Stay Married

Unsolicited update since I went back on a stupid dating app:

A week ago a beautiful woman liked my profile and I politely let her know that she had a very nice profile but was, unfortunately, too far away for there to be any meeting to get to know each other etc etc

She wanted to talk anyway and said that she could live anywhere and distance shouldn’t keep two people that wanted to be together apart….it’s “only 110 miles”

Then I, the sensible one, said we don’t even know each other so we could avoid the inconvenience of long distance…not like when you get to know some and they move away.

Anyway short story long: Today she told me that she loves my hair…

She then said the silver suited me

I said I didn’t mind it even though I was brunette my entire life ( sent with 2 photos of me with brown hair)

She responded “WOW baby are you sick?!”

I replied “Sick?”

Then she asked if I dyed my hair silver…and I had to explain that around 50 years of age my hair gradually stopped being brown and started being silver…

Age progression

WOW baby are you sick?!

Her response:

“Lol I understand what you mean now, it’s the change of your age but I never worry about it, because our mental age will always be 18”

and included a stupid GIF of some little 2 year old dancing with sunglasses on

Wtf

P.S. She’s currently 50yrs old…2 years younger than me

P.P.S. Even though I didn’t hear her say it I keep hearing her say it over and over again in my head “Wow baby are you sick?!”

Lovely Luna

I went to the river and I lay by his side

to feel how you tugged on each of our tides

Usually one thinks of oceans and seas

but you pull on all humours even those of creatures and trees

Our saps quicken and our breasts become full

so irresistible is your enchanting pull

The river ran quiet and deep down it was dark

though your reflection gave his ripples a spark

Your light became brighter as you climbed the sky

and I breathed you in then stood with a sigh

I stretched up my arms to bathe in your glow

and you lit my path as I turned to go

Back in my room alone in my bed

at peace while visions of you swam in my head

“I’ll see you in my dreams Lovely Luna” I spoke from my heart

and we drifted off together though ever apart  

Kiddo’s Vegan Rap

So often I hear: “Table for one?” Because that is all they sees.

So I smile politely as I say: “Yes please.”

But really for two:
Me and the ghost of who I used to beees.

I order fake alfredo and that fake cheese.

Mixed with mushrooms, onions and those sweet peas.

Only two legged animals injured in the making of this meal.

(but not the chimpanzees)

Who would’ve thought it would take so many years to heal?

(being single like a disease.)

Whether it comes out wrong or it comes out right;

I eat it all, don’t lick the plate, I finish every bite.

Pay the bill and tip well then we drive home for the night.

Snuggle my ghost beneath the covers as I close my eyes.

Struggle with no needs of another
that’s my big prize.

“Peace”

*drops the mic

~ Kiddo

Extraordinarily Ordinary

You know when you squirt the dish soap into the sink and seconds later you notice a PLETHORA of tiny magical bubbles floating all around you and you instantly feel like the hills are alive with the sound of music? (I guess to younger folks you’d feel like a Disney Princess). Well that happened to me this evening and nothing else that happened today matters. Excuse me while I sing with the woodland creatures that have inhabited my kitchen.

~KiDD

 

Learning to Dance in the Rain – Excerpt from There Were So Many Dancing Times

(Excerpt from my childhood)

…“It’s raining! It’s raining!” I shout gleefully “Can we go play in the rain Mamma?!”

    “Let’s go!” Mamma stands up with Sarah as the next song starts and she boogies over to the door singing “If you got the money honey, I got the time!”

    Mama opens the door and Stephen jumps from the top step with his towel cape flying behind him and I stand on the second step holding my face up to the sun and the rain to enjoy this “sun shower’ before leaping into it. Mamma and Sarah join us on the grass and we dance around in the spring rain that smells like orange blossoms from the grove next to our trailer. It seems the sun shower is about to fizzle out but then Mamma shouts, “Wooo! Woo woo woo!” and starts popping her mouth with her left hand and nodding her head up and down and rhythmically tapping first one and then the other of her bare feet on the wet ground. “Wooo! Woo woo woo! Woo! woo woo woo!” She continues this as she begins to move in a circle and Stephen and I follow suit when we realize that she is doing her “Indian rain dance”.

    “Woo woo woo woo!”  we are all dancing following Mamma in a slow circle. We kids start to improvise and make this dance our own.  I add a few spins to my my dance first one direction and then the other and Stephen adds his own rain call which is a higher pitched vocalization after about every third set of 4 woos.  We all have our heads back calling up to the clouds requesting more rain and it works as usual. Soon we are all drenched by a cool downpour as the deluge starts in earnest. I love the cleansing rain and am so happy that Mamma decided to dance up a storm. We break from the circle and all dance around the yard catching raindrops in our mouths until thunder starts to rumble across the sky. Lightning flashes in the distance and we all know that signals a temporary end to our outside dancing and we head straight for the door. The wind picks up and as Mamma opens the door it is snatched from her hand and slams into the trailer making us all squeal and laugh. As we get inside Mamma turns off the radio and tells us to take off our wet clothes and then wraps each of us in a towel and plops us in a row on the couch.

    “Now be still and be quiet. Daddy will be home soon and I am fixing to start supper. You know lightning is attracted to loud kids and wiggle worms.”

    We definitely know that. We sit still and quiet listening to the thunder as it really starts to boom. The lightning keeps flashing so bright I start to see spots. It’s like God has the flashbulb attachment on his Polaroid and we are posing for Him. Stephen is on one end of the couch and I’m on the other with Sarah wide-eyed in the middle.

     I whisper to Sarah, “It’s okay Sarah, the lightning will leave us alone if we are very quiet and don’t move.” I lean back against the cushion and monitor the storms sounds as it ratchets up and then starts to wind down almost as quickly as it started. I’m starting to feel pretty sure that we are going to be safe and my eyes are beginning to feel heavy. Mixed in with the rumbling thunder are sounds of  Mamma opening and closing the icebox and of her getting out pots and pans. The smell of Mamma’s cooking wafts from the kitchen as the thunderstorm sounds further and further away outside and I fall asleep right there wrapped in a towel like a caterpillar in a cocoon.

~ Kiddo

Wrong Nickname? Subtitled: A Doozy of a Depression

 

    **NOTE: I  STARTED THIS POST INTENDING TO BE AMUSING…because that is what I do. Rather than talk about problems I try to make people laugh. When I write I want to be mostly uplifting even while acknowledging the struggles that everyone goes through. Pointing out the struggle and the success is meant to be encouraging but you know how sometimes you just need a good cry or a place to vent? This post didn’t turn out short and funny as I intended but maybe I just needed to write it. Maybe someone needs to read it. If not today then maybe whenever they are going through something and they happen to find it…if you don’t want to read about an ugly depression that lasted a couple of months just read the bold at the beginning and end. 

    I know that much like the road construction here in Florida we are all a work in progress but after finding myself in much the same condition as I was this time last year I am thinking I should have the nickname D.O.T. rather than Kiddo. I don’t know about where you live but here it seems like as soon as they get finished repaving or widening a road they start all over again making improvements on the same stretch of highway. I see so many Bob’s Barricades that I feel like I am starting to recognize the same ones on different projects.

     Every person’s life has ups and downs and keeping a positive attitude is very important. Sometimes it can be hard to stay positive. During the last half of 2018, I experienced roadblocks and detours. Earlier in the year, I had once again started writing my novel based on my life growing up in central Florida. I started out excited to be revisiting my childhood and fictionalizing it until I got to July 4th of 1976 which was our countries bicentennial but then the memories got too real. I was three years old in July of 1976 but the memories were getting very emotional for me so I took a break. I took a few days off and then a week and currently I am still stalled on that project. In July of 2018, I had finally gotten back into better shape after the surgery on my cervical spine that I had at the end of 2017 and was leaving my doctor’s office in a great mood due to the fact that my weight was on record as finally going down and because I had just been told that everything was looking great and that I wouldn’t need to be checked again for six months. Then WHAM! On the way home from that appointment I had a car crash that involved a car stalled in rush hour traffic that totaled my car and gave me whiplash that hampered me physically for about six weeks. On top of the physical pain and daily headaches, I was trying to get another vehicle in a hurry while bumming rides to and from work.

     In August I finally found a vehicle that I could maybe afford but I wasn’t thrilled to be getting it. A 12-year-old minivan brings its own set of problems but it was hopefully going to be better than bumming a ride the 35 miles to my job every day. Replacing a vehicle unexpectantly is very hard on a single income and I am still paying for that literal ROADBLOCK. The van had to be in the shop three times in the 1st four months that I owned it and it is in desperate need of tires but I still owe $650 on it so hopefully the tires last a little while longer.   The whiplash cleared up and I started making physical progress again midway through September and when October arrived I was feeling encouraged. I am a strong person and have made difficult comebacks before so I felt like I could do it again. I had maintained my optimism despite my setbacks because I am a strong person and also because I am a naturally optimistic person that finds joy in the everyday beauty of the world around me. I felt great mentally and emotionally so no problems that arose were actually a problem. 

     I usually enjoy being with my own thoughts so being single isn’t typically a big issue for me. Even though I was alone a LOT I wasn’t sitting around feeling lonely and sorry for myself and I had actually started to envision a happy future for myself without a partner. I was still excited to get up every day despite the fact that I wasn’t super happy about my replacement vehicle. I was very much aware of the fact that things could have turned out much worse and was just thankful to still be cruising along.

     November was upon me before I could even believe it and then WHAM! Here came the mental/emotional DETOUR. Brain chemistry and hormonal imbalances can be a bitch…as much as I tried to fight it with physical activity, a healthy diet, positive people and sheer force of will I eventually slipped into one of my depressions which of course left me feeling unmotivated and at times helpless. I seemed to have swung from being my usual insomniac self to having narcolepsy.  I was doing all I could do just to get up and go to work. You know how alcoholics are considered to be ‘functional alcoholics” as long as drinking doesn’t interfere with their work or other responsibilities? I felt like as long as I kept getting up and doing what absolutely had to be done to pay the bills I was at least functionally depressed. I just kept fighting like Atreyu in the Swamps of Sadness and would even have a good day here and there.  A couple of times I felt like I was coming out of my funk but it had sunk its teeth in deep and wasn’t letting go. Many mornings I  woke up despairing of the fact that I had to face another day and stayed in bed as long as I could and still make it to work on time.

     Despite usually being a ‘yes person’ I had started being a ‘maybe person’ because I hate saying ‘no’ until eventually I was turning down invitations and making excuses or just saying I was tired or just not up to doing anything. After several weeks with the blues I began waking up with tears already in my eyes and occasionally the idea of ending it all would whisper to me from my dark places before I even opened my eyes. I pushed those whispers aside and got up and took care of business. As I moved through the day I felt like there was an actual physical quilt weighing me down. The quilt felt so thick and heavy it must’ve been soaked with the tears of other tortured souls. This sopping wet quilt made it hard to move and hard to take a breath. I felt utterly alone and hopeless and was fighting tears so often during the day that my eyes started to feel irritated and my vision was blurry.  I intentionally put unhealthy thoughts away and tried to focus on how good everything in my life was. There was so much to be thankful for and I was never ever a quitter. Everything was feeling impossible but that didn’t mean that it was impossible. I felt alone but that didn’t mean I was alone. When people asked how I was doing, of course, I said that I was doing fine. I knew that just like in the past this stupid pain in the everything depression would just burn off like morning fog after the sun comes up. I just had to hold on and keep trying to try. I hated that my sons had to go through the divorce of their parents and I had done everything I could to keep my marriage from ending. I would never want to put them through something that would be more traumatic and even more shameful than a divorce so I focused on staying strong for their sakes. At least in this situatuon, I was the only one in charge of the outcome. If I ever quit trying to try I knew I could be lost like Artax to that tragic Swamp of Sadness. We were all forced to accept the unfair loss of Artax but I refused to accept my own loss. I struggled not to give in to the darkness even though I was finding it harder to totally ignore the dark whispers that suggested I just stop fighting and sink. 

     I was almost glad when I got one flu and then another because it gave me a legit excuse to stay home on the couch in my sweatpants and t-shirt when I wasn’t at work. Recently I had been hating going to the gym. When I did get my ass to the gym I was hating every minute of being there. I was FORCING myself to stay as long as I could but sometimes stopped after a single mile on the elliptical and often skipped the rest of my workout completely. When the flu hit me I didn’t have to hate myself for skipping my morning and evening gym visits. I was too sick to workout and expect to recover in a timely fashion. When I am not depressed I have to force myself to be smart and skip a few workouts if I get a cold or flu but I hadn’t felt like going to the gym for almost a month when I got the flu so this was a bit of a relief. I would stay hydrated and rest and heal up!

     Along came the holidays and for the 1st time since I had to start working full time when my husband left five and a half years earlier, I had a lot of time off from work. I didn’t have the money to go anywhere or a reliable safe vehicle but I was just relieved not to have to get up and get dressed and drive to work worried that my tires were going to blow. I was very very depressed at this point but planned to use the time off work to force myself back into my gym routine as a way to combat this soul-sucking darkness that I was literally feeling for no other reason than something being off balance chemically or hormonally. Mid-forties hormones are whack yo. I had a plan that I knew would work for me. Instead of going to the liquor store I went to the grocery and bought a cart slap full of healthy foods that I love and enough delicious coconut water for a week and a half. I had eleven straight days without having to work and I was going to use it to get my healthy mindset and healthy emotions back in shape while also getting my body back in shape. I let about five people that I always enjoy seeing know that I was available to hang out for the next week and a half. I needed to be with people that make me laugh. I had begun to feel more alone that I have ever felt in my life and wanted healthy interaction. It seemed that everywhere I looked I saw couples. Happy couples. Everyone, no matter their age, weight or hair color had someone to snuggle with, shop with, laugh with.

    You know what Burns wrote about the best-laid plans of mice and men often going awry? Well, that is true for the plans of women too. Unfortunately, everyone was super busy during the holidays or didn’t have any time off from work, or they had gotten the flu too or had spouses or friends that they were spending time with and I only got to do something with someone one day halfway through my time off. That one day was beautiful. I used that day as hope to hold on to and as proof to my doubting self that life is amazing and worth living.  As I previously mentioned, I am a loner and I am pretty self-sufficient. I can be my own mental coach and encourage myself when things don’t go exactly right for the most part but I am in a stage in my life where my kids are grown, I don’t have a partner, I don’t have friends that I see every week. I work in an office with very little interaction with other people. Hardly any conversation is in my life now. Almost zero physical contact a day. I hug my son when I get home and when I go to bed. That is it. My life as a lonely loner was starting to feel unbearable for the first time ever. After years of progress with my self-esteem, I was back to the point of hating my guts. I hated everything about me. I hated my being weak and needy and hated that I was being tempted to give up. I hated that I couldn’t just will myself to be better. I hated myself for hating myself.

     Despite hating everything from my looks with my wrinkles and grey hair to my weight and a closet full of clothes that I can not wear comfortably I just kept encouraging myself to hold on until the darkness ended. I was having two-sided conversations with myself. I only talked to myself about my negative thoughts and feelings. I never wanted to bum other people out with my insignificant problems and if I did get a chance to have an interaction with others I didn’t want to waste it complaining about my own shit. I would never involve someone else in the drama of self-harm urges. No one wants to hear me comparing the dark thoughts about hurting myself (or worse) to having a craving for something that isn’t healthy. You know when you don’t WANT to keep wanting that unhealthy snack that will NOT STOP calling to you from the kitchen? You try to distract yourself or eat something healthy so you won’t still want it and you might even make it into bed without caving but then you can’t fall asleep for imagining giving in and just taking ONE BITE? During my dark times hurting myself (or worse) can keep pestering me the same way.  For no real reason, other than an imbalance in the force. No one wants to hear that and even if they did I didn’t want to share that about myself. I have made promises to not ever do myself harm again and I have kept those promises. I even have a tattoo as a constant reminder to never act on those unhealthy urges.

     I wanted positive interactions with people. I wanted to be someone that someone else would enjoy being around even if I was no longer enjoying being with myself. Rather than saying “woe is me my life is so hard I should just end it all” I was speaking positive things to myself to refute the negative things that were no longer just whispering. I kept encouraging other people if I encountered any and meaning every positive word I said even if I wasn’t feeling it. I was making positive posts on my social media and doing my best to enjoy the scenery and the sunrises and the sunsets and then a few days ago just as unexpectantly as it descended the darkness lifted. 

    Nothing changed with my situation but some chemical or hormone must’ve rebalanced itself and I was released. My spirit was no longer being strangled or trampled on. I was no longer resisting dark urges. I was back to being myself waking up at 4:45 a.m and energetically running on the elliptical by 5:15 doing my Rocky air punches as I ran while jamming to the magical vintage synth of the Eurythmics. Every 20 minutes I would jump off the elliptical and do 10 pushups and jump back on before the 30 second pause caused the machine to reset. 

     In July I had listened to the audio version of a book I had read by Stephen King called Finders Keepers. In the preface are two quotes. The first quote is from Joseph Campbell “It is by going down into the abyss that we recover the treasures of life.” and the second quote is from a character in King’s book and a character in a character’s book in King’s book (King fans will understand how that works) That quote is “Shit don’t mean shit”. The two quotes stayed in my mind while I was going down into the abyss. They sort of became a mantra for me. 

     My life is not bad. I have a great job with very little to no stress. I am renting a house that is a thousand times better than the apartment I had to move into for four years. I don’t live in a location that is freezing cold. I have two wonderful sons and recently gained a daughter-in-law and a 6-year-old grandson. My life is pretty damn good. I just got a second job that allows me to have conversations with people a few nights a week so now I will at least have those interactions while hopefully earning the money to get tires on the minivan.  I try to be a positive influence on other people and I am a happy laid-back person. I am extremely thankful for all of the good things in my life but depression can come out of nowhere for seemingly no reason. Just the same way my low key mania can just come back for no other reason than some whim of my body and brain chemistry. Mania is way more fun and productive than depression but even low key mania has dark dangerous urges disguised as fun times.  Urges that I sometimes have to use my sheer force of will to ignore. Over the last couple of decades, I have gotten really good at not acting on impulses and compulsions. I am thankful that I have this much control nowadays because the past couple of months were a doozie of a depression.

    This morning I saw the progress photos that I had proudly taken to compare my January 1, 2018 smooshy body to my July 1, 2018 fitness. Fortunately, I had just magically come out of my most recent depression and didn’t have a relapse! I have to pave the same stretch of road I paved at the beginning of last year but at least I still see a road ahead of me. That is why I started this long ass post: To say that since I have to keep working on the same thing over and over again I should be called D.O.T. The only reason I won’t change my nickname is that I can’t decide whether to pronounce it Dee-oh-tee (almost rhyming with coyote) or just go by Dot (rhymes with hot). Call me what you will, I got this.

 

~KiDD

PERSPECTIVE!

Life is beautiful…unless you’re this discarded half applicated tampon surrounded by cig butts never getting to serve your purpose

tampon
But wait: If your purpose were the same as a tampon then I think being discarded in a parking lot is BETTER…at least the view is better and there’s fresh air. PERSPECTIVE!

~ Kiddo

Always a Choice

There is ALWAYS a choice. Today my choices were :

1) Whine at work

2) Wine at work

3) Do nothing ….

I don’t get paid to do nothing and I really have no one to listen to me whine so the choice was OBVIOUS!!

Three roads diverged in a wood, (my desk is made of wood) and I– I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference. *Boom*

~ Kiddo

Kiddo Uncompromised

Wrote this long ass post 3 years and many tears ago…but I DID find another job and did NOT lose the apartment and recently even rented a HOUSE 😁 https://kiddoskorner247.com/2015/06/10/kiddo-uncompromised/

“When the moisture on my face is a mixture of sweat, raindrops from the literal storm that I am running through, tears of pain and doubt that I refuse to hold back and tears of pure joy at the beauty of my life that’s when I know that I have lived. I am in this moment truly ALIVE!”
~ Kiddo (6-10-15)

I have been a runner my entire life. I have been running since before running was “cool”. In the 70’s I didn’t need a cool head band, sneakers and jogging shorts. All I needed was my barefeet and ground to cover. I didn’t wear hairbands and ponytail holders because I had a sensitive scalp and was prone to headaches so I tended to run against the wind when I could. The wind not only kept my straggly hair out of my face allowing me to see where I was going but it also made me earn every inch of ground that I crossed. Sometimes I would run against wind so STRONG that it seemed like I was running in place. To me this was a good time. I never looked for the path of least resistance and I felt like the more challenging something was to do the more it was worth doing. I didn’t run for financial gain or for health or for the recognition of others. I RAN FOR THE PURE JOY OF IT.

In the 80’s I was encouraged to join the track team at school and since I loved running and jumping I did. I was one of the best on the team and my biggest problem (as well as my coach’s ) was that I could only participate in three events per track meet. I ran the mile run every single meet but I also ran the mile relay (as the anchor or catch up runner) and did the long jump and the high jump depending on where I was needed most for a particular event. One thing that allowed me to really shine was when the runners would have to run against the wind. Most of the runners in Jr high and high school hated running against the wind and were very discouraged by it. Not me. I would tuck my chin, fold my lips in to keep them from drying out and slow my breath to avoid flaring my nostrils. My hair would fly out behind me and I would be a kid again running for the pure joy of it like my Creek ancestors did generations ago.

Even as someone that truly loves running there would be times as a teenager that I would want to quit. Training to run sometimes took some of the fun out it. Occasionally, I would rather be doing something other than running and I would MAKE myself run at least 5 miles. When my dad got in on my training and would have me drink 5 raw eggs before running 5 miles every morning no matter what the weather I started to lose my joy. I truly hated running in the cold. When I found myself focusing on how far I would still have to go I would make myself stop thinking like that. I trained myself to look back on how far I had gone. The truth is that just running ONE mile was an accomplishment. There was no failure. At first I would have to make myself flip my perspective from one of dreading the distance yet to go to appreciating how far I had gone. The higher the number of laps or miles I had ran grew the more I would feel like I could quit at anytime and still have won. Even giving myself permission to quit I wouldn’t quit because the pressure was off and it was basically a game to see how far I could push myself.

Once again I have found myself in the position of being a single unemployed mother and I can’t help but feel the importance of the decisions I make in the near future. There’s WEIGHT to my choices simply because I am not the only one effected by them. Weight isn’t necessarily a bad thing though. It makes us see what we consider important. It makes us stop and truly think about our decisions. In fact, I have a few weights that I have been carrying around for the majority of my life that I hope to never lose. When I was seven years old running barefooted through a field near my home I was stopped short by something that looked like an egg. It was a blur beneath my feet as I zoomed past it but I came to a screeching halt and walked back about 10 yards to see this bird egg. When I got back to it I discovered that it wasn’t an egg at all. I had found a perfectly smooth, cool to the touch even in the mid-day sun, stone! I started calling it my pet rock because pet rocks had been really cool about 5 years before and this was the coolest natural rock I had ever seen. I had seen plenty of perfectly smooth rocks in rivers in the Carolinas and Tennessee but this was in the middle of a dry field in central Florida and nearly perfectly round. I thought it was amazing and I have carried that rock with me for about 35 years. In 1992 when I was 19yrs old I discovered another weight that I loved so much I had to have it. This discovery was a paper weight I unpacked at Cracker Barrel while I was stocking the gift shop with new items. It was just a glob of glass, with different coloured glass inside to look like two dolphins swimming in the ocean. I loved it and bought it with my employee discount. That was 23 years ago. I have kept both of my weights with me through thick and thin. Even when I didn’t have a place of my own and I was backpacking through the southeastern states I kept these two weights. I never even used them to hold down papers. I kept these items with me because they were beautiful to look at and felt great in my hands. One seemed to be shaped and smoothed by nature and the other was intentionally crafted my a human. Both of these weights were shaped by outside forces exerted on them but both of them were beautiful as a result and their form was even more impressive to me than their function. Every time I had to sort through my belongings and choose necessities I kept both of these weights. I kept them through spring cleanings and chaff clearings and they have been with me for the good and the not so good. I’ve kept these weights through my ups and downs because I value what we’ve been through together and they’re lovely to behold.

This afternoon I went for my run and I have so much energy since I haven’t worked in four days. I’m like a cross between Sarah Connor and those treadmill dancers and I just enjoy myself as I cruise on down the road. I had a great playlist of songs that I totally enjoyed running to. The songs gave me an opportunity to change my pace and move to different rhythms. The wind was in my face and it started to rain and I was completely ALIVE.

I am NOT scared of the future. I know that even if I don’t find a job in time to keep our apartment that my heart will keep on beating and I will still live, laugh and love beneath the sun and the clouds and the beauty of the night sky. Life is about ups and downs and round and rounds. I truly love roller coasters and I will make the best of the ride.

When I think about the uncertainty of the future I remind myself that no one’s future is certain. Even people who think that their path is set and that they know where they’re going they are not CERTAIN of how things will turn out. If you’re under the illusion that your future is set I hope that you’re not proven wrong. I hope that you’re not caught off guard. If your life goes exactly according to plan then I am HAPPY for you. I also will feel a little bit sorry for you because you won’t know how you can roll with the changes. You won’t find out about your ability to go with the flow and learn to compromise without compromising your true self. I lost my job four days ago for being true to myself and I wouldn’t change that for the world. Life is beautiful even as it’s uncertain and I am happy with that. I look back on my life and see that I might’ve made different choices in retrospect but we don’t have the ability to go back and make changes. Even though there are a few things I would do differently if given the option to go back I am glad that I can’t. Every choice and every consequence that I lived through has shaped me and strengthened me to be what I am today. Every worry I have ever had has been pointless unless I see it as a learning experience. I worried about things that weren’t necessary because things work out one way or another and often times things that I worried about never came true. These things still teach me about the things that are important to me and give me an appreciation for how things turn out. When I had just given birth to my first child I was genuinely concerned that his tiny mouth couldn’t possibly latch onto my giant nipple but the nurse assured me that this wouldn’t be a problem. She had experience and she turned out to be right. Now that little baby is making his way through the world and driving himself around in his own car going about his business never knowing that at one time I was worried that he might not be able to nurse.

Life works out and life is beautiful. It’s all about the journey because the destination is the end of life and we will all get there eventually. If it were possible to stand before my ancestors and my posterity I would proudly say that I lived my life true to me. I’m a hedonist and enjoy life fully but I have made a positive difference in the lives that I have touched. I have made the world a better place and I have cooperated along the way but I never compromised. I have run with the wind at my back but I was truly alive when I ran against the wind with my straggly hair flying out behind me earning every inch of ground that I covered.

Hopefully I will find a good job soon that both pays the bills and allows me to be a service to others without being a disservice to myself. Until that time I will do my best to make it happen but I will not worry about the future. The future is uncertain but it will happen no matter what.

Two weights I have chosen to carry

My playlist for that evening’s run

The Sun is Shining Weather is Sweet

FINALLY, after days and days and DAYS of nearly constant rain, the sun is shining! Don’t get me wrong I dearly love rain and thunderstorms, clouds and dimly lit days but I was definitely missing the sunshine. I have had to commute through flooded roadways, potholed streets and downpours with maniac drivers. Some people drive like it isn’t raining at all and some people drive like they have NEVER seen water fall from the sky. It is not a safe mix for interstate travel.

Last week during a deluge I watched from an intersection of two major roadways as a northbound vehicle drove through the flooded street and then over the median that was underwater and into southbound lanes.  Fortunately, the southbound traffic lights were red so there wasn’t a collision. The driver stopped momentarily and I assumed they were going to turn so that they were headed south too. Not the case. The driver proceeded to drive northward as the traffic got the green light and headed toward them. It was crazy. I couldn’t believe my eyes as vehicles started to stream around the car as if it were a stone in a river. Moments later I had to pull off of the road and wait the flood out. My car was stalling and other vehicles that were larger than mine were creating wakes that had the water up to my doors.

I have been informed by the weather forecasters that this morning’s sunshine will not last and that my Memorial Day weekend plans will be soggy as the rain comes back for another week of Florida fun but I dearly hope that they are wrong. I don’t want to travel with the holiday travelers through more of that mess. I have my fingers crossed and my vibes set to ‘Sunshine” so I’m doing all that I can do to ensure that my trip to Saint Augustine will have dry weather.

I haven’t had a chance to stop by the beach on the way to work for the last couple of weeks but decided to celebrate this morning by stopping by for a few minutes to breath in the salty air and experience the freshly washed shoreline. There were many people out despite the early hour and everyone was friendly and smiling. There was a festive feel to the scene and I lingered as long as I could before heading to work. Life is good in sunshine AND in rain but for this morning I am soaking in the sun.

Make your hay people. The sun is shining

20171221_071941

 

Then and now

When I was a child my ears stuck through my hair and so I was made fun of for looking like a Mon chi chi. I thought Mon chi chi were adorable so I had one….but I thought I was ugly. I began to wear a cloth headband wide enough to cover my ears. I wore a giant rubber band at night to keep my ears flat while I slept hoping they would just stay flat. I had my mom buy freckle eraser from Avon and prayed and really believed it would work. I still have freckles to this day. When I was 14 I was permitted to get a haircut that allowed my hair to be feathered over my ears. I look back at photos I hated my entire childhood and realize that I believed what people told me rather than believing what I saw with my own eyes. When I looked in the mirror I did not see this adorable face. It is so hard for me to believe that these are the same photos I have known my entire life. I recognize the pictures but they never looked cute to me before. I was always self conscious of my looks because I never saw the truth. I walked around FEELING GROTESQUE like I should be hiding somewhere. That feeling persisted for much of my adulthood. I look back at photos from the last 45 years and can’t find an ugly one in the pile. I was 35 years old before I actually felt like I wasn’t disgusting to look at. I will be 45 years old in 1 week and sometimes wish that I could go back and live a life feeling like I wasn’t horrible to look at BUT I compensated for my looks by being clever, funny, and athletic and who knows what kind of personality I would have if I had always thought I was as adorable as I see that little girl now.

Reminder to self: Slow journeys give us time to pay attention

 

This is my yoga space that I have been using at work as I began my slow journey back to some sort of fitness. I have just enough room, a window and a fire extinguisher just in case I get really overheated. This space is one of the advantages to working alone.

This week I have been feeling great emotionally and feeling better physically and I have hope that I will get back to feeling greatish physically.

I have only had my cervical correction/stabilization surgery and don’t know when or IF I will actually go through with lumbar correction/stabilization surgery so therefore I am literally practicing with a broken (in a couple of places) back. If I do opt to have the lumbar surgery it will be at least 10 months from now.

I am being pretty careful and modifying even though that has always been hard for me even with a solitary practice. It is easier to do NO BACK BENDS and NO INVERSIONS (other than forward folds and such) now that I have vivid pictures of my spinal Xrays and MRIs to remind me that ignoring what my body is telling me does NOT necessarily make me stronger. I am physically heavier and weaker than I have EVER been because I pushed myself physically in the wrong ways for decades. PLUS in the past year or so I have had to modify not only how I workout and do cardio but also how I sleep, get out of bed, sit on a toilet, use a chair, drive a car, ride a bike, walk, “run” and even BREATHE.

Pain has never been enough to make me really listen to my body even when the pain was significant. If I could keep moving I did….so eventually my body simply QUIT allowing me to ignore it. Proof that as I have always said: Your body is smarter than your brain 🙂 ….Okay I haven’t always said that but in this case it is true.

I HAVE always said that life is about the journey not the destination (I didn’t make it up but I do SAY it) and I know that journeys have setbacks and detours that make the journey more memorable and allow for more growth. Life is beautiful,  so very beautiful, even with hard lessons and one day this life will be over so I plan to appreciate as much of it as I can while I am still here.

I waited 30 years for this moon

This morning I watched what I could see of the eclipsing blue super moon from the east coast of Florida. I had been waiting about 30 years for the three lunar phenomena to coincide. In August of 1980 I had become very interested in astronomy due in large part to a partial lunar eclipse that I had heard was coming up. I was intrigued by eclipses at 7 years of age and wanted an explanation as to why it was to be a partial eclipse and wanted to know if penumbral was just a fancy way of saying “partial”. I lived in a small town and my elementary school had a very decent library with librarians that would help me find out whatever I could but it wasn’t always easy. We didn’t have the most up to date encyclopedias and the astronomy selection in the science section was stocked mostly with glossy picture books about the planets. When I was 11 years old the school let us all go out and “view” the solar eclipse that occurred near the end of the 1983- 84 school year. Of course we made the standard shadow boxes and were taught to never ever look at the sun but I could NOT resist taking peaks as the sun was nearly covered by the shadow of Earth. The world around me took on a weird dimness and I felt the magic of the eclipse and understood why ancient cultures felt that eclipses were so significant. I felt a little privileged to be living in a time in which we knew the cause and the exact timing of the sun going dim but I also felt a little deprived to be living in a world without the belief that the happenings in our sky held signs and omens that shaped human events and rituals.

We had 14 eclipses in the 1980s that kept me interested in the sun and moon and their relationship with Earth. During that time I had begun studying the stars and could point out most of the well known constellations and planets to anyone that would listen to me. In central Florida where I grew up I was far away from big city lights and could clearly see the milky way like diamonds poured out across the dark velvet sky. I think at first people were slightly amused at my enthusiasm and stories about the night sky but after a few years they started to call ME when they had a question. I would get questions about something very bright or very twinkly or streaking overhead and I usually had the answers (Venus, Sirius, the Orionids meteor shower). I had learned all of my information thus far in the age before the “information super highway” or Google and had done so by visiting libraries and reading outdated books at my school. I was never too sure of my pronunciation of astronomical names and phrases because I mostly just read about them and didn’t have anyone teaching me how to say them.

There was another HUGE sky event in 80’s that had people talking and excited. Halley’s Comet came through in 1986 which was the year I turned 13 and boy did it get a lot of build up! I was pretty excited about it and couldn’t believe how lucky I was to be here for the famous comets return. I studied where and when to look and read all about Samuel Langhorne Clemens and his desire to go out with the 1910 passing of the comet because he had been born during it’s appearance in 1835. I had been spouting facts about an ancient Greek comet that had all of the characteristics of Halley’s so it MUST have been the same comet. I was so full of information that I was glad when someone would ask me about it. Apparently a lot of people including adults had the idea that it would be SUPER BRIGHT or that it would streak by like a “shooting star” and I was happy to correct this misinformation. Turns out many people were disappointed that year including myself. One of my uncles said to me “I went outside last night and didn’t see anything flying over but an airplane.” Some nights during Halley’s visit my dad would take us out into a field and let us use his gigantic binoculars to look for the comet on clear dark nights. We were able to see it but it was HARD. The binoculars were powerful and heavy which made it hard to keep them steady enough for a clear view. I tried to slow my breath and the beat of my heart. With patience I was able to get a pretty good look at the smudge of a comet in the night sky and after several nights I was able to make out that distant smudge with my naked eye! I was initially disappointed with my view of the comet and others would make comments about wasting their time or exclaim “THAT is all it is?!” when I pointed it out for them. I was able to regain my own enthusiasm for the event my giving friends and family some facts about what we were looking up at. I would say “yeah, but it is on the opposite side of the sun from us” and when they were still mumbling unimpressed I would say “Hey, it’s 39 MILLION miles away and you can SEE IT!” then someone might say “I can’t actually see it though” and I would say “focus right beside it because sometimes it easier to see when you don’t look right at it” which didn’t go over very well. One time I was trying to impress whoever was out in the dark field with me by saying “there are TWO meteor showers associated with Halley’s Comet!” and I got a couple of “cools” and an “awesome, are they happening tonight!?” I wished I could say yes but replied “uhhhhh no… but if you stay out here for awhile looking up you will see a random shooting star just like every other night.” which was followed by a long pause while we all looked up then “Ohhhhh kaaaay” This was a tough crowd. Some people seemed to be disappointed in ME because I had built the comet up over several months and they felt as if I had tricked them.

Over the years I saw people get all excited about upcoming events only to be let down at the reality so I stopped building things up for people and stopped volunteering information about things that I was interested in. If someone asked me a question I was all to happy to give them all of the information they wanted but I mostly stopped inviting people out to look at meteor showers and planets with me. I did have a few younger cousins and a couple of older cousins that would occasionally watch the night sky with me but it seemed to me that there wasn’t much room for it in the adult world. One thing that everyone still seemed to get excited about though was THE ECLIPSE. I started to think of the eclipse as the easy way to get people into my world of astronomy.

Not long after the passing of Halley’s comet I received a decent Meade telescope for Christmas. Having a telescope was amazing for me and I used it throughout the year spending many hours alone beneath the dome of the sky. My dad spent more time with me and my ‘scope than anyone else did and I will never forget the time we spent taking turns at the eye piece looking at the moon and the planets. I remember the very first thing I looked at through my telescope. My dad was with me and I was trying to follow the directions for using the new tripod to position my new telescope to view Sirius close to the horizon. It was super bright and super twinkly and very colorful. I didn’t want to spend too much time reading the manual so I grabbed the largest lens (which turns out to be the lowest magnification) and popped it into the 90 degree diagonal prism and aimed the end of my ‘scope at the big bright twinkly star figuring that it would be about the easiest thing to find. Almost right away I spotted the BIG bright scintillating light and got super excited. I was bouncing up and down on the inside but being very careful and deliberate on the outside. The image I was seeing was big and fuzzy so I started to dial the focus in….the image got BIGGER but I realized that it was also getting fuzzier so I dialed the knob the other direction. As the image sharpened it got smaller and smaller but still seemed to be twinkling even though it wasn’t as colorful. I was amazed at how alive the star appeared through the lens. I started to feel like an astronomer making a discovery because it seemed like small objects were darting in and out and around the star. I couldn’t believe what I WAS SEEING! I actually gasped aloud. I couldn’t believe it until I realized exactly what I was looking at. The end of my scope had dropped slightly and rather than being aimed at the “dog star” it was aimed and now perfectly focused on a street light about half a mile away that had moths and beetles darting around it and banging into the light. It was a really great close up of the light. I remember the feeling of being dumbfounded and nonplussed and then laughing so hard at the realization that I was looking at something on planet Earth. I let my dad have a look and we both just laughed and laughed. He told me to let that be a lesson to me. I took that to mean that perspective and focus are important and that our ideas can be changed by focus or the lack thereof without even knowing what we’re really looking at.

Me having this telescope sort of got people’s attention again. In the summer of 1989 I was 16 years old and we had a total lunar eclipse. It was a spectacular event because it went on for HOURS and it occurred a few days after the peak of the Perseid meteor shower so we saw several “shooting stars” as well. It was a warm night, we were still out of school for the summer so I had friends and family come over to look through my telescope. People always asked to come look through it whenever there was a meteor shower even though I explained that meteor showers couldn’t be viewed through a telescope. So while we were all out in the field I would let people take turns looking through my telescope. They oohed and ahhed as I aimed and focused on Saturn and it rings, or Jupiter and it’s moons or our own moon and it’s many mare and craters. I had my crowd back. I will never forget that night as long as I live. I was having conversations about eclipses and meteor showers and the comets that caused them and people were actually listening and amazed and excited like I was. I remember specifically telling people that this was one of the best eclipses so far and that I regretted that I wasn’t aware of the one in 1982 that had been an eclipse at PERIGEE that was the second full moon of the month which made it a blue moon. I told them how very rare it was and how there wouldn’t be another blue perigee lunar eclipse until I was FORTY FOUR YEARS OLD!! I couldn’t imagine how the world would be in thirty years. I had no idea where I would be but I knew that I would be watching that eclipse! I had no idea that the term “supermoon” would replace “full moon at perigee” or how I would fight that change at first before grudgingly accepting it and then coming to sorta kinda like it….even though I can’t stop myself from telling people that I had been a moon freak or “lunatic” before it was cool and that the terms supermoon and micromoon were very recent creations even though the moon has been doing those particular tricks forever.

This morning less than a month before my 45th birthday I stood alone on the balcony of a very old mansion along the Indian River as I watched the moon that I had told my crowd about 30 years ago. It was a beautiful rare blue super eclipsing moon. It was worth the wait even though from my vantage point it was setting before it reached totality. I was NOT disappointed. In fact it was better than I had come to
expect it to be for me. I thought clouds would probably block it. In recent years I have lowered my expectations which means simply that I am less disappointed with celestial events as well as terrestrial ones. Everything is amazing and wonderful. Just the fact that a round glob of goop in my face has a lens that allows light in to a bigger glob of goop in my skull which translates into images so that I can see what is happening around me even light years away is mind numbing. More mind numbing even than a street light surrounded by bugs on a cold night in Florida.

26869332_950645701762654_340252205451837440_n

26864212_154972261959876_6457181440579731456_n(1)

26867570_145707049435939_8240438779408547840_n

26868076_156692725120778_3936972988670279680_n

IMG_20180131_075334_067

scene behind me

Survival Instinct 

I think that deep down we all know that the end is THE END. That we all return to the void that we were before we were conceived. We don’t experience the void because we are not conscious. We don’t exist before conception and we won’t exist again. Otherwise why would there be the survival instinct? We can all TRY to fool ourselves into believing that we believe in an afterlife but if we do then why do we fight to stay in this life or dread death? The pain and scariness of the actual act of DYING is understandable but the terror of being dead forever is ridiculous. We weren’t ALIVE for most of time and even the oldest person’s life is short compared to the the time that they are not alive. Deep down there is a certainty that we will soon be nonexistent again. Nonexistence is the easy part but it is not enjoyable. Even pain and uncertainty are an experience. Nonexistence is the absence of experience and I can see how that can be attractive to people struggling in this life but the beauty is in the struggle. The void may seem beautiful from this side and the thought of never ever struggling again is certainly attractive but the knowledge that it is not only unavoidable but also permanent is reason enough to put it off for as long as possible. If we TRULY believed there was a future to experience after death we would not have a survival instinct that kicks in when our consciousness is threatened. We would not gasp for breath or claw our way to the surface. We would simply relax into our exit or be excited for the adventure of the next phase of existence. We wouldn’t come up with elaborate bed time stories of paradise to comfort us about death. Enjoy life because just like anyone that has ever lived or will live it’s the only one you get. This life is precious and beautiful for no other reason than that it is PRECIOUS and BEAUTIFUL and it doesn’t have to mean a thing.

Tide Pool

Let’s lay in a tide pool you and I, with the sun all day on our backs. To feel the surge wash the shells up and then drag them beneath us will be like hundreds of tiny fingers massaging away our worries and putting them out to sea.

Let not even words come between us to interrupt our conversation. Like ‘Strangers in a Strange Land’ this water ceremony will allow us to grok one another in perfect fullness. Become my water brother on the shore at rest between the extremes of crashing surf and barren sand.

We’ll watch the sun as it westers and extinguishes itself in the gulf. You’ll not have to ask for me to rub ointment on your too warm skin,I’ll cherish the act as this growing closer continues through the night.

In the morning there’ll be a new pool to soothe your tender back.So then let’s lay in a tide pool you and I, with the sun all day on our face ~ Kiddo

“It’s not you it’s me”

Everyone that finishes with me tells me how amazing and wonderful I am…

even though I’m sham.

That I’m the best they’ve ever had…

that I should be glad.

That I deserve everything that I desire…

falls from the thin lips of a liar.

Even when I try …

the only thing I ever believe is “goodbye”

I laugh it off as I hop into the pool…

And toss over my shoulder “that’s cool”