Archive for the 'awake' Category



21
Nov

Legacy

We’re separating, which either means we’re resetting a bad cycle of anger and recrimination, we’re ending the marriage, we’re hanging on for dear life, or we’re merely hedging against inevitable divorce. The meaning and implications vary from minute to minute. The only clear thing is keeping life as regular and predictable for the three girls as possible, keeping them busy with school, and their familiar surroundings, and apart from the turmoil in our relationship.

There is no question in my mind this arrangement has long since become a source of familial anxiety and untenable stress. Add to that new sobriety and the usual challenges of raising three young children, and the family pot is boiling over, burning, and setting off screaming fire alarms.

Should our marriage ever recover from this and our family reconvene, it will be a heartening and inspiring story. It will give people power over their sense of futility and courage in the face of doubt.

But right now we have no such story.

B will leave for awhile, still seeing the girls regularly. I will stay with them in our house, which is warm and safe in the winter, spacious and light with pretty colors and double-paned windows.

I’ll watch them run around the kitchen island, the familiar pattern tracing an invisible path on the silly fussy hardwood floors. We’ll talk over the matters concerning 5 year olds at breakfast — the Christmas play, whether the tooth fairy will leave another $2, what they want for their birthday — and I’ll look at them closely and see this time as a flicker that I cannot grasp or cling to but merely watch float by, already gone. If I close my eyes and open them, they’ll be beautiful laughing 16 year olds rolling eyes and avoiding my presence, but knowing I’m there. They’ll talk on the phone, they’ll argue about curfew, they’ll treat me like beloved wallpaper.

But will they love themselves? Will they feel that they’re beloved? When I look at their sweet faces with small traces of their babyhood still visible around the soft chins and chubby hands, I can see that this is the most important thing I’ll ever do. That failure here will haunt me. I have been given these amazing girls.

What riches!

And how would someone treat such a gift…

I’ve so often joked and pattered on about the problems and challenges of parenting… the drag of it all. But in the last weeks, I really understand that all that hip chat is hiding the essential truth of my life today. I love my daughters more than myself. More than my husband. More than life.

But it is also true that I am completely blinded by the instinct to protect and could be overreacting and using this as an exit strategy for a marriage about which I’ve had ambivalent and negative feelings for a long long time.

Whether this is courage or folly will be revealed…

#44

17
Nov

Custodial Parent

I share joint custody of the twins with their father and his lovely wife. Ours is not a particularly unusual arrangement these days. Though B and I have the twins most of the time (they go to their dad’s every other weekend), it’s a little like having a back-up team. When our team flags, they come in for relief and advice and perspective. We all share love and concern for the twins and as a group make quite a successful parental pod. I won’t deny that having a grillion parents and grandparents and two homes must at times get confusing for the twins, and the long-term impacts of this arrangement have yet to be seen. But even with that, I’m convinced the girls are lucky because they have so many people (legions!) who love and cherish them.

When I married B 3 1/2 years ago, I longed for a happy ending. A safe and loving home for my daughters and myself. I was partly making up for what I saw then as their deficient life — one with a single mama and a single (at the time) daddy, who were still angry at each other and unable to put them first. I was searching for a port in the storm and I found one. For awhile.

My mistakes this go-round have been many and grave. The biggest one being not recognizing that my neglect and abuse of the marriage would ultimately doom it to rocky shoals.

This doesn’t justify the manner in which the twins have become recipients of marital frustration. Not. One. Bit. Children are innocent and need protection, care, and love, regardless of how low down and struggling we feel.

I will pay, have paid, for my mistakes…but not today.

Today I have a reprieve and am feeling serenity and gratitude my daughters and I have a loving extended family, a home, a port in the storm no matter what happens.

It comes with us now, wherever we go.

#39

13
Nov

Art

In the end, reading, writing, looking at art, listening to music is a kind of Rorschach Blot test… What we see and interpret and find there is a reflection of what we bring to the matter. Those instances of revelation that occur are such a gift because they give us pause. An opportunity to laugh, smile, cry along with the writer, painter, musician .. Like a hand reaching out across our solitude, we are comforted and led to a deeper place.

A little while ago, I cut back my blog reading to a handful, both from a desire for simplicity and also because I’d rather follow a few stories closely. I like to know what is going on with her family, his Londoner life, anything she has to say

Joanne’s blog is simply incisive and well-written. She is lovely in person (and can fit in my pocket), and also has generously given me this award..

[BloggingHitsTheMark.jpg]

I’d like to pass it along to Jenn at I Serve the Queens. Her writing always gives me chills… And I find something richer and deeper with each read… It is art.
**

On a lighter note, holiday fun at Rugrat Reprieve

#35

09
Nov

Flush

coins.jpgI received my 30 day coin the other day –to signify that I’ve gone 30 continuous days without drinking even one eensy sip of wine. It took a long grueling time to get to this point and several slips.. but I have the coin and I’ve been carrying it around and feeling proud.

It’s been a strange thing to try and write about — my daily attendance at AA meetings, my cravings, and longings, and dreams about drinking. Hard to believe I ever thought it was just a little evening ritual. Strange because at a very deep level it seems to have almost more to do with waking up, opening my heart back up, looking around and taking stock, than not drinking.

We fall asleep as the days go by… caught up in all of the daily busyness and go-round of meals and work and laundry and children. Some are incredibly lucky (or have naturally occurring seratonin) and can somehow manage to feel joyous and happy and grateful and awake. For most of us, I think it takes some sort of regular spiritual exercise.. some demonstration or daily reminder that life is short… what we have to give others is precious and unique. And that dropping out, zoning out, killing ourselves off bit by bit so that we’ll be passable, sale-able, acceptable to the adults around us is a huge mistake. A mistake for which many of us will pay dearly.

In the end it’s the amazing experience, often completely shockingly horrid, often lovely, of waking up… that has left me speechless and stunned. Every day there are moments I feel like a person who’s dived into icy ocean waters and the tingling skin and cold in my eyes is so close to unbearable I cannot tell if it’s pain or pleasure. But it is absolutely real.

But the scary part is I hadn’t grasped how asleep — dead to the world, really - I had become. And just think of all of the ways we have to shut down, tune out — it’s unspeakably easy to eat it all, watch it all, drip it all, drink it all away…

Our Deepest Fear

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate,

Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure,

It is our light not darkness that most frightens us,

We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented and fabulous?

Actually, who are you not to be?

….

-Nelson Mandela

#31

05
Nov

Girls, Girls, Girls

This weekend my girl D and I drove to Vancouver B.C., cosmo town for cosmo girls, for a few nights away… We talked, we spa-ed, we shopped, we ate (especially me), and we did not drink.  The concept of vacationing without drinking seem(ed) completely ridiculous until recently, but it really worked out pretty well.

I fantasized about red high heel boots and enjoyed looking around immensely but did not buy anything but books…

red-boots.jpg

Me and the puddins were happily reunited Sunday evening over lasagna, oatmeal, salad, and toast… and I’m reminded of how lucky I am to be the mama in this house..

Day #27

29
Oct

We Have Good Genes

I’m braving the world of cardboard, patience, and sugar-infused gratitude and have agreed (in a mumbly way) to make my adorable twin daughters Halloween costumes this year –because they are unfortunately of an age where I can’t just whip out last year’s Costco specials and convince them it’s all new again. Little buggers are getting smarter every day … while I appear to be losing braincells and beauty faster than a varnish-eating reptile.

Since all the costumes I can (theoretically) put together revolve around cardboard boxes, glue, and sharp kid-dangerous cutters, our options are somewhat limited to square things. To wit: robot, candy machine girl, square pumpkin, rabbit (also square). Won’t this be a delight?

I could drive over the Costco and spend $60 on 2 ladybugs and call it good, but this year I want something more. I want them to experience the fun and goofy frivolity associated with failed home craft projects. It’s in their genes, they might as well get used to it.

Besides, the glorious forgiveness and imagination of our children is absolutely the best reason to procreate in the first place… Stay tuned…

***
Want to write for Strollerderby? Here’s how

15
Oct

Ode to Carol Gotbaum…

Carol Gotbaum’s story is a tragic one… She was mother to three children under 7 who suffered from severe depression and alcoholism… While on her way to a residential treatment center in Arizona, she died while in airport police custody.

Judith Warner’s NY Times blog looks at the lack of kindness and understanding showed to Carol during the last hours of her life… And I heartily agree that her death was completely preventable…

However, I think what was lacking was an understanding of her desperation… a desperation some of us feel occasionally (to a greater or lesser degree)… which culminated in her untimely death..

More about Carol here

This one’s for you Carol (and all of us taking the long way)

05
Oct

Smells Like Complacency…

So he sat there and talked about his 30 years of sobriety.. the dark days and the dangers of complacency or “resting on your laurels” and the guy next to him (clearly drunk) interrupts and caterwauls loudly: “yethhhh ithhhhhh goood to remember not to retht….” and the subject being “complacency” the older gentleman (who had been speaking) leans over to the guy and says “Pal. I’m glad you’re here, but YOU smell like complacency to me.”

****

Strollerderby has been going through some growing pains of late, but I feel like we’re settling into a good routine. As usual, I’m completely inspired by the talent of my fellow writers… This summarizes some of the funniest pieces from last week. Thanks to Jessica, I’ve realized black latex leggings are the new MomJeans….Meowwwwww!!

#18

26
Sep

Clearly Now…

As the fog lifts, I’m amazed at what I’ve missed. Even with my self-described harmless evening drinking ritual (that hadn’t yet resulted in DUIs, lost jobs, children, or marriages) I was checked out every day between about 5pm (ok 4pm) and 9 or 10pm. I was coping, so I thought.. I was relaxing, doing something for myself, giving myself a reward for all the day’s hard work. And who would have argued with that? Three kids under 6, two jobs, life as an angsty cheerleader. I deserved those drinks.

What I hadn’t realized is that I (and so many like me) deserve so much more than a zombified state at the end of a long day… that to be checked out is a very poor substitute for truly replenishing soul-feeding activities (time with real live girlfriends, reading, warm sweet-scented baths).

There’s a long way to go… a daily struggle to avoid that first drink to oblivion, but I’m seeing things I haven’t seen in awhile. Colors, textures, multi-dimensional aspects to each day that are exultant and joyous (and of course also heartbreaking and sorrowful). The world is bigger, deeper, wider, than I’d let myself see for so long.

And it’s good. Today it’s good.

#9

—-

Over at Babble today I’ve weighed in on the Great FlickR/Babble Fiasco of 2007



Get Red





StumbleUpon My StumbleUpon Page