Life Lessons for the Tired and Lazy

And now for something completely different…

This week has been good, and today has been good, but I hit the burn-out point at about 6:04 tonight.

I’ve been sick for a week now and I’m tired because I stayed up too late last night supporting charitable causes saving the environment playing on the Interweb, and then my darling child got me up during the night and then woke for good at 6 a.m. So it’s Friday night and I sort of have my crankypants on (fleecy pajama ones because I don’t care what the calendar says, it’s not summer!). But I’m in luck – Rach and Sara have a link-up where I can rant share what I’ve learned this week. Which happens to all be stuff I already know but maybe if I write it down I’ll actually learn the lessons instead of continually repeating them.

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  1. When I’m sick I need to either sleep or get up and have a shower. Spending half the day in my pajamas actually doesn’t make me feel better.
  2. Staying up late and thinking it’s fine because I don’t have to work and can nap the next day is dumb. Because I don’t nap. So I just end up tired.
  3. I tend to run out of patience a little faster – okay, pretty much immediately – when I’m tired.
  4. I need to find some sort of toilet paper tracking system so we don’t keep having Toilet Paper Emergencies, which result in raiding the house for Kleenex boxes and late-night trips to the store.
  5. I should not take my dog for a walk wearing plastic flip-flops. I’ve done this before and got blisters. I did it again today and have blisters and really sore feet (see above reference to crankypants).
  6. Even when I don’t feel like it, I should pay my child sufficient attention because if I don’t it inevitably results in him throwing things around the room and then tackling me bodily and that, surprisingly, doesn’t make me any more cheerful.

And with that, at 7:49 on a Friday evening, I bid you good night. I’ll probably be asleep before 9, which is a good thing because I have the small boy on my own for most of the day tomorrow for the first time in a really long time so, you know, being tired would be a bad thing.

Wish me luck.

Turn the Page

Yesterday I turned a page in the book that is my life.

It has felt, at times, as though this book was ripped from my hands and tossed carelessly aside, with no regard for its protective cover and certainly no respect for its contents.

I’ve watched, helpless, as the wind blasted through and whipped the pages, tearing some and removing others entirely.

I’ve set it aside, hoping by some miracle that it will be intact when I next peek at it.

I’ve tried to cover this book, to bind it, to patch its holes.

I’ve accepted it will not be the same book it once was.

I’ve given it to others, asking them to use their professional skills to mend it and make it stronger, better, beautiful again.

It’s bound now, but in pieces. Some parts of the spine were damaged in the process and will forever bear those scars. The pages are all there, though perhaps not in quite the right order. Some are tear-stained. Some reveal the evidence of having been torn out, crumpled, and then rescued and returned to their place in the tale as acceptance of what is.

This book that is my life is still my book and it still contains my story. A different story than what I set out to create, but it’s still mine – accepted and embraced – and I will no longer allow others to dictate the chapters to come.

I’ve turned the page.

***

Yesterday, after three years of struggling with postpartum depression and three months of being off work, I stopped waiting – hoping – for others to write the story for me. Because I wasn’t happy with how the plot was developing.

I want to rant about how medical professionals are supposed to listen to you, keep you informed and allow you to advocate for yourself. I want to rail against another’s perception of me that is entirely untrue, and made worse because it is uninformed. I want to counter each one of those untruths and say, See? This is what I’ve done to make myself better. This is who I am.

But I won’t. Because it’s risky and because it doesn’t matter and because I am in charge of my story again.

Yesterday I released the pause button. I saw my therapist and got validation from someone who has been with me on this path for nearly eight months. I decided, firmly this time, not to work with a doctor who is making things worse instead of better. I went instead to my family doctor, who listened and actually heard me. She saw me for who I am and what I need even though her absences from her practice have meant she hasn’t been as involved in my care.

I stated what I want to do, I listened to her advice and we – together – decided on next steps.

She made me feel it’s not just me.

She gave me options.

She gave me trust in myself and faith in the possibility of what might come next.

She looked at my son and said, “He’s perfect.”

She told us, her questioning of it subtle but clear, that someone – a person who has never met our son – suggested we get him assessed. We emphatically said no. We – his parents – are not concerned that he needs to be “assessed”. He’s high energy and spirited and challenging at times. He’s also three. But yesterday he spent the better part of an hour in a small room, while his mom and dad talked with a doctor about something we all desperately need help with, calmly and patiently playing with a Mr. Potato Head. He was amazing, and my mama heart was filled with pride and love for him.

I wanted to take that evidence and show this…person who my son is. He was amazing. He is amazing [and he just came into the room and brought me flowers ♥]. The fact that I find it hard to deal with him at times is my problem, not his. We are not going to make this about him.

In my book, yesterday’s story is about getting the right help. It’s about people who listen. It’s about finally getting someone to say, yes, you can go back to work and trusting that I know whether I am well enough. It’s about my husband who sat next to me, supporting me while I talked (almost) without crying, and then took us out for ice cream afterwards.

And it’s about a little boy, for whom I have so much love it makes even the hard parts of my story worth it and who makes me feel that maybe – just maybe – I’m ready to do it again.

As for tomorrow, the page is still blank. The rest is unwritten. But I hold the pen.

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Things I Like About Me

The lists are appearing everywhere – in one friend’s blog, then another, then another. “Things I Like About Me.”

It’s a link-up hosted by Elena at Ciao Mom, who I first met when I told my Reclaiming Me story.

I think this is a great idea. We need to acknowledge the good things about ourselves – the things we like, and that make us who we are. And doing it out loud is even better.

I’ll admit when I first saw this I thought it would be a pretty easy list for me to make. Despite a blog full of evidence to the contrary, I’m okay with who I am (and here’s where I give credit to my parents). I have my faults and things I would change, just like everyone does, and I’m not perfect 😉 but I do generally like me.

So I’ve been thinking for a couple of days about what I would include on this list. Some things come easily to mind, but I want to include the things that have made my particular struggle so hard and that I’ve learned to embrace about myself. So with that introduction here is my list of things I like about me:

  1.  Damn, this is harder than I thought. That’s what I get for being cocky.

Take 2:

  1. I like that I’ve found the strength to be open about my experience with postpartum depression. That has been really empowering.
  2. I like that even though this whole journey has been a gigantic pile of crap, to put it mildly, I am finding meaning and purpose in it.
  3. I like that I have big dreams and I’m brave enough and confident enough to pursue them, even if that’s not the usual path and what I “should” do.
  4. I like that in my professional career I have never taken a job and just done what’s expected. I’ve always aimed to do more and do better and I think it’s something that’s just in me – I never realized it until I looked back on years of this pattern.
  5. I like my writing style. After 7 months of an onslaught of other voices in the blog world, I have stayed true to who I am and to my own voice. And I kept writing, even when some of the stuff was so personal I worried what people would think when they read it.
  6. I like that I’m a fatalist – I believe what’s meant to be will be. But I don’t just accept what happens (see: last 3 years of denial and stubbornness), I look for meaning in things because I believe it’s there and my life will be better if I keep learning.
  7. I like that I don’t hold grudges.
  8. I like that I am really, really good at being diplomatic when it’s necessary. Seriously, I rock at this.
  9. I like my eyes.
  10. I like that I can get totally into something and let it inspire me (see: horrible vlog about my obsession with birds).
  11. I like that one of the things I spend a lot of time thinking about is how to support others. I don’t always know how, and sometimes I can’t do it, but it’s hugely important to me. If I can find a way to do that and make money, I’ll be set and happy for life.
  12. I like that I’ve kept running, even though it was brutally hard in the beginning and I thought I was going to die when I ran my first 10k. And two months after I had a really bad training stint where I could have given up I decided not to and instead trained for (and ran) a half marathon. And then two more back to back.
  13. I like that in many circles I’m known for my love of chocolate.
  14. I like that I can say “I love you” to people I’ve never met and mean it.

Camping, Rectified

When dinosaur camp was confused with camping, there was disappointment on a small boy’s face.

That has now been rectified.

It started with backyard camping to see how things would go.

The tent was set up. The camping chairs were brought out. The appropriate sticks were acquired and fashioned for optimum roasting.

No time was wasted in getting those hot dogs over the charcoals. (The deck was only set on fire a little bit.)

The toddler roasted his own (and did a fine job, too).

Of course cooked hot dogs are no good, so you give that one to your mother and then you eat one raw. And then another. Then it’s time for s’mores. And another (raw) hot dog.

Whew. All that camping practice is exhausting.

Even the dog thought so.

And that was mama’s cue to go inside and sleep in her own bed. 😉

Result: Camping practice a success! On to the real thing.

Camping must-haves, according to a three-year-old: boots.

(Camping is thirsty work, apparently.)

And then a happy discovery: flush toilets!

Grandpa and Grandma came out for the marshmallows.

A bit of tossing and turning in the night, and the bacon was forgotten at home, but he made the best of the breakfast hour.

Overall result: one happy camper.

 

Uncool

You know what I love about blogging? It’s making me rich. Not in money – the currency is love, friendship, and community.

Some of you have already rolled your eyes and closed this tab. The rest of you know what I’m talking about.

My life has been enriched since I started blogging. Here, it doesn’t matter who I am. It doesn’t matter what I do, or what kind of a car I drive or how pretty I am. What matters is what I share.

Everyone feels uncool sometimes. Yes, everyone. Think of the most popular girl in high school (was that you?) and I guarantee she was insecure about something. Or maybe a lot of things. Perhaps even a lot of the time.

Ironically, blogging can sometimes make us feel especially uncool. We succumb, at times, and measure our worth in visits, clicks, comments and re-tweets. We follow our Google Friend Connect numbers like they’re our bank accounts – waiting, begging, praying for them to go up. We want people to “like” us, on Facebook, but in general as well.

It’s the curse of the blogger and I’ve seen many post about their blogging insecurities, only to be assured that, yes, their blogs are great. Their writing is great. They are great. Which is great. Sometimes it’s nice to be reminded of these things by someone other than your mother.

Coincidentally, three of the leaders in my PPD community have recently posted about popularity in blogging. Lauren from My Postpartum Voice wrote about her Klout score. Katherine from Postpartum Progress and Yael from PPD to Joy both wrote about popularity as a result of the Circle of Moms contest for the top 25 mental health blogs. (If you read Yael’s post, you’ll see where the inspiration for this post came from.)

I think Klout is probably bunk, but when people award me Klout points I appreciate it, not because it affects my score, which I care nothing about, but because I take it as a compliment.

I was nominated in that Circle of Moms contest – another compliment – and ended up at number 10. I’m grateful for what it will do to raise awareness about postpartum depression, but I have no illusions about what it means for me – it was a contest that allowed a vote a day, which is hardly a valid measure of the top anything. Some of the ones that came in below me are more established, more authoritative, more lots-of-things blogs.

So no, those things don’t mean I’m cool. I’m not cool. In high school I wasn’t popular but I wasn’t an outcast either. I was just me, and I’m glad of that now.

Now I don’t worry (very much) about being cool. I don’t fuss about what I wear around my more fashionable friends. I don’t look at the moms who seem put together and totally with it and feel inadequate, because I know they have bad days just like the rest of us. My taste in music probably resembles a 16-year-old girl’s more than a 36-year-old mom’s, but I don’t care. It makes me happy.

Instead of worrying about whether I’m cool, I try to relish the relationships I have. What matters to me is that people like you show me that what I share with others matters.

“The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you’re uncool.” – Lester Bangs in Almost Famous