conversation danced around the overwhelming reality that my mother sat there too, neatly tucked into a box stamped CREMATED REMAINS on every inch of available space. It is a strange thing to hold the hand of someone breathing, and then moments later bathe them in your tears because they no longer are. It is entirely another thing to hold them, dressed in cardboard and postage, one week later.

I remember her struggling to breathe, fighting for her life while also fighting to die.

I remember her months back, trying to place how she knew me, and giggling like a child at my jokes.

I remember her one year ago, finally able to have visitors, even if it was on the other side of a COVID SAFETY tent. Her there–present, happy, and all too aware of the fact that I was recording the visit. I knew I’d want it someday. Now that I do, I struggle to find it.

I remember her many years ago… hours of Triple Yahtzee, Dr. Pepper, old stories, and jokes.

I remember her when I was small enough to pick up. I remember the “fun mom” who’d pull me from my bed at 2 a.m. so she could teach me how to bop to old Sha Na Na records.

And now I remember her in a box I haven’t quite found the strength to open yet. A box that claims to weigh only six pounds but feels like it holds the weight of the world.

Within the walls of this house there has been so much loss. Beneath this cottage roof rest the ashes of my parents now. Lining the stairway walls live photos that haunt me of a family that is no more. Even with that sadness though, these walls have held the best and most beautiful bits of life–bits of US. Us traveling this gypsy path of life together, dreaming in unison and also supporting one another fervently as we carry out solo dreams of our own…

rainy day in october…

This morning I sat in my yard crying, out in the rain.

Several weeks before this weeping crumble, my husband and I returned from vacation to learn one of the stray cats who hangs out near our yard had given birth to two kittens. By this point, the kittens, though adorably dependent on their mama still, seemed to be coming into their own. We were shocked. We hadn’t even known she’d been pregnant.

To tell you the truth, we had actually thought she was a he, a he whom we have aptly called Arthur for nearly two years.

Once we realized our mistake, Arthur became Bea Arthur, and we both became smitten with Bea’s adorable babies…

There was a bit of drama not long after, when we learned the babies had been trapped in a neighbor’s garage for three days. We rescued them and everything seemed great. In fact, on the last day of September, as I folded laundry neatly into my suitcase, I saw them following mom around and trying their first attempts at nibbling some of the food we set out for the ferals. In a life season of so much unknown, these two little clumsy kittens brought much joy…

The next day I drove to Michigan to sit at my mother’s bedside for her last days. The week before she’d been hospitalized. On the day that I scrambled to pack my suitcase, she’d been released into hospice and the prognosis was days left, at best. For ten days I held her hand, brushed her hair, laughed with her as she rallied, and cried silent tears as she lashed out. Alzheimer’s is an ugly monster. Many friends who’d lost mothers reached out with advice drawn from their own experiences. A commonality among their words was how, though hard, the process of death and closing those days could be truly beautiful. It seemed crazy, but then for four days she rallied and I saw the sunlight of beauty everywhere. It was after the rallying faded, when her illness once again consumed her and the memory of my face was washed away, that the beautiful was replaced by something I can only surmise as sinister.

Like a switch, we transitioned into a dark and triggering time.

After ten days, I make the trip home. The dark days were difficult. I’d said my goodbyes. There was nothing left to do.

My first day back, as I went out to feed the cats, I saw Bea Arthur and her baby-daddy Tom. Something seemed off, so I tuned in and watched. Seeing the two of them show up, (at their safe, comfortable, feral distance) was not abnormal. As Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday sightings, walks, and evening encounters seemed to still be just the two of them, we began to wonder if something had happened to the kittens.

We have wildlife around. Raccoons, skunks, foxes, and a rogue coyote from time to time. We’d been concerned for them from the beginning, but when we’d stumbled upon Bea and her sister nearly two years ago, they were starving babies themselves. They wouldn’t let us near them, and everyone we phoned said if we caught them they’d be euthanized. Instead we built a heated shelter and feeding/watering station at the back of our yard and watched them grow up.

We did what we could. Even so, it is devastating to think of something happening to those two babies.

Through last night and this morning Bea Arthur stayed hovered beneath a bush near the shelter. Rain came, puddles formed, inching closer and closer to her. Still she stayed there.

Perhaps it is the weight of stagnantly waiting for my mother to leave her life. I was exhausted before that journey began, but now I am feeling so much more so. Also though, there is this other season of loss forever tattooed on my insides. The miscarriages, lost children, aching and empty arms…

There we were, rain falling all around us, this lost mother and me. Her babies seemingly gone. Heartbreak. I tried to pour love into her, as our gaze held tight, a sea of rainwater and grief pouring all around us as we sat suspended there. A cat and a woman, both having lost. Both knowing such struggle.

Was I projecting onto her? Probably. But also, she seems to have been through a hurt that led to the scars of which I’ve carried for so, so long.

Today, October 15th, is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day. This evening marks the International Wave of Light, where candles are lit at 7 pm, light casting globally in remembrance of significant loss. The dark, dreary skies of my city today feel appropriate. For the stray mama tabby and for myself. For the many other women who’ve lost, falling asleep beneath these street lights–expanding unfathomably beneath this entire sky.

Loss is hard. Waiting for it and surviving after it.

I don’t have anything wonderful or wise to say. I’m sad. I remember. I remember the hopes and dreams of motherhood. I remember the few beautiful moments with my own mother, amidst the sea of abuse and trauma.

I remember two clumsy kittens climbing all over their mother…

I remember and I’m sad. It’s terrible. Some days are like this, and that’s ok.

Even when it is hard, we have to pause to remember.

a surviving memorial…

I did some dumb stuff as a kid. Now, looking back with the wisdom of a full-grown human, I’m sure that I was looking for attention of various kinds…

I was really young, perhaps six or seven, when I–in a fit of anger over being locked in my bedroom–decided to stick a metal hairpin into an electrical wall socket. Not only did this act blow the power of our single wide trailer home, but it melted my thumb and forefinger flesh to one another, the hairpin painfully sandwiched in the middle. The pin shaped scars lived to tell their story in my fingerprints for decades…

I’ve already shared my old, weather worn couch and rattlesnake story. No need to go back there here. *shudder*

Throughout late middle and early high school I did the worst of it. Like many girls my age, I was in pursuit of not only parental love and attention, but the attention of boys too. A boy’s attention warranted the sort of popularity that my naive self had determined was most validating.

I wanted to feel valid…

I also, having arrived at this point in my life from a foundational origin of childhood trauma, took my pursuits for love secret steps farther. Cutting, carving into, and burning my body primarily. Punishing this self for the ways in which I saw it had failed me. Fingers down throat, diarrhetics, deprivation of hydration or nutrition–of enjoyment… As bad as those choices were, they weren’t the sort of dumb teen stuff I am referring to.

I’m talking about vegetable oil and sunshine!

Together.

This body lathered in cooking oil while laying out with friends… peaceful afternoon naps in the cozy sunlight where I barbequed my flesh to the point of black, blistering char. The swimsuit criss-cross design became the ornament of my skin. Twenty years later my back still shown that X. Now, nearly three decades after that brilliant summer habit, while the difinitive lines have faded, the freckled clusters of scarred open spaces still tease that the kiss of a shape may live on forever…

There’s the scar on my nose from tumbling stubbornly down a hill…

The painful, cystic deformity I will live my entire life with because I insisted on wearing size 5 1/2 shoes, while my feet naturally filled a 10.

The scars from childhood– both living on the surface of this shell but also veining deep into the inside, have shaped me. They’ve taught me to walk with caution, to show myself grace, to actively love this body… to try and send love out into the world.

Some of the scarring stems from the consequences of my stupidity, but also from the recklessness of others. They stay with me, altering my person in seen and unseen ways. I am neither the melted flesh of my careless choices, nor the result of cruelty rained upon me.

I house the remnants of what was– I am the relic…

foraging…

This summer is speeding by, which should feel a bit mixed-blessing, but also feelings are weird right now so nothing is hitting quite normal. That’s ok. I think the most important part is we realize and admit it instead of holding expectations for ourselves based on the perception of how things used to be–how WE used to be…

This past month had me officially quitting the daily drinking of coffee, upon waking. Maybe it’s my fibro, maybe it’s just stress or age… it could be anything really, but this daily cup is no longer good for my body. (ha! was it ever great for my health?) I miss it, because I truly enjoyed it. That being said, I have begun drinking iced coffee some afternoons, and I love that. Adapting how much milk versus coffee, flavor, etc. It has been an adventure. It isn’t every day, but it is definitely the pick me up some afternoons really need!

As I was processing through the whole coffee debacle, (my enneagram wing 5 really shining through here) I had several friends recommend mushroom coffee. The glowing recommendations coupled with the delectable descriptions– elements of a sweetly spiced chai, or the creaminess of a nutty cocoa. By my opinion, it is like none of these things. It wasn’t a good fit, for me. That being said, if you’re a mushroom coffee lover and you have some advice on how to make it incredible, I’ve read the health benefits and am willing to try again.

July also played out as the third month that I’d be dealing with the unexplained arm/nerve pain. It has, at times, been very debilitating. I’ve had doctors say it’s fibro. I’ve had physical therapists say it’s a sleep injury. Pretty much everyone is shooting in the dark with guess, but the likelihood is that its related to my second vaccine dosage, otherwise entitled Long Term Moderna Arm. Good times. (Disclaimer: I am still very much in favor of vaccines, and do not doubt that this is a complication due to combined issues from fibro and the shot.)

Because of the previous issue mentioned, sleep has been in micro doses. Can one micro-dose sleep? At any rate, my schedule is all out of sorts.

I also used July to practice making Instagram Reels (on the fence), working on my manuscript and progressing that journey, and finding opportunity for more connections.

As we step gracefully into August, I’m wondering if these next thirty-one days could be where the real magic lay. I am a super big nerd when it comes to oddball holidays, so I thought I’d share some fun things about the days ahead.

  • This is Admit You’re Happy Month. {Listen, please allow yourself to be happy when you are. Also, please be honest with yourself when you aren’t. Happiness is neither to be expected or required. This is stupid.}
  • It is also Romance Awareness Month. {I mean, What?!?!}
  • Both Picnic and Peach month. {I can get behind these}
  • National Eye Exam Month. {Interesting that this is scheduled along with romance awareness and seeing your happiness. Hmmm.}
  • Today, August 1st, is Friendship Day! Yay! It is ALSO International Forgiveness Day.
  • 2nd- Ice Cream Sandwich Day {YES, PLEASE!}
  • 4th- Chocolate Chip Cookie day {just a few months ago was chocolate chip day. Could be combine them and give a day to something more rewarding maybe??? Just a thought.}
  • 5th- National Underwear Day. {*crickets*}
  • 8th- International Cat Day
  • 9th- Book Lover’s Day
  • 10th- Lazy Day; National Smores Day
  • 12th- World Elephant Day
  • 15th- Relaxation Day
  • 17th- National Thriftshop Day
  • 18th- Bad Poetry Day
  • 19th- National Potato Day {Idaho REPRESENT!}
  • 25th- National Banana Split Day
  • 26th- Women’s Equality Day and National Dog Day

Some thoughts… PERHAPS we should have less food days (though they are delicious) and lazy/rest/nap (that one was a different months) days and just educate people on how to rest, take care of themselves, balance priorities, etc. Most of these days are just ridiculous or funny. Lighthearted and worth celebrating, perhaps… But keeping a focus on these things that truly matter.

Moral of the story: Grab an ice cream sandwich this month. Write a note to a friend. Take naps, read books, and listen to your body. This is how we live our lives, love our lives, admit we are happy, and celebrate US.

Also, go get your eyes checked…