The Story of How We Met

So How'd You Meet button

“You need someone who lights you up,” my mom told me several years ago. At the time I was dating a guy I really liked, but who I knew wasn’t going to be a long-term thing. A few months later – after said boyfriend moved away, thus ending the relationship – I came home from a weekend trip to a friend’s wedding. As soon as she saw me, my mom knew I’d found that someone.

Thus begins the story of how my husband and I met. Sort of. We actually met several years before that wedding, but that’s a story I’m sharing with Rach for her “So How’d You Meet?” series. She asked me if I’d share it and of course I said yes. It’s a happy story to share, and I love Rach to death. She’s one of the nicest (and best) bloggers I know (and we still need to set up a Skype call, Rach!).

Come visit me at Life Ever Since to read the rest of the story.

Valentines Revisited

This is something I wrote last year and re-posting it feels like a bit of a cheat. But in my defence:

  1. Mama Kat told us to write a poem for our valentines.
  2. My blog was quite new at the time, and it seems reasonable to bring it back to see the light of day.
  3. I like it.

It’s one of my favourite posts, and one I don’t think I could better, so here you go:

 

In the eyes of the boy, I am everything. I know everything. Can do everything (except build snowmen). My kisses heal wounds. My breath in the night scares away the darkness. My hugs bring him home.

I carried him then, gave him life. Nourished his body with mine. Carry him still.

To me he can say, “I love you, too” even when I haven’t said it first, because sometimes love is unspoken.

In the eyes of the boy I am perfect.

In the eyes of the man, I am the other half. The other half of one whole.

I offer what I can and he takes it, adds to it and makes it more.

If I need help I can ask for it and he gives it. Sometimes I can’t ask for it and he gives it anyway.

I have said, “I’m sorry.” And he has said, “There are no conditions.”

In the eyes of the man I am perfect in my imperfection.

To me, the boy is life and light and lilting laughter. He is me and he is the man: he is the poignancy of potential. He’s also his own person and don’t you dare mess with that.

He is perfect.

To me, the man is the source of much of the best of the boy. He is more – much more – than I knew when I met him. He is my patience and my strength. He is rational when I’m not. He laughs when I can’t.

He is love, and love is perfect.

I’m lucky to have them, these two. My two.

Valentines.

Mama’s Losin’ It

One Year Later

It feels as though the post on my one-year anniversary of blogging ought to be profound. I started off trying to write something like that, but it’s not working and will be relegated to another post, another day.

New Year’s Day usually feels quiet to me. A calm before the bustle of January, when the it’s-the-holidays excuses for being lazy or skipping out early no longer work. That’s what January 1, 2011 felt like to me.

I have a vivid mental picture of that day, which I don’t have for most New Year’s Days (tending, as they do, to all blur together). I had spent New Year’s Eve 2010 in the usual fashion—with Chinese food followed by blissful nothingness—with one critical difference. That last night of 2010 I sat on the floor of our living room, in front of the fire, and set up a blog in WordPress.

It was totally unplanned. I had been thinking about writing about my experience with motherhood, but I hadn’t really thought about it being so specifically about PPD and I really hadn’t thought about getting into blogging. And yet there I was with wordpress.com on the screen in front of me and before I knew it this blog was born.

It was a short time later that I became Farewell Stranger, but at that time I was simply MamaRobinJ. I had a basic blog and a Twitter account (because I didn’t want to use my professional Twitter persona for this very personal project) and I decided I was going to do it. And then I went to bed.

The next day, during the quietness that was January 1, 2011, I got a direct message on my other Twitter account from my boss. “MamaRobinJ is a great idea,” he said. And my heart exploded in holy-shit-fuelled adrenaline.

That was the start of what became a slow progression towards having it be okay to talk about this. I would say a year later I’m 95% there – it’s still not something I bring up early on when I meet new people, and the people at my new job don’t know this about me yet (unless they’ve Googled me, in which case hi!). But it’s no longer an oh-God-please-don’t-find-my-blog sort of thing.

For I guess that’s the beauty of blogging, isn’t it? It can be whatever we want. If we want to be anonymous, we can. If we want to use it to say, “This is who I really am. This is my experience. Do you still love me?” we can.

One year later, this is who I really am. And not because I hid who I was, but because this blog, and those of you who have been with me during the last year, have allowed the protective shell I placed around myself to crack and let the light in.

One year later, this is who I really am. Because you still love me.

colorful-cupcakes

Image credit: ms.Tea on Flickr

So today, on this New Year’s Day that feels not quiet but alive with possibility, I wish to say thank you. Thank you for this last year. Thank you for loving me.

Have a cupcake.

 

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.)

 

On My Anniversary

Personal crises do funny things to relationships, as too many of us know too well. We go through these things, individually or together – or together-but-individually – and almost always, I think, something changes.

Our journeys become harder when we’re faced with something other than the chosen road. Doubly so, perhaps, when we’re fighting against the current, thereby using energy we previously put into our partners, our relationships, our life-as-we-knew-it.

This extra baggage we carry isn’t always something we acknowledge. We don’t pick up rage or grief or illness and turn to our companion and say, I’m sorry. I have to carry this for a while. For now I’m going to have to put down your need for time to yourself / some of the things I do around the house / my ability to be a nice person to live with. 

We just don’t.

Or at least I didn’t.

My baggage was an extra weight, strapped to me like a backpack, that I couldn’t identify. I questioned it constantly, turning around and around in desperate attempts to identify it. But it was a part of me, and so it turned with me, always just out of sight.

I picked up that backpack when no one was looking. When I wasn’t looking. It was just there, and it became part of me. My husband could see it, but he didn’t realize it was unidentifiable to me, and unwanted.

To him, it had become part of me.

He didn’t want it in our lives either. He didn’t like that backpack, and he hadn’t agreed to let me bring it on our journey. He thought the backpack and I were inseparable and, not satisfied with that, he gave me a choice: ditch the baggage or get off at the next station.

I chose to ditch the baggage, of course. I hadn’t wanted it in the first place.

As it turned out, it wasn’t so easy to set down.

In the end my husband had to help me. It was too heavy a weight for me to deal with on my own. So as I sat down in the middle of the path, like a stubborn child unwilling or unable to go on, he started loosening the straps so I could walk on. Slowly, bit by bit, he moved things around to adjust the load. He held my hand for a while. He kept me going.

It wasn’t enough.

When I said I needed to stop – just stop – he didn’t blink. He called in others on our path to help support the weight of my baggage and slowly, gently, he helped me take the pack off.

That baggage is gone now, though my body still bears the evidence of its weight – the marks it has left on me, the ache of having borne it for so long. My husband sees these scars, as only the one I’ve chosen to travel with me on the path of life truly can.

I’m less afraid of that extra baggage now. I know what it looks like, what it feels like to carry. I know more about where it came from and what it almost cost me.

I said almost.

Today is our 7th wedding anniversary. We’ve been together 13 years.

I’m feeling lucky.

Black & white wedding photo

I love you, my love.