Archives for November 2011

Hope Chest Identity

I came home from work one day many months ago to find that my husband had cleared all the junk out of our guest room and made it into a space for me. The stuff we had piled in the closet was gone. The discarded items that had been placed on the floor and then forgotten had disappeared. The bed was covered not with books and boxes but bedding. And in one corner sat my desk, brought up from downstairs, emptied of the detritus of its time in a child’s playroom, and ready for writing.

It was, in every sense of the term, a room of one’s own.

It was meant to be a sanctuary – a place to retreat from clutter and to hide from the crashing about of a small but rambunctious boy. And that’s what it turned out to be, though not in the way he’d first intended.

I spent a lot of time in that room when I was on leave earlier this year. Almost two months straight, I think. I slept there, I read there, I wrote there. I lay awake late at night there and wondered what was going to happen to me. I drank endless cups of tea there. And I found my sanity there.

I was in there again over the weekend. That’s my room to pack as we prepare to move, so I dove in. The desk was easy – it was reasonably well organized and all the stuff it contains is current. No sorting required.

The hope chest was a different story, though.

Another wish-come-true, my hope chest was made by my husband early in our relationship. He sawed and cut and hammered, building the whole thing lovingly by hand. It appeared one Christmas, a complete surprise since he had managed to hide it in the woodworking shop of the apartment building we lived in at the time. When we moved to this house it came with me. It sits there still, housing — until this past weekend, anyway — the same stuff that has hidden within it all this time. Stuff I haven’t really looked at for years, until this weekend.

Opening the lid, I saw the same bits and bobs I remember from all the other times I peeked. My teenage diary, the key long since lost. A small wooden box — painted purple and adorned with a heart flanked by two Rs — that contains a few years’ worth of birthday, anniversary, and Valentine’s cards from my husband and I to each other. (I’ve kept every single one — 13 years’ worth — and that original purple box got full long ago.)

There are several shoe boxes in the collection as well, an informal filing system for things I wanted to keep. One contained old notes — handwritten — from my boyfriends in university. I read a few, laughed and shook my head, and tossed them. I’m not that girl anymore.

Another was full of university-era letters and cards, this time from my mom in the days before email. At the bottom of that box were some letters from my Grandma, who passed away in 2001. That shoe box got put into a moving box, as did the one containing print-outs of all the emails my husband and I sent to each other in the long-distance days of our relationship. I remember the girl who got those letters and emails, and I want to take her with me.

old letters

Image credit: Madhya on Flickr

I dug further, through old photos and souvenirs and keepsakes from trips travelled and relationships ended. And then, at the very bottom of the hope chest, tucked in one corner, were journals. Stacks of them. I had forgotten about them entirely. I packed all of it, but now I wonder if I should have.

Everything in that hope chest is at least 10 years old. After this last year, a lot of these hope chest treasures don’t feel like me anymore. The things I cherish I will bring with me, and I feel no regret over relegating the embarrassing ones to the trash. But what about the rest? The journals and photos and mementos that represent a part of my life? In my head that part is long behind me, so much so that looking at those words I can hardly remember the girl who wrote them. She looks like me in pictures, sort of, but not the me I see in the mirror each day.

I think I’m ready to leave some of it behind, but I wonder who I am without it. Will I remember that girl? Is she still in there? Does it matter?

For now I’ve packed it all. I will load it on to a truck and take it with me across the mountains to the other side. And maybe when I get there I’ll be able to answer those questions.

 

This post loosely inspired by this week’s Be Enough Me prompt: What image or symbol reminds you to Just.Be.Enough?

Every Monday join us…
Write, post, link up, share your story and your voice.
Be part of carrying the weight of confidence and share our mission
to empower, inspire, and remind women, parents and children
that the time has come to celebrate ourselves!

Next week’s prompt: I am feeling… (inspired by a Soleil Moon Frye tweet)

(Remember you can also write on a topic of your choice.)

 

Life List: The Next 15

I’ve mentioned my life list before, and I’ve posted about the things from my list I’ve completed. Since we’re moving in a couple of weeks (ack!) and I quit my job (whee!) I figure this is a good time to dust off the list and see what I might work on after we move. Here are 15 things, numbered according to their spots on the master list.

3. Volunteer again.

Since we’re going to be in a new city, it might be a good time to look at volunteering – even for a one-off event. Good way to meet people, and would also force me (and my complete lack of any sort of sense of direction) to find my way around.

6. Attend a TED talk.

I do want to attend one in person, but I just came across TEDxWomen, which is taking place on Dec. 1 in New York and LA. I really want to figure out how to attend, but if I can’t you can bet I’ll be watching the talks.

9. Get in the habit of taking more photographs.

I really need to rethink this one, because it’s difficult to define the point at which this is done. In any case, a new place is a good opportunity to take some more pictures. Plus I have a spanky new iPhone 4S. Instagram, baby!

19. Really learn how to use a graphics editing program.

I’ve been using Pixelmator and, frankly, it bugs me. Time to find an alternative and see if someone (I’m married to) might be willing to walk me through its use.

24. Write something and have it published in a magazine.

I actually did this already and forgot to post about it. I had a piece on postpartum depression published in a local parenting magazine in October, which was very exciting. But I’d love to do another, so I’m going to get some ideas going and work up the nerve to pitch something.

29. Learn how to make a cup of tea – properly.

Because we’re in for a real Canadian winter, and I’m going to need tea.

cup of tea and teapot

Image credit: YaZzZz on Flickr

30. Have another child.

We’ll see what we can do about that. :)

33. Act in a stage play again.

I totally want to do this, especially after a recent Twitter conversation. Maybe there’s someone who’d be willing to let me be a reindeer or a shepherd in a Christmas play…

44. Improve my 10K personal best.

I need to get running again. Even if I freeze my buns off doing it.

51. Get my personal email inbox to zero.

I almost got this done while we were away last week. (That’s the beauty of a long car trip and no wifi.) I’ve got the system set up but I need to finish it and then use it more consistently. I’m sick of losing emails.

52. Get some form of exercise every day for 30 days straight.

But don’t hold me to it.

54. Get a colourful streak in my hair.

I did this one already too, but I’m hoping to get the blue put back in before I go. (Stupid dye fades so damn fast.) I would like to see if there’s a way to get this done so I can keep it, though. Hair extensions, maybe? (Anyone know?)

55. Give blood 5 more times.

I’ve got one counted towards that five, but I need to go again.

58. Get a tattoo to commemorate beating PPD.

I’m planning to go with a friend, and he and I were hoping to do this before I move. Maybe we’ll do it, if I can get my act together. Aside from all the packing and stuff, I do need to commit to a design. I saw this one recently and I’m thinking of something like it:

bee-tattoo
Isn’t that cool? I don’t want the bee (wasp?) but a bird silhouette where the bee is and my words (whatever those are going to be) where the z’s are might be just the thing. Got any tattoo pics you like? I’ll add them to my Pinterest board. At this point all ideas are welcome.

59. Help someone else with their life list.

This is a relatively recent addition to the list, and I really like it. I need to find someone with a list that includes something I can do to help. (Have a list? Anything a humble Canadian girl can help you with? Link please!)

So there you have it: 15 more things I can do to embrace this change.

What are your short-term goals and dreams?

***

This is my entry in the Just Ask Bucket List Getaway Giveaway. Just Ask offers a breast and ovarian cancer screening and is encouraging people to share 15 things that I want to enjoy in my lifetime as a reminder to be aware of my health. Want to enter? Head over to TodaysMama.com to get the details. 

One Mom’s Perspective

What to say when asked to write about why I’m unique? Or why I’m awesome? Or why I should be chosen to blog for a parenting site?

I could tell you I’ve spent the better part of the last few months looking for just such an opportunity (just ask Natalie). I could remind you I’ve quit my job because I think I’ve done what I can do there and I believe that in order to get where I want to be I need to walk away. I could connect those dots and tell you that when I wrote about believing in something, this is what I meant.

Maybe that sounds silly. Quitting a director job to be a mommy blogger? Pshaw. But I don’t want to be “just” a mommy blogger. Maybe I will get another full-time job, but only if it’s the right one. But, more importantly, I don’t think there is such a thing as “just” a mommy blogger.

After my wedding, I gave my mom a tile with a picture of us from my wedding day and the following quote:

“The moment a child is born, the mother is also born. She never existed before. The woman existed, but the mother, never. A mother is something absolutely new.” ~  Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh

At the time I really didn’t understand how true that was.

I do now. Every mother does.

The “mother” part of my identity isn’t the only part. I’m not even sure it’s the biggest part, at least not in a day-to-day sense. Who I am as a person is not defined by the fact that I have a child (even if who I am as a person is increasingly defined by how exhausted I feel. That part ends, right? Right?!). I do think what makes me unique is that who I am is influenced by how I responded to the unexpected difficulty I had upon becoming a mother.

At least that’s what others said when I posed the question.

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(Silly girl, of course it’s relevant.)

So I don’t know if it makes me unique, but that’s who I am. I’m a writer and a blogger and a communications professional.

I’m a working mom with a husband who’s a stay-at-home dad.

I’m a west coast girl who’s moving to the mountains.

I’m a PPD survivor.

I’m a brutally honest writer who believes there’s beauty in the breakdown.

I’m a TEDx speaker.

I think toddlers are boldly, brilliantly, delightfully weird.

I’m not afraid to dye my hair blue to show my support for something important.

I’m not afraid to take a leap of faith.

I’m someone who believes that we should be honest about what being a parent is like and that we shouldn’t have to pretend every single ounce of the experience lights us up.

I’m also someone who believes parenting can be fun, and funny, and inspiring, and that writing about it makes a contribution to this world.

 

viewfinder

Photo credit: Kuzeytac on Flickr

***

For Nadine: Yes, I cheated by linking to other posts above. Here are three of my best, or the three I think demonstrate why I’d be good for your site:

The real: On Motherhood and Losing Yourself

The sweet: Mirror Image

 

For everyone else: If you send her subliminal “pick Robin!” messages I will love you forever. 

10 Days of Mama

It’s been 10 days. 11, I guess. Today is the 11th day.

He had the flu about a week and a half ago – 11 days ago, I guess – and we did all the usual things through a day or so with a sick little boy. I wore my Mama Who Has Been Barfed On badge again with pride and enjoyed the cuddles – warm and soft and in the normal range of worrisome. Which is to say not terribly.

Then the abdominal pain started and by 4 am a week ago Sunday we were in the ER. No parents want to learn their child’s appendix has burst the hard way.

The ER was quiet that morning. No one else in the pediatric area but us. Waybuloo is only slightly less weird at four in the morning; those Brits were definitely on something.

No appendectomy required. A bit dehydrated, even though he drinks Pedialyte like it’s juice, and home we went.

That was only the second in a series of sleepless nights.

Tonight will be the 11th night. We have pushed through a brief road trip (if a very long drive – there and back in six days – can be considered brief), a house purchase, and a few quick visits.

We are home, but he is not better. He has been, off and on. Enough that we felt it was okay to make the trip. Enough that he played in the snow on Friday. Enough that he went to school yesterday.

But he is not better, and the morning at school was apparently weepy with repeated requests for Mama. When Grandma and Grandpa picked him up, he went home with them and slept. For more than an hour. (Very unusual.) Daddy had to go and pick him up.

Mama came home, and the pieces of velcro connected again. We have been this way – attached – for 10 days. Or 11 now, I guess. He wants me and stays close, his soft hair tickling my chin and his small fingers rubbing my wrist.

This is what I know:

His toddler tummy fits right in the palm of my hand.

It is warm and soft and it soothes me.

Rubbing his tummy only sometimes soothes him.

He has a spot – a specific place he likes to be. Between my chin and collarbone, shoulder tucked under my right arm as it wraps around him.

This has been his place for months now. It’s where he comes when he wants a cuddle. It’s where he sleeps when he’s sick. It’s where he fits.

Except he doesn’t. He’s getting tall, and his gangly limbs struggle to find a place to land. His head bumps against my chin as he looks for his spot, refusing to acknowledge that he doesn’t fit the same way as before.

He wants me to fix him, except I can’t. He’s blocked, I think, so nothing terribly worrisome now either except that my baby’s in pain. We’ve tried the usual remedies – applesauce, prune juice, warm baths. We’ve tried worse, and had it work, except not fully. And now, on the 11th day, he doesn’t want any of that.

He just wants Mama.

Tomorrow Daddy will take him to the doctor to see if she can help. Mama will go to work, again, and turn on the bright lights, again, in hopes they will keep her awake. She will take ibuprofen for her shoulder – the one that loves holding her boy but is tired, and is sending waves of stabbing pain running up and down her neck between her ears and her shoulder in protest.

Tomorrow is day 12. He might still want Mama, but hopefully, for everyone’s sake, he won’t need her quite so much.

 

Freely written and linked up with:



The Two Thieves

I’ll always remember a certain piece of advice my mom gave me years and years ago:

You’ll regret the things you didn’t do more than the things you did. 

I’m not sure I really understood it at first. I was, at the time, young enough to be focused on all the things I hated about myself. (I’ve since grown older and wiser.) I did something embarrassing at school and regretted it. I didn’t study hard enough for that math test and regretted it (even though I certainly didn’t want a do-over). All those things I thought meant something.

As I got older I started to realize what my mom meant. All those things contribute to a life and are part of what make me who I am (do not ask me to do math, I beseech you). But I’ve long since learned they aren’t what’s important.

What’s important is what we choose to do – deliberately and with purpose, no matter how hard it may be. And in thinking about the things I might not do because I’m scared, I came to understand what my mom meant about regretting the things you don’t do more than the things you do. I thought it was brilliant and therefore so was she.

When I look back, there are many things that were hard or embarrassing or just plain awful, but I don’t actually regret any of them.

leaves in water

Image credit: Steve-h on Flickr

I don’t regret my weeks of being homesick at the beginning of a four-month exchange I went on to Germany when I was 15. It taught me that I’m stronger than I give myself credit for.

I don’t regret choosing a university closer to home instead of a more adventurous-sounding one across the country. That choice led me to my husband and the family I have now.

I don’t regret sticking with a job I initially hated. It gave me some really good experience and a foundation for what I want in my work.

Sometimes I wish I had tried harder to get Connor to sleep when he was a baby, but I don’t actually know if it would have helped. In any case, wishing won’t make it so.

I don’t even regret my horrible experience with PPD. I don’t regret the agony or the anger, the misery, the number of doctors I saw without getting a diagnosis or even the horrible psychiatrist. I don’t regret having to take time off work or spending a few months on a bunch of different medications so I could get through each day, minute by minute. That experience has taught me about life, myself, what I value, and what I can do when I do what’s right.

I certainly don’t regret anything I’ve posted on this blog.

“Many of us crucify ourselves between two thieves – regret for the past and fear of the future.”
~ Fulton Oursler 

And now I’m about to enter a new phase. We’ve been discussing this move for a long time – years, actually, even if only in a hypothetical, wouldn’t-it-be-great-if kind of way. One of the reasons we didn’t do it before was fear. My fear. But I think it’s time to do it.

It’s nerve-wracking to have so much change all at once, especially after a period of instability. But I’m okay with that. I think the change will be a good thing, and now that we’ve bought a house and know where we’re going to be three weeks from now I’m getting totally excited.

But I’m still scared. I’m scared to be that far from my parents, even if it (hopefully) turns out to be temporary if they move as well. I’m worried about having made a decision that will mean Connor won’t see his grandparents regularly, and that they won’t see him.

That’s the part that makes me feel sick to my stomach. Not the move, not the job, not leaving everything else that has been my world for so long. It’s my parents – their support and their time with my son. But I think we have to do it. I think it’s the right thing to do. So I’ll accept the fear in place of regret. The two thieves – I’ll avoid one by embracing the other.

And live with no regrets.

 

We hope you will read, comment, link up,
and explore the stories of others who have joined in. 

————

Every Monday join us…
Write, post, link up, share your story and your voice.
Be part of carrying the weight of confidence and share our mission
to empower, inspire, and remind women, parents and children
that the time has come to celebrate ourselves!

Next week’s prompt: What is one image or symbol that
reminds you that are you enough?

(Remember you can also write on a topic of your choice.)