Wednesday, August 29, 2007
I Have No One to Tell
It was a rough moment but I quickly got over it and thought - just sharing with myself should be good enough - am I doing this for these other people - no. Who then am I acheiving this for? Me and my daughter - so we both can have a brighter future. When I picked her up I told her my news. She said "That's good Mom" and that was it.
I briefly thought of another alone moment a few months back that I was proud of an alone moment that I thought would be tough but I got through just fine. Christmas Eve - putting the presents under the tree alone - when I finished and looked at the offering of gifts - I realized how hard it was the first time to do that by myself - this past Christmas I realized I was going to be okay and I am now - even if I have no one to tell of my triumphs or my disappointments in life. I'm going to be okay.
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
10 Chick Flick Movies I Love!
1. When Harry Met Sally - After watching this movie - I was gone! Sally was my hero - embarrassingly I even dressed like her and sported a similar hat for years to come and struggled not to be high maintenance when I thought I was low maintenance.Fave quote-Harry Burns: I came here tonight because when you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible.
2. Valley Girl - This was a chick flick but I didn't know it yet. I had never seen anything like it - I was kind of into punk and had visited one of my best friends in California and saw real Valley Girls and Boys up, close and personal. "I'll Melt With You" by Modern English will forever take me back to fall of 1983 when I met Chris for the first time.Fave quote - Fred Bailey: [introducing himself to Julie and Stacey] Hi, I'm Fred. I like tacos and '71 Cabernet. My favorite color is magenta.
3. Gone With the Wind - This movie strikes at the heart of every girl and what it means to be Southern and a Southern belle at that. And always the Cause. In hind site I see I have followed in Scarlett's path and pined for years for a man who will never be in my grasp again and I've got to wake up and let him go once and for all before I miss out on some other special person. I love this scene because Scarlett wants to dance so bad and throws care to the wind that she should be in mourning.
Fave quote-Scarlett: Great balls of fire. Don't bother me anymore, and don't call me sugar.
4. Out of Africa - This movie told the story of an independent and powerful woman in her own right who fell in love with a great adventurer who would never put his love for freedom above her. The scene where Denys washes Karen's hair took my breath away - it was a necessity but such an intimate gesture. Oh to be loved and touched like that.
Fave quote-Karen Blixen: He even took the gramophone on safari. Three rifles, supplies for a month, and Mozart.
5. Proof of Life - Your husband gets kidnapped in a foreign country and Russell Crowe comes to save him. OMG - Forever cemented the fact that - yes, I want to have Russell Crow's love child. Based on a true story that ran in Vanity Fair, this story is beautifully shot amidst lush scenery and combines a chick flick with a tough guy, shoot-em up story. It also marked the return of David Caruso in a role that brought him back from obscurity.Fave quotes-Alice Bowman: Just tell me you know how much you mean to me. Dino: Downtown One, what the f*ck was that?
6. Serendipity - This is really a buddy film/chick flick - where two guys are doing the same crazy things that two girlfriends would do to track down a lost love. I was hooked the moment John Cusack pointed out the constellation in Kate Beckinsale's freckles. This movie almost inspired me to read Love in the Time of Cholera.Fave quotes-Dean [Lying on the grass with Jonathan, outside Sara's house] Maybe we're lying here because you don't wanna be standing somewhere else.
Saturday, July 28, 2007
Looking for Mr. (W)right
This past weekend my grandmother's roommate passed on to the positive side of heaven and earth. It was sad to visit last night and notice how empty and still it was on her side of the room. The experience left my grandmother shaken and confused. When I arrived my grandmother was looking for her mother. I stayed with her a little longer than usual and even crawled into her bed and laid down with her. I hugged on her, loved on her and spoke in her ear to try and give her (and myself) some comfort.My mom visits my grandmother every day. My sister comes from out of town and stays for weeks and spends entire days with her. My daughter and I visit her every Saturday and Sunday. We try to go for Bingo when she feels like playing or afternoon church services on Sunday.
Thursday, July 26, 2007
Monday, July 16, 2007
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Viva Las Vegas, Part I
Yes, I actually heard this song in Vegas - how appropro I thought as I walked towards the dancing waters of the Bellagio Resort and Casino - Elvis sang me over the pedistrian bridge while the mist of the water cooled the stiff, hot night air.One of my resolutions for the year 2007 was to go to Vegas for my 40th birthday. My new BFF Tiffany helped to not only make this a reality, but a great trip. We didn't get wild. We didn't dance on any tables. However, two moms disappeared in the desert for a few days, emerged on the strip and stayed up all night and slept all day. We didn't have to cook dinner (we only ate two meals while we were out there), wash clothes and didn't have to take care of anyone but ourselves. It was a great escape with a great friend and a great way to celebrate turning 40.
Our trip began with teary daughters not wanting to send their moms off without them - it tugged at both of our hearts and for me, it was especially hard - I had never left my daughter to go on a trip - for me - without her. Heartstrings were taut with guilt and having to let go a little. But we put on our shades and drove towards BNA.
The plane ride was LONNGGG but we met Vicky from Virginia - who spilled Jack Daniels on her jeans three rows back - and we heard about it all across the Midwest skies. Her husband was "invited" to a poker tournament in Vegas - he was a "professional poker player" (aren't they all) while Vicky supports them working in the E.R. at a Richmond hospital. She found out 1) it was my birthday and 2) I was the only other person drinking on the way to McCarran and then 3) a Crown and Coke arrived courtesy of the poker playing house-husband. When I looked back to thank them - they were making out - Grosser than Gross! We promised we would look her up at Harrah's (yeah right) and glimpsed the lights from the Las Vegas strip from our window to the world on the plane.
The first thing we saw after we hopped off the plane were slot machines in the gate area of the airport. It was a surreal experience. The luggage area was a trip - the huge ads for the Aussie "Thunder From Down Under" greeted us not to be confused with the Outback Steakhouse dessert of the same name (except it's chocolate-enough said!)...
.Tuesday, June 19, 2007
South on Hillsboro Road
I turned to my mother for refuge and we moved in with her for a brief time. To get to her house was a one shot deal south down Hillsboro Road. I would drive out of the Vanderbilt enclave, cross I-440, run the gauntlet of traffic through afternoon rush hour of Green Hills, meander through Forest Hills and make a brief appearance in Brentwood as I crossed Old Hickory Blvd. Passing the Forest Hills Baptist Church meant I was almost home free from all the issues chasing me. So many times I would pass the sign marking the Williamson County line and I would breathe a sigh of relief, I could escape into the lush, green hills of forest and fields and no one could find me.
Her neighborhood felt safe for me and I would retreat upstairs to the second floor and just "be" in one of her two guest rooms. I did this for months. We slowly began getting back out in the world, but I never ventured far from this radius off Hillsboro Road.
After a few months passed we moved to another area for a brief period of time - this time to the neighborhood I had grown up in. It still felt like home and I would do tours of the old high school stomping grounds, take my daughter to the park I used to play in and I rekindled some old friendships and visited with a lot of my friends' moms that I ran into in the grocery store. I even drove by the home of my high school sweetheart a time or two for the comfort it gave me. I came to realize that I had outgrown this part of town and moved on.
I quickly found my way back down Hillsboro and bought a home of my own and settled us in a spot close to my mom. At the close of each work day, I brighten when my commute takes me past the sign announcing my entry into Williamson County. I say my prayers regularly and give thanks for our safe home, school and "village" as my little one calls it. I rarely drive the interstates anymore - I have no reason to - going South on Hillsboro Road leads me to all the places I need to go - including the most important place - home.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Dad, Thanks for the Bird House
I can't avoid thinking of our dad when June rolls around - his birthday is this month and of course, the Father's Day golf and fishing displays, greeting card aisles and television commericals scream out out for notice in the weeks preceding both of these events. The past few weeks have made me wince when the event was brought to the surface. And not just because our father is no longer around to receive the obligatory card either.
In the past when I would read the verse on the cards, I resented that the lovey-dovey lines about the dad always there for you - words not applicable to the type of relationship we shared.
I always wanted to ask Hallmark if there is a card that says - "Hey dad, Mom did a helluva job raising us all by herself - we turned out great in spite of you being voluntarily absent from our home. Aren't you proud?? Happy Father's Day" ??? There are many other angry, bitter, and sarcastic questions that could easily be posed but I'll stop with this one - it all comes down to underscore this same point.
It wasn't until I became a parent that I realized the mistakes that parents make aren't on purpose - it's a learn as you go process. That life is full of decisions and you don't always make the right choice. As a parent your strengths and weaknesses seemed magnified in the eyes of your child - you would rather die than let them down - however, your child will overlook them just to be loved by you. Maybe our father thought his transgressions were so great that they were unforgivable.
On the other side - just to be in our father's presence meant the world to me - when he showed up for the birth of my daughter and came to see her after the surgery she had as an infant - his absences at my dance recitals, performances at football games, car wrecks, heartaches, awards night and even at my wedding were instantly forgiven.
Every time I make a mistake in a life choice that inadversely affects my daughter - I wish I would have had the chance to talk about this point with my dad as an adult, but I never reached that level in our relationship. I never had the chance because it was hard for me to talk to him without reverting back to that little girl afraid of her father and I would always break down and cry.
The night we came home from the hospital and stood over her on her changing table the enormity of the responsibility of having a child hit me like a seismic wave. My parents did this three times - oh my gosh - how did they do it?
Even though my father's absence in my life was hard to live with - I knew he was out there on the periphery - if I had a need - I think he would have come through for me. I kept telling myself because his father died when he was so young maybe he just didn't know how. He had to be father figure to his three sisters - when his three daughters came around - maybe he was just tired of it all and knew under the tutelage of our mother - that we would survive it somehow.
A few years before he died, I was walking in my backyard in Kingston Springs and I heard an unfamiliar noises - silent-like screams and peeps and little mini-hubbub going on. Hanging from a tree was a birdhouse he had given me and it was filled with the sounds of a young little family - three little birds ready to eat - waiting for their parents to come back to the nest. A beautiful blue-jay approached and warned me away (dive bombed me more like) - I quickly backed off as to not invade the sanctuary of their home and watched from our deck as the parents flew back and forth bringing sustenance to their little babies.
The birdhouse was one that he had built - one of the few gifts I had from him at my home - and I cherished it. I was thrilled that the birds had finally made a home in it, so I picked up the phone and called him and told him how fitting it was that the day was Father's Day - and the little bird family was literally thriving in a house. Just like my sisters and I thrived in the house built by our parents - the baby birds had shelter, they had food, they had love and protection -and they were gonna be just fine.
Monday, June 04, 2007
Not Ready for Swimsuit Season
I was recently pushed into the deep end of the dating pool by a beloved friend long before I was ready for it. After I pulled myself back out of the cold water - I realized that it was both surprising and fun to be pushed in and not only that I found that it was actually quite refreshing... . That first experience over and behind me, however, has led me to decide that wading in slowly is much, much better. Is anytime ever a good time to start back? Probably not. Am I ever going to be ready to pushed into the pool?I haven't done this in 15 years. And although I enjoyed my dating years when I was younger I don't know how to do this anymore. At this point in my life I always simply envisioned myself just being "mom" - my central and proudest role in life to date. Not "mom" going out on dates, giggling on the phone late at night, hoping to get an email in my inbox and daydreaming of where this could lead or even worse the terrible self-recrimination we put ourselves through and second guessing myself by secretly wishing I looked younger and was actually getting invited out on dates and should I be doing this at all?
So my first plunge - albeit shocking and exciting and a little letdown now that it is over before it really got started is behind me. I guess I'm kind of relieved.
I can still do this - the old chops are still there - however, it is not like riding a bike cliche - pick up where you left off ... and so I find myself feeling like an alien? Who is this person inside my skin? I don't know her. It feels "pizarre" as my little one would say. These feelings have lain dormant I now do not know what to do with them. Monday, May 28, 2007
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Lost and Found at the Met
I woke up, had a fabulous cup of coffee, borrowed a car and drove an hour over the NY state line to the MetroNorth Station in Katonah. The train station was the crossroads of the city ... quaint coffee shops, stationers, bistros, funky and expensive boutiques lined the picturesque town where Martha Stewart served her in-home sentence.
We whizzed through the city streets, I got tickled at the back
and forth video-like game the cabs played with each other. I tried to glimpse down corridors passing by in blur and see the neighborhood flavor but before I could take in too much we had arrived. I was deposited at the steps of the Met paid my fare and stepped out into the bright day. I quickly gobbled down a hot dog from a bona fide street vendor and had to make myself sit down and take it all in. I did it. I HAD arrived. I tried to look cool and not appear to be too dumb-founded and act like Gomer Pyle - well, Gol-ol-ly, I was in NEW YORK CITY (channeling both Gomer and the salsa commerical at the same time here).After fumbling around at the information desk and audio tour station, I made it to the Greek Gallery right away - I wanted time to enjoy the entire collection. I got chills seeing some of the pieces we had only viewed in various multimedia collections. The funerary vases from the Geometric period were so much larger in life than I had expected. The expressions on the grave steles were so somber and personal that up close. I loved wandering from piece to piece and marveling that the works of a stonemason lived on these many centuries past.
Finally, I saw the many images of the Greek Gods - Herakles, Aphrodite, and the mighty Zeus. I may as well climbed Mt. Olympus than the steps of the Met.
Ascending to the 2nd floor, I found myself viewing the 19th century & European collections. Matisse, Monet and Van Gogh - nothing compares to seeing them in person. I wandered back down in search of the elevator I kept appearing at the front of this gate in the Medieval collection...





The rooftop was particular exciting - seeing the West Side of Central Park stretch out across the vastness of the green space caused me to pause and realized I had never seen this part of NYC.I wandered a bit more - sometimes I would sit and look at the details - seeing Washington Cross the Delaware was impressive and I appreciated the art students scattered throughout the gallery making notes and sketching away. What a wonderful classroom this turned out to be for all of us visiting that day. I found that I learned a lot about myself on this day as well.
Upon leaving I browsed in the gift shop but couldn't find anything that came close to representing the precious hours I had spent behind the Ionic columns of the museum's facade. I descended the steps, bought a kitchsy t-shirt for my girl and jumped in a cab & headed to Serendipity III.
I wanted to catch the Ford Escape Cab that looks like our car but couldn't get myself aligned correctly in the cab stand line. After assurances from my English speaking cab driver that I would be able to get a cab on this street, I jumped out to find a yound crowd gathered outside. The wait at Serendipity was 2 hours long - "Not bad," chirped a 20something from Long Island-probably drawn to the place like many - since it had become famous on the silver screen. Since this cab driver did not speak English - I kept my thoughts to myself - and I realized that I had been voicing an internal conversation with myself all day. I had really enjoyed spending the day with myself and doing something that in another time I would have been told that it wouldn't have been possible.
Monday, March 26, 2007
Writing's Power to Heal
Writing's power to heal lies not in pen and paper, but in the mind of the writer.--APA
Sharing our stories can also be a means of healing. Grief and loss may isolate us, and anger may alienate us. Shared with others, these emotions can be powerfully uniting, as we see that we are not alone, and realize that others weep with us.
--Susan Wittig Albert
It's been a year since I started this blog. I started writing again so I could do something positive with all the emotions I had inside my mind. To try and figure them out so to speak. The address I haven't publicized, but rather shared with only a chosen few...putting posts out when the mood would strike me - not blogging for the sake of blogging but just using it when I needed to examine something and see where it was going - why I was thinking about it or rather trying to decipher some confusing feelings and dreams.
For a time I couldn't write - the words simply would not form for me like they used to - but time is a powerful thing and a year ago I was able to let the keyboard sing again. Like most, I worry about my writing and if I will be judged for what I put down on paper. However, this format enables me to let my thoughts go in an anonymous world and in doing so it has saved a part of me and gave part of me back to myself. Finally I can love the giver - myself.
My writing has allowed me to finally get mad at my ex-husband! It has allowed me to walk on a hiking trail I traveled on long ago. It has allowed me to remember and cherish a special person I love deeply and have lost touch with... It has allowed me to love my old self and build a new self. It has allowed me to define the new space I live in...realizing that it's a good space after all.
This weekend I dreamed I was riding on a train in a antique passenger car... I knew my fellow passengers but I didn't know them...We were all content to be headed in the direction we were going. After I opened my eyes and going throughout the day, I realized that these dream was telling me that my life is heading in the right direction. I had been off-track for a while, but now I'm back on the right course. It is the greatest feeling to realize this feeling of contentment.
What a difference a year has made for me - I'm enrolled in a Master's Program and yes, I have the confidence finally to hold my head up and be a Single Parent (after calling everyone and checking in with everyone else first - yes it's okay, okay). I have a healthy, terrific, smiling, singing, skipping daughter who loves me and my mom and sisters are absolutely fabulous. And my friends, my chosen family - the ones I call on via a rotation basis so too many crisises doesn't overwhelm just one - well, there's not adequate words to describe the roll they have played in helping me build back my live and my self-confidence. They love me for me. They are there for me for my tearful "have to go sit in the car and cry" lunches and are there to laugh and call to make sure I'm watching our favorite team in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen this year.
A month and a half ago life was finally able to break through and make me realize how blessed I am with the life I have re-built and since that day the peace that I have prayed for so long has been present.
So now without my thoughts being clouded by worry I can continue observing things in life that touch me and record them here - my very special healing space.
Friday, March 02, 2007
Home Improvement
I began tackling another room makeover project - with great intentions I selected paint colors and began shopping for new fabrics to redo my bedroom. With a Saturday free, I made the hasty decision to remove the wallpaper in the master bath and paint the bathroom first. I thought it should only take what an afternoon?I peeled wallpaper for 10 hours over the past weekend. The wallpaper is winning - half of it is still up on the walls, my back is shot and my fingernails still have sticky paste lodged underneath. That's what I get for thinking I would tackle the easiest job first. My oversized master bedroom would be painted by now.
It's amazing the inner dialog you carry on with yourself as you spend that many hours in one of the most utilized rooms of your home. I listened to music. Sang old songs to myself. Thanked myself for thanking myself and talked to the putty knife and magic wallpaper scrapper more times than I care to admit.
Earlier in this online journal I reflected on a lot of self-discovery in Putting on the Primer where I worked on a similar wallpaper removal project in my kitchen. I finished that project that had two stubborn layers of wallpaper (they were much easier) so I know I can do this. I couldn't help but remember the self-reflection that came with that project. This one is no different. So much has happened on my personal journey since then...
While I stripped wallpaper of less than a half inch in length from the wall - I grew frustrated about how long it was taking me - I had given up my weekend for this?!? As I sprayed and sprayed the solution on the wall and scrapped and scrapped I related this act to how long it takes to peel back any layers and see what's underneath. And when you do peel back one layer - sometimes you are only scratching the surface.
Recently, I stumbled upon a peaceful place in my post-divorce life. Days have passed when I don't think about attorney's, court or even attorney's fees. The familiar feeling I have walked around with like air has been let out of a balloon has momentarily left me. Am I finally getting over this?
The spring air has brought me back to the night four years ago when I didn't sleep and knew that when I left my home the next morning it would tragically be my last night there in the home & life that I cherished and loved.
In my conversation with self - I have pondered why I took this route and didn't do the easiest room first. I certainly didn't follow the path of least resistance. Sometimes that's a hard road NOT to take. I tried that in my marriage and it backfired on me.
I have slowly and steadily worked to refortify the foundation that crumbled underneath me. I'm still building and reconstructing - that foundation that I'm now responsible for will remain a work in progress - because I have learned that nothing, not even the colors of the walls, stays the same.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Doughnuts for Dads, Daughters and Dachshunds
They had donuts for dads this morning at school... my daughter got upset and started crying last night saying "daddy hasn't come to anything since kindergarden" - I just let her cry while I held her and told her how much that I loved her hoping that it would ease her hurt a little bit (her dad moved 1,000 miles away four years ago). I told her that I was sure there were some dads who were out of town and couldn't be there and then other kids like her - but to be strong and she would have another special time with her dad.
So early this morning - I made a sign that said Doughnuts for Dachshunds - and our dachshund was cooperative and acted crazy - jumping on her owner and biting her toes to wake her up and running like a banshee under the bed and into the bathroom at breakneck speed (at least for a dachshund okay)...and wouldn't stop until she got a mini doughnut...and that chilled the crazy pooch out by the time we left for the day ... so I walked my daughter into school in the midst of all those fathers and said I was going to storm into the principal's office and ask why they couldn't have "Moonpies for Moms" and she loved that and held my hand and was swinging it. So we circumvented the doughnut event and I kept us busy with a classroom project I am assisting with for Read Across America and got her to help me with a tape measure - then we saw a classmate and his dad from the beach this summer and the dad took one look at her instantly caught on and was so wonderful to talk to her about their moonlit hunt for crabs on the beach at night and she was beaming. Internally, I said a silent thank you to the dad - it meant so much to me.
My mom is taking her to her favorite doughnut shop, The Donut Den, this afternoon for a special doughfilled treat.However, tomorrow is another day - Doughnuts for Dads P - Z. For now I'm taking one moment at a time and hoping that in the morning a crazy dachshund will provide some more much needed licks, laughs and pleas for doughnuts.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
How Did My Life Get So Off Track?

I can never turn back.
That got off track.
Will I always regret
the loss of civility?
With two people that I loved
that hurt me deeply.
I lashed out in anger
tired of being hurt.
To prove myself
to state my self-worth.
What am I trying to prove?
I made my statement
loud and clear.
They had both discarded me
No longer held me dear.
Did I reach my unstated goal?
Did I pull even?
Did I change my role?
Did I achieve the direction
I was trying to gain?
If so, why do I still
feel so much confusion and pain.
I made my statement
now what do I do?
Retreat to my safe place
and lick my wounds?
I wonder...
Will I ever get past this?
Will I ever heal?
These two episodes in my life
ever fresh and surreal.
Am I standing up to another father
so he won't do the same thing to his little daughter?
Their rejection was my story,
my life's underlying theme.
Do I just want someone held accountable
to give rise to my self-esteem?
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Going Back to College to Get More Knowledge
This summer I took a giant leap of faith in myself and applied for graduate school. For fear that I wouldn't get accepted I told no one what I was attempting. I did a serious self-evaluation in writing my personal statement, acquired my recommendation letters and closed my eyes when viewing my long forgotten transcript and GPA from my undergradute days. Still unsure of myself, I dusted off my portfolio from all my acquired work from the past 18 years, remembered the tips from my mock interview with my sister and went to an interview with the Dean of the program.Two weeks of holding my breath later, I GOT AN ACCEPTANCE LETTER via email! I was schocked beyond belief and weak with relief. Before I would not have had any doubt of my abilities, but my shaky confidence wouldn't allow me to get my hopes up.
My undergraduate experience was some of the best four years of my life. I now found myself wondering what I had gotten myself into? At my first orientation for graduate students, I felt like quite the granny compared to some of the young kids sitting around me who weren't born until the (gasp!) 1980s. When my first paper was due, I discovered that I had forgotten the MLA rules of style and had to ask an 80s baby to refresh my clouded memory. Mrs. Estes, my AP English teacher from McGavock, would be appalled if she knew of my lapse in MLA brain cells.
Combining classes and work make for some long days and nights for me - but I know the end result will be worth it. This experience has already worked wonders for my battered self-confidence. I know that going after this degree would not have been an option for me in my former married life and I remind myself each time I walk to class what a privilege this is to take part in. More importantly, I feel like an important member of the community I find amongst and I didn't realize how much I needed to belong to something like this. My goal of obtaining this master's degree has given me a new purpose - one that I will be proud to accomplish.
The one night away a week is probably hardest on my daughter. When I first told her I was going back to school and it was going to take me three years to complete my degree this way, she burst into tears. "Mommy, you are leaving me for three years?" She interpreted it to mean I was leaving her behind literally going away to college. I quickly explained that this was not the case. "Why do you have to go back to school?" she asked. And I found myself evaluating my personal statement once again in a way to explain it to my seven year old.
Basically, I just told her that no matter how old you are learning never ends. I wasn't content to just read books on my own - that I wanted to study, examine, discuss things, be challenged and earn a higher degree for myself. I'm doing this for us, I told her, so I can get a better job and be a better person, a good example for her. Where this landed in her comprehension I'm not sure, but she loves that I have homework too, assigned readings and papers and research on the internet and was eager to see my "report card" at the end of the semester. I try to do my homework when she is doing her assignments.
Over the years, my reading has saved me - it has let me escape and taken me to places that I will never see. Already my graduate student experience has given me so much - courage to believe in my abilities again, finding my voice to express my opinion amongst other learners and realize that it counts.
During my interview with the Dean I told him - that if I were accepted that I would complete the program, because I always start what I finish and that was my sincere intention. This isn't only a quest for knowledge and accomplishment or a piece of paper to hang on the wall - it represents so much more for me at this point in my life.
My daughter came home one day with a new rhyme she learned on the playground it goes something like this... "Girls go to college to get more knowledge ... Boys go to Jupiter to get more stupider". I wince when I hear this last part from growing up in a household where we were not allowed to say anyone was stupid or dumb it pains me to hear the latter part of this phrase repeated. The former president of Harvard, Lawrence Summers, would definitely debate me on the merits of the statement as well. But I love the first part - Girls go to college to get more knowledge. I can only hope and dream my daughter will follow in these footsteps - I've learned in my life that it's truly not about the destination, but the journey that leads you there.
Tuesday, January 09, 2007
And I'm Going to be Forty
Sally: ... and I'm going to be forty.Harry: When?
Sally: Someday.
Harry: In eight years.
Sally: But it's there. It's just sitting there like this big dead end.
-- When Harry Met Sally
2007 - this year I turn 40 (gasp!)
Actually I can't wait to embrace fortydom! No dead end for me - it represents a new beginning - with the drop of the ball on New Year's Rockin' Eve my countdown officially began! Goodbye tumultous thirties! Hello 40 and Welcome Back Home Sabrina!
My celebratory goals for the first year:
--continue to work on my Master's Degree.
--celebrate my official entrance into adulthood (Finally I feel like I'm going to be a bonafide adult).
--hike Mt. LeConte.
--go on a fabulous Girl's Trip to commemorate this milestone.
--have a fabulous party in honor of my family and friends that got me here!
--help my other friends turning 40 this year to enjoy it just as much as me.
--count each and every blessing.
--buy myself a fabulous birthday present.
This is going to be the year of living fabulously. No looking back - just straight ahead!Watch out world - here I come!
Tuesday, December 26, 2006
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
I Lost it at Starbucks
After my 6th trip in one hour to the big box stores in search of a hot Christmas item for KK, I stopped at the Starbucks counter at Target on my way to the parking lot. I couldn't score the elusive game I was in search of, but a latte was
I must have looked miserable as I moved to the pickup counter to grab my white chocolate mocha, Tina looked at me and said "Are you okay hon?" She stepped out from behind the counter and gave me a hug and without even knowing what was bothering me gave me a squeeze and said "you know everything is going to be okay." I quickly gulped in a deep breath of hair, grabbed my to go cup and blindly ran out of Target. The kindness of a stranger was again overwhelming and I lost all composure - everything I had been trying to hold in for the past week came pouring out. Wednesday, November 29, 2006
I Want to Be a "Rock Star" Mom
A few months ago, I dropped my daughter off at school on a Monday morning. She skipped off to the front door wearing a zippy white, brown and plaid skirt, her Mary Janes and an Old Navy t-shirt that said "My Mom is Rock Star". I felt like a rock star that day... the night before I had prepared her snacks, filled out permissions slips and water bottles, ironed her clothes and laid out her lunch money, library books & ballet bag for the entire week. We arrived at school on time and I felt good about myself. We had our act together and were both prepared for another week in the world.Four hours later, I was eating lunch at my desk and got a phone call from the school nurse. My daughter had thrown up in the school cafeteria! Did she have any other symptoms? Could it be strep? Has anyone else in her class been sick or gone home early? My mind raced to calling the pediatrician's office on my speed dial, getting someone to cover me at work for the rest of the day and thinking of what would I do about the next day - she couldn't be at school in a 24 hour period after getting sick.
I drove to her school quite dejected thinking of the shirt she was wearing and how what a joke it was - a mockery now because I was feeling quite unlike a "rock star" super mom at the moment. When I arrived she confessed that she had eaten ranch dressing on a chocolate chip cookie. Maybe it's a stomach bug and the combination she had eaten was too much to take I thought, but I still worried about the rest of our week and how it would unfold. I couldn't bear to look at the sassy shirt any longer.
We went home and changed out of school and work clothes and she was imprisoned on the couch for the rest of what would be a low-key afternoon. I had to talk myself out of beating myself up from worrying about my boss and job, and slowly began to realize that it's okay to come out of overdrive and just simply be mom for the afternoon.
As a parent, I worry everyday over parenting her - that I don't get to spend enough time with her - that I don't read to her every night, that she is living in a single parent home, that she eats a good breakfast and enough fruit and vegetables each day, what would happen to her if I died early, not having $$ to have decent life insurance to leave behind if something did happen to me, making sure she goes to college, not having a father figure in her daily life, that she lives a good, moral life with me as a role model, that I don't have enough $$ in my bank account for an emergency fund, that if she could she would be a night owl, that if I accept a movie invite from a friend that I feel guilty spending time away from her. Sometimes all that alone is so overwhelming to me.
So to hold it together I try to keep everything moving forward in one direction at a safe, speed. Try to keep us on a routine so our family life runs smooth and we don't notice the person missing from the picture. We had to paint a new photo of what our family looks like and we are both finally getting used to it.
Who doesn't want to be a "rock star" mom that has fun with their child and makes super parenting decisions. I do. I want to be on top of everything in her life, give her piano and violin lessons, get her a math tutor, be involved in her community and set a good example at all times and want the correct words to come out of my mouth in teaching moments. But in a total "rock star" mom fantasy world, I would love to fly her to Chicago and treat her to lunch at the American Girl Place and spend the afternoon looking at the dinosaurs at the The Field Museum. Or take her to Serendipity's in NYC so she can have a Frrrozen Hot Chocolate and jump on the piano at FAO Schwarz. Or watch her swim with a dolphin on a Disney cruise.
Like any parent, I naturally want to give my daughter the world. But naturally all she needs is a mom who is loving, patient, and kind (especially after hearing chocolate chip cookies dipped in ranch type confessions). It's intrinsic that we know this, but good to remind ourselves that your child doesn't care if you are a rock star or a person of privilege to be able to provide the basics - love, boundaries and a happy home.






"Dear George, remember no man is a failure who has friends.