On belonging…

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I do not know when this happened, or how, or frankly why. I feel like one day I’m skipping happily along, enjoying life and the next I’m suddenly hyper aware of the reality that the world is being slowly taken over by subscription boxes. Ha! At first I thought to myself- self, this probably happened while you had your nose in your ipad playing Candy Crush, but upon further research it seems a good chunk of subscription box companies have already gone under thus leading me to believe they began their businesses (with little success) prior to March- when my Candy Crush obsession began.

Even my best friend keeps a Pinterest Board on subscription boxes, which is how I learned they were in fact called “subscription boxes.” I’m not too quick sometimes.

Anyhow, the husband and I have been a little curious about them for a while now. There aren’t any that particularly interest him, subscription wise, but the idea of them are a bit intriguing. Business wise, it’s smart. Business wise, it was probably a lot smarter before pretty much everyone and their aunt Lucille’s cat were starting Subscription Box services, but still… After months of deliberation, we went ahead and decided on a few gift subscriptions for others, signed Gen up for a teen girl one (I might post a review because I am super excited about that one!) And then I signed up for Birchbox and Ipsy.

Ahhh, Ipsy… Ipsy has an undetermined wait list. That can’t be good. Have you seen the reviews on their boxes though? AMAZING! I’m all for saving money AND finding products I’ll love. Except Gen’s box. I don’t think that will help me save money, I just think it’s really cool.

Anyway, I’m cool now. I belong. I subscribe. It may only last a few months before I grow tired of it, or it may become my new favorite thing to get these little packages in the mail. We’ll see…

What are your thoughts on Subscription boxes? If you don’t subscribe, do any interest you?

Reality vs. the movies vs. the rain…

Rain is great for the soul, I believe. My spirit craves to be out in it, twirling about, completely soaked and feeling blissful. If life were a movie, I would have woken up this morning, grabbed Genny and done just that. We would have danced and laughed, spun and splashed. I would have taken pride in knowing that this was one of those goal/dream-mother/daughter moments we each imagine we’ll have. You know, the kind she’ll remember forever, and set to recreate as special memories with her own children. A building musical montage would indicate that this really was the sort of moment our life as a mother-daughter duo was made of.

Unfortunately for both Genny and I, this morning, life isn’t a movie. The rain, it showers down around us, but real life shines through. Real life in the form of the deep set arthritis in a two-decade old knee injury. It tries it’s best to make me hate the rain, and it it almost succeeds. When it really wants to get the better of me, it works with my migraine riddled brain. Migraine brains hate the rain. Even beyond those things though, what may have been a fun moment, should the elements not have made it unlikely, the things she’s more likely to remember forever are the daily things. Some days have really great things, but she’s fourteen and that makes me the enemy most days. I’m not a fan of that. Most of the time it seems like she isn’t either, but she still goes with it. It’s weird, this teenager thing. I’m pretty sure I’m not doing an awesome job as a mom of a teen. I try to focus that I want her to grow up to be a kind, respectful, educated, empathetic and responsible adult. I figure that if I could focus on those things, maybe the other stuff will be easier to get through. Between you and I, it’s a lot easier to focus on that when she’s being much easier to get along with…

I had a friend with a now 17 year old girl tell me, recently, that 13/14 was the worst. This gives me hope.

And it’s not easy for her either, I know it. I hated being 14. It was my worst age, though thankfully for extremely different reasons. She’s on the brink of starting an entirely new high school where she only knows a couple of kids, and she isn’t really friends with them. That’s a bit of a nerve wracking thing, for sure. But she suffers from the movie syndrome a little, and I think that hurts her more than anything. See, she knows that life isn’t like the movies except for the fact that she expects life to be just like the movies. The friends, the boyfriends, the high school dances and experiences. This summer she had a summer volunteer job and she expected that to be just like the movies show summer jobs to go. It wasn’t, and the disappointment hit her hart. It turned to resentment and the last few days of her time there were spent complaining about the program leader and how awful it was. She expects us to be like a tv family. It’s hard, as parents, to compete with that. No matter what we’ll do, it will always let her star struck expectations down. It will be hard for her, as a person, to deal with the crashing reality of life, whenever she allows that to happen.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about our worlds and how we often imagine them one way just before reality shatters them into being another. I’m not alone in this. There is a reason our nation (and not just our country, I know) has such a plethora of addictions. We are big on denial and pretending. It’s kind of like the town I live in. It’s a beautiful, fairly historic small town. From the look of it, and the way the community practices, it could be one of those “perfect” little towns. It’s absolutely gorgeous, everywhere. But if you lived in my house, for example, you would hear sirens A LOT. Tragic amounts, multiple times, every day. Sometimes to the point of bringing tears to my eyes because there will be so many, for so long, headed to a location near by. But that’s life, and life is the same everywhere. (though if you are my friend, and you are wanting a change, and missing me, this IS the perfect place to live and you should move here now because I am lonely!)

I guess, I’m no different. I instantly beat myself up over how we couldn’t go dance and play in the rain, which Gen’s tv mom surely would have done with her, BEFORE BREAKFAST even (that would have been warm pancakes with homemade blackberry syrup and likely not blueberry toast and tea.) which isn’t all that different. Maybe I’m not expecting my life to be just like the movies, but I’m obviously expecting more from myself than my reality can be.

To do list today:

– Be more graceful, in my head, with me.

– Remember the goal is the type of adult Gen becomes.

– enjoy the rain, however possible.

– clean my office (seriously… It’s a train wreck in here. That’s what I get for avoiding it for 6 weeks.)

– do something creative, of some fashion.

– charge my DSLR and stop taking pictures, only with my iPhone. Seriously.

a few words on love…

It is amazing what can change in a month.

In one little summer month, I took a complete break from blogging {both reading and writing them} to focus on other writing projects, finishing up summer classes and spending time with my family. I was optimistic about the wonders that July would hold. I was also just starting a preventative migraine medication that I optimistically hoped would change my life.

Life seldom turns out like we expect it to. At best, we should keep our expectations low and our eyes looking upward and our feet moving forward. If I make it through a day managing that basic recipe, I consider it a good day.

July was a hard month for us. It was pretty much hell physically, with this medication adjustment and issues that arose from it- (some of which were physician issues, leading me to change PCPs and pretty much start over.) A little over a week of it was pretty rotten in the way that last year was, for us, but we made it through and keep telling ourselves (Chw & I anyway) that we are better for it.  It’s amazing how much can change, in just a few short moments… Moments otherwise small, that grow larger than life and world altering.

In a sweeping gift, whose irony is not lost on me, I have my favorite film quote preserved onto a piece of wood. “I believe in love. Not just getting it, but giving it. I think that if you’re able to love someone, even if they don’t know it, even if they can’t love you back, then it’s worth it.” {It’s from the movie Gosford Park.} And I have to say that even on this side of broken hearts and hopeless outlooks towards tomorrow- I still do believe in love. I believe that, as people, loving others is truly the best we can do. They won’t always love us back. Sometimes they’ll choose not to, sometimes they can’t. It shouldn’t matter though, because real love is a gift given. We live in a world more jaded and bitter than ever, shutting the opportunity for real love out. Our society has tricked us into believing love is cheap and comes in the color of amber that burns as we drink it down, or feels sticky between our thighs when he/she never actually knew our name. These things aren’t love. Love requires constant giving of oneself, at all cost. It isn’t some gothic and trendy dark, pierced and moody example of pain, but something so incredibly challenging that it’s all together the hardest and most beautiful all rolled into one. This goes for the friendship loves, the familial loves, the romantic loves. Love is the most worthwhile and selfless thing we can do. It gives the homeless and needy warmth, it quiets pangs of hunger. Love fights for justice, rescues the wounded and oppressed… Allowing love also opens us up, exposes us and leaves us vulnerable. Not to sound cliche’ but love hurts.

I’m hurt… Quite possibly the worst my heart has ever been hurt. It’s that I don’t want to get out of bed in the morning, can’t I just sleep all of this sadness away type hurt- but I still believe in love. So there’s that. And I get out of bed. Eyes up. Feet forward…

In the spirit of Taylor Swift… 14…

Yesterday I was talking with someone I recently met about my youngest daughter being fourteen, and me at fourteen.

It really messes with my head.

My daughter is adopted, and didn’t come to us with the best of beginnings. Of course this affects her life in ways that make some things a bit more difficult than they are for the average fourteen year old girl. Now that part I can relate to. I have said it here before, but my readership has changed a bit so I will put it out there again… When I was twelve, I was sent to live in an ultra conservative Christian group home, a few states away from my home. I craved a normal adolescence. What i ached for was normal. {Of course, what I did not understand was that “normal” wasn’t something I would ever have because my beginning had been traumatic and altering, and shaping. Anyway, all of that is a story for a much different post.} So, in that regard, I can relate to Gen and I see a lot of similarities in us. I am also able to be empathetic and understanding to those feelings in a way that no one really cared to before me, over the silly things like the notion of a high school experience, and boys.

Ah, fourteen…

Fourteen was a magical age for me. Perhaps the most romantic that I had. It was, what memory serves, the age before life got really hard. It was the age before heart breaks of love, harsh young adult realities and the death of childhood dreams…

For years I have watched movies, or read books within the Coming of Age genre, and often the characters are around fourteen. It would strike me how different their fourteens looked to mine, but never did I really grasp how inappropriate mine may have been- until I was the mom of a fourteen year old girl…

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That’s me, on the far right in my amazing pink and black tie died shirt. AWESOME. I was barely 14 and the year was 1990.

My favorite movie was still Dirty Dancing because I’d only seen very selectively conservatively appropriate films for the past two years so I clung to that one.

My favorite band was Depeche Mode. How that got approved, is beyond me. At the time I was certain that Personal Jesus was a tune highlighting the importance of religion of some sort, still rebellious enough but not quite the booty call anthem for melancholic pre-emo depressants that it actually was. Apparently my houseparents also naively assumed the best. (Though by the time I had turned 17, they had changed their tune dramatically and even most Christian music was inappropriate.)

I loved writing depressing poetry, laying out in the sun (STUPID!) and photography. On my little neon yellow 110 camera- I was an artist.

In the afternoons we sometimes chilled out in front of the TV watching Little House. This would continue through most of my group home years. (until my house parents decided Little House was inappropriate and I would then watch it at my friend’s house, as if it were some crazy soap I couldn’t miss- Even though we’d seen them all, already.)

 

My best friend was a girl named Dandy. This is us a few months after that picture…

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I apparently loved big bangs. Who am I kidding, we all did.

Still in pink and black (though I do not remember this shirt at all) and wearing a bullet, on a chain, around my neck. I’ll get to that…

Between the last photo, in May, and this one, in October, interesting developments had taken place.

I was in love.

I was *head over heals for a boy named Mike Hemsath. We talked of things like marriage and running away together. We made out extensively, everywhere we could, ever chance we had, for as long as we could manage as such things were significantly frowned upon at conservative Christian group homes.

Mike evoked that can’t wait to get out of bed in the morning and motivate me through absolutely anything so I can see him again spirit in me. I was literally the girl next door. (group home. only four houses. Even with forbidden relationships- and all were- it was bound to happen.) He was the perfect boy friend. He loved to talk, though whenever we had the chance to talk we usually did other things with our mouths… He loved to write me long notes and letters. He made me mix tapes- the kind where he talked between the tracks recorded live from the radio- of course meaning he invested serious amounts of time in them.

By the end of our relationship I had seven tapes (two were just him talking to me about how much he loved me and what he would do for me, and what his life goals were, which included me.), a shoe box full of notes, his Mike Hemsath scented denim jacket and every ounce of faith and trust in him and our future together. He was leaving the group home. On his “goodbye”, he begged me for the only photo of us (because we were FORBIDDEN to be together), and I relented because I loved him and knew we were forever. He gave me a bracelet that meant we would marry one day and there would never be any other girl for him. He left his best friend William with instructions to watch over me, protect me and begged us not to fall in love. This was the week before Christmas*.

We officially broke up just before I was fifteen. He seldom called or wrote. He had a real life on the outside and it was bound to happen, though it hurt like hell and broke my little girl heart into a million shattered pieces. (We were loosely in touch for a few years, but it was uncomfortable. I’d love to hear how he is now. It’s funny, he’s the only boyfriend I think my husband has ever worried about me being friends with. I am friends with pretty much all my others. There is something about Mike that worries him, which is funny to me because looking back- none of that was really love. It was lust and transferred life hurt and desperation (on my part) for love and acceptance.

I look at my fourteen year old and I can’t imagine her going through a day of that right now. The highs and the lows were too intense for a girl that age and likely why I handled them so inappropriately.

*the bullet. I was a witch. Well, not really. I wanted to be a witch. I was a wanna be witch. I did some really bad, stupid things. Scary things. That bullet was all a part of that. A friend and I did it together. it was a dark time.

*That Christmas morning I was going to kill myself. I won’t go into the details but a sweet little boy literally saved my life.

I guess everyone’s coming of age tale is unique to them. They can’t all be sunset kisses on Grandpa’s farm with the neighbor boy. Here’s to a gentler one for my girl all the same…

 

A Way of Life…

I was sitting in an exam room yesterday afternoon, as a new patient, feeling acutely aware. With our new insurance, we have a PCP and everything has to go through them. The funny thing about them, however, is they are basically chosen at random. Having a not so great history with doctors, I was feeling pretty vulnerable sitting there.

From the moment I had walked through their office door, there were a few things that struck me as unexpected though.

One being their completely dated office setting. It’s not that I think I deserve to be seen on some fancy sitcom physician office set or anything, but the decor and filing system were pretty significantly dated. Something about that comforted me.

Second, was the reception/nurse staff. Unbelievably kind. I had certainly expected your standard office curt, but not this.

Third, during my hour mostly alone, in the exam room, waiting- I took in the sights and sounds. Things like the 1960’s textured wall paper, the Normal Rockwell art on the wall and the hand embroidered pillow case on the very old (actual table) exam table. I realized that all of it set a tone that felt so much less industrial than anything I had experienced before. It felt warm and nurturing. I am sure there are people out there who might prefer a sterile atmosphere, but I realized yesterday that I’m not one of them. (and let me point out, it was CLEAN…)

When my doctor finally made her way in, I liked her instantly. There were a few things we didn’t quite see eye to eye on, but that didn’t affect my opinion of her. She took the time to talk to me, and to listen. She actually cared about the things that are wrong and wants to help make them better. She showed incredible kindness, interest and patience.

For the past year and a half I have been significantly deaf in my right ear. It came in the middle of my six month adventure with pneumonia and several doctors assured me it would “clear itself up, in time.” I left that office yesterday, with my hearing completely restored. (Even 16 hours later I am still overwhelmed and adjusting, as my ear had overcompensated trying to hear for so long, that everything is so loud and overstimulating. )

On the wall beside the chair I had waited in, was framed a yellowed print of a poem by Max Ehrman. Though I may be outing myself in a minority, I’ll admit I hadn’t ever read it before. As I had quite a bit of time, waiting, I read it again and again. Each time that I did, I felt parts of my spirit lift and soar. It’s truly beautiful and I feel like in more than the one (hearing) way, I left her office a better person. More aware, more appreciative of my surroundings… I don’t know, maybe I’m just  classic example of someone who REALLY needed some time to herself. ha ha… At any rate, I’m going to leave you with the poem.

“Go Placidly amid the noise and haste and remember what peace there may be in silence. As far as possible, without surrender, be on good terms with all persons. Speak your truth quietly and clearly, and listen to others, even the dull and ignorant; they too have their story. Be yourself. Especially do not feign affection. Neither be cynical about love- for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment is it perennial as the grass. Take kindly the counsel of the years, gracefully surrendering the things of youth. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you from misfortune. But do not distress yourself with imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness. Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself. You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should. Therefore, be at peace with God, whatever you conceive Him to be, and whatever your labors and aspirations, in the noisy confusion of life keep peace with your soul. With all it’s sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. ” ~ Max Ehrman Desiderata: A Poem for a Way of Life