Archive for Parenting & Co-Parenting

Jan
26

Random Tuesday Ramblings

Posted by: lynn | Comments (0)

randomtuesdayIt’s Tuesday, which means random ramblings. To read the random thoughts of others and see the master who created the blogging phenomenon, check out the Unmom.

One. Happy Birthday, dear blog, happy birthday to you.

For some reason, I had it in my head that human, being was born in early February 2009. Nope. Last night, I checked and she was born on Jan. 4, 2009.

I remember coming up with the idea of this blog while walking to my car after work. I had shut down another long-term blog and was writing notes on Facebook. I wanted a bigger audience, so I found Wordpress and started making a new blog.

I’ve always tended to write a rather open journal/life blog about the condition of being human. I had also just read something about the idea that we are spiritual beings having human experiences, and part of our struggle as humans is to be rather than do.

Since I’m on the path of learning how to just be, I thought I’d title the new blog human (comma) being. As in I’m a human working on being who I am. And that’s how the sausage was made.

I think it takes most bloggers a year or so to really figure out what their blog is about. This blog is about telling my story so that I can inspire, inform, amuse and entertain you. Some of what I write is a cautionary tale. Some of what I write is about getting the poison out of me so I can move on. Some of what I write is about gratitude. And most of it is probably TMI. Oh well. Hi, I’m Lynn, and I’m addicted to telling my story with very little filter.

I’m so grateful for every single person who reads human, being. I’m grateful for my handful of subscribers, and for the people who comment. I’m grateful for the people who send me emails. I’m even grateful for all the weirdos who find this blog by searching for naked kids (because my most successful post is about nudist camps for kids).

I love my blog. I don’t know what I’d do without it. I don’t know who I’d be without it, because it (and you) have become a key part of where I’m going and how I’m growing. Thank you.

Two. I’m being inundated by offers of retreats and classes and journeys.

Lately, I’ve unsubscribed to most of the mommybloggers I used to read because I’m not getting much out of them, and subscribed to a bunch of people who I think will help me along the new trajectory of growth I can feel myself beginning. The trick is that all of them offer retreats and coaching and eBooks and classes and interesting journeys. And, I want to do every single one of them.

Which is part of why I wrote the blog last night about what I need, right now. I feel overwhelmed by gurus.

I’d like to do some of this retreat work. I think it would be a) fun and b) forward-moving and c) inspiring. It’s been a while since I’ve done anything like a retreat or class. But how to choose? And how to pay? Dilemmas. Universe? Any help here?

Three. Depression check-in.

I think the combination of counseling and homeopathy and Vitamin D and T3 has really helped my feelings of depression this season. The physical symptoms are still there–lack of motivation is strong, lack of focus is strong, sugar cravings are moderate. But the actual sadness and irritation and seething rage that usually make up the end of January and early February are just hovering along the edges.

What I have felt, though, is anxiety. Crushing, can’t leave the house anxiety. As I’ve felt this, I’ve come to realize that anxiety has always been part of my SAD picture. I didn’t recognize it before. I have no good tools for managing anxiety, separately from the depression, aside from valium, which I have taken to get out of the house on a couple of days. Last Thursday, when I couldn’t go to work, anxiety was my jailer. Yet another layer in the complicated physiology of Lynn to understand.

Four. Salsa partner search.

On Sunday, I went to a party at Motion en Fuego, Brigette Ellis’s studio, that was designated as a partner search. And, once again, I was disappointed. Male salsa dancers in Denver tend to get to the advanced beginner/early intermediate level and stall out. There were a lot of guys there, but only one was interested in performing and none were interested in competing.

So, since I’m working on listening to the universe (as always) and letting go of the HARD to make way for the EASY, I think I’m going to change my Very Personal Ad, which I posted on Havi Brooks’ The Fluent Self blog on Sunday. I do not want to find a salsa partner. I want a salsa partner to find me. I am taking the search off my plate, and asking the universe and all who are in it to bring me someone who wants to practice, perform and compete. (and so it is, amen)

Five. Car conversations.

For most of first and second grade, Lauren hated to talk to me about school. I’d ask her questions, and she’d get more and more obstinate, which led to me trying to force her to talk to me, which led to her literally pinching her lips shut and shaking her head with her fingers in her ears. Nice.

Something happened in third grade. Now, she volunteers information about what she’s learning as soon as she gets in the car. She’s very engaged while discussing what they’re learning about the Gold Rush, and this book called Shiloh she’s reading in her book club. She loves me to quiz her on her times tables and her spelling challenge words. And, she’s even volunteering information about her social life, which before seemed to be the greatest secret on earth.

When you have a baby, for the first many years you know almost everything that happens in her life. When I got divorced, I lost the experience of half of her life–the time she spends with her dad. The 8 o’clock phone call ritual rarely bears much more fruit than a quick goodnight. It’s both great and weird to be getting (finally) this glimpse into my daughter as a real person with real feelings and thoughts and fears and frustrations. Yes, she’s always had those, but at 8 and two-thirds she finally has the intellect and vocabulary to express all of it.

And I’m loving it. Especially the car conversations. They rock.

Six. Girl stuff.

Tomorrow I’m going to upload some old blogs about my struggles with the Fucking Mirena and the Aftermath, which is basically abnormal cycles to the max. I think, like my blog on Vitamin D (my second most popular blog), these tales can help other women who think they are losing their minds, as I did, but rather are just having bad side effects from progestin.

Dear body, please decide. Am I still fertile, or not? Because this 35 days of bleeding, followed by 40+ days (now) of not bleeding, with little hints that you might be letting it flow any day, then not, is on my last nerve.

Yes, 40 and a half is a little early for menopause. I tried progesterone cream and re-entered puberty. I tried Vitex and had cycles like I’m having now without taking anything. I’m grateful that I’m not having hot flashes or night sweats. I’d just really like some regularity, you know? So I know when to wear my $20 fancy panties and when to wear the $2 granny panties. Thanks for listening.

Jan
18

The Last Decade: 2005

Posted by: lynn | Comments (2)

As I look back on my life over the past decade, I don’t recognize the woman I was 10 years ago: scared, unconscious, trapped. The past decade contained a series of events and mini-awakenings that have led me here. I know I am not fully conscious … yet. But unlike 10 years ago, I can imagine the fulfilled, happy, awakened woman I will be at the turn of the next decade. In an exercise that is almost purely selfish, in the next several posts I’ll be taking a snapshot-heavy look back and where I was each year during the past 10 years, and what my major achievements and losses were. It’s the losses, I believe, that move us forward the most.

2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004-1, 2004-2, 2004-3, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009

The first year of my separation and divorce had flown by so quickly. As the anniversary of the date my ex left me approached, I did everything I could to distract myself. Bad Boyfriend Joe helped me along that path, drugging me with sex and booze. He was shifty, never quite looking me in the eye, sometimes disappearing and leaving me anxious. I thought I was in love with him.

January

Laurel & me at my house blessing

In January, I held a house blessing party. I hired a shaman to smudge the house and remove all lingering energy from all the corners. When my closest friends arrived, we walked from room to room, lighting candles and blessing the space. Soon all of the guests arrived, each bringing a small token for the blessing altar I was setting up on my sideboard. My birthmother sent blessed sea salt from Maui, which I sprinkled along the doorways to keep out evil spirits. My friend Wendy gave me origami cranes. Everyone contributed to the Lynn’s New Stove fund. The party was immensely entertaining, and touching. My parents came, surprising me with some of the tenderest words I’d ever heard them say about me. My friend Jenny brought her newborn daughter, and we passed her around so people could rub her fuzzy head for good luck. At the end of the evening, My friend Helen’s now-ex pulled out my guitar and started playing. We were all drunk, but Joe was especially so, and he kept us laughing with blues riffs sung to Michael’s excellent guitar playing.

February

I continued to spend money I didn’t have. By February, I was asking Joe to contribute to the grocery and booze fund, since he was drinking my liquor cabinet empty every week and spending most of his time at my house. I volunteered for a charity Mardi Gras party, sitting on the decorations committee. When the party came around, Joe was my date. We were both wasted on hurricanes. I wore a beautiful turquoise ballgown I’d bought on sale at Jessica McClintock. He kept me laughing until he started embarrassing me with his loud stories and inappropriate use of the English language–everything was a ‘harbinger’ to him. I felt responsible not only for his behavior but for his idiocy. And yet, I clung to him.

Me and Laurel, Mardi Gras 2005

I don’t remember feeling depressed that year, probably because if I was home and Lauren was with her dad, I was intoxicated.

I continued to take salsa lessons and go dancing once or twice a week. I ate as cleanly as possible to make up for the liquid calories I was taking in. I went to the gym, somehow motivating myself to do an hour of cardio plus an hour of lifting five or six days a week. I felt strong and sexy, desirable. Yet something was off. I was not happy.

Lauren came and went. When she was with me, we watched a lot of videos–Sleeping Beauty and Mary Poppins were her favorites. Her dad started dating a girl, who he introduced Lauren to right away. We fought about that. She had met Joe a couple of times, but he had never stayed over when she was with me. My ex’s girlfriend frequently slept over when Lauren was with him. We fought over how inappropriate it was. He’d call me and yell at me over the stupidest things; the conversations would end up with him threatening to fight me for custody, to stop paying my alimony and child support … and with me crying.

I decided the only way to keep him at bay was to communicate only through IM and email. That helped a bit. But I felt so terrified that he would go to court, that  I acquiesced to his every demand. I still believed that he was right: I was a terrible, selfish mother. He punished me by belittling me, making me ask for my checks every month, complaining about how poor he was as he traveled to the Caribbean, Mexico, and other places. He bought a second car “for fun”–a convertible BMW coupe–and rubbed it in my face as he complained about writing my child support check. When he and his girlfriend started talking about getting married, he told me that “someday, maybe you’ll experience love like what I have with her.”

March

Xpu-ha beach 2005

In March, I went to Mexico by myself to recharge by the beach. Joe had wanted to go, but I wasn’t willing to pay for his trip. I stayed at a run-down motel that sits on Xpu-Ha beach, about an hour south of Cancun. It was cheap, and my bungalow was 50 feet from the water. I brought my laptop and wrote. I discovered the beach was clothing optional, and after the first day kept my bikini top off most of the time so I didn’t stick out from the other guests. I got multiple massages. I did yoga every morning on the beach, and walked on the sand for an hour every night. I went to Playa del Carmen and danced from midnight until  5 in the morning at a salsa club with the best Cuban band I’d ever heard. I shopped and shopped, looking for souvenirs for Joe and Lauren. I took hundreds of photos. I felt lonely. I could feel something stirring inside of me, a hurricane of all the crap I hadn’t dealt with over the past 15 months, but I pushed it all down again. I was not ready to deal.

May

In May, as the Joe drama was winding down, another drama was winding up. My spending habits had caught up with me.

One day I opened a credit card statement to learn that the company had increased my interest rate from 9.99% to 29.99%. I had never been late making my minimum payment. Apparently, though, only making the minimum payment flagged me as someone dangerous to default. It made no sense: I couldn’t afford to make more than the minimum, so they jacked my rates and increased what that payment was. Within weeks, all five of my credit cards did the same thing. Suddenly, I realized I was about $30k in credit card debt, and my new monthly payments would be equal to nearly two-thirds of my take-home pay. My second mortgage increased again. I was terrified of losing everything again.

I visited a lawyer to inquire about bankruptcy. He counseled me that I made too much money to file Chapter 7 and wipe out all of my debts. Instead, he said, it would be better to settle with the creditors. First, I would have to stop making payments all together. I would have to brace myself for an onslaught of shaming correspondence, he said, but eventually I’d start getting settlement offers. I had never not paid my bills before. I was so embarrassed about the position I’d put myself into. I kept paying my mortgages and my car payments so I wouldn’t jeopardize my biggest assets.

June

Joe and I were through by my birthday. I broke it off with him and it felt like I was going through withdrawals. He was like heroin to me, and in retrospect I see that I was into him because of who he said he was: creative and successful. He was certainly creative, but he was also insane and unsuccessful. My addiction to him made me lose good judgment, and although it was painful to let him go, I had to for my own sanity. (Read all of the Joe chronicles: part 1 and part 2 and part 3.)

Then, I had a nervous breakdown. One day at work, I started crying and couldn’t stop. I had neglected my own health, and had become very hypothyroid due to forgetting to take my medication. My body could not go on until I dealt with all of the emotions that I had stuffed for the previous year and a half. I took a break from everything: work, dating, working out. I cried, and I cried, and I screamed and I punched my pillow. I sat with my therapist twice a week. I went to church. I journaled extensively. I had never before allowed myself to be utterly weak and messy. It felt wonderful to be a mess and not give a shit what anyone thought. I didn’t tell my mom, though, because I knew she wouldn’t approve.

July

By the end of July, I was feeling better. Then Dan called. He wanted to take me to lunch. I was in a serene place, totally in touch with who I am, so I agreed to meet him. At that lunch, I finally found what I had wanted from him for almost 18 years: closure. I learned he was moving to Houston, that he was unhappily married, that he did not believe he could have it all. And he finally answered my question: why did he never choose me? He had many chances, but he always picked someone else over me. His answer was as close to the truth as I think he could ever come: He never thought he could live up to being the man he knew he’d need to be to have me as his life partner. I was able to say goodbye then, for good.

Saying goodbye to Dan triggered something in my heart, a knowledge that I would not be able to fully love someone until all of my what-ifs were solved. So I systematically found every guy I still carried a torch for: my high school crush, my next-door neighbor, the bad boy in high school who I put off because I was too goody-two-shoes. I went out with a couple of them and discovered that everything I thought I liked about them was mere projection. By August, my heart was empty of all old entanglements. I entered into the online dating world again.

August

I read the book “Calling in the One” and did an exercise that helped me figure out exactly what qualities I wanted in my life partner. I wrote a list of 50 characteristics, then whittled it down to 5. I wrote those five characteristics on a card and kept it in my purse. After every date, if the guy did not have at least one of them, I wouldn’t see him again. I joined a meet-up group and began expanding my circle of friends. I went to church at least once a week. I kept dancing. It was one thing besides Lauren that brought me joy.

September

In September, I met a guy online who lived in Minneapolis. We hit it off on email and by phone, and he flew to Denver to spend the last weekend of the month with me. I had a great time showing him my hometown and some of my favorite close-by mountain spots. On Sunday, we went to Morrison and climbed around Red Rocks. Then we went to lunch at the Morrison Inn. A few hours later, as we were driving over the gorgeous and remote Guanella Pass, we both started to get sick. By the time I took him to the airport the next morning, we were both exhausted from food poisoning. I felt better on Tuesday, so I kept another date I’d made for drinks and a movie. But as I sat at a high-top bar table at the Hornet, a trendy bar in Denver’s South Broadway district, I began to shiver. I cut the date short, and by the time I got to my car my teeth were chattering. I turned the heater on full blast and drove home as quickly as I could.

On Wednesday morning, my work colleagues came to my house as planned for our annual retreat. As I cowered in blankets on my couch, my boss insisted that we take my temperature because I looked very ill. It was 104 degrees. My low back ached. My whole body felt like a pincushion. I got an emergency appointment with my doctor, who took one look at me and sent me to the ER. When I arrived at Rose Hospital, I could not sit up. The only way I felt comfortable was curled in a ball on the dirty waiting room carpet. I could not think clearly. My pain was at a level 10. After what seemed like hours, but was probably 10 minutes, a nurse wheeled me back to a gurney. They started me on IV fluids and took my temperature again: 106. My brain hurt.

People poked me with needles and catheterized me since I couldn’t sit upright to pee in a cup. After what seemed to be hours, a doctor came by and told me I had a severe ecoli infection in my bladder, kidneys and blood. I was septic. The tests showed my kidneys were shutting down. My blood pressure was 80/40. I had a CT scan with contrast, and when the tech pushed the contrast through my IV my vein burst. I never knew pain like that before.

I was wheeled to a room. Nurses and doctors huddled around me. I heard the word ICU thrown about. I heard the word dialysis. They started me on three kinds of IV antibiotics and a morphine drip. I dozed in and out of consciousness, coming awake screaming in pain when the morphine wore off. I tried to force the clock forward with my thoughts so I could get another burst of morphine. A roommate came in, and her moans of pain sent me over the edge. I had a panic attack because I thought she was a monster who was going to kill me. I was moved into a private room, given heavy sedatives.

The morphine kept my blood pressure very low. The nurses would not let me see the monitor, but at one point my readings were 50/30.Vein after vein blew out and eventually they put my IV in my foot, which was incredibly uncomfortable.

My mom came. My dad came. My friend Barbie came. Laurel came. They brought me PJs and my pillow from home. They helped me sip broth. I called my ex and asked him to bring Lauren up to see me. I was not sure I was going to live, and I needed my daughter. He refused. I screamed at him. My dad got on the phone and threatened his life. Finally, Lauren was able to come, and I cried as I held her. She was only 4.

The next day I started to feel better. My pain had shrunk, and I stopped the morphine. My blood pressure improved. The nurses stopped looking at me with haunted eyes. Halfway through the third day, I started vomiting. The pain had shifted from a dull ache in my kidneys to a sharp ache in the middle of my stomach. A smart doctor did an abdominal ultrasound and found that my gall bladder had ruptured. Within an hour I was in the operating room. I stayed in the hospital for another two days.

My mom drove me home, and as she sat with me in my living room, I noticed that my hands were swollen. The waistband on my sweats seemed to be getting tighter by the minute. Within 90 minutes of being home, my whole body had swollen to the point that I could hardly distinguish my toes from my foot: everything was a big watery blob. She took me back to the ER, where I got on a scale to discover I had gained 37 pounds in a few hours, all edema. I was re-admitted and underwent a litany of tests, some very painful. I had another CT with contrast, and the pain of that substance being pushed into my vein was so excruciating that I came off the gurney and hit the tech in the face. They administered more sedatives. I was admitted for two more days until the edema subsided. The doctors never could explain what happened to me.

I went home. My friends and family pitched in to help me. Coworkers sent flowers. Lauren came back to me, and my mom stayed with us so she could care for her granddaughter while I slept.

October

I finished a 6-week course of Cipro. My digestive system was a mess, and I could only tolerate the blandest of foods: potatoes, rice, white bread. I lost 25 pounds, celebrating when I weighed a svelte 139 by buying a bunch of clothes in size 4. I was skinny again! I got back on the Internet Dating bandwagon.

The creditor phone calls were starting to reach me at work and on my cell phone. I changed my phone numbers and they found me again. I felt so lost and like a huge loser. I was saving what I would have been paying them in a separate account. I was tempted to start paying again just to end the abuse I was taking. I stopped answering the phone altogether. I was so scared that this scheme would not play out as the lawyer said it would.

I ignored the hospital bills.

November

The trials of dating continued. I went to work, and spent hours each day on match.com, Yahoo! Personals, lavalife.com. I was able to increase my hours to seven full days per pay period, and the extra money came in handy. My ex continued to be a dick, flaunting his love life and his money while crying poor to me when I asked for help paying for Lauren’s teeth cleaning. I was feeling better physically every day, and I returned to the gym. I still couldn’t eat meat or fibrous veggies without winding up in a ball on the floor from stomach pain. I saw a GI doctor who told me digestive issues were common after gall bladder removal, and that I just needed to wait it out. I would eventually get better.

The week before Thanksgiving, I received a letter in the mail from one of my creditors, signed by a real person. The letter was a settlement offer. I called the representative and negotiated a deal: I would pay 20 cents on the dollar of my debt if I could pay it off all at once within the next five business days. He gave me contacts at the other credit card companies, and I worked out similar deals with them as well. The Monday after Thanksgiving, I liquefied my retirement and savings accounts and paid off all of my creditors. I felt such a sense of relief that the ordeal was over.

December

My social life picked up. All of a sudden, I had a dozen new friends. I went to parties every weekend, out to dinner, skiing. I kept setting up dates from match.com. By the second week in December, a pattern had emerged: I’d set a date with a new guy at Starbucks and he’d no-show.

I complained diligently to Laurel, who was experiencing her own dating dilemmas. I thought perhaps the no-showing was unique to guys on match.com. I saw an ad for a new dating site called engage.com, and joined it. After building my profile, I did a quick search for men age 36-42 within 200 miles of Denver. The site was so new that my search returned two matches: a guy with no picture who lived in the mountains and a guy my own age who lived about 20 minutes away from me. By his pictures he was cute. By his profile, we had a few things in common, including a love of South Park and zombie movies. I sent him an email, and then noticed I had an email in my inbox … from him.

His name was Steve.

We chatted by email for a couple of weeks as I became more and more disillusioned by the guys who were standing me up at every turn. The week before Christmas, I told Laurel that I was done with dating. That same day, Steve asked me if I wanted to get lunch. I agreed, figuring it would be my last date for a while. On Dec. 29, 2005, I met him at an upscale Tech Center restaurant called Ya Ya’s Eurocafe. On first look, he was cute. He was about my height, sandy blonde hair, blue eyes, with an athletic runner’s body. We sat in a booth. I ordered the most expensive salad on the menu and a glass of wine. If this was going to be my last date for a while, then I was going out in style, poor sucker.

And then, we started talking. And talking. And laughing. The waiter kept coming by to see if we needed something else, but really trying to get rid of us. Three hours into our lunch date, he asked me for a second date. I agreed. He was fun. He walked me to my car, and as I hugged him goodbye, he went in for a kiss.

It was fast, warm lips pressed against mine, a caress of tongue, but enough to send a shiver down my body and almost cause my knees to buckle. It was the best kiss I’d ever had in my life.

We met the next day to go ice skating in Cherry Creek North. The day was beautiful, in the 50s. We held hands as we hobbled around the small rink, laughing. Turned out that he’d never been skating before. I was impressed that he’d chance making a fool out of himself like that. We continued the date over wine, then he followed me home.

I didn’t want to sleep with him on the second date, and resisting him was difficult. We had a good old-fashioned makeout session before I sent him on his way. Before he left, we made a third date for New Year’s Day.

I spent New Year’s Eve with my friend Barbie, eating at the Trail Dust Steakhouse, then coming back to my place to do some year-end rituals. As we wrote down the beliefs we wanted to release then burned the papers in the fireplace, I found myself thinking about Steve. It had been a long time since I felt so excited about a guy. Our chemistry was palpable, and it went beyond the physical. I really liked him. I sent him a text at midnight: “You should be here, kissing me.”

Last night, as we sat down for dinner, Lauren asked, “Momma, why are we having ham for dinner?”

Steve piped right in: “Because it’s Ham Day.”  He grinned at me across the dining room table, our cue to let the fun begin. Usually, this kind of fun denigrates to stories about letting clowns jump on Lauren’s bed and try on her underwear.

Lauren gave us a quizzical look, not sure if we were teasing or serious. “No it’s not.”

“Yes it is,” I jumped in. “Ham Day is celebrated all over the world. Not by everybody though.”

“Like not everyone celebrates Christmas,” Steve said. “But we do, and we celebrate Ham Day by eating ham. And bacon, too.”

Steve did fix me bacon and eggs for breakfast yesterday morning.

“And by wearing our pajamas to work!” I said. She eyed my outfit. I was wearing brightly colored striped knee socks, red cropped pajama bottoms with white lace along the edge and a long-sleeved black T-shirt. With no bra. I pride myself on wearing the most mismatched outfits possible when at home, if I’m wearing clothes at all.

“You didn’t wear that to work, did you?” A slight twinge of horror coated her tone. Horror from the girl who wears plaids and stripes together.

“Of course I did!” I said. “Because on Ham Day, that’s what you do. Everybody at work was in their pajamas today. Didn’t you do that at school?”

“Well, we didn’t have Ham Day at school,” my daughter said, rolling her eyes like a practiced teenager, although just 8 years old. She’s precocious, I tell you. “Well Steve didn’t wear his pajamas to work …”

“Sure I did,” he said, lifting his blue-flannel-clad leg up over the table to show her. “It was great. I was comfortable all day. And I ate ham. And bacon! Mmm, bacon!”

She forked a bite of her ham, chewed pensively, grew a little smirk.

“I just don’t think anyone at my school knew it was National Ham Day. That’s all,” she finally replied after swallowing. Good. The kid was catching on.

“Well, it’s a rather new holiday, you know,”  Steve said. “New ones crop up every day. You should definitely go to school tomorrow and wish everyone a belated Happy Ham Day.”

“I think I’d die of embarrassment,” she said. “You guys are so weird.”

So, everyone, Happy Ham Day, belatedly. Next Jan. 8, be sure to eat lots of ham and wear your PJs to work. You’ll thank me. It’s fun. Especially because you get to tease the hell out of your children.

Jan
06

The Last Decade: 2004, part last

Posted by: lynn | Comments (0)

As I look back on my life over the past decade, I don’t recognize the woman I was 10 years ago: scared, unconscious, trapped. The past decade contained a series of events and mini-awakenings that have led me here. I know I am not fully conscious … yet. But unlike 10 years ago, I can imagine the fulfilled, happy, awakened woman I will be at the turn of the next decade. In an exercise that is almost purely selfish, in the next several posts I’ll be taking a snapshot-heavy look back and where I was each year during the past 10 years, and what my major achievements and losses were. It’s the losses, I believe, that move us forward the most.

2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004-1, 2004-2, 2004-3, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009

2004: The end of the end

July

Independence Pass

Still on my Hear Me Roar campaign, on July 4 I decided to go camping … by myself. I camped all through my childhood, usually in a trailer or a big platformed tent at Girl Scout camp. I bought a tent, and borrowed one of my parents’ sleeping bags, and headed up to Twin Falls at the base of Mount Elbert. I had an idea for a mystery story that would take place at a campground there, about a woman who goes camping with her husband and wakes up to find him dead next to her. I wanted to get a sense of place, and be alone since Lauren would be doing our traditional BBQ at her dad’s sister’s house without me for the first time in her life.

My parents were both slightly appalled and worried about me going camping by myself–bears, marauders and the like could be lurking about. I was more worried that I wouldn’t get my tent up or be able to start a fire. I stopped at the top of Independence Pass (so poetic, the woman in mid-divorce reaching that height as our nation celebrated its own independence … ha!) and took photos with my new Canon 8 megapixel digital camera, then tooled down the big hill to my reserved spot. In the next hour, I not only had my tent set up (rain fly 0, Lynn 1) but I had started a fire in the fire pit. Somehow, I forgot a chair, so I hunched next to the fire pit with my book, and remembered something else.

I set up a tent all by myself.

Camping is so fucking boring. And even more so when you’re camping all alone. Lucky for me, the sun went down not too soon after that, and I went to bed.

As the night insects began to sing, I felt this deep sorrow sneak into my tent to curl up beside me. I tried to push it away, but it was persistent. For the first time in months, I considered my sorrow and realized what I had lost: not just my husband, but my dream of what my life would be. Living in my dream house, driving a beautiful car, traveling when we wanted to, giving Lauren what she needed and what she wanted. I had lost my family, even if it had made me miserable. And, I had lost myself during the previous 12 years. I had no idea who I was, or what I wanted, or if I could even do this living on my own thing. I had never lived alone before. I cried myself to sleep.

In the morning, I got up early and decided to take a hike. I packed some rain gear, water, sandwiches, snacks and started up a trail. Four and a half hours later, I found myself nearing the top of Mt. Elbert, the tallest 14er in Colorado. I hadn’t set out to climb my first 14er, but I had.

Mt. Elbert Path

At the top of the world, I glanced at my phone and realized that I had exactly 5 hours to get back to my camp, pack, drive to Denver, shower and meet a friend to see the Cirque du Soleil. So I started to run. Back at the site, I tore down my camp and stuffed everything in my car. My Volvo’s speedometer pegs at 130 mph on the flats, I learned. I like to drive fast, and I made it home in the nick of time.

2004 was the year of easy mortgage money. Somehow, I got approved for a $200,000 loan with no documentation of income and started house shopping. I found a cute three-bedroom townhouse in the southeast Denver suburbs, and got so excited about it. I put in an offer, then took off to the Renaissance festival with Jimmy. As we strolled amongst the wenches, my realtor called to tell me I’d been outbid. I was crushed, and Jimmy was there to pick up the pieces.

I was so fragile then, the slightest thing shattered me. I wouldn’t cry, but I’d grouse and get really mad, then try to philosophize whatever happened away.

closing day

At the end of the month, I found another townhouse–this one with a little garden that backed onto a greenbelt, an attached one-car garage, two master suites and a full, unfinished basement. Oh, and a fireplace and a community pool! I put in an offer before it was on the market, and the seller accepted. I was so happy! My new townhouse was all mine. It had been a rental for 15 years and was not very updated, which is why I could afford it. I wound up with a fixed first and a adjustable second–the broker told me it would be less expensive that way.

August

On August 4, my husband and I visited the courthouse together for the last time, and stood holding hands in the lobby. We sat next to each other and listened as the judge approved our divorce. I was so sad. We both cried. And, we were both relieved to be done with it.

I closed on my new house on August 20, with Lauren (and teddy bear Clover) by my side. I called in my girlfriends for a painting party. For the first time, I got to pick every single color in my house without anyone else’s opinion. The majority of the walls went manilla envelope. My bedroom: the deepest aubergine. Lauren picked the princess/bubblegum pink for her walls. The far living room wall and the kitchen walls went  burnt orange, And my favorite deep sea blue went up in the front foyer and half-bath.

Lauren dances in her new room

My piano found its perfect home on a long wall, and I hung an antique chandelier I’d converted to electricity all by myself over my dining room table. I spray painted all the ceilings, covering up a decade of renter’s smoke stains. Thanks to my friends Jenny and Kim–who braved trimming the ceiling lines at the top of a 16-foot ladder in both bedrooms, which have cathedral ceilings–and especially Laurel, my entire house was painted in three days. My parents and sister and Laurel and even my ex helped me move in. My new mattress sat in my new bed next to my new nightstands and covered in my new fuscia bedding. My room felt like a boudoir.  I loved it.

On the third day, as I painted the living room wall, Dan called me, out of the blue. I was glad to hear from him. He came over and we spent a long time talking. He was happy to see me free. I asked him, again, if he’d leave his wife for me and he once again said no. This time, it didn’t hurt as badly, because I was getting excited about what my life might look like. I could almost let him go. Almost.

September

Excited to be off the tram

Once we were in our own house, Lauren started to settle down. The night terrors diminished, then stopped. Right before Labor Day, she fell off her bike and broke her wrist, earning a bright pink cast for 8 weeks. We took a trip to Glenwood Springs and Aspen for Labor Day–our first of many Mommy-Daughter trips. We got stuck in an aerial tram during a huge lightning storm with four terrified French tourists, and she had me sing to everyone because “Momma your pretty voice makes me so calm.” My sweet, precocious daughter, for whom I had zero patience. She easily fell victim to my moods, and got used to comforting me as I apologized for snapping at her again, and again.

I went to the Social Security office to take back my maiden name. When I looked at the transaction receipt, I had to laugh out loud: the time stamp was 2 pm on Sept. 16, 2004. Exactly 9 years to the minute of my wedding day. I was me again, at least on paper.

October

In the fall, my employer allowed me to increase my hours to three days a week, and the extra money helped. I was still spending way too much. I kept getting my hair professionally colored, and kept up my twice monthly mani/pedis because I deserved it, damnit. I paid the minimum on my four credit cards every month, but not much more. In November, I made my first payment on my very own ALL MINE house, and I cheered when I wrote the check. Then, a shocker: in December the payment on my second mortgage went up by 15%. All of a sudden, money was really, really tight. So tight that I started charging food and gas, something I’d never done before without paying the card off at the end of the month.

Bachelor Bob's Reject with John Kerry

Lauren and I fell into a pattern: I was Momma three or four nights a week, doing everything she needed, playing games, reading to her, watching princess movie after princess movie. Then I was Lynn the single girl with a full social life the rest of the week. Jimmy went to Brazil to be with his family, and I went back to the online dating sites. I was a mess, but I was having a lot of fun too.

On Halloween, my second-favorite holiday, I convinced Laurel to get dressed up and go out with me. I had a blast with my costume; it was the year of Bachelor Bob, and I dressed up as Mary Jo, one of his jilted lovers. She was a tearful one, that girl, and I figured out how to cry real tears on cue when someone mentioned Bob’s name. We both had too much cheap beer, and somehow I wound up with a guy who almost convinced me to go to Burning Man with him the next year. Then, I forgot his name and lost his phone number. It was great to feel young and sexy and DESIRABLE. After so many years of wondering if I was frigid, I figured out I was anything but. However, in the back of my mind, I heard echoes of cruel voices calling me a whore. Any pleasure I took in my escapades was diminished by shame and guilt.

November

Carriage Ride

We spent Thanksgiving with my family at my aunt’s house.I took Lauren to see the Nutcracker, and we took a carriage ride through downtown Denver. She was amazed by the dancers for the first hour, then not so much. Afterward, we went for hot chocolate at the Market, a kitchy Denver coffeehouse on Larimer Square. We had so much fun that she remembers it, five years later. So do I.

After Thanksgiving, I met Bad Boyfriend Joe. My seasonal depression sneaked in, and I began focusing more on my new boyfriend, the TV, reading–anything–to numb the pain. I continued to shop too much, buying an entire new wardrobe to celebrate my new svelte 155-pound figure. I was drugging myself with spending and sex and booze. I knew at some level that I was hurting myself, squandering precious time I could use to figure out who I was now. But I couldn’t bring myself to be truly alone, to be silent. To hear god. I felt closer to the universal mind I believe connects all energy in existence than I ever had before, but I still held it at arm’s distance.

December

Christmas was rough. Lauren spent Christmas Eve and morning with me then went to be with her dad for the rest of the day. Not having my daughter with me almost broke me in two. Wine helped hold me together.

Skiing with Laurel, New Year's Day 2005

On New Year’s Eve, I went to Frasier with Laurel to stay in her new condo. We had a great lobster dinner–neither of us wanting to be the lobster murderer–and drank great wine. Just before midnight we tromped through the frozen night under a blanket of stars. It was a glorious evening. The next day, we skiied at Winter Park.

I was so glad to see the end of 2004, the year from hell. The year where I lost everything I thought I was. Or so I believed.

Hayman Fire burnline, on a random roadtrip from Deckers to Manitou Springs.

In 2009, I turned 40. It seems remarkable to me, that number. It’s solid, the mile marker smack dab in the middle of my road trip called this life.

The first part of any road trip is filled with moments of my settling in, figuring out the best place for my sunflower seeds, selecting the best CDs or playlist, moving the cooler around until it’s firmly in the middle of the backseat. I usually find myself taking more pit stops in the first half of a long road trip. I look around more. I worry about getting there–wherever ‘there’ is–safely and on time.

The first half of a road trip feels like a dress rehearsal for the second half, the time where you really sink into the seat, elbow on the ledge of your open window, and sing over the wind at the top of your lungs even when the hot guy in the convertible pulls up beside you. Who cares what he thinks anyway. This is your trip, not his.

Someplace in the middle of my roadtrips, I usually stop, stretch my legs, get my bearings, and settle back in. I do a little reorganization, toss the empty soda cans in the garbage, work the knots out of my back. That’s exactly what this year has been like. I’ve been working my shit out, often in public here on this blog.

  • I’ve been doing therapy weekly since May, using PSYCH-K techniques to unearth and resolve deep-held beliefs about myself and life. Some of the work as been successful, other parts not so much, but the fact that I’m dedicated to this journey to the point of spending 7% of my monthly income on it tells me this time around–because boy, have I tried this before–I’m ready to resolve and let go.
  • I got married, throwing my lifetime fear of abandonment out the window as I said I DO to Steve. I am so committed that I even changed my name, something I didn’t do the first time around.
  • I became committed to figuring out the best way to deal with my bipolar disorder–the best way for ME that is.
  • I have become much better at quickly coming to understand how I feel and why I feel it. Where it used to take me days or even weeks to get it, now I can usually get to it in one conversation, or one blog.
  • I decided that yes, I will write the novel. Nothing’s on paper yet, but the outline’s almost done in my head. And, because I am nuts, I also have started thinking about a second novel, to be written under my pen name, which will be an erotic romance. 2010 will be the year I actually write these books, now that the process doesn’t seem insurmountable. I still have some confidence issues to work out, but those will come by starting the damn things.
  • I started taking pictures again. I love taking photos, and while I want to get better, I’m willing to ask questions and look dumb and have a lot of failures along the way. I’m hoping that someday I can make a buck or two on my work, either by taking portraits or selling calendars (ha!). But for now, I love that I have a hobby I can play in minus the need to be the World’s Greatest.
  • I have written more this year than ever before, thanks to this blog. Yes, yes, sometimes I’m funny (by accident) and other times I’m downright depressing, and the Days of Grace project has become tedious for me, and maybe even for the 50 people or so who read this every day. However, I have been writing. And not writing was part of the shit I wanted to work out this year.
  • I stopped trying to lose weight. Since I’ve been dieting in one way or another for most of my life, deciding that if my body wants to be a size 12, so be it, took more weight off me than South Beach or Atkins or fasting ever did. Figuratively, of course, because I’m still a size 12. However, this morning, when I looked at my naked body in the mirrors, I was fine with what I saw. This time last year, I looked pretty much the same, and I hated what I saw.
  • I started to heal my relationship with my sister, which has been estranged for the most part since she was born.
  • I have become a better, more loving mother to my daughter.
  • I’ve mastered the double spin in salsa dancing.
  • I’ve learned to better speak my mind even when it’s uncomfortable to do so.
  • I’m still a slob, although I have had moments of neatness.

If you follow numerology at all, you understand that life comes in cycles. Numerologists say that those cycles are 9 years long. For me, 2009 was a 1 year–a year of rebirth, and of continuing to let go of what I started to let go of in year 9. I’m halfway through it, and I can feel the momentum for my next new adventure building inside and outside of me. I will continue to work on my depression, my perfectionism, my body image and identifying goals and values so that I can launch myself into whatever comes my way with a new vision of who I am and where I’m going on the second half this roadtrip called my life.

Blogger Extraordinaire Gwen Bell has issued a blogging challenge for each day of December–a “Best of” for 2009. I’m joining in as I have time and as the topics interest me.

Dec
16

Days of Grace: 254/365

Posted by: lynn | Comments (1)
  1. I’m planning Lauren’s 3rd grade team holiday party, and so far the parents have been great about signing up to bring things and volunteer. I’m lucky that her neighborhood school is populated by upper-class families who have extra money and time to give to such an endeavor, otherwise the kids would be doing coloring sheets and eating stale chex mix for 2 hours, since that’s about all I could afford to provide for 57 children.
  2. Our office assistant Kaitlyn is doing a big web site edit for me. I will kiss her or buy her chocolate when she’s done. Or both.
  3. Udi’s cranberry walnut bread, with which the yummy turkey, pear and blue cheese sandwich I had for lunch was made.
  4. I’m still feeling up from the homeopathy, albeit tired. Yet up.
  5. I’m [this] close to an almost-2-week vacation.
Nov
26

Big girl room

Posted by: lynn | Comments (2)

I spent eight hours this weekend cleaning and decluttering Lauren’s room.

Eight. Hours.

For the past year, I’ve let her clean her own room. As long as the dirty clothes get put in the hamper, the clean clothes get put away and any food/plates/glasses make it to the kitchen, I’ve been OK with letting her do what she wants. Then, the other day she complained she had nothing to wear, and I noticed she had worn the same pants three days in a row.

“Where are the five pairs of jeans I’ve bought you?”

“I dunno …”

So I went into her dresser and lo and behold, instead of jeans, I found a drawer full of Halloween candy wrappers, bits and pieces of toys, drafts of art projects, and single socks. Apparently, she’s been cleaning her room by stuffing everything that’s on her floor into every possible nook and cranny. I’d previously nipped in the bud her attempt to clean by shoving everything under the bed, or in the closet (as I did when I was her age).

On Sunday morning, I felt particularly energetic. She’s with her dad this week, which is good, because I knew I would be getting rid of a bunch of her stuff. If she were there, she’d protest every item. She’d protested this summer when I attempted to purge stuff. At the end of six hours of sorting, I had three lawn bags of donations and two of trash. I made some decisions for her, giving away almost all of her early-reader books and a few of her McDonald’s-style stuffed animals. I even gave away the toy guitar I restrung with real strings a few years ago (but don’t hold tune), which I’ve rarely seen her play but has lived in the corner of her bedroom for years. That was a tough call, and she may not appreciate that I let it go. I also culled almost all of her half-filled coloring books, all the broken crayons, all of the markers (dried out). I called her at her dad’s about one group of items: her babydolls.

“Do you want to keep them or give them away?”

“Only give them to Natalie,” she said. Natalie is her 3-year-old cousin, to whom we gave half of her babydoll stuff this summer. My sister’s house is small, and they don’t have room for more toys especially with a second baby on the way, I told Lauren.

“I’ll have to think about it for when I come back to your house,” she said after a long hesitation. I know why she’s torn: the babydolls are her last link to being a little girl. I’m torn too. The two dolls she’s had left were gifts at her first birthday party. She learned to walk by pushing her purple babydoll stroller. And her teddy bear, Clover, slept in the plastic crib when Lauren took naps. I don’t really want to see them go either, and with the rest of the purging, there’s room enough in one of her closets.

After a trip to the Goodwill, I tackled the actual cleaning part, vacuuming the whole room twice, rearranging her furniture, removing her dresser. Instead, her clothes now hang in a closet, and a rolling cart with plastic bins holds her socks, underwear and PJs. She can see her whole wardrobe, which is bigger than I realized, and hopefully will not come to me again with the complaint of having nothing to wear.

Her room sits above the garage and it’s always cold in the winter and hot in the summer. I bought her new thermal-lined curtains for her picture window and an induction heat standing heater. I also finally (after about 9 months–lousy mother!) hung up two posters and three framed prints we bought, as well as some cork squares to display her artwork and photos. We have a recliner in the basement that we’ll move to her room to fill a corner and give her a reading chair.

I also did away with most of the places she had to stuff things, and with less things to put away, hopefully it will be easier for her to keep it picked up.

Last year, we did away with her bubblegum pink walls and went with a white, seafoam, green and brown color scheme. When I closed the door last night, I realized her bedroom now belongs to the big girl she is becoming. It’s a bittersweet moment.

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