Where I’m From

I am from homemade Playdoh in blue and green, from the endless possibilities of Brio trains, and multi-coloured afghans hand knit with love.

I am from beach houses, suburban houses, and the house of many trees, each one a home complete with dogs and dance recitals.

I am from my mother’s mountain, a freshwater spring spilling on to the sand, and a John Denver soundtrack on long drives between the two.

I am from summers at the pool and advent calendars at Christmas, from Rileys and Birds and the traits of the Nelsons.

I am from Calvin and Hobbes quoted at the dinner table and laughing so hard milk comes out your nose.

From you have your mother’s eyes and I’m going to drive with my eyes closed so tell me if we’re going to hit something.

I am from a belief system that knows kids and clothes can be washed and that little girls are more valuable than family treasures accidentally broken.

I’m from a hospital nestled in the foothills, tourtière on Christmas Eve and school lunches that were the envy of classmates, they who wore kilts and blazers and heard pull your socks up and dangly earrings aren’t allowed. (I wore them anyway.)

From boats and salt water oceans, a mother’s hand warm from her tea, and the man who summoned emergency personnel with a practical joke, prompting a fondly-recalled story in the newspaper 25 years later.

I am from fat, brown photo albums, artwork and photos above computers  and a do-anything-for-you kind of love reflected in a lifetime of knowing what it is to have a family.

family photo of children playing in the sand

The beach house where the spring water flowed into the ocean. (That's me on the left. The 4th sibling came later.)

 

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With thanks to Mama Kat for the prompt using this template based on this original work, which I’d seen before but had not yet been inspired to try. 

And with sincere apologies to my mother if I’ve made her cry (again). 

Walking the TEDx Talk

Yesterday I presented at a TEDx event – the locally-organized versions of the well-known TED conferences. I’d like to share that experience with you and have been trying to figure out how best to do that. I was inclined towards a humble description of how it went, as in:

It went really well. 

It was a great experience. 

It was fun, and I’m really glad to have done it. 

You know what? Screw it.

Instead I will tell you this: I got up in front of a theatre full of people I don’t know – people from my local community who I might very well see on the street tomorrow – and told my story about postpartum depression and how blogging, with brutal honesty, about my breakdown not only helped me but helps others. I shared some excerpts from my posts here. I cried – not a little, a lot.

Here’s how it went: I got a standing ovation. And I am really damn proud of that.

I wasn’t sure what to expect from the event and I certainly wasn’t sure about my place in it. I was honoured and totally excited to be asked to speak, and I was less nervous than you’d think about telling my story. What I did worry about was whether people would connect with it and whether I would be able to offer something for them to take away.

The organizers were supposed to give me time cues and they chose not to, so I went, er, slightly beyond my allotted six minutes. Judging by the response, the people – including men – in the audience who were crying, and the incredibly generous comments I got afterwards, I think I can safely say I managed to get my message across.

That’s not the only reason I’m proud of how it went. I’m proud because I did it in a way that was true to who I am. I knew I was going to cry – I couldn’t figure out any way around it. And I actually didn’t worry about it. My story, and my message that it’s okay to be a little bit vulnerable, it’s okay to remove our masks and be honest about our struggles, and that, in doing so, we might actually make the world a better place – that’s an intense sort of topic. You want people to be emotionally invested in what you’re asking them to do? Make them cry.

Making people cry wasn’t my goal, obviously. Making it okay for me to cry was my goal. Because that’s what happens when we open ourselves up to people and share the stories about the hard stuff and reveal that maybe – just maybe – we’re better off for having dealt with something difficult. We allow ourselves to be vulnerable. I was never okay with that before. I am SO okay with it now.

Those of us who put our words to these pages – who tell those hard stories and reveal our tears – know there’s beauty in the breakdown. We know we’re not alone. We know we will get support and that those who don’t support us perhaps just don’t understand.

I’ve seen this countless times on other blogs. My friends’ blogs. Your blogs. I’ve seen you share stories about hard things I never would have suspected had you not written about them. I’ve seen you be bravely, beautifully honest and then, just when I think all your cards are on the table, you lay down your hand and say, “This is what life dealt me. It’s not the hand I’d have chosen, but there’s no point hiding it so I’m going to play. I’m going to stay in the game and play, and if you care to read along with me I’ll share my strategy and you’ll see that you can win even when you get dealt a bad hand.”

That’s why I believe bringing together writing and technology is more than “blogging” and think those who dismiss what we do here underestimate the power of this art. This art has the power to break down barriers and borders. It has the power to make life better. It has the power to make lives better.

You know it, and I know it.

And I think it’s an idea worth spreading.

[Update: The video of my talk is now available.]


This is our very last week to make an impact for Be Enough Me 4 Cancer. Last week we had 45 people link up an enough-themed post in our 
Be Enough Me for Cancer campaign and I’d love it if you’d help us boost that number again. For every 20 linked up posts, Bellflower Books will provide a memory book to a woman fighting breast cancer through Crickett’s Answer for Cancer, and help bring a smile to courageous women giving it their all, every single day. The link-up remains open for three days. No blog? No worries. You can also comment on the post or on the Just.Be.Enough. Facebook page with your own story and be counted.

 

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.

A Picture of Love and Laughter

I remember our wedding fondly. We had so much fun planning and putting little touches of ourselves into it. Instead of clinking glasses to get us to kiss we made people write us a haiku, and we still have them all. When we came into the reception the song we played was “Somebody’s Getting Married” from The Muppets Take Manhattan. It was totally us, right down to me bawling down the aisle. (“Oh dear,” said the woman who was marrying us when she saw me coming. “Does anyone have a tissue?” Unfortunately she was mic’d and you can hear it on our wedding video…)

All that crying evidently made something in me decide we needed a moment of levity. I started to recite my vows, which we wrote ourselves, and got to this line: “I promise to love you the way you are.”

And I laughed.

I’d apologize to my husband, but he knows exactly why I laughed. He is 100% his own person, right down to his goofy sense of humour (which is what I was thinking about in that moment), and I’d never try to change him.

It was a good moment.

We have a lot of totally amazing photos from our wedding but because of that moment, when prompted to pick my favourite wedding picture, I chose this one:

That ability to laugh got us back up the aisle (no tissue required) and played a big part in where we are today. At the end of the month we’re celebrating our 7th anniversary, and we’ve only just begun.

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Because we all need more Muppets in our lives:

Linked up with Mommy of a Monster & Twins for:

On the Move: Guest Posting at Mama Wants This

A very dear friend of mine – Alison from Mama Wants This – is having a birthday this week and asked me to guest post at her place. I said yes, naturally, since she lives on the other side of the world from me and the most tangible gift I can give her is time for herself to celebrate.

And friendship, of course. And love. But she has those anyway, and not just on her birthday.

Happy birthday, Alison. I am so glad you’re in my life. xo

If you’re visiting from Alison’s, welcome.

Everyone else, please come and read my story about why I changed my birthday, and be sure to wish Alison a happy 35th!