Time

20 years ago I was starting my first teaching job. That feels so weird. I remember my first job vividly. The teaching part doesn’t feel 20 years ago. I still remember those kids and my class room and so many of the firsts that went with that year.

What does feel long ago are most of the other details. The one bedroom apartment. The long term boyfriend at had at that point. The truck I still drove. Those things feel like forever ago.


My dad said at lunch today (I work with my whole family) that there was a Silver Alert out for my grandmother yesterday. I wonder if they do Silver Alerts across the country? It’s like and Amber alert for the elderly. An alert that an older person is missing. That was my grandmother yesterday. My dad didn’t know until it was over. She decided to drive to Walmart. She got confused and lost. A chain of family members were called and one of my uncles talked to her. He told her to stay where she was he was coming for her. When he got there she wasn’t there. They finally found her back at home. My dad’s oldest brother called him and offered to be the son who took her keys away.

All of that feels so sad and scary. I worry if my future will involve me taking away keys. And one day will one of my sons have to take away mine?


My dad and brother are coming tomorrow morning to take the big desk away. The drawers are empty. The top is still full of things and there is no clear path to the door. I walked in there to get it ready and then walked back out. I don’t feel motivated. I feel tired. I suppose that means I need to get up early on a Saturday morning to get everything ready for them.


Nathan works tomorrow. A volleyball tournament. The transition back to fall sports has finished. He will work every Saturday until Thanksgiving weekend now. He might have one off on their by week….maybe. And he will only have Thanksgiving weekend off if they don’t make it to third round (or maybe second round) of the playoffs. We are ready and not ready all at the same time.


A post showed up in my timehop app today. It was a caption to a post on Instagram I think. It in I mentioned the changing of the light and how it was already noticeably different in the evening. Maybe that is what made me notice it tonight too as we swam after dinner. By 8:30pm the outside lights were already starting to flicker on and the sky was tinged pink and orange as the sun had already set below the horizon. By the end of the month it will be almost dark by 8:30pm. I only know because we usually have the boys’ birthday party at the end of August and it is usually a big party at my parent’s house with a huge water slide. We aren’t doing that this year. I am a little sad but mostly glad to not have to do that this year. Still, the light is changing. I like noticing the light and the slow shift of seasons. It will be hot here for months yet, but the light still changes. I like the rhythm of the changing light.

Today was a lovely, boring, ordinary day.

I like those kinds of days.

We did school and ate lunch.

We had a PT therapy appointment in the afternoon.

We went to the office store for envelopes to mail the birthday invitations.

We went to the grocery store to buy things for dinner since the meat I had planned for last night was suddenly bad, despite the date!

I cleaned out my desk in preparation for it to be picked up.

I deep cleaned the master bathroom.

I made dinner.

Now it is time for bed.

Imagining

Carole texted me today. They were listening to a children’s artist that both of our families listened to years ago, when the children were babies.

A particular song took her back to the year 2006.

There are lots of songs that take me back to particular moments in time. The way the light slants across a room can take me back too.

Talking about the past ultimately led to imagining the future.

She made the comment that in 10 short years her house will be empty of children (if they all go off to college somewhere). 10 years from today we will be counting down to the boys turning 21.

I have has much trouble remembering the daily life with 3 year old twins as I do imagining them getting ready to turn 21.

Thinking back and forward always makes me a bit wistful and unsettled. I feel sad at those years gone. Did I savor them enough? I think mostly I was trying to survive them.

Am I savoring these days enough? Maybe we never can savor as we live through the moment. We are caught up in the day and its particular struggles. Maybe the best we can do is to notice the moments as we live them. Maybe that is enough for the moment. Then one day, 10 years from now I can sit and think back and savor them with the tinge of time past.

The other side

Last night I wrote about the hard side of parenting special needs children.

After writing my post I vented out on my exhausted husband. Then I was finally able to sleep.

We have hard days. Unpredictable days. Frustrating days.

But we also have amazing days. Days when the son in question takes my suggestion to do the listening therapy for 15 minutes before he does his school work and it changes everything.

Days when they know all the answers and we have great, deep discussions and I feel like I can see their brains growing.

We have the days when they eagerly do their chores and don’t fight too much.

Today was about as opposite from yesterday as it could possibly be. I have learned over this year that this is how it usually happens. We have a terrible day in some way and then the next day redeems the previous by leaps and bounds.

Transition phases are hard. When they are in the midst of a developmental change we see the most struggles and the largest shifts between good and hard days. We are entering the puberty years and the testerone is flowing and changing them. I am not a fan of transition years. They are hard and feel like they will never end. But they always do and one day I realize that whatever it was that has been so hard hasn’t been happening for weeks. I know that when we emerge from this transition my little boys will have disappeared and tiny men will be left in their place.

Watching them straddle the line between child and man is hard. But they will make it just like all the boys before them.

Tonight Emory and I did a live paint-along with Let’s Make Art. I purchased the August subscription box and tonight was the first painting of the month. I am finding that I enjoy watercolor very much. I also find I am trying to find time to squeeze in more and more painting.

It was fun painting with Emory tonight. He is my more artistic child. I watched him work his way through and it was fun to see his progression of ability and understanding through the course of the project.

On the good days I can be grateful for the hard days. The good days might not be a sweet without those harder days sprinkled in.

Emoryโ€™s watercolor painting – Age 10 –
August 6,2019
My favorite section of Emoryโ€™s painting
My painting
Watercolor
August 6, 2019

Lonely

Today I cried for a different reason.

It is hard to know what to write about certain things. Walking the line between my story to tell and my children’s’ stories to tell is very difficult. Our lives are so intertwined that it is hard to know what is strictly mine and what is theirs.

My children have various learning disabilities. Challenges? Brain differences? I don’t know what the “correct” term is anymore. If they went to public school they would have IEPs and we would go to ARDs. They would be part of the special education department.

I can tell you one term I don’t like: SPED. I feel pretty confident I used the term when I taught school. But when you sit on the other side, the parent side? That abbreviation that has become its own word feels gross and bad. When I hear it, it makes me feel sick. They don’t mean it that way. But to this parent it feels like the new word for the R word that we just don’t say anymore.

We have been in and out of therapy since 4 months old. Most therapy started in earnest around age 2. I once asked our early intervention social worker a question. She told me that some of the things we were seeing were due to inconsistent parenting. I was new to this world of special needs. I agreed. I mean, every parent on the planet could probably be MORE consistent. So we tried. Of course we saw some improvement but it certainly didn’t solve the problems. Anyway, I asked her how we would know if what we were seeing was a real problem or just because I was a bad parent. (I probably didn’t word it quite like that even though by that point I was annoyed with her and was probably thinking it.)

She said, “Real issues never go away, they just change and morph as the child ages. You see the problem grow with the child.”

It didn’t take us long to know we were looking at real issues with the one in question. (The other one had an official diagnosis so we weren’t bad parents to that one….just his twin.)

I have never forgot that conversation. I have watched the struggles our children have grow and change over the years. We find ways to help them. I research and seek out new therapy. It never stops. Ever.

Today as we worked on a home program to address a specific issue it became clear to me that it was time to start looking for a new specialized therapist to address the issue. I blinked hard to force the tears away as I watched him try and fail to make his brain comply.

I hate these moments. They always sucker punch me. You NEVER get used to seeing your child struggle with something outside of their control. No matter how many times your child is tested and how many times you sit in meetings and hear the below age level results, it never gets easier.

I think I found a place that can help us. It is the benefit of living in a large metro area. Mom and I talked about it in whispered conversations. They help us. They support every decision and test and therapy we have ever sought out. Nathan’s family does too. We are lucky because we know so many who wouldn’t be as lucky to have such supportive families.

I had to drive to the bank to sign paperwork dealing with fraud on one of our debit cards. (I really wish people would quit hacking in and stealing information. It is very inconvenient.) As I drove I finally couldn’t stop the tears. They just fell down my face as I drove. I didn’t sob loudly or cry hard. They just leaked out and I couldn’t have stopped them if I had tried.

That is what it is like to be a parent of children who aren’t like everyone else’s. Some days are hard and it hurts. It feels extra hard because when you look at our boys it isn’t immediately evident that they are different. People don’t extend them the same understanding and courtesy afforded to people who have more obvious special needs.

Some days I feel so alone. Friends can empathize. They listen and try. I appreciate every single one of them. But they don’t live the life. They don’t know the anguish. I don’t have many friends who have kids that have brain differences like mine do. That’s okay. I don’t have time for support groups and play dates with people like us. We have school and I work full time. We have co-op and currently we have therapy twice a week. That will probably increase soon. And Nathan has football and work.

Today was lonely and hard.

Tomorrow we will try again. It might be a better day. It might be worse or the same. But we always keep going and keep trying. I won’t give up because I can’t. Its their lives after all.

I cried in church today. More than once.

Tragedy is hard.

I mentally picture me, and my children, and husband, and parents, and family, and friends in that tragedy. My heart hurts.

And I feel scared.

The world in the last 5 years has felt like too much.

I do all the things they suggest. I look for the helpers and the heros. I look for ways to help. I focus on the present with my people. I pray.

And then another tragedy happens.

I stopped watching the news about 2 years ago. My anxiety was through the roof. I felt like crying all the time. I just couldn’t anymore. They seem to focus on the horrific. Everyone is angry and yelling. Everyone seems so intent that their way is the only right way and that EVERYONE should do what they think.

Life doesn’t work that way. There is very seldom ONE RIGHT WAY.

We want our children to be kind and inclusive and helpful. We want them to share and find compromises. And then you turn on any political debate or anything to do with a politician and they are THE EXACT OPPOSITE. It is hard to expect those things from your children when they look at the adults around them and see the exact opposite.

It isn’t just politicians. All kinds of adults think that leaving nasty comments or yelling on Facebook is okay. I always wonder if they would say the words out loud that they write. My money is that 95% wouldn’t.

I did some online thing tonight where it sends an email to your representative to work on gun control. Many of the men in my family own guns. More than one in fact. Some hunt. I don’t think it is wrong for people to own a gun. But not one of my family members owns gun accessories or guns that allow them to shoot many rounds of bullets quickly.

I have had someone argue to me that hunters need those things. Really? You need to shoot 50 bullets into your wild boar or deer really quick? I have never been hunting but I don’t think you need that. Seems to me that you would spend alot of time digging out that many bullets.

I have had family argue to me that no matter what bad guys will still get guns. Probably. People intent on doing wrong will always find a way.

But it doesn’t seem to me like all these recent shooters are necessarily “known bad guys” with lots of felonies. So maybe, maybe we make it illegal to own certain things. Things like being able to shoot tons of bullets really really fast. You cannot convince me that people need that.

I am not against guns. But I also think something in the system is broken because bad things keep happening. Gun laws won’t prevent all bad things from happening. But shouldn’t we try something? Doing nothing isn’t helping. Sitting here and watching it happen over and over and over….isn’t helping.

Compromise means that both sides have to give up something.

Can we try? Something? Anything?

You don’t have to agree with me. I am okay with that. I don’t agree with some of my family and yet…we are still family. I still love and respect them. Hell, I work with them and value their thoughts and opinions. Just because we don’t fully agree doesn’t change who they are to me.

I don’t really think my email will make much difference. But I had to do something. I had to say something. I need to say that what we are doing isn’t working and we can’t keep doing the same thing over and over and expect something to change.

Of course, most people will just yell from their side of the invisible line. It seems like that is all anyone wants to do anymore.

I don’t feel like yelling.

Last night Nathan and I were talking before bed. I have agreed to be a mentor for a confirmand for the coming year. I told him how surprised and honored I was that my friend asked me to mentor her daughter during this very special year. I said, “Out of all the women at the church, she chose me! There are so many amazing women at our church. And most probably have it much more together than I do.”

He said, “I think you have it all together.”

My husband sees me and thinks I have my life together. Or I suppose as together as any person can really have. So much of life is out of our control. No one can be completely together all the time!

To hear him say this…out loud…with confidence and without hesitation…I am not sure I can even think of words to describe how it felt and has continued to feel all day today.

So much of my life feels completely out of control. I feel like I am clinging to the edge most days. But maybe my perception is off. Maybe I am so far into my head that I can’t really be objective and see me as others see me.

This isn’t a new problem. My second year at college my suitemate confided in me during the second semester. She said when we first all moved in to the dorm in August she was intimidated by me. She looked at me and said I seemed like I had it all together and was so confident. I was shocked because she was saying things to me that I never thought or expected. Truth was I was terrified of new suitemates and fitting our lives together in the confines of a shared bathroom! In college I lived by the mantra, “Fake it till you make it.” I guess it worked. I pretended to be confident and at least one person believed that I was!

I have another friend who I value deeply because I can count of her to tell me to get out of my own head. When I start to spiral she doesn’t hesitate to speak truth and be blunt and honest. We have drifted the last year. I put most of that on me because I pulled back from everyone and everything in the last year. I have missed what she brings to my life.


I spent most of the morning cleaning and making space for the new cabinet Nathan surprised me with for my birthday. I love it. It is an old piece with character and beauty and it fits me perfectly. I cleaned and fussed with it for hours. I stuck a variety of things in it and don’t feel satisfied and I look forward to filling it and getting everything just right.

In the afternoon, mom and I went back to the antique store that Nathan bought the cabinet from. We went last week because mom found the store in her search for the perfect display cabinet. The store is full of treasures and old things. Last week I found an old secretary cabinet that I really liked. I wanted to go back and look at it today.

I like the idea of an old secretary desk. I keep far too much paper crap in my life. The more drawers I have the more stuff I keep. Stuff I don’t need. Stuff that clutters my life. I feel so ready to get rid of the clutter and have purged quite a bit in the last month.

Currently I have a big desk that was my great-grandmother’s. I don’t love it but it is functional and was free. It has LOTS of drawers. Every single one of those drawers is currently full of things that I stuck in there when cleaning up quickly. My friend calls it “the stash and dash”. The desk is big and full of things I need to purge. Getting a smaller desk kind of forces the issue.

Plus, I am ready to downsize from the giant Mac we bought years ago. It is old and slow and I can’t even remember the last time I worked on that big computer. I need to deal with the photos stored on it and it wouldn’t fit at a smaller desk. Forced clearing out is sometimes the best for me.

While we were there I saw a different secretary desk that I noticed last week when we were in the store. Last weekend the dealer was cleaning it up and getting it ready for display so I didn’t bother him. But today it was on display and it was so beautiful.

It is old. It isn’t too big. It has useful drawers but only 3. It has an old key that locks it up. I sat at it. I stared at it. I listed pros and cons between the two desks for about 20 minutes. Mom pointed out that it doesn’t really match much in my house. That gave me pause. Of course, most of my house is IKEA furniture because it is inexpensive and because of I have boys who aren’t very gentle with things.

I thought it over as I stared down the two different desks. They were very different in style. Finally I said, “One represents where I am now in life. The other represents who I feel like I really am and where I want to head.”

I chose the second one. The old one. The one that is English and has superb craftsmanship. I chose the one that represents who I feel like I am deep inside. The me who is becoming. My future.

I sat at that desk again in the store and wondered at its story. The dealer said it is from the early 1900s. I honestly have no idea. It looks old. It smells old. I wonder who sat at this desk before me. How many owners has it had? Were they male or female? What letters did they write while sitting there? What treasures did they lock away with the old key? If it truly is English, when was it brought here and how did it get to Texas?

I am part of its story now. What will I do at the desk? What will I write? What will I add to the story?

I love old things. I love the history of those things. I love to poke around old shops and look at old photos. There is a shop in Ardmore, OK (where Nathan is from). They clearly purchase entire estate sales and then bring it all back to their store to sell. The store is HUGE and full of so much stuff. Last winter I was fascinated by the photos and yearbooks and framed certificates. All those things represent people who lived. They had lives and dreams and goals. Part of me is sad that their stories end up in some random shop, no longer wanted. Their stories are lost and I wish I could capture them.


42 ~ day 1

I created this new space at the beginning of summer. I was eager to start writing in a new place. Really, I was excited to just start writing and recording again.

Then, summer happened and I didn’t write anything.

To be truthful, I tried. I wrote and deleted and started at the blank white screen multiple times. Then I gave up. I gave in to the crazy this summer has brought and decided I would just wait until the time was right.

Last night, as I sat contemplating the arrival of my birthday, I felt ready. I want to record this coming year. My birthday feels like a great day to start.

About a week ago my mom said to me, “In 8 years you will be turning 50.” That was a big sucker punch that I certainly didn’t expect to feel. Age is a number. It has never bothered me or concerned me. I embrace it. I feel proud of it. Life is truly a gift.

But all this week her offhand comment has whispered through my head.

50.

Wow. That feels so different than the number 40 did. 42 feels like nothing special or unique. Just a number. My kids will turn 11 this year. My husband turned 44. We started our 7th year of homeschool. He is starting his 15th year at his school. My dad turned 68. Mom turned 66. My brother turned 39.

These are just ordinary numbers. Steps along the way. They aren’t milestone years.

50.

That’s a milestone. People who are 50 are old, at least that is how I felt when I was 16 or 22. But I don’t feel old. And as I sit a mere 8 years away from 50 I certainly don’t consider 50 old anymore! I don’t necessarily even feel 42. What should 42 feel like anyway?

My children recently learned about the idea of a mid-life crisis and asked if I had ever had one. I told them I had one this last spring. Life has been chaos for about a year. My step-father-in-law was fighting a hard fight with cancer and we found out late spring his fight wouldn’t be won here on earth. We were rushing through ISO certification at work and most of that responsibility fell on me and it was very stressful. It was becoming evident we needed another stint of physical therapy for one of the boys. And then there is the world. Everything about the world feels desperate and draining. I was worn out, overwhelmed, and at a breaking point.

I asked my mom if we could move into their shed.

They don’t really have an ordinary shed. Their shed could fit about 4 or 5 tiny houses in it. We could purge everything and live on the minimum. My husband could quit the job that sucks so much of him away (but that he also loves). We could travel with the boys and enjoy the last of their childhood years.

I was dead serious. I was ready to sell and live in their shed.

I was running. Running back to the place I have always felt safe. Running home where mom and pop would make sure everything was safe for me and my family. I am, and always have been, a flight person. I have never been a fight person.

This was my mid-life crisis. No new wardrobe or haircut. No job change or fancy car.

Running.

Running back to where I could right our world and feel safe.

I’ve pushed through and mom pointed out that we have far too many LEGOs to live in her shed. We made it through our first grandparent death. I am currently waiting to receive the ISO certification. The boys and I just finished our first week of 5th grade. Nathan is back at work. Life is settling and I feel better.

But to be honest, a tiny bit of me still feels like running. I still feel a bit wide-eyed and desperate. Maybe more than a tiny bit.

Carole shared a breathing technique she read about one night in the midst of a pretty epic panic attack. It actually worked and I practice it every day. I have spent more time in prayer. And I picked up a new hobby.

I think I might feel like fleeing most of this 42nd year. After all, politics are starting to ramp up as we get ready for the 2020 election. I don’t really watch TV because I have to protect my mental health, but bits and pieces still filter in. And, I am in charge of teaching my children which includes current events.

Seriously though, I feel a deep shift within me. I cannot quite name it yet but it is forming and growing. I am trying to sit with that swirling mess. I want to let it happen and watch it develop. I am curious about what will emerge and how I will ultimately change. Perhaps that is the real heart of a mid-life crisis. There is a bit of crisis about it. Change makes us uneasy and a wide-eyed. It is normal and natural for us to change. Really it wouldn’t serve me to still be like I was when I was 19.

But crisis feels dire. So maybe this is my mid-life changing. My mid-life becoming. Because I do feel like I am becoming, like I am stepping out and forward into who I have always meant to be.