October 30th, 2009 | 2 Comments »

My BB loves to draw, and I just love the things he comes up with.  I think he’s very good.  He uses different colors and makes designs and shapes and stays within the lines when he wants to, and beyond the lines when it suits him.  I love that!

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This drawing was a heart breaker.  It’s the first family drawing he’s made, and he did it the very day that Gadget left.  Look!  I have extra arms, because I do so much.  (Artistic interpretation taken liberally.)

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This one cracks me up.  He did this just the other day.  ‘Mommy, this is a sign.  It’s a no BB sign.  You put it on your door.’  Genius!  I swear, I have not taught him the sign symbol with the circle and slash that represents ‘do not’, and I can’t think of any on our normal routes.  Dora, Diego, or Sponge Bob must have taught him.  I do bark at him to stay out of the bedroom while I’m trying to put LB to sleep.  Every. Single. Night.  He just wants attention, but insists on demanding it at precisely the time when I need to be exclusive with LB.  Any distractions stir up the sleep cycle and the meltdowns commence.  It’s a precarious balance.

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“Mommy, this sign says ‘No running across the street and jumping in puddles or else you will get in big trouble because you could get hitted by a car and runned-ded over and have to go to the hobspital.’

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This one is very Van Gogh.  All the windows and lines.  I especially like this one.  The spaghetti sauce is a nice touch, too.  You know, real.  Authentic.

One problem about loving to draw is that one who loves to draw might, especially if he’s 4-1/2, draw on, oh, just about anything.  To help channel this love, I thought it would be good to provide an allowable space for artistic expression.  What could be better than a whole wall?!

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Chalkboard paint is a great invention.  It can even be tinted (within a limited palette), so I got blue.  Blue is, after all, BB’s favorite color.  Am I a thoughtful mother, or what?  BB being BB, however, was unable to resist the temptation to continue drawing on any available surface while waiting for the chalkboard paint to dry.  During this time he decorated my camera case and eventually had to do a little time for his crime.

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LB, not wanting to miss any of the action, joined him.  (How I wanted to get a picture of the moment when they were standing side by side, both noses to the wall!  It was short-lived, since the curtain was much more interesting.)

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Finally!  Let’s draw!  They had just come home from daycare and didn’t even wait to take off their jackets.

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He likes to draw aliens, lately.  These are inspired by ‘Galaxar’.’

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And here it is, in full splendor.  It makes me smile.

Posted in art, children, projects
October 27th, 2009 | 3 Comments »

This time every year the waves of sorrow return.  Not only memories of my brother, thoughts of his children and how they are coping with this day and their own memories and sorrow, but also the memory of one of my dearest friends.   October used to be my favorite time of the year.  The glorious colors of the leaves on the trees.  Bright blue skies, puffy clouds, crisp cool air.

Now, when October comes, there is the exhilaration I’ve always felt with the changing of the seasons, but with it a melancholy.  Wisps of sadness for lost lives, lost loves.

It’s been four years since my brother’s sudden and tragic departure.  One year since the unexpected loss of my friend.  I think of them often.

I miss them.

~*~*~*~*~

And now for some super cuteness.  How can anybody be sad for long when they can get lost in these pools of grey-blue that go from forever to forever?  Or nibble on the deliciousness of that perfect little face.  My little boy wonder.  He’s growing so fast and is hardly a baby any more.

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Posted in sorrow
October 26th, 2009 | 6 Comments »

The last time this happened was December 03, 2007.  Shortly thereafter, LB sprouted and gestated for, oh, what was it?  37 or 38 weeks?  Followed by ten months of servitude to the Lactina.  Followed by four full months of vaguely wondering whether I’m going through the change.

I think this works out to one week shy of 23 months.  I guess the plumbing still works, after all.

Posted in ob-gyn
October 26th, 2009 | 1 Comment »

Obviously, I missed the most obvious.  Like I said, a bit slow on the uptake.

So, the whole oldest profession thing has sort of been gnawing at me, and after another sleep cycle to let my brain rest, it occurred to me that the point may very well be that I don’t have to compromise myself.  At all.  Ever.  (I just thought I did, being caught up in everything, and all.)

Duh.

Posted in dreams, me, mental health
October 25th, 2009 | 2 Comments »

I am not always the sharpest tool in the shed.  Especially when it comes to matters of a personal nature.  While metaphors may be completely obvious to some, I’m a bit slow on the uptake.  It helps to write things out.  So these are the representations that I’ve come up with.

  1. The oldest profession
    Woman compromises self to serve man
  2. A situation with no apparent choice; no alternatives
    The decision to file for divorce
  3. Office building
    Business, not personal
  4. Modern architecture, pecan colored wood with smoked glass windows
    Warm, clean, new, private, not foreboding, not seedy.  Legitimate.
  5. Receptionist
    Judge; court system.  The avenue or agent through which the arrangements for a different life are made.
  6. Room 3D
    The way to a multi-dimensional life
  7. The clientele; young, pleasant people, having fun, comfortable with themselves, on a journey
    Representative of another life, freedom, happy-go-lucky, adventure
  8. A black man and a white man
    Things are black and white (or not black and white)
  9. Broken glasses
    Flawed perspective
  10. Shattered right lens
    The right perspective or view is not available or impossible to see clearly
  11. Expensive glasses
    Perspective is valuable and important
  12. Skinny blond, getting ready to party
    Representative of fun
  13. RV/ATV
    Recreational vehicle is representative of play.  Specifically an ATV; all terrain, flexible, rugged, can handle all situations
  14. Condoms
    Safety, care, caution, no compromise.
  15. Female condoms
    Take care of self
  16. Clear and shiny color
    Obvious, nothing is hidden.  Honest.  Truthful.
  17. Two-pack
    Doubly or twice as significant or  important
  18. They were the first choice
    This is significant
  19. Purple package
    Royal?  External appearance not necessarily indicative of what’s inside
  20. Black condoms
    Unclear, shrouded, dark, not fully trustworthy?  –or, over the hill, as in black balloons
  21. Arcade lights, corner shopping center
    Vegas?
  22. White pjs
    Innocent sex life?
  23. Kids left alone
    Where was their dad and why wasn’t he watching them?  Unavailable.  Not there.  Out of the picture.  Unable to count on or depend upon.
  24. Allowing myself to question the situation
    Fear and confusion can completely disarm, and trick us into thinking we are trapped with no alternatives
  25. Field
    Open.  No secrets.

I think, through this exercise, the thing that jumped out at me the most, is the part about the importance of taking care of myself.  And maybe also that no matter what I decide, whether to go through with this divorce or dismiss it, that it will be okay.

Posted in dreams, mental health
October 23rd, 2009 | 2 Comments »

I had come to a turning point where I found myself with no other options, so I opened the smoked glass front door of the quasi-modernistic pecan colored office building (a warm, wooden structure), and stepped inside.  It wasn’t a seedy place, by any means.  It was clean and quiet.  There could be any assortment of businesses operating from within these walls.  I spoke to the receptionist and inquired, in a ’round-a-bout way, how one would arrange a business transaction if one had never done that sort of business before.  It was the oldest profession in the world, but it was unfamiliar territory to me.

She made me an appointment.  This is a double, she said.  A double?  It’s just as well.  I accepted the appointment.  I needed the business, and even though it was new to me, I had no other options, so I was grateful.  I wasn’t really in a position to give too much more thought to it, other than it was something that I had to do.  Stay the course.

The day arrived.  I returned to the building, and the receptionist greeted me with a nod.  I was feeling embarrassed, starting to question whether I really should be there.  I timidly asked her where I might find Room 3D, and she pointed down the hall, to the right.  I walked down the hall, vaguely wondering what circumstances brought these clients to this place.  Was this their home?  There were many questions, but I didn’t stop to give them much hold.  I knocked on the door and went in to meet them.   I had assumed they would be men, and they were.  But there was also a woman in the room.  I was a bit puzzled, but didn’t jump to any conclusions.

The one who opened the door was a black man, relatively young, maybe in his early thirties.  He was fit and good-looking.  There was a white man, and the woman.  I didn’t notice anything remarkable about the white man.  I was relieved that they weren’t old, greasy, smelly, skanky and creepy men.  They seemed pleasant enough.  Even normal.  Although, I must say, the thought crossed my mind as to what circumstances cause people like that to make these, uh, arrangements.  (It turns out they were going on a trip the next day.  Europe, I think.  This was just a stop, and they were just here for a while, having some fun.  Seems reasonable enough.)

The woman was sitting on a four-wheeler in the living room.  It seemed a bit odd for an ATV to be in the living room, but it wasn’t any of my business.  It wasn’t dirty, or anything.  Maybe that office space was also used as a recreational vehicle showroom or something.  Anyway.   She was skinny and blonde and sort of reminded me of a rocker chick, like the one on Guitar Hero.  She had those low rider distressed blue jeans on.  She said something about going to get some stuff to party with, and left the room.  So I figured she was going to be back and somehow be involved.  I was wondering what on earth I’d gotten myself into, but there I was, and I decided not to get worked up or freaked out, but to just stay calm and not jump to any conclusions.

The black guy was cheerful and gregarious.  He was at the moment concerned with his glasses, which he was holding in his hand.   Look, he said, they’re broken, and it’s a bummer because they’re really expensive glasses!  He was fairly animated about it.  I politely took them and inspected them, turning them over in my hands.  They were heavy, not a bit flimsy, and did indeed have an expensive feel to them.  They were dark stylish metal frames, smooth shiny black with nice boxy lines.  Italian, or maybe French.  Very nice.  The lenses were clear, but the top corner of the right lens was completely crushed.  Useless.  A real shame.  I handed them back to him.

So.  Back to business.  The reason I was there.  I was trying not to sound nervous, but had to ask the question, before any, uh, business commenced.  Do you have condoms?

No.

No?

No.

Well, I didn’t have any.  It’s not the kind of thing I think about.  I’ve not particularly lived a lifestyle that required them.  But this was new ground, and one thing I knew (even though I was completely unprepared) was that it was ab.so.lute.ly necessary.

There weren’t any hard feelings and the discussion wasn’t all that awkward.  Calm.  Businesslike, I suppose.  I agreed to run to the drug store and acquire the tools of the trade.  Amateur.  I sauntered out, and thought to check on my boys, to make sure they were okay.  BB was supposed to be watching LB while I was out.  I peeked in their room, and there was LB, perched high on top of a cabinet, holding a blue dryer ball in each hand (they are used for fluffing the clothes in the dryer –the boys love to play with them).  He had a good hold of them.  Very controlled.  And he was well balanced and didn’t look to be in any danger of falling.  Still.   It reminded me of a scene from Kung Fu Panda, in which Panda was perched on the ceiling beams, in perfect control of the situation, munching happily on some treat.  I closed the door and hurried down the street, thoughts of guilt and abandonment starting to seep in.  I need to hurry up, get this over with, and get back to my kids.  I kept going, until I reached the big store on the corner.  It had dark glass walls, and lots of twinkling lights lining stairs, doorways, windows, and elevators.  Sort of like a dance club, actually.  But it was a shopping center.  Maybe like something you’d see in Vegas.  I’d been there before, in a dream.  I remembered the place — when I’d been before, there was a room on the second floor with racks of pajamas, all white, in my size range, and I was quite pleased to have stumbled upon it, given my penchant for pajamas.  But there wasn’t any time for browsing.  I had a commitment to meet.  I rushed in, past the racks of souvenirs and knick knacks that seem to be present in every drug store, scanning the aisles.  A sales lady approached and asked if I needed help finding anything, just as I spied the rack I needed.  “No, I’m good.  Thank you!” I said brightly.

I quickly scanned the selections.  There were quite a few choices, but what first caught my eye was a two-pack of clear cylindrical items that were apparently the female version.  Interesting.  I picked up a package and noticed a bowl filled with single purple packets.  I picked one up and looked at the label.  Apparently the contents were black.  Interesting.  They’ll work.  I grabbed a handful, made my purchase and headed back.

And finally, finally, I thought to myself, why am I doing this?  Why on earth do I think this is my only option?  What made me think this was my only option?  I don’t need the money.  I don’t need this.  I don’t need to do this.  I don’t want to do this.  I don’t have to do this.  I didn’t go back.

We were all walking in a field, me, Gadget, BB and LB.  It was late afternoon, not quite dusk.  I turned to Gadget and said, “There’s something that I have to tell you,”  and proceeded to recount what I’d done.

And then I woke up.  And marvelled at the sheer detail of the dream.

In the next installment, I might delve into dream interpretation.  Such an abundance of metaphors.  So many details.  Colors, thoughts, numbers, emotions.  I’m a strong believer in the healing power of sleep, and I also believe that sometimes dreams are our brains’ way of working through things that we haven’t processed completely while awake.  This one will take some thought.

October 22nd, 2009 | 4 Comments »

Thank you all for your warmth and well wishes.  Things have been mostly good, with a smattering of not-so-good.  It’s so easy to fall back into familiar patterns, and many of those are patterns that could stand to be reshaped into something better.  Yet there they are.

The good things have been sweet and uplifting.  Even encouraging.  But one careless comment and in less than a blink of an eye, whoosh, we’re teetering on the brink, flailing and trying to regain our balance.

It’s precarious.

He’s going through something that I don’t understand, and I’m trying to give him as much clearance as he needs.  Yet there are times when I can’t help but think about how I’m bending over backwards to make sure his needs are met, but the price is that my needs are compromised.  My needs that have already been compromised.  For so, so long.  I yearn for balance.

Do I not deserve it, since I’ve set the precedence by being an enabler?  A fixer?  A comforter?  A mother?

It’s my nature to help.  I’m a helper.

Sometimes it feels as though I’m being taken advantage of; and that — I don’t like.

The devil on one shoulder sneers, “You did it to yourself,” and the angel on the other shoulder whispers, “You are loved.”

Always having to be the strong one takes it toll, and seeds of resentment slowly put down roots.

Tomorrow I’m taking a day off to get my hair done and window shop the downtown market, alone.  It will be very, very good for me.

I have some happy posts with new kiddo pictures coming soon.  They fill me up, my beautiful boys.

Posted in bellyaching
October 11th, 2009 | 11 Comments »

This is nothing like the tale of Bilbo Baggins, and there is nothing like a mid-life crisis to jump-start a marriage (or send it off to the scrap heap).

In short, he left.

I filed.

He came home.

So here comes the long of it.

Gadget’s been on a steadily souring course for some time now, which escalated shortly after his dad’s passing.  Constantly irritable, he had a scowl imprinted on his face, and would barely speak or even look at me.  Being the not too bright when it comes to interpersonal relationships sensitive creature that I am, I internalized and assumed that somehow I had done (or not done) something.  A glutton for punishment, I even went so far as to ask if he could rule me  out as part of the cause of his unexplained feelings, to which he said, “I can’t rule anything out because I don’t know why I feel this way.”  Nice.  That felt good.

And so it went on.  Then he went away for a 3-day weekend business trip during which time he didn’t call home.  Cue the alarm bells ringing in my head.  I was distraught when he returned, and he was sour and irritable.  We had THE TALK.  I had to ask if he’d met somebody.  No, he hadn’t.  All that late night text messaging with someone, what about that?  Just friends of friends who don’t have a life.  Fine.  I didn’t really believe him.  I was hurt that he would carry on conversations with some near-stranger(s) when it was like pulling teeth to spend words between US.  I have to dig for any morsel of information.  Nothing is forthcoming.  We were finally talking about what’s going on with him, but it had to be me who brought out the ‘D’ word.  I didn’t expect him to jump on it, though.  Not in a thousand years would I have ever thought he’d be the one who wanted to leave.  I know I’ve had a difficult time adjusting to a partnered life, having spent the better part of 40 years the commander of my own ship.  But there it was.  He wanted out.

Do what you need to do, to find your smile.

I thought he’d stay home while we worked through the details, but he found a place the very next day, and that was that.  Gone.  I was stunned, really.  Leaving must have been on his mind for some time, for him to be able to move out so quickly.

I didn’t get a chance to process my feelings.  I did the paperwork.  Once you wade through the thousands of pages of instructions, and cut to the chase, it’s surprisingly easy to get a divorce here, without a lawyer, with children, when both parents agree to the terms.    I filed.  I wanted to get it done while we were still on good terms, uncertain of how things could change, for better or worse, in the coming days.  I set the hearing date, which is 90 days past the filing date, and I prepared the final papers for the hearing and had him sign them.  All set.  Show up to the hearing, have the judge sign the papers, and that’s that.  I keep the kids and the house.  He gets the truck and the boat.

I had to work, and I had to take care of my kids.  I didn’t want them shaken or confused.  I didn’t want to expose them to any turmoil.  I put on a cheerful face, and when asked, explained that Daddy’s taking a time out.  A grown-up kind of time out. He’s not in trouble.  He just needs to be alone right now.  I was matter of fact, and BB accepted it as that.  But inside, everything churned.   I wanted to cry and scream and release some emotion, but I couldn’t — it would frighten the kids.  It was a terrible few days.

I made new plans to keep things moving.  Joined the gym, added the kids.  Pick them up from daycare, give them a snack, drop them off at the kid’s playroom, work out, go home, feed them, put LB to bed (poor little guy falls asleep in the car on the way home), spend a little one-on-one time with BB, then off to bed.  Do it all over again.  Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays we go to the gym where I do water aerobics for an hour.  The other days BB is my helper and we do projects and jobs, all with gusto to make it fun.  Take out the garbage, take out the recycling, cook dinner, tidy up the house.  Last weekend we sanded, painted, and reupholstered our dining chairs.  BB helped me sand and choose the new fabric.  We walked through the fabric store playing “I spy”, and we had a good time making the transformation.  I wouldn’t let him paint (we used spray paint) or use the staple gun, for obvious reasons, but he loved sanding and I think he shares that wonderful feeling of accomplishment and creativity, now that we see the fruits of our efforts.  I love that!

I asked Gadget to come over for dinner and spend some time with the boys.  They need to see their dad, I told him, and true enough, they were so happy to see him, they couldn’t stop climbing all over him, and running circles around him.  LB kept resting his head on Gadget’s leg and foot.  Hugs.  Baby hugs.  I couldn’t fathom how he could possibly walk away from that.  Yet the frown remained, just below the surface, imprinted on his face.  A truly unhappy man.

He called the next day.  He’d thought things through.  He didn’t want to live a different life after all.  He thought he could be happy on his own, but decided that the life he wants is with us.  He would be more involved with the children.  He would help out more around the house.  He would be a better father and husband.

I can’t take the yo-yo action, I told him.  You can’t change from unhappy to happy, the way you can switch a light off and on.  But he insists he can.  He insists he’s made up his mind and he will stay with that decision.  The decision for family.

Come home, I said, but I’m not going to cancel the case immediately.  You have to prove to me that you mean what you say.  We have nearly 3 months.  Show me.

We have new family plans.  BB, Gadget, and I each get to choose what’s for dinner on two days of the week, so we have six days planned and one day for leftovers.  We’re going to do something fun as a family every other weekend, and Gadget and I are going to have a date, just the two of us, at least once a month.  We’re going to do more together.  All of us.

We went to the aquarium yesterday.  It was a full and happy day.

Gadget’s bachelor pad, the court fees, and emotional trauma have added up to a very expensive couple of weeks, but in the long scheme of things, if these were necessary in order to reach a pleasant and hopeful outcome for a bright and glorious future, then it’s all well worth it.

I’m still holding my breath, though.

Posted in marriage