Baby Steps

I’m making progress.  Agonizingly slow progress, but progress nonetheless.

My cane is my constant companion, but with it’s help I am able to:

Come downstairs in the morning by myself .

Go to the bathroom.

Take a shower.

Walk around the house and lift anything that weighs less than a half gallon of milk as long as it is not below my waist.

Household chores remain outside of my abilities.  I tried to empty the top rack of the dishwasher yesterday and only got through the first three glasses, realizing that the twisting and stretching to put the glasses in the cabinet was beyond me. 

I have moments of rationality and positivity where I think, it could always be worse.  Thank God this is (hopefully) mendable.

And then I have other moments of discouragement, when I cannot believe that something went *pft* so suddenly, leaving me incapable of caring for my children.  No rhyme or reason to it.  Just *pft*.  And when Zan says to me, “You just poured yourself a glass of milk?!  Doesn’t that make you happy?!”   It puts me in mind of one of my favorite movies of all time….”I can’t help my three year old get dressed in the morning, and pouring a little glass of milk is supposed to make me happy? Hmmm?” 

However, I believe God whispers, then speaks a little louder, and when we choose to ignore the signs, he knocks us over the head with a club to get our attention.  I am also reminded of our many blessings when things go awry…our family, our friends, and our neighbors have all come pouring out of the woodwork to help and we are humbled by the richness of love that surrounds us.  They are what I hope to be.

So with baby steps I’m coming along, and as my back heals, so does the order of my priorities.  Thanks to everyone for your prayers and good wishes.

“God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks to us in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: It is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”    -C.S. Lewis

-Isms

Last night I dreamt of my grandmother.  She is my only living grandparent, and she is not doing well.  By some miracle she is still with us, surviving a long illness which had her poised on the brink of crossing over two years ago.  Since, she has been residing in a nursing home, and we have been blessed that although her body has turned traitor, her mind has remained sharp and she is still my Memiere.  However, I’m worrying for her in my gut in a way that I did not worry for her two years ago when the doctors had us calling in the Priest for Last Rites. 

Mister and I spent a couple of hours visiting with her yesterday, and I was reluctant to leave when the time came.  Having her on my mind throughout the day, led to dreams of her last night.  It was as though my mind was a book, flipping pages through my memories….

The memories that I woke up holding onto actually made me chuckle.  My Memiere has always had a knack for twisting normal, well-known idioms into some slightly bizarre saying that fits a situation all the better.  We call them “Memiere-isms”….

For example:

“When the pot calls the kettle a son of a bitch it can expect to get burned.”

“Don’t put too many eggs in a small basket.”

“You can’t have your cake and chew gum at the same time.”

“You’re biting off more than you can chew and if you don’t choke on it first you’ll throw it up later.”

I’ve only scratched the surface with a few examples of her “wisdom.”  I’ll tell you, as bizarre as they sound, she always manages to say just the thing you needed to hear.  I am grateful for every bit of wisdom she has shared with me in her own unique way, and I am grateful for the very large hand she had (and used!) in my upbringing.  I will cherish the rest of my time with her here, and hope that my gut is way, way off this time.  I still need her.

Square Pegs

So the other day, Big Girl asks, “Mom, did you have a ‘group’ in school?  You know, a clique that you hung around with?”  I responded with the simple truth that no, I did not have a group.  I got along well with everyone and think I was well-liked enough, but didn’t belong to a “group.”  Friends with everyone, friends with no one is how I would classify my school years.  Her response:  “Oh, good.  Then it’s okay that I don’t fit in anywhere.  I’ll still grow up fine.”

This got me thinking….and thinking….and thinking some more.  Will she?  It never bothered me that I didn’t “fit,” but I worry that it bothers her.  I knew I fit within my family and had a sense of belonging there, although I never imagined myself “like” them.  I come from a very weird strange odd eclectic family, which simply meant that I fit in with them simply because they didn’t fit anywhere either.   My Mom’s family is self-reportedly antisocial.  Family first and only was my Mom’s  family’s outlook on life.  What more do you need?  And my Dad’s family is Irish Catholic from the Bronx.  What more is there to say?  (I am quite likely more like my biological father’s family’s personalities, but have spent a lifetime fighting the genetic tendencies to respond to situations the way I remember they did…I have all but squelched that fiery part of my personality although the tinder is always there waiting for the sparks to ignite it.) 

And in thinking about my daughter’s situation, I began to realize that I still don’t “fit” anywhere at age 40.  I fit within my family, and fortunately found a husband who was my missing piece, but I wonder what it is?  This tendency to feel separate somehow?  Zan and I are social people….we like people….we have friends, very dear ones, and many who have crossed that boundary of friendship into the circle that we consider family.  But I still can’t define myself into a “group.”  I don’t fit into the large circle of Mommies whose existence seems to orbit around school parties, and PTSO functions.  I don’t fit with the Friday night Happy Hour Mommies. (Thank God.)  One of the only places I ever did fit was the school where I worked.  And even then, we were a group of misfits within the district.  The only school out of five that held a certain philosophy of educating children that the rest of the district balked at.  We were an island often rowing against the current….and I fit there.  And I fit at Camp Wilton…talk about a collection of bohemians…none of us conformed to the “norm.”

So what do I tell my daughter?  How do I help her maneuver this social landscape? 

I tell her it’s okay to not fit.  It’s okay to feel displaced.  Stand on your convictions, but do it in a way that exhibits class and avoids making enemies.  Stand out because of your honor, but don’t dishonor others.  Treat others as you want them to treat you, but grow a tough skin because that’s not how many others operate.  Address the people directly who have disrespected you, but do it with couth and tolerance, and don’t expect the apology that you deserve….let it go once you’ve said your piece.  Avoid toxic people…you can’t save them.  Declutter your own aura so you aren’t sending negative energy into the world.  Pray to God for guidance and trust that it will come, although the answer may not be the one you were hoping for.  Don’t argue with strong-minded people.  Know your own mind, and don’t be swayed, but also understand that they will not be swayed either.  Agree to disagree, or don’t engage at all.  Sometimes peace is more important than convincing someone else of your rightness.  Bind those who bring you happiness close to you, and let the others go.  Trust your family, and do the work required to keep your relationships loving and positive…you will always be able to depend on them.  And lastly, be content with your own company….there will be times when you will be your only friend. 

I want her to trust that someday she will find her place, as impossible as that seems to her right now.

Man, this parenting stuff is hard work.

Seventeen

On January 16, 1993 I married my best friend.  Cliche, I know, but true. 

For better, for worse…for richer, for poorer…in sickness and in health.

We’ve mostly had better, but at times we’ve had worse.

We’ve enjoyed being richer, and trudged through our days being much, much poorer.

We’ve suffered through sicknesses, and thank the good Lord have been blessed with much, much more health.

And I thank God everyday that in the one choice that mattered the very most in my life, I chose right.