May 102013
 

I'm spring cleaning this week.  Something I do every, say, four or five years.  Actually I saw an episode of Hoarders on the Discovery Channel and it freaked me out.  I swear I saw things I owned in this woman's house and then I thought, "she sort of looks like me.  She sort of sounds like me.  Oh my God, it could be me.  I could be in an alternate universe right now, seeing my future." Spring cleaning began.  I started to pile stuff in every room.  Shoes? who needs them.  Whose clothes are those? Don't know, out they go.  Why do we have two office chairs and I don't care that we have two desks we only use one at a time.

I didn't care what it was, if I didn't use it, didn't think it was going to be used, didn't like the look of it, didn't know whose it was, didn't know where to put it or where it belonged, it went straight to a pile.  I was manic.  No way was someone going to put me on a TV show for some kind of hoarding intervention and believe me, sometimes I think my family would like to have me committed.

Then, David and the girls came home.  There was gasping.  There was crying.  There was digging.  At some point I seem to remember having tug of wars with different members of the family and myself.

"Dad, please tell her it's mine.  I want to keep it.  Please Dad."

"No, we're hoarders I tell you, hoarders.  Give it up."

"Please Dad, help, that's my Biology Book (who am I kidding?  I would never throw away a book), that's my swimming medal."

"Oh my god, that's the music box papa gave me."

"Honey, you can't throw away my shoes, I need them for work."

"NO you don't! You have one pair on your feet now."

"My guitar, mom, my guitar? Have you lost your mind?"

"I haven't heard you play it in a year, or a month, or a week.  I don't know.  You don't need it.  It's taking up space."

"Honey, put the guitar down, come on, put it down.  You can do it.  That's it.  Just put the guitar down."

By this time, the girls were a sobbing mess, desperately digging through piles like seagulls at MacDonalds.  I'm throwing things back as fast as they are taking them out.  I'm on a mission now.  There is no stopping me.  Hysterical laughter is bubbling up from my gut.  My mind is on a repeating tape.  "I'm not going to be on Hoarders.  I'll show them.  I'm not going to be on Hoarders.  I'll show them."

Suddenly, my head comes up.  I sniff the air.  Is that blood in the air? or perhaps a video game? maybe another desk chair? or that extra vaccum cleaner?

Like a rabid dog, I follow the smell, salivating, pupils dilating.  Oh ecstasy, another thing I can throw in a pile.  Merciful god, my heart is going to burst with satisfaction.

At that moment, David appears before me with a huge smile on his face.  He's holding a vodka martini.  A vodka martini.  The essence of vodka swirls around my head.  He gently brings the glass closer to my face so the scent can waft up through my nostrils.  I close my eyes and began to sway.

"Come on, honey, follow the vodka.  Can't you just feel the crispness on your tongue?  Come with me and I'll give you the nice martini.  You can sit in your favorite chair.   - Girls, get your mom's favorite chair out of that pile in the living room. -  That's it.  Be a good girl."

I sat down and David handed me the glass.  For a couple of minutes, I just sat, my body in harmony with vodka martini.  Then I took a sip.  Oh, pure, sweet, heaven.  I slump back in my favorite chair.  My mind at rest.  My body at peace.  All is right with the world.  I've done a good thing today.  I've cleaned out our house.  I'll never be on Hoarders.  My family understands me.

Of course, they put everything back and no one has mentioned it since.

They did let me put away all their winter clothes though.  That was nice of them, don't you think?

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 Posted by at 6:24 pm
May 062013
 

I'm 50. I finally have the time to pursue the dreams and passions I've tucked away for so long.  Both daughters seem to be finding their way in the world, slowly but surely.  One is working full time.  Both are back in school, preparing, albeit like turtles to leave the nest.

The problem is I'm not sure what I want to do.  What dreams I want to pursue.  What passions have grabbed at my heart.  You would think I would know that wouldn't you?  But I really don't.

I spent my 20's working through college, graduating and deciding whatever I had majored in wasn't what I really wanted to do.  So I changed direction, started looking, tried something new.  Then I met David and life stopped for awhile.  I was married and spending my time trying to figure out how to be married.  David was in the military and by sheer fact, my needs came second.  The military is a demanding mistress.  It didn't bother me that I spent so much time in a supportive role.  I still was trying to find my own way.  Being the touchstone for David gave me time to think my prospects through.  Although I will admit, you don't do very much thinking in your twenties.  You spend time being anxious, demanding, obtuse, thinking you are a visionary.  As for me, I'm not sure what vision I was aiming for but looking back at pictures whatever it was, didn't work.

Then, along came the thirties and with it children.  David and I were both firm believers that the decision to have children meant that everything took second place to their well being  and childhood.  I chose to stay home.  With David's support, I chose to homeschool both daughters.  I tried to create the perfect environment for their growth.  I was the nurturer.  At the same time, David was sailing through his career.  We were moving.  Supporting him and his needs.  I have no regrets in any decision I made at that time.  It just meant that I wasn't taking the time to think about my singular, individual passions or my path.  The girls were my passion.  David was my passion.  Making a home was my passion.  Schooling was my passion.

The forties were spent preparing two young women for their entrance into the world.  It was also a season of winter for our family.  We had many trials to overcome.  Parents to mourn.  Teenagers to guide.  David retired and set off on a new career.  Another, almost as demanding as the first.  But, we did lay down roots.  We stayed in one place.  We found the home that the girls will always remember as the house where their lives took place.  But still I didn't have the time to sit down and think, "What is my passion?  What meaning do I want to have in my life? What road do my feet ache to follow?"

Time wasn't available for me to nurture those thoughts, to follow them through.  Teenagers took more time than little ones did.  I became a counselor, a taxi driver, a girl scout leader, a swim team mom, and a crew mom among other "positions".  I was still home schooling and teaching on the side - my degree, funny how life works -.  Then in a blink of an eye, I turned 50.  My children were grown and I was looking at the rest of my lifetime, fairly clueless, as to what I wanted to do with the years ahead of me.

What was the point of all my meditation on the past 50  years?

Emma asked me, "how did I know what I was passionate about? How did I know which dream to pursue?"  I really had to think about her questions.  The truth is, I didn't know.  They changed with each decade.  Whatever demanded my time and energy I found a way to be passionate about.  My life dictated where I was in the pursuit of my own personal dreams.

Now, mind you, I wouldn't change a thing.  I gave up a career for my daughters and to follow my husband around as he was transferred.  Those years are precious to me. I may not have chosen them.  They may have been chosen for me but I wouldn't change them in any way.

- with the exception of living in Florida.  I hate Florida.  I should of put my foot down on that move. -

I told Emma, "I'm not a "lean in" personality.  I don't believe you can have it all, exactly when you want it."

Life is more like a puzzle. You have a piece at a time and your job is to enjoy each piece for what it offers and what it brings to the overall picture of your life.

But now the time has come for me to choose my own pieces of the puzzle, in the order that I would like to see the puzzle finished.  It's a heady sense of power and one I'm not really used to being given.

All I know for certain is I'm excited and exhilarated over the prospect of choosing from so many pieces.  Do I know where to start?  No, I don't.  But start I will.

If you have any suggestions, throw them at me.  I'm willing to look at anything.  50 - what a wonderful turning point in life.  No ideas yet, but I know it will be my choices, my decisions and so ultimately my own personal passions.

The rest of my life, what an exciting proposition.

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 Posted by at 3:03 pm
Apr 222013
 

I'm going to tell you a story.  You will gasp.  You might shriek.  You'll wonder if you really did know me after all or my girls (for those of you who do actually know us).  If you don't know us, you won't want to but then, really, I can't feel bad.  I have enough trouble finding time to clean my bathrooms so I don't think you'd want me for a friend anyway.

One day, a wonderful, loving mother, was driving down the road with her two little, adorable, blond daughters.
She homeschooled.  She was a Girl Scout leader.  She was a Sunday School teacher.  She wasn't young and inexperienced.  She had a mini-van.
She sang to her children.
She read books to her children.

She did crafts with her children.

She believed in car seats, and bike helmets.

She did tend to lose the little one but that's a multiple layered story for another time. (and don't think she ever lets me forget it).
The children's clothes matched, always, even the shoes.

They took road trips, visited museums and historical sites.

Washington D.C.
Yorktown
Monticello

They even had a family bed.

On that particular day, as they were driving down the road, having spent a wonderful afternoon at the beach, the fabulous mother asked her beautiful children what they wanted to be when they grew up.  It was really a conversation starter because the fabulous mother loved talking to her children.

If you're throwing up right now, just stop it and pay attention to the story.

The lovely, but very tall, 6 year old said, "I'm going to be a singing cowboy and wear a cowboy hat and go around the world singing and telling people about Jesus."

We stood in line for an hour and a half but it's Virginia.  We were a (cough, little vomit, rolling eyes) swing state.

We stood in line for an hour and a half but it's Virginia. We were a (cough, little vomit, rolling eyes) swing state.

 

The fabulous mother's heart melted.  What an incredible parent she was to have raised such a loving, giving, child.

"Well, Emma" the mother said, "What about you?".  Her expectations were not high since the little girl was only three.  She was the cutest thing you have ever seen, tiny, tiny, with white blond hair and big brown eyes.  "Do you know what you want to be?  A fireman maybe, or a teacher, or maybe a doctor, or a missionary? or maybe, (big sigh) a mommy?"

Little Emma Grace, strapped in her car seat, looked her mommy straight in the eye (through the rear view mirror.  Keep your eyes on the road at all times.  This mommy was a good driver and has since been hit a by a car driven by a man not looking at the road!!) and said...,

"When I grow up," in a clear lilting, tiny voice, "I want to kill people."

Maybe I should of been paying attention

Yes, you read it right.  It's the truth.  I'm not making it up.
I do believe this is parenting at it's best.  The fact that I, the mommy, didn't run off the road, didn't immediately hand the child over to someone else to raise, didn't lock her door at night when she went to bed.  She just replied, kind of in a strangled, dear God did I hear right?, sort of voice, "That's nice sweetpea."

Conversation ended.  The not so fabulous mommy, continued to drive home, where she put the beautiful little girls in a warm bath, found a bottle of Vodka, and fell on her bed face first.
The moral of this story is..., the mommy gave up "parenting" and from that point on just tried to make it through the day and hope that she didn't wake up one night with little Emma staring at her.

Been this child's Girl Scout Leader - for - like - forever.  That's her Silver Award.

Susan, whose two best friends are her daughters Bonnie and Emma.  They make her laugh, dance, growl, scream, giggle, run, become a shrew and generally thank the heavens that she got the opportunity to know them.

The stars in my sky and the greatest joy of my life.

The stars in my sky and the greatest joy of my life.

p.s. This is the same child who is a vegetarian.  Figure that one out.

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 Posted by at 5:31 pm