It has been a journey, these past few months.
Dreams meeting bumps in roads.
Friends Unfriended.
Friends Reunited.
Some dreams lost. Some dreams found.
Therein lies The Rub.
It seems impossible, at times, to discern truth from fiction. Fact from gossip.
If beauty lies in the eye of the beholder, so, it seems, does The Truth.
Truth is a multi-faceted little gem, don't ya think?
When an attorney takes on a case and argues the truth for the verdict of his choice, he may sometimes have to face the fact that the judge or jury does not embrace his truth. They reach an alternate decision. They find a different truth, or believe the other side of it.
Perhaps, in the end, the truth does not even exist. Perhaps, in fact, the truth is nothing more than perception.
Many, many individuals will perpetuate their version of a truth via words, images, gossip and such. Social media feeds this frenzy. It seems to me that, in this world we live in, silence is the equivalent of guilt. Gone is the gracious time when loose lips sunk ships. Today, he whom posts most double entendre memes and gets longest list of "friends" to add comments WINS. Right?
Therein Lies The Rub. What a shallow victory this is. What a false definition of friendship. Of winning. Sitting around and gossiping with many about one you say is a gossip seems childish, at best. At the least, it is gossiping.
Truth is, social media continues a frenzy of falsities. It allows adults to embrace childish notions. It brings common sense to its knees. It makes decent individuals turn to unrecognizable beings.
The Clique does not define the truth. They define their own boundaries of the truth they embrace. The individual who stands through the storm, embracing their own truth and holding their head above the storm... I ask you to pause and reconsider that person. Silence is not defeat. It is not agreement or acceptance. Silence is embracing their need to understand their own truth.
Maybe, before you put up that nasty meme touting and spewing your side of a situation, you might pause. Perhaps. Unfortunately, people will continue to use Facebook and Twitter and Instagram to force their opinions and beliefs on others. Unfortunately, people will see these social media posts and believe that This Is True.
Me, not so much. And... therein lies the rub.
Saturday, October 17, 2015
Sunday, August 9, 2015
Sparkles and Such...
Somedays are ultra sparkly.
Days of pageants and dance routines and tiaras and bobby pins.
When we are living in them, the stress can dull the sparkle.
The Momma Knot in the pit of your stomach and the un-asked-for chills up your spine and down your arms as you wait to watch your child take the stage is blinding.
More blinding than the thousands of rhinestones under stage lights.
That, my friends, is ultra- blinding.
I am very happy that I made one binding choice many years ago. As a Dance Studio Director, I decided and declared (loudly and repeatedly) to my clientele that, when my daughter was on stage, I was NOT Director. I WAS her mother.
I did not answer tugs on my sleeve or pause mid-run-to-catch-her-perform to discuss another child's hair or costume trauma. I did not reply to anxious whispered questions or irritating texts.
I focused on my Momma Knot. I embraced it. I enjoyed it. I bathed in it and I engraved it on my heart and in my brain.
Madi will be 18 this week. Eighteen years filled with sequins and tap shoes. With hand held microphones and squeaky speaker systems. Eighteen years topped off with me sitting in the Clayton Opera House last night as she represented her platform and her ideals and her undeniable beauty in the Miss Thousand Islands Pageant.
The knot was HUGE. The tears were welling. My heart was pounding. Not for The Sparkle. Madi doesn't need a crown on her head or a sequin studded gown to glow. It was just the Momma thing. That's My Girl.
She walked like a model, she showed her spunk and intelligence. She sang with fervor and beauty. She was undeniably wonderful.
So, after... when she did not take home the crown nor the sash nor even a certificate-- I reevaluated that Momma Knot. The one I have felt inside so prominently for almost eighteen years. I examined its twists and turns and strong, unyielding bond. I realized something momentous. Perhaps, just perhaps, that knot wasn't fear for her. It has never been about my fear or my fear for her. It has always been this growing mass of pride. Pride for her strength and talent. Not pride that comes before a fall. Not pride that blinds... pride that makes me see. See that my daughter is more than I could have ever imagined. She sparkles so bright... And, in that moment, the knot lessened just the teeniest bit.
Just enough for me to exhale.
Days of pageants and dance routines and tiaras and bobby pins.
When we are living in them, the stress can dull the sparkle.
The Momma Knot in the pit of your stomach and the un-asked-for chills up your spine and down your arms as you wait to watch your child take the stage is blinding.
More blinding than the thousands of rhinestones under stage lights.
That, my friends, is ultra- blinding.
I am very happy that I made one binding choice many years ago. As a Dance Studio Director, I decided and declared (loudly and repeatedly) to my clientele that, when my daughter was on stage, I was NOT Director. I WAS her mother.
I did not answer tugs on my sleeve or pause mid-run-to-catch-her-perform to discuss another child's hair or costume trauma. I did not reply to anxious whispered questions or irritating texts.
I focused on my Momma Knot. I embraced it. I enjoyed it. I bathed in it and I engraved it on my heart and in my brain.
Madi will be 18 this week. Eighteen years filled with sequins and tap shoes. With hand held microphones and squeaky speaker systems. Eighteen years topped off with me sitting in the Clayton Opera House last night as she represented her platform and her ideals and her undeniable beauty in the Miss Thousand Islands Pageant.
The knot was HUGE. The tears were welling. My heart was pounding. Not for The Sparkle. Madi doesn't need a crown on her head or a sequin studded gown to glow. It was just the Momma thing. That's My Girl.
She walked like a model, she showed her spunk and intelligence. She sang with fervor and beauty. She was undeniably wonderful.
So, after... when she did not take home the crown nor the sash nor even a certificate-- I reevaluated that Momma Knot. The one I have felt inside so prominently for almost eighteen years. I examined its twists and turns and strong, unyielding bond. I realized something momentous. Perhaps, just perhaps, that knot wasn't fear for her. It has never been about my fear or my fear for her. It has always been this growing mass of pride. Pride for her strength and talent. Not pride that comes before a fall. Not pride that blinds... pride that makes me see. See that my daughter is more than I could have ever imagined. She sparkles so bright... And, in that moment, the knot lessened just the teeniest bit.
Just enough for me to exhale.
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Empty Nest- The Poem
Empty Nest
It isn't Empty Nest Syndrome
It isn't tears on somewhat sunken cheek bones or looking in the mirror to see a tired stranger
It isn't holding my breath when she shakes hands with Principal and grabs diploma with other and I can't hear for the roaring in my ears
The pride chanting in my head
The love bursting my veins
The hollow hole growing in my solo soul
She says every time I cry I owe her $5
I am already poor
She is my wealth
I am the single mother of a special needs daughter
I have walked away from everything and everyone else in this world
To run to her
I have sat vigil in cold hospital rooms
Stroking her face
Side swiping stray hairs
Caressing her tiny hand
I have slept in the curve of her feet at the bottom of her hospital bed
I have brought her home after 39 surgeries and fought with myself not to hold her hostage in the safety of our home
I have watched her fight to walk
To walk on
To walk away
I have hung on to let her go
And here we are
High school over
Success heaped on success
Smile painted on my thinning lips like a too bright lipstick
My hand aches for her little girl fingers to wrap around mine
But I see my hands now
Veins exposed
Wrinkles forming
Nails ignored
Unadorned left ring finger
I have not been His Wife
I have only been Her Mom
Open palm to fist and Palm again
I cannot question
I try to accept
Fly little bird
Mama's nest sits empty
Monday, July 6, 2015
It's the Little Things
It is the Little Things on a journey.
The nurse who gives me $1.25 for the vending machine because I am a "good mama who needs chocolate".
It is the janitorial staff member who sings to your daughter every morning... Because he loves to see That Smile.
The amount of kindness a surgeon musters to dance a jig to relieve her pain cannot be underestimated... All 6'4" of stern manliness a-jumble at her bedside.
Thirteen years and thirty-nine surgeries. Amazingly, despite the pain and beyond the tears, the multitude of kindnesses shown us are what makes my heart flutter.
And... There was always Emma. Emma first met us when Madi was four. She was an LPN and Madi was a toddler who had already Had Enough. I was an exhausted single mom. IV meds were the worst. No one seemed very sympathetic when my daughter screamed in pain. They shrugged off her tears and smirked a bit at all The Drama. Not Emma. She believed Madi and sought a solution. She brought in a stock of hand warmers for Madi's bedside stand. Just a heat pack... Such relief. Emma began "The Book of Madi" for the nurses station and insisted evey nurse treating her look it over. Meds were to be pumped on "turtle speed" and heat packs applied. Madi's baby blanket should always cover her IV sight--- she didn't like to see it. Her trusted Ellie the Elephant must always prop her arm for comfort.
Simple tasks brought about by a woman whose kindness and compassion amaze me to this day.
When Madi was nine she was finally correctly diagnosed. Her rare condition included restricted blood vessels that were very thin. Meds administered through an IV felt like ice water roaring through her system. The Doctor told us that this pain was, indeed, "unbearable". Thank you, Emma, for believing my little spit fire when no one else would!
Today, Emma is an amazing nurse. Madi is a high school graduate. They are best of friends, sharing life via snap chat and meeting for lunch or dinner when we return to Children's Hospital... 7 hours away.
Madi has chosen to attend college close to her hospital. I am anxious and worried, but will certainly sleep better knowing her favorite nurse will always be on duty and on the lookout for my kiddo.
A lunch out, an extra hug... And certainly, a heat pack if it is needed.
Thanks, Emma. Your kindness makes this world such a better place!!!!
The nurse who gives me $1.25 for the vending machine because I am a "good mama who needs chocolate".
It is the janitorial staff member who sings to your daughter every morning... Because he loves to see That Smile.
The amount of kindness a surgeon musters to dance a jig to relieve her pain cannot be underestimated... All 6'4" of stern manliness a-jumble at her bedside.
Thirteen years and thirty-nine surgeries. Amazingly, despite the pain and beyond the tears, the multitude of kindnesses shown us are what makes my heart flutter.
And... There was always Emma. Emma first met us when Madi was four. She was an LPN and Madi was a toddler who had already Had Enough. I was an exhausted single mom. IV meds were the worst. No one seemed very sympathetic when my daughter screamed in pain. They shrugged off her tears and smirked a bit at all The Drama. Not Emma. She believed Madi and sought a solution. She brought in a stock of hand warmers for Madi's bedside stand. Just a heat pack... Such relief. Emma began "The Book of Madi" for the nurses station and insisted evey nurse treating her look it over. Meds were to be pumped on "turtle speed" and heat packs applied. Madi's baby blanket should always cover her IV sight--- she didn't like to see it. Her trusted Ellie the Elephant must always prop her arm for comfort.
Simple tasks brought about by a woman whose kindness and compassion amaze me to this day.
When Madi was nine she was finally correctly diagnosed. Her rare condition included restricted blood vessels that were very thin. Meds administered through an IV felt like ice water roaring through her system. The Doctor told us that this pain was, indeed, "unbearable". Thank you, Emma, for believing my little spit fire when no one else would!
Today, Emma is an amazing nurse. Madi is a high school graduate. They are best of friends, sharing life via snap chat and meeting for lunch or dinner when we return to Children's Hospital... 7 hours away.
Madi has chosen to attend college close to her hospital. I am anxious and worried, but will certainly sleep better knowing her favorite nurse will always be on duty and on the lookout for my kiddo.
A lunch out, an extra hug... And certainly, a heat pack if it is needed.
Thanks, Emma. Your kindness makes this world such a better place!!!!
Thursday, June 11, 2015
Needy Need Not Apply
I recall being independent at a very young age. I was an only child for ten years, then "the oldest". My parents simply expected I would do a vast array of chores. I never wondered if other girls did. I was expected to handle everything from dusting the bannister to mowing the lawn. I weeded gardens, painted sheds, cooked dinner, cleaned house and watched The Baby Brother. I recall hot summer days spent pushing the lawn mower and cold winter mornings shoveling snow. I just did it. I did not get an allowance. I got love. Seemed enough.
Here's the rub. My parents raised me to be able to Do It All. Clean house, do manly chores, take care of babies, work at a job, get good/great grades, and be a social butterfly.
Would seem I am a catch, eh? Well. Perhaps not. I am almost 52 and decidedly single. I have had a vast array of failed relationships in my life, and I think they all fall in to two distinct groups:
1. The guy who couldn't stand it because I could do it all alone
2. The guy who didn't do much or nada because I could do it all alone
#1. Pissed me off
#2. Wore me out
Hasta LaVista, baby.
I am now almost one year Manless. Partnerless. Alone.... but not lonely. I have been approached by some men, but I have something to say:
Needy Need Not Apply.
I don't want to hear about your past failed relationships, and I assume you do not wish to hear about mine.
I don't want to hear about how LONELY you are. Buy a pet or get a past time. Pleeeease. You are a Grown-Ass-Man.
I don't want to be called "Sweetie" or "Honey". I'm not our "Sweetie" or "Honey". I am a Grown-Ass-Woman.
I don't want you to SAY "You shouldn't have to do so much". I want you to show me you will do it for me by... DOING IT FOR ME.
That's the bottom line, I guess. A lifetime of independence leaves me in a place where something truly romantic and HOT would be the guy who mows my lawn while I'm at the studio. The one who makes me dinner after work. That guy.
Let's be clear. Don't need the guy. Many days, don't want the guy. But, I'd LOVE to have my lawn mowed. Today. No, really, the lawn... out back... on the hill. No undertones or suggestive word play here, folks.
I have always loved my quiet time. Reading, writing, day dreaming, gardening. I want to get up and head out to an estate sale if I wish. I want to sleep til 9 am if I want to. I am content with what I have. I have a wonderful daughter, an adoring dog, and extended friends and family. I'm cool with all that. So, if you are aware of all the above and Never Need To Be Needy, then there may be a puzzle piece missing here. If not... I can get by without that small, missing piece.
Too old for games and too young at heart for boredom. No NEED for the Needy. Seems about right.
Here's the rub. My parents raised me to be able to Do It All. Clean house, do manly chores, take care of babies, work at a job, get good/great grades, and be a social butterfly.
Would seem I am a catch, eh? Well. Perhaps not. I am almost 52 and decidedly single. I have had a vast array of failed relationships in my life, and I think they all fall in to two distinct groups:
1. The guy who couldn't stand it because I could do it all alone
2. The guy who didn't do much or nada because I could do it all alone
#1. Pissed me off
#2. Wore me out
Hasta LaVista, baby.
I am now almost one year Manless. Partnerless. Alone.... but not lonely. I have been approached by some men, but I have something to say:
Needy Need Not Apply.
I don't want to hear about your past failed relationships, and I assume you do not wish to hear about mine.
I don't want to hear about how LONELY you are. Buy a pet or get a past time. Pleeeease. You are a Grown-Ass-Man.
I don't want to be called "Sweetie" or "Honey". I'm not our "Sweetie" or "Honey". I am a Grown-Ass-Woman.
I don't want you to SAY "You shouldn't have to do so much". I want you to show me you will do it for me by... DOING IT FOR ME.
That's the bottom line, I guess. A lifetime of independence leaves me in a place where something truly romantic and HOT would be the guy who mows my lawn while I'm at the studio. The one who makes me dinner after work. That guy.
Let's be clear. Don't need the guy. Many days, don't want the guy. But, I'd LOVE to have my lawn mowed. Today. No, really, the lawn... out back... on the hill. No undertones or suggestive word play here, folks.
I have always loved my quiet time. Reading, writing, day dreaming, gardening. I want to get up and head out to an estate sale if I wish. I want to sleep til 9 am if I want to. I am content with what I have. I have a wonderful daughter, an adoring dog, and extended friends and family. I'm cool with all that. So, if you are aware of all the above and Never Need To Be Needy, then there may be a puzzle piece missing here. If not... I can get by without that small, missing piece.
Too old for games and too young at heart for boredom. No NEED for the Needy. Seems about right.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Celebrations and Salutations
Graduation season always hits my heart and knocks my senses sideways. I took it hard when it was my own rite of passage, I have struggled and embraced all that it has held for my friends, my relatives, my students... and now, for my only daughter.
I screen shot large portions of life in my head. Snap memories into the puzzle of my life like I am a jigsaw Queen; relive rolling video in my brain as I fall to sleep at night; wake early and look at the day ahead with trepidation mixed with elation.
I thought I would be a bigger mess. I thought I would walk around in a river of tears every day. I expected sobs at dance recital and gulps of air like some washed ashore fish as I witnessed "lasts"... last concert, last this, last that.
Tears. I have them. Somewhat silent, slippery little devils, who roll down my waiting cheeks and cause me to wipe with backside of hands as secretly as possible. Sniffles. Blame that on allergies.
But... full on tsunami cry? Not yet.
This is a celebration, folks. This amazing human whom I created has become SOMEONE. I have always known she is special... as every mother knows every child is... but in this time, in this moment, she is SOMEONE. Someone who has achieved so many goals throughout her first twelve years of school... academically, musically, socially, physically, emotionally. Someone who has made plans for an amazing future and has taken solid steps to see those plans through. Someone whom I am immensely, and justifiably, proud of.
It is a month of salutations. Congratulations. Farewells. SeeYaLaters. Hugs that linger longer. Foot steps that pause as backward glances are made before plunging forward. Yesterdays growing foggy as today beams and tomorrow beckons. Shake hands with confidence, smile broader, laugh when you can. This is the way this life goes. It just goes. On and on; somehow... everyday closer to the salutation--- Good bye.
Forgive my sentimentality. I am just another mom watching another child walk across the stage which represents life. I am just another empty nester choosing bedding for college dorm room and counting pennies to pay tuition. I am just another mom laying in bed at night, silent tears rolling down cheeks, salty rivers onto pillowcase.
Yes, I am celebrating. Mostly. But, sometimes, the celebration pauses and reality hits. Forgive me for praying... Forget Me Not.
I screen shot large portions of life in my head. Snap memories into the puzzle of my life like I am a jigsaw Queen; relive rolling video in my brain as I fall to sleep at night; wake early and look at the day ahead with trepidation mixed with elation.
I thought I would be a bigger mess. I thought I would walk around in a river of tears every day. I expected sobs at dance recital and gulps of air like some washed ashore fish as I witnessed "lasts"... last concert, last this, last that.
Tears. I have them. Somewhat silent, slippery little devils, who roll down my waiting cheeks and cause me to wipe with backside of hands as secretly as possible. Sniffles. Blame that on allergies.
But... full on tsunami cry? Not yet.
This is a celebration, folks. This amazing human whom I created has become SOMEONE. I have always known she is special... as every mother knows every child is... but in this time, in this moment, she is SOMEONE. Someone who has achieved so many goals throughout her first twelve years of school... academically, musically, socially, physically, emotionally. Someone who has made plans for an amazing future and has taken solid steps to see those plans through. Someone whom I am immensely, and justifiably, proud of.
It is a month of salutations. Congratulations. Farewells. SeeYaLaters. Hugs that linger longer. Foot steps that pause as backward glances are made before plunging forward. Yesterdays growing foggy as today beams and tomorrow beckons. Shake hands with confidence, smile broader, laugh when you can. This is the way this life goes. It just goes. On and on; somehow... everyday closer to the salutation--- Good bye.
Forgive my sentimentality. I am just another mom watching another child walk across the stage which represents life. I am just another empty nester choosing bedding for college dorm room and counting pennies to pay tuition. I am just another mom laying in bed at night, silent tears rolling down cheeks, salty rivers onto pillowcase.
Yes, I am celebrating. Mostly. But, sometimes, the celebration pauses and reality hits. Forgive me for praying... Forget Me Not.
Monday, May 4, 2015
Standing up or Backing down?
It is something I have struggled with all my life. Daily.
Standing up... or backing down?
If I stand up for my beliefs, if I state an honest opinion, inevitably, I meet with someone else's beliefs.
If they choose to state them, I am faced with conflict.
I despise conflict.
I have been known to cross three states to avoid it.
No, really.
Within the need to avoid conflict, lies another of my qualities with duel attributes.
I can always see some aspects of truth in someone else's beliefs.
Wrapped in that self attribute is the fact that others see my ability to accept degrees of their position as me Backing Down.
This, quite often, leads to me running away. From the person; the discussion; the argument.
I am certain there is a complete thesis available on my disorder in the halls of literary and academic homes.
This would not help me.
Why? Because I would be able to see and understand all sides of the arguments held therein.
Go ahead, have a giggle at my expense. Really, it's okay. I understand the comedy of errors here.
All of my life, I have avoided argument and conflict and, more often than not, have chosen to not state my opinion and have held it all in until... Boom. I explode.
Today, I am filled with opinions.... and emotions. Rage and anger and pent up disbelief at how the small and extremely large injustices go unanswered, unaddressed, unstopped and undone.
We have come to live in a world where the gray is so massive that the black and white-- the right and wrong-- cannot be seen.
Everyone has a right... to their opinion, to their lifestyle, to do as they wish.
And MY OPINION STATED HERE is that I agree... unless their opinion is so hurtful it causes another person pain. Unless their lifestyle involves impinging on the rights of others. Until their lifestyle means that others may not enjoy life.
And, therein lies the rub. The conflict that I avoid. That I despise.
Let me say this. I have always been aware of my personality trait. I did not become an attorney (once high on my list of possible careers), because I knew that this distinct part of ME would not allow me to do that job to the best of my ability and to serve others best.
I fear that those now in authority may also suffer from my trait.... but have chosen to plow in to politics and positions where being decisive and sometimes NOT accepting of others is a necessity.
I believe they need opinions. Strong ones. They need to stick to those opinions. Listen to others, yes. Bend to them? No.
So... I've gone and done it. Stated my opinion at the risk of hearing yours. Here is another thing I know about myself, though... once I put it in writing, my opinion is strong and unyielding. I know beyond doubt this is how I feel. It is my opinion that some people need to have an opinion.
There. That's done.
Standing up... or backing down?
If I stand up for my beliefs, if I state an honest opinion, inevitably, I meet with someone else's beliefs.
If they choose to state them, I am faced with conflict.
I despise conflict.
I have been known to cross three states to avoid it.
No, really.
Within the need to avoid conflict, lies another of my qualities with duel attributes.
I can always see some aspects of truth in someone else's beliefs.
Wrapped in that self attribute is the fact that others see my ability to accept degrees of their position as me Backing Down.
This, quite often, leads to me running away. From the person; the discussion; the argument.
I am certain there is a complete thesis available on my disorder in the halls of literary and academic homes.
This would not help me.
Why? Because I would be able to see and understand all sides of the arguments held therein.
Go ahead, have a giggle at my expense. Really, it's okay. I understand the comedy of errors here.
All of my life, I have avoided argument and conflict and, more often than not, have chosen to not state my opinion and have held it all in until... Boom. I explode.
Today, I am filled with opinions.... and emotions. Rage and anger and pent up disbelief at how the small and extremely large injustices go unanswered, unaddressed, unstopped and undone.
We have come to live in a world where the gray is so massive that the black and white-- the right and wrong-- cannot be seen.
Everyone has a right... to their opinion, to their lifestyle, to do as they wish.
And MY OPINION STATED HERE is that I agree... unless their opinion is so hurtful it causes another person pain. Unless their lifestyle involves impinging on the rights of others. Until their lifestyle means that others may not enjoy life.
And, therein lies the rub. The conflict that I avoid. That I despise.
Let me say this. I have always been aware of my personality trait. I did not become an attorney (once high on my list of possible careers), because I knew that this distinct part of ME would not allow me to do that job to the best of my ability and to serve others best.
I fear that those now in authority may also suffer from my trait.... but have chosen to plow in to politics and positions where being decisive and sometimes NOT accepting of others is a necessity.
I believe they need opinions. Strong ones. They need to stick to those opinions. Listen to others, yes. Bend to them? No.
So... I've gone and done it. Stated my opinion at the risk of hearing yours. Here is another thing I know about myself, though... once I put it in writing, my opinion is strong and unyielding. I know beyond doubt this is how I feel. It is my opinion that some people need to have an opinion.
There. That's done.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)




