It is back to school time and I am amused when I sit waiting for my daughter to come out of her school. She has, in the past attended a school where it was hard to find her when the bell rang, as every girl looked the same.
Now she is in high school and she is in The Fine Arts Academy as a dance major. This high school is basically the equivalent to the high school of preforming arts in the movie FAME, sadly without spontaneous lunch songs.
I watch the children coming out of the doors, some have pink hair shaved on the sides and look very surly. Some are tossing a football looking very assure, some hold books appearing astute.
Today I saw a girl with a mullet wearing a KISS tee shirt and a leather cuff on her right wrist. We would have been friends.
The most astounding thing I saw was a parent yelling at their child to hurry up, this parent used all the cliche empty parental threats that were not at all threats.
"Hurry up! The world does not revolve around you!"
"I swear if you don't get in this car....we have to get your brother, why are you always thinking of yourself?"
I had to chuckle as I still sat and waited for my own child.
I have five children.
There was a time when I caught myself yelling at them to clean their messy rooms, I was tired of tripping over toys or worse getting a damn piece of Littlest Pet Shop stuck in my foot.
I lost it. I yelled, "YOU ALL ARE SO SPOILED ROTTEN, YOU ACT SO ENTITLED, YOU DON'T TAKE CARE OF ANYTHING, WHY DO YOU ONLY THINK OF YOURSELVES?!"
I stopped. I looked around at the mass of toys and realized my children did not buy them, I did. I looked at each child individually. Each child had a time where the world did in fact revolve around them and only them. Each child had a time where they were the only one.
I have often said to new parents that the very best advice I can give them is to not rescue their child at every turn. Let them forget their homework and not rush to school to bring it to them. Even if you are lucky enough to be a stay at home parent that is not part of your job. Get over the guilt. If you rescue them you will only be teaching them not to care for themselves.
If you think your child acts spoiled, ask yourself who spoiled them? Who bought all the toys? Who said yes at every whimper and whine?
If your child acts entitled who replaced their cell phone they lost or dropped in the pool? Of course they are entitled. you made them that way.
If your child is ungrateful who did not teach them proper manners or gratitude?
We tell our children to say thank you to grandparents or friends when they are given a gift, but do you teach your child to say thank you for dinner?
I am by far not a perfect parent. My children are not perfect people. What they are is happy. They like to be in my company and talk to me. They tell me things most kids would not share, and lets be honest what they don't tell me I probably already know but figure it is best left unsaid.
My children are very smart. Most of them have decided or made life choices that limited their career or college choices. Instead they use their intellect to search out what they want to learn, and what makes them happy as people, and happy in the relationships they create.
I am not taking all the credit for this, they were given a lot of freedom to make messes. As toddlers they could play naked in mud for hours, as teens they broke rules and learned from their decisions. When I went through my own dark place my children were left alone mostly learning from each other. I was here physically but not mentally.
If you have such a busy life that you have no time to let your child learn how to tie their own shoe, you need to re evaluate some things. Yes it can be frustrating sitting on the floor watching them fuddle with their chubby fingers to make rabbit ears and cross them over (or however you teach the art of shoe tying), but it can also be amusing and a wonderful opportunity to encourage and let them know they can do it on their own. When they do finally get that shoe tied by themselves you will have given them the opportunity to be proud and excited at their own achievement.
As they grow you need to let go of what you feel their achievements should be, and follow their lead in support.
Keep Your sense of humor
Be patient
Pick your battles
Let them make mistakes
Love them
As a last note, when you want to have those uncomfortable talks and aren't ready to sit down at a table I find the car works best. Make sure you have at least a 30 minute ride that involves a highway. They wont jump out and are literally a captive audience. It also helps to let them have control of the radio stations.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Thursday, June 27, 2013
How Not to Write a Book
Never ever ever tell anyone you are writing a book. Chances are they are too. Or they will ask what it is about, a natural question. But if you are not entirely sure what it is about and are letting the characters direct you, it is a hard question to answer.
I am now going to tell you exactly how not to write a book.
1) Spend hours making the perfect playlist that you will listen to when you write
2) Eat an entire pound bag of M&M's while making the above playlist so you feel too fat to write. Because naturally you want to be thin for the book release and book tour.
3) Imagine the hotel room you will be staying in when you are on your book tour.
4) Feel sick from the imaginary sushi you had while in the hotel.
5) Stress that no one shows up to your reading at Barnes and Noble.
6) Wonder if there will even be Barnes and Nobles left by the time your book is finished.
7) Dance to that one song on the playlist that you probably should not have put on the "Writing my book list."
8) redo playlist.
9) Realize that you would never have gotten sick from sushi because you hate sushi and would not have ordered it. But your imaginary publicist took you out to dinner, you nibbled and could not wait to grab a burger to eat in the hotel room while treating yourself to a pay per view movie on the hotel's TV. A movie you meant to go see when it was in the theaters, but in actuality you were really too lazy to actually go.
10) Worry about run-on sentences.
11) Get the cat off the keyboard. This takes at least ten tries and leaves you feeling guilty.
12) Pet the cat.
13) Convince yourself that if you just quit your job the book would get written.
14) Mentally compose a resignation letter.
15) Completely wrong song, back to the playlist for more editing.
16) Have an imaginary argument with family members over the book because they think you revealed too much even if you did change names, dates, genders, and all relatable facts.
17) Listen closely to the lyrics of the song currently playing and smile because you are so in love.
18) Ignore the reminder that pops up to call your mother because you just do not have the mental energy to talk to her and feel the pain of all that is missing due to her disease.
19) Think of the character in your book that has some of the qualities of your mother, and promise to finish the book in time for her to read it.
20) Close out facebook and open up Word and look at the blank screen and realize you need a diet coke and cigarettes to get started. Close the laptop.
Congratulations, contrary to what this list represents, realize you wrote it down, which means you wrote something, which means you ARE a writer.
Hallelujah! (Rufus Wainwright version song #28 on playlist)
I am now going to tell you exactly how not to write a book.
1) Spend hours making the perfect playlist that you will listen to when you write
2) Eat an entire pound bag of M&M's while making the above playlist so you feel too fat to write. Because naturally you want to be thin for the book release and book tour.
3) Imagine the hotel room you will be staying in when you are on your book tour.
4) Feel sick from the imaginary sushi you had while in the hotel.
5) Stress that no one shows up to your reading at Barnes and Noble.
6) Wonder if there will even be Barnes and Nobles left by the time your book is finished.
7) Dance to that one song on the playlist that you probably should not have put on the "Writing my book list."
8) redo playlist.
9) Realize that you would never have gotten sick from sushi because you hate sushi and would not have ordered it. But your imaginary publicist took you out to dinner, you nibbled and could not wait to grab a burger to eat in the hotel room while treating yourself to a pay per view movie on the hotel's TV. A movie you meant to go see when it was in the theaters, but in actuality you were really too lazy to actually go.
10) Worry about run-on sentences.
11) Get the cat off the keyboard. This takes at least ten tries and leaves you feeling guilty.
12) Pet the cat.
13) Convince yourself that if you just quit your job the book would get written.
14) Mentally compose a resignation letter.
15) Completely wrong song, back to the playlist for more editing.
16) Have an imaginary argument with family members over the book because they think you revealed too much even if you did change names, dates, genders, and all relatable facts.
17) Listen closely to the lyrics of the song currently playing and smile because you are so in love.
18) Ignore the reminder that pops up to call your mother because you just do not have the mental energy to talk to her and feel the pain of all that is missing due to her disease.
19) Think of the character in your book that has some of the qualities of your mother, and promise to finish the book in time for her to read it.
20) Close out facebook and open up Word and look at the blank screen and realize you need a diet coke and cigarettes to get started. Close the laptop.
Congratulations, contrary to what this list represents, realize you wrote it down, which means you wrote something, which means you ARE a writer.
Hallelujah! (Rufus Wainwright version song #28 on playlist)
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Color Me Sepia
When you give your daughter the advice "Be open and allow yourself to be vulnerable" for writing a psychology essay, that essay may just turn out to be about you.
Or in this case, me.
My insides contracted when she told me she wrote an essay about me, abs tight, ready for the blow.
As I read, I relaxed. I have to say there was nothing in there that I did not expect to see. There was however one of my deepest fears.
My fear of how my children view me.
Turns out they, or at least she, see me mostly as depressed, or asleep.
My youngest daughter lay with head in my lap the other night while I mindlessly played with her hair. She is a remarkable child, and in a matter of weeks will be 14 year old. To me, she is my baby.
I brushed and twirled her hair and contemplated what it must be like for her having lost her father at such an early age. I was 12 when mine died and I at least have some first hand memories. My daughter has none, only anecdotes, photos and videos (that need to be transferred to the latest technology so she can watch them).
The daughter writing the essay was a few weeks shy of 10 years old when her father died. She has memories. Her memories, like mine are sepia toned, and filled with camping trips, vacations, and story times.
Her formative years after his death are what she writes about. The years I mentally checked out and was for the most part a zombie.
I wish I could implant in her brain that I was there, I was trying to smile, laugh and enjoy each and every moment.
As a family on a whole we went through some pretty hard times, I made mistakes. Small ones and huge ones. I own up to them now and have been for the last few years.
It has been a long time and I am now in love again. It is a different love, not just because I am in love with a woman. It is different because I am older, more cautious of my heart and we have a few more walls to break down.
It is different because I made her a mother to my children, a job she embraces and does with ease. It is different because I am not alone anymore.
Easter was last weekend and the table was sparse. One child in college, one who had to work, it was not the over crowded bustling action I am used to on holidays. Yet, at some point a few of us managed to annoy the other few by spontaneously bursting into "Day By Day" from Godspell.
My family will randomly juggle, dance, sing, do back tucks, make hilarious videos, claim photos steal their souls, argue, laugh, cook, show me a new tattoo or book they have read.
My older children will curl up in my bed to watch a movie with me, or invite me to bingo.
We have struggled, maybe more than some and less than others. I have stayed.
If I could write an essay back to my daughter, it would be short.
"I am awake now. I am happy. I am sorry. I love you."
To the rest of the family I would say, "I see thee more clearly, I love thee more dearly, I follow thee more nearly."
So watch what you post on Twitter.
Or in this case, me.
My insides contracted when she told me she wrote an essay about me, abs tight, ready for the blow.
As I read, I relaxed. I have to say there was nothing in there that I did not expect to see. There was however one of my deepest fears.
My fear of how my children view me.
Turns out they, or at least she, see me mostly as depressed, or asleep.
My youngest daughter lay with head in my lap the other night while I mindlessly played with her hair. She is a remarkable child, and in a matter of weeks will be 14 year old. To me, she is my baby.
I brushed and twirled her hair and contemplated what it must be like for her having lost her father at such an early age. I was 12 when mine died and I at least have some first hand memories. My daughter has none, only anecdotes, photos and videos (that need to be transferred to the latest technology so she can watch them).
The daughter writing the essay was a few weeks shy of 10 years old when her father died. She has memories. Her memories, like mine are sepia toned, and filled with camping trips, vacations, and story times.
Her formative years after his death are what she writes about. The years I mentally checked out and was for the most part a zombie.
I wish I could implant in her brain that I was there, I was trying to smile, laugh and enjoy each and every moment.
As a family on a whole we went through some pretty hard times, I made mistakes. Small ones and huge ones. I own up to them now and have been for the last few years.
It has been a long time and I am now in love again. It is a different love, not just because I am in love with a woman. It is different because I am older, more cautious of my heart and we have a few more walls to break down.
It is different because I made her a mother to my children, a job she embraces and does with ease. It is different because I am not alone anymore.
Easter was last weekend and the table was sparse. One child in college, one who had to work, it was not the over crowded bustling action I am used to on holidays. Yet, at some point a few of us managed to annoy the other few by spontaneously bursting into "Day By Day" from Godspell.
My family will randomly juggle, dance, sing, do back tucks, make hilarious videos, claim photos steal their souls, argue, laugh, cook, show me a new tattoo or book they have read.
My older children will curl up in my bed to watch a movie with me, or invite me to bingo.
We have struggled, maybe more than some and less than others. I have stayed.
If I could write an essay back to my daughter, it would be short.
"I am awake now. I am happy. I am sorry. I love you."
To the rest of the family I would say, "I see thee more clearly, I love thee more dearly, I follow thee more nearly."
So watch what you post on Twitter.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Excuse Me Do You Have a Napkin?
When I announced I was getting married for the first time, my groom to be's best friend laughed and said, "I'd like to see you move his napkin."
I had no idea what this meant.
My first husband had lived alone for most of his life, when he was not sent to a Catholic boarding school. He had some eccentric ways. His windows were covered with book cases, which were packed with books. He did not go out much, had his set of friends that he had forever,he was (and still is) funny, smart, and ofttimes charming.
At the wee age of 29 he was fairly set in his ways. He is also a writer. When he would sit down daily to write he would carefully places all his immediate needs in order, book, pen, ashtray, lighter, cigarettes, and a glass of water with a napkin under it.
The napkin.
To move the napkin would be to change something, to alter his universe, to invade his space, to make my presence known.
I tried to move his napkin in many ways during the course of our marriage. We had two children, we moved (a lot), but I was unable to move the napkin for any significant length of time, and we parted on good terms. On the day we divorced we had lunch together.
Many years, more children and losing my second husband to cancer, I am again in a relationship. I spent almost 9 years alone before finding and committing to another relationship.
Something has felt "off" for me from the moment she moved in. Nothing I could name, but rather felt. Nothing so dramatic that I wanted to end the relationship.
Just something.
My first husband is traveling the world at the moment. He is a free spirit now with little possessions. What he owns he can fit into one suitcase, a far cry from our five bedroom house with a pool we once lived in.
I was thinking about him and I realized he no longer has his napkin. He has become flexible and fluent to change.
I knew then that I am the one now with the napkin. I have lived in this house doing things how I prefer them for so long that I am afraid I can not move my napkin. Some ways or habits are not even ones I particularly enjoy, it is just the way I have been doing them.
As a result I have at times been resentful to my love.
When did I become the one who is not flexible and fluent to change? I am the one who invites chaos into the house with children, animals, mess. All she wants to do is help.
She has, for the most part lived with someone her entire life, roommates in college, various lovers, random roommates. She is used to the ways of cohabiting. I thought I was the one who was well versed in those ways.
I have forgotten.
I have at times been bitter. Bitter than my first husband is free to do as he pleases. Bitter that I am stuck in a house and city I do not love, and now bitter that someone I invited in is trying to change things. Even for the better.
It is time for my napkin to go. If I hold on to my napkin it will be all I have and I want more than that. I want unrestricted love. I want to let go and jump again. I have before and I want to again.
My napkin is a lie. My napkin will not keep bad things from happening, it will not prevent possible illness, it will not make everything "okay". It will however prevent me from truly loving, from changing, from letting go.
Letting go of the past.
Letting go of the present fears.
I know that if I continue to hang on to my napkin I will never love her in the fullest way that I can give her and that is not what I want for her, or me, or the myriad of children, pets and mess we have.
I need no one to take away the napkin, I throw away in the way I obtained it, alone.
It is scary, it isn't easy, but it is so worth it. For years I needed it to survive. I needed to learn how to be alone. I fought very hard to imagine a lifetime without loving again, and I succeeded. Now I will relearn what it means to give in love and not just accept in love.
Look at your own glass. Are you holding a napkin that is preventing you from something? A change, a love, a habit?
Let's go green and clean up all the napkins we have. I am excited for the extra space in my heart to be filled.
And yes, scared.
I had no idea what this meant.
My first husband had lived alone for most of his life, when he was not sent to a Catholic boarding school. He had some eccentric ways. His windows were covered with book cases, which were packed with books. He did not go out much, had his set of friends that he had forever,he was (and still is) funny, smart, and ofttimes charming.
At the wee age of 29 he was fairly set in his ways. He is also a writer. When he would sit down daily to write he would carefully places all his immediate needs in order, book, pen, ashtray, lighter, cigarettes, and a glass of water with a napkin under it.
The napkin.
To move the napkin would be to change something, to alter his universe, to invade his space, to make my presence known.
I tried to move his napkin in many ways during the course of our marriage. We had two children, we moved (a lot), but I was unable to move the napkin for any significant length of time, and we parted on good terms. On the day we divorced we had lunch together.
Many years, more children and losing my second husband to cancer, I am again in a relationship. I spent almost 9 years alone before finding and committing to another relationship.
Something has felt "off" for me from the moment she moved in. Nothing I could name, but rather felt. Nothing so dramatic that I wanted to end the relationship.
Just something.
My first husband is traveling the world at the moment. He is a free spirit now with little possessions. What he owns he can fit into one suitcase, a far cry from our five bedroom house with a pool we once lived in.
I was thinking about him and I realized he no longer has his napkin. He has become flexible and fluent to change.
I knew then that I am the one now with the napkin. I have lived in this house doing things how I prefer them for so long that I am afraid I can not move my napkin. Some ways or habits are not even ones I particularly enjoy, it is just the way I have been doing them.
As a result I have at times been resentful to my love.
When did I become the one who is not flexible and fluent to change? I am the one who invites chaos into the house with children, animals, mess. All she wants to do is help.
She has, for the most part lived with someone her entire life, roommates in college, various lovers, random roommates. She is used to the ways of cohabiting. I thought I was the one who was well versed in those ways.
I have forgotten.
I have at times been bitter. Bitter than my first husband is free to do as he pleases. Bitter that I am stuck in a house and city I do not love, and now bitter that someone I invited in is trying to change things. Even for the better.
It is time for my napkin to go. If I hold on to my napkin it will be all I have and I want more than that. I want unrestricted love. I want to let go and jump again. I have before and I want to again.
My napkin is a lie. My napkin will not keep bad things from happening, it will not prevent possible illness, it will not make everything "okay". It will however prevent me from truly loving, from changing, from letting go.
Letting go of the past.
Letting go of the present fears.
I know that if I continue to hang on to my napkin I will never love her in the fullest way that I can give her and that is not what I want for her, or me, or the myriad of children, pets and mess we have.
I need no one to take away the napkin, I throw away in the way I obtained it, alone.
It is scary, it isn't easy, but it is so worth it. For years I needed it to survive. I needed to learn how to be alone. I fought very hard to imagine a lifetime without loving again, and I succeeded. Now I will relearn what it means to give in love and not just accept in love.
Look at your own glass. Are you holding a napkin that is preventing you from something? A change, a love, a habit?
Let's go green and clean up all the napkins we have. I am excited for the extra space in my heart to be filled.
And yes, scared.
Monday, February 18, 2013
Ice Cream
When does a memoir begin and when should it end? I ended this blog, a memoir of sorts on a happy note. An upswing in life. Swings have a way of eventually behaving to the laws of gravity, if left alone they will rest. They may become stagnant. They could fall apart. Whatever movement or inertia the swing takes it still tells a story.
I have not written a word in a very long time. I let life take me away from the page by choice. I have not been very happy with that choice. I struggled on finding my voice, finding my path, nor offending anyone and tending to my new relationship.
Almost a year has gone by and now I suddenly have the need to pick up the proverbial pen. My memoir continues. With that said here is what has been floating about my head:
Dear Children,
I write to you now using two thumbs and a phone. I write hoping my magical phone will
catch most errors, spelling and otherwise. There will come a time when my thumbs may not move so deftly across the tiny keys. The time has already come where I must put on glasses to see the tiny letters.
There may come a time when I forget more than packing your lunch, or what time your doctor's appointment is.
We may laugh about it at first. We will make fun and I will be the first to participate. I have always said you need to be able to laugh at yourself to make it in this family.
There may come a day when I no longer want to laugh about my loss of memory or the disappointments my body will bring me.
There may be a time when I can no longer recall the names of our former pets or your current loves.
This does not mean I no longer love you or them. What's in a name? Right now I look around me and I see all objects I can put a title on. Except for maybe that odd plant in the corner.
Simple things. Door, window, chair.
You will look at my hands and wonder how such frail papery skin held you as a baby. How hands that now trembled once managed to carry groceries, talk on the phone and keep you by my side so you wouldn't run off.
I will move slower. If you become parents you will understand that I move like a child and I will silently ask for your patience as I once have to you when you demanded on tying your own shoes which was done painfully slow and with acute precision. Let me move slow. Let me have some of the patience I have given you in your lifetime.
If you happen upon me and I am still and looking in the distance I have not left you to the loss of memory. I have gone back to you in my mind in such a real way it feels I am there. When snapped out of my memory I may confuse the past and the present for a moment. Do not force the present on me. I was visiting with you, just in a different time.
If I forgot the bad, don't remind me.
I may not want your new technology no matter how much easier you think it may make my life. To you it may seem I have given up on learning. This will
Not be the case. I am relearning everything again with the amazement and innocence as I did the first time.
I once had a cat who lived to be in his 20's. he had lost most of his teeth and would only eat cream cheese. I brought him to the doctor and told him
I was worried that he would not eat anything else. The doctor asked if he is happy,
Does he purr.
Of course he is happy.
Then stock up on cream cheese.
Ask my questions now children while you are fairly certain you will get the right answer. Ask about your family and what you were like ad a child.
Ask how I feel about things so that one day you will never ask yourself what I might have thought of something.
Don't mourn for the loss of my memory. I will do that for myself until even that will go away. There may come a time I can't recall your name or maybe your face. But that time is not now. Now I have you and you have me.
Please know that if and when that time occurs I have not forgotten that I love you. I may appear absent but know I visiting you still. I am visiting you as a baby, I am visiting you as you play soccer or as we all gather at holidays and laugh.
Oh and before I forget, stock up on cream cheese. Or in my case ice cream.
I have not written a word in a very long time. I let life take me away from the page by choice. I have not been very happy with that choice. I struggled on finding my voice, finding my path, nor offending anyone and tending to my new relationship.
Almost a year has gone by and now I suddenly have the need to pick up the proverbial pen. My memoir continues. With that said here is what has been floating about my head:
Dear Children,
I write to you now using two thumbs and a phone. I write hoping my magical phone will
catch most errors, spelling and otherwise. There will come a time when my thumbs may not move so deftly across the tiny keys. The time has already come where I must put on glasses to see the tiny letters.
There may come a time when I forget more than packing your lunch, or what time your doctor's appointment is.
We may laugh about it at first. We will make fun and I will be the first to participate. I have always said you need to be able to laugh at yourself to make it in this family.
There may come a day when I no longer want to laugh about my loss of memory or the disappointments my body will bring me.
There may be a time when I can no longer recall the names of our former pets or your current loves.
This does not mean I no longer love you or them. What's in a name? Right now I look around me and I see all objects I can put a title on. Except for maybe that odd plant in the corner.
Simple things. Door, window, chair.
You will look at my hands and wonder how such frail papery skin held you as a baby. How hands that now trembled once managed to carry groceries, talk on the phone and keep you by my side so you wouldn't run off.
I will move slower. If you become parents you will understand that I move like a child and I will silently ask for your patience as I once have to you when you demanded on tying your own shoes which was done painfully slow and with acute precision. Let me move slow. Let me have some of the patience I have given you in your lifetime.
If you happen upon me and I am still and looking in the distance I have not left you to the loss of memory. I have gone back to you in my mind in such a real way it feels I am there. When snapped out of my memory I may confuse the past and the present for a moment. Do not force the present on me. I was visiting with you, just in a different time.
If I forgot the bad, don't remind me.
I may not want your new technology no matter how much easier you think it may make my life. To you it may seem I have given up on learning. This will
Not be the case. I am relearning everything again with the amazement and innocence as I did the first time.
I once had a cat who lived to be in his 20's. he had lost most of his teeth and would only eat cream cheese. I brought him to the doctor and told him
I was worried that he would not eat anything else. The doctor asked if he is happy,
Does he purr.
Of course he is happy.
Then stock up on cream cheese.
Ask my questions now children while you are fairly certain you will get the right answer. Ask about your family and what you were like ad a child.
Ask how I feel about things so that one day you will never ask yourself what I might have thought of something.
Don't mourn for the loss of my memory. I will do that for myself until even that will go away. There may come a time I can't recall your name or maybe your face. But that time is not now. Now I have you and you have me.
Please know that if and when that time occurs I have not forgotten that I love you. I may appear absent but know I visiting you still. I am visiting you as a baby, I am visiting you as you play soccer or as we all gather at holidays and laugh.
Oh and before I forget, stock up on cream cheese. Or in my case ice cream.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
I Run Because I Now Remember How
Boxes sit in the garage waiting to be packed. Thus far the only actual motions I have gone through to prepare to move are mental.
How do I let go? How do I discard the comfortable familiar for the unknown?
I now know this is the question that has held me back in so many ways for such a long time.
I have felt a change in the winds on my neck and it came to me as I stood comfortably in a hallway, that letting go is the easy part.
How do you let go?
You just do.
I have bemoaned my actions and reactions to the point where it cuts to a comforting darkness.
Today, I am resolute in my thoughts and decisions.
Today I leave the darkness behind and follow through with actions.
Today I let go.
Holding a sobbing child in my arms I cried for and with her. I cried for the pain she feels that I can not stop. I cried for the losses she has endures. I cried the for the very glory of her existence.
For her I let go. For her and all the others I have held in my arms crying I let go. For the ones who I can no longer hold I let go.
For the one who wants to hold me, I have to let go so that she can have that chance.
I sit here and I write and I find it difficult not to giggle. There is a spirit I can feel emanating from my body right now that I can no longer contain.
Today I know what I have been thinking about and dreaming about, mentally packing for has arrived.
It is not a moving van, or a signed lease, that has arrived.
I have arrived.
With this arrival comes letting go.
I let go of the past. I am ready.
What arrived today was one simple sentence.
It is with this sentence that I will leave you as I prepare for the next step, the next chapter. It is with this sentence that I put an end to some things and begin new ones. Is is with this sentence I say good bye.
I am happy.
How do I let go? How do I discard the comfortable familiar for the unknown?
I now know this is the question that has held me back in so many ways for such a long time.
I have felt a change in the winds on my neck and it came to me as I stood comfortably in a hallway, that letting go is the easy part.
How do you let go?
You just do.
I have bemoaned my actions and reactions to the point where it cuts to a comforting darkness.
Today, I am resolute in my thoughts and decisions.
Today I leave the darkness behind and follow through with actions.
Today I let go.
Holding a sobbing child in my arms I cried for and with her. I cried for the pain she feels that I can not stop. I cried for the losses she has endures. I cried the for the very glory of her existence.
For her I let go. For her and all the others I have held in my arms crying I let go. For the ones who I can no longer hold I let go.
For the one who wants to hold me, I have to let go so that she can have that chance.
I sit here and I write and I find it difficult not to giggle. There is a spirit I can feel emanating from my body right now that I can no longer contain.
Today I know what I have been thinking about and dreaming about, mentally packing for has arrived.
It is not a moving van, or a signed lease, that has arrived.
I have arrived.
With this arrival comes letting go.
I let go of the past. I am ready.
What arrived today was one simple sentence.
It is with this sentence that I will leave you as I prepare for the next step, the next chapter. It is with this sentence that I put an end to some things and begin new ones. Is is with this sentence I say good bye.
I am happy.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Who Am I Anyway?
Dear Baby Girl,
Soon you will be given a name you will never identify with but one day will fight for. You will call yourself many names over the years but hearing "baby girl" will always make you feel loved.
What I am going to tell you may come in handy when you are sitting in front of a screen writing your thoughts, ideas, dreams and aspirations.
Take heed precious one.
The words that have cut you and left scars have turned into artwork that are now complimented when you walk down the street. The scars lay beneath but all you will see is the beauty.
You have been given many talents and you will eventually find the right one to focus on, until that time enjoy playing all parts of the minstrel.
On the dark days disappear.
You know how. You will not remember the actions beyond the feel of the knife and a few spoken words. You have been given a way to fly away from that scene, so fly.
Develop those skills as you will use them time and again when the world lets you down and continues to take away the ones you love most. Cry until you get to the place after the tears.
You will stand at many grave sides and feel nothing. This nothingness will come out later in the arms of someone who wants to protect you.
Let them.
Open your soul no matter how frightening it is.
You will make mistakes Little One. You will fall, you will be Judas to some but mostly to yourself.
Let the better voice take reign and listen when it points to signs of danger.
Learn to be weak. Learn to ask for help when you need it, it will only make you stronger to accept the outstretched hand that is offered.
You will dance better in your head than your body will allow, but someday someone will see you dance the way you see it. They will take your hand and dance with you.
Words will form in your mouth that will hurt others, and you will know immediately. Accept that your words will have a reaction and a consequence. You will lose friendships over words. You will cause scars the way others will scar you.
Be humble, see your mistakes but do not let them define you.
Forgiveness is always there for you, even when others do not grant it.
Take the forgiveness you give to others and return it to yourself.
People will tell you life is a game, not fair, short, a bitch.
To you life will always be a dance.
There will be times when the dance is a glorious pas de deux. Focus then on the adagio, slow your breathing and dance.
Do not rush so much baby girl, even without a name you will make a mark upon this world.
Every hurt you feel or create will serve you later when you need the reminder of love and humility.
Block out the scarring words you will hear, they come from a place that is not your own. Do not take the words that scar, release them in tears if you must, but do not let them reside within. Those words are not your truth.
I tell you now that there will be times when your truth seems too difficult to own. There will also be times when your truth is self intoxicating.
Every time you dance be it solo or ensemble, leave a part of you behind and take a new part with you as you go.
Your tears have not been precalculated, neither has your laughter.
Someday there will be someone that says, "I love the way you think...dance with me."
You do not need a name to dance, you only need the desire.
You have danced into this world nameless and will spend many hours searching for the definition of who you are.
You will be named.
You will be called: friend, daughter, mother, cousin, wife, sister, aunt, niece, widow,writer, photographer, stylist, reader, giver and lover.
What possible prewritten name could hold all of that?
You will know your identity. Someday I promise, you will embrace it
Soon you will be given a name you will never identify with but one day will fight for. You will call yourself many names over the years but hearing "baby girl" will always make you feel loved.
What I am going to tell you may come in handy when you are sitting in front of a screen writing your thoughts, ideas, dreams and aspirations.
Take heed precious one.
The words that have cut you and left scars have turned into artwork that are now complimented when you walk down the street. The scars lay beneath but all you will see is the beauty.
You have been given many talents and you will eventually find the right one to focus on, until that time enjoy playing all parts of the minstrel.
On the dark days disappear.
You know how. You will not remember the actions beyond the feel of the knife and a few spoken words. You have been given a way to fly away from that scene, so fly.
Develop those skills as you will use them time and again when the world lets you down and continues to take away the ones you love most. Cry until you get to the place after the tears.
You will stand at many grave sides and feel nothing. This nothingness will come out later in the arms of someone who wants to protect you.
Let them.
Open your soul no matter how frightening it is.
You will make mistakes Little One. You will fall, you will be Judas to some but mostly to yourself.
Let the better voice take reign and listen when it points to signs of danger.
Learn to be weak. Learn to ask for help when you need it, it will only make you stronger to accept the outstretched hand that is offered.
You will dance better in your head than your body will allow, but someday someone will see you dance the way you see it. They will take your hand and dance with you.
Words will form in your mouth that will hurt others, and you will know immediately. Accept that your words will have a reaction and a consequence. You will lose friendships over words. You will cause scars the way others will scar you.
Be humble, see your mistakes but do not let them define you.
Forgiveness is always there for you, even when others do not grant it.
Take the forgiveness you give to others and return it to yourself.
People will tell you life is a game, not fair, short, a bitch.
To you life will always be a dance.
There will be times when the dance is a glorious pas de deux. Focus then on the adagio, slow your breathing and dance.
Do not rush so much baby girl, even without a name you will make a mark upon this world.
Every hurt you feel or create will serve you later when you need the reminder of love and humility.
Block out the scarring words you will hear, they come from a place that is not your own. Do not take the words that scar, release them in tears if you must, but do not let them reside within. Those words are not your truth.
I tell you now that there will be times when your truth seems too difficult to own. There will also be times when your truth is self intoxicating.
Every time you dance be it solo or ensemble, leave a part of you behind and take a new part with you as you go.
Your tears have not been precalculated, neither has your laughter.
Someday there will be someone that says, "I love the way you think...dance with me."
You do not need a name to dance, you only need the desire.
You have danced into this world nameless and will spend many hours searching for the definition of who you are.
You will be named.
You will be called: friend, daughter, mother, cousin, wife, sister, aunt, niece, widow,writer, photographer, stylist, reader, giver and lover.
What possible prewritten name could hold all of that?
You will know your identity. Someday I promise, you will embrace it
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