January 11th until the present (March 30th)

Dear Connor and Dekker, The writing that follows is meant only really for the two of you and your dad, but I’m typing it into my blog because typing is easier for your mom than writing on paper these days. Also, having it online on my blog is a way I hopefully won’t ever lose it. Lately my mind seems to have a hard time remembering a lot of things, and I’m often misplacing things and I’m only 43! I’m just not feeling quite as sharp in my mind and memory as when I was in my 20s or 30s. That’s not to say I’m old- because I’m not! It’s just to say it takes a little more work to keep my mind sharp. And I want to keep my mind sharp so that I can enjoy life with you both and with your dad for a very long time. Since my mind isn’t the sharpest, and since we as humans just tend to forget a lot of important life lessons over time, I am going to write now and tell you what I can remember – at least what I feel is most important to remember – about what happened to me — to us — over the past few months.

On January 11th the storm began. Not a literal storm, but a storm of life. Pastor George, our church family’s pastor, has said more than once that in life you’re either just about to go through something difficult, just came out of going through something difficult, or are in the middle of something difficult right now. 2020 was a storm for many people all across the world in many ways. When you’re older you’ll likely remember the year when your school was closed for a long time, when you had school at home many days, when you wore masks everywhere, when your mom and a lot of people seemed upset about the news, and maybe you’ll remember some of the really good times that came from all the extra time we were able to spend together or the opportunity you had to get to spend with Mr. Joe, your tutor who became a good friend to our family this year. Well, as 2020 ended and 2021 began, I thought I was in the midst of a challenge related to my workplace. I had lost passion for my career and sometimes dreaded work because it just wasn’t going so well, to state it simply, this school year. With this mood about my work, a stomachache on the first day back after the Christmas break did not surprise me. Maybe it was because I took the medicine I took for anxiety on an empty stomach that morning, I thought, or maybe it was due to anxiety itself. This I soon learned was no regular stomachache and increased into something that could not be ignored and that would not lessen with normal things like tums or saltines. After leaving work and calling your dad, he called the doctor for me who told him to quickly take me to the emergency room. You two were with your dad when he brought me to Holy Spirit Hospital emergency room for what I thought might be a short quick stay – I wasn’t really sure and the pain kept me from thinking of anything but the current moment. Now however when I think back on that ER visit, I realize it was probably very scary for you, as I was crying out in pain but your dad and the two of you were required to leave me there (Dekker you were 7 and Connor you were 10 — too young to see your mom crying in such pain). Due to COVID, you were not able to wait with me in the ER. Were you to be there, you would have seen (and I’m glad you didn’t) me crying out in such pain (I’m not sure for how long – I estimate about two or three hours – the emergency room was crowded) that I lost all sense of whether I was embarrassed in that public setting, lost all awareness of my surroundings for the most part. At some point when I had crumpled to the floor, I remember another person who was in the waiting room, herself waiting to be seen by a doctor,vwent to the counter and said “this woman needs help now”. Several people came eventually and I was taken to a room back in the ER. At some point I was given a pain medication that led to me falling asleep (I met a physician’s assistant who would be part of my journey in the coming weeks, who was named Kelly). When I awoke I found the storm was changing though it didn’t feel like a storm I was in control of one bit. It was as if I had entered into this strange new world like I was in the middle of a tornado where I was spinning around in the calm center of it, as I was rolled on a stretcher from place to place for various scans and tests. The time was close to midnight and I was amazed at all the hard-working and alert people I met whose jobs required so much of them at this hour of night. The pain medication most likely altered my anxiety level quite a bit, but I truly believe it was the Holy Spirit’s peace (“that passes understanding”) which empowered me to get through those initial confusing moments (and many that would follow in the next several months) by pushing past a place in my mind that wanted to worry about my own and instead used the situation as an opportunity to ask questions of the humans I met along the way in the hospital. I learned that the man who pushed my stretcher to the CT scan room was quite prayerful and that he was from Africa. Inside the CT scan room, the CT scan operator shared about her son’s ADHD and her struggles with helping him. Asking af few questions and then devoting myself to genuinely listening to each person I met took my mind off of what was going on with my body and the immediate emergency of that night. I found I was able to genuinely connect with the individuals who literally were holding my life in their hands. Around midnight, I met Dr. Chinh Pham, who would compassionately jump into the storm with me, as this is something that surgeons — who routinely save people’s lives – are accustomed to doing as part of their everyday lives. He calmly and matter-of-factly informed me that I had a cecal volvulus (a.k.a. twisted up intestines) and would be operated on in just a few minutes. After first asking if I could brush my teeth (for some reason that seemed important at that time), I was taken to the operating room where 1/5 of my small intestine was removed. After a three hour surgery, Dr. Pham called your dad and assured him everything went well and would be just fine. I awoke in a hospital room on Tuesday morning where I would stay until the following Sunday. I had a tube in my nose called an NG tube that ran from inside my stomach up through my nose and out to a bucket that hung on the wall behind me so that doctors and nurses could monitor the liquids that came out. I was allowed to suck on ice chips to keep my mouth a bit wet but was not allowed to drink or eat anything. A quiet elderly lady was in the bed on the other side of my room and was soon discharged to be replaced by a lady who was admitted for blood clots in her lungs This woman was about Grandma Joyce’s age, seemed very anxious, wanted to talk a lot (talking was difficult for me with the tube in my nose), and seemed to have very different political ideas than me (which she brought up in conversation a few times). My room-mate was allowed to eat and drink, which increasingly was challenging to meas I found myself becoming so thirsty and so frustrated with the NG tube. Throughout that week in the hospital, I went deep in a place in my mind at times. I was lonely and sad. I felt about 100 years old. I missed you and dad. I was scared. At first I was still taking medication for my anxiety and for depression because I relied on those. This too was confusing though because I began to learn that these medicines could and would affect the healing of my intestines. The nurses had to give me what are called catheters several times at the beginning of the which I won’t describe further. I felt like I just wanted to leave but could not. When I spoke with you over a video call, we each were upset in our own ways even though it was something that we could at least see each other for a few minutes. The pain in my incision was intense so sitting up was so difficult. Some nurses were so compassionate, like Rose, who prayed with me and shared that she has the same birthday as me, and Rebecca, who talked with me about her cats when I couldn’t sleep (and who was about the only nurse who really helped me sit up without pain because she had such strong arms). There were many others who helped me through difficult days and nights who I’m rather sure I’ll remember forever: Marina, Vernell, Deb, Chelsea, Brittany, Mary Joseph, Mayet, and others.

I don’t share all of this because I want to remember all of the difficult times, though. I share this with you because I want you to know that in spite all of this that I experienced, the peace that passes understanding, which the Bible tells us only can come from the living Holy Spirit inside of us, never left me. In the midst of great pain and especially in the midst of being away from my family so long, I found it difficult to pray much. I felt it hard to rest because a hospital is full of sounds of patients all around (one night a woman in distress yelled “I DONT KNOW WHAT TO DO” repeatedly for two hours) and a hosptal is absent of the comforts of home we so often take for granted. (I never thought I took them for granted, but truly I did). Yet something inside me gave me strength to speak words of kindness to my anxious room-mate and to ask questions of my nurses, prompting them to share about their own lives. One nurse, Christine, helped my room- mate and I even laugh – which was quite a talent of Christine’s, considering the situations my room-mate and I were dealing with. I witnessed first-hand how demanding the job of a hospital floor nurse is and how some nurses do their jobs well and with grace while others, well…. don’t.

Not all things are good, but Romans 8:28 tells us all things work together for the good of those who love God. One good I’m taking away is the confidence that filled my soul throughout the experience. in my career , I had come to doubt myself and at times was even afraid of what my coworkers thought of me. In the hospital, in my interactions with all the variety of people who I met , I found my confidence only as I let go of focusing upon myself. I began to tell myself to let go of worries, pain, and discomfort, and to instead hold tight onto the goal each morning of wanting to encourage my nurses, the housekeeping staff, and my doctors. I knew I couldn’t see my children or my husband so had to trust you were in God’s hands. I chose to trust that God wanted me there in that hospital at that moment whether I liked it or not. I was frustrated with my room-mate because I just wanted to be alone, but I prayed for God to help me be loving. There were quite a few times I didn’t feel like I could pray, though, and I reached out to friends and family in a text asking for prayer. Just when I would feel I didn’t have the strength, I’d soon after find myself encouraged by the gentle visit of a certain nurse or kind words of a housekeeping person, and I knew in my heart the prayers were answered. Toward the end of the first week, I pushed as much as was in my power to be sent home. I needed to show I could eat food and that it would come out the right end. I ate the tiniest bit, and had the tiniest passing of that food (gas and farts are a really big deal when you’re in the hospital especially for GI matters) and was allowed to go home. When I came home, I found that your grandparents had come to stay and help dad, and I had learned from my time with my room-mate how to put politics aside and just love them. I felt too that they loved me, and your grandad shared stories with me I had never heard about when he was younger. He told me about how he met Grandma and about how he traveled to California when he was young (and got lost on a long walk to see a parade — that story he told me as I waited in the hospital to be rolled to the OR for my second surgery). Despite all the times I was a brat (even moms were once kids and still act like them) and times we didn’t get along, this health emergency leveled everything and brought me face-to-face with the simple fact of how much my parents love me and I love them. I also felt more love for Dad’s parents too — we don’t share the same blood but we’re family. Situations like this make everything else matter less and love takes precedent. I was able to just receive and give hugs and feel genuine gratitude for being taken care of (not a common experience for an adult mommy!) That week was when President Biden was inaugurated and on that inauguration Wednesday I felt so healthy and grateful beyond words. My bed felt so comfortable and my senses so heightened. I thought I had enough experiences and had learned plenty and was ready to begin healing.

That Thursday , with a surgery drain in my side, called a JP drain, I went for a routine followup surgery visit. Dr. Pham removed the drain yet seemed concerned, but prescribed nausea medicine, as I was sent home. That day I began vomiting frequently. Each time I vomited I felt some relief though I was becoming weaker each day. In my mind, I was actually thinking of what it might feel like to die, to pass to heaven. I don’t think I was actually in danger of dying, because your dad and I were in communication with Dr. Pham, but when a person is feeling like I was at that point, this is a point when it is natural to think about dying. I felt sad but peaceful and just waited to see what would happen because at this point was just really confused. I had the surgery, had followed the doctor’s directions, yet here I was with all this bile coming up out of my body and feeling worse than I can explain here in words. That Sunday evening, Dr. Pham arranged for me to be readmitted to the hospital, this time to a private room. The hope was that I would feel better when hydrated by IVs and that a blockage in my intestines would be passed along with the help of the fluids (without any further surgery). I entered the hospital this time stronger in my mind than the first time, really leaning on the power of friends and family who were praying (not to mention also sharing jokes to make me laugh, meals to keep my family fed, and cards and flowers to brighten my hospital room). When the blockage didn’t pass naturally, the storm brought surgery two. The blockage ended up being a “redundant sigmoid” that had attached itself to the scar tissue of surgery one. The storm wasn’t over with surgery two though, because (after a weekend of less than attentive nurses, particularly one who seemed to always be too busy to help) infection developed in my incisions. The surgery team opened up the incision, and when I was finally able to visit with your dad (the day before my hospital discharge), we were given directions on how to pack the open wound. Soon after I was sent home, another spot opened up on the incision, and your dad now had to pack two open wounds. Your dad loves your mom so much, do you know that? He might not always seem to show it with kisses and lovey-dovey words, but not all husbands could or would do what your dad did. When I returned home from that second hospital stay, on February 3rd, Dad had to become a bit of an instant wound nursw He changed the bandages on my (not so pretty) incision on my belly every morning and every evening starting that day and continuing still today (March 30th).

I’ve been writing for a rather long time now but feel I have only touched the surface of what I want to share with you boys. I will spill out a few more thoughts now and will elaborate on them, hopefully, more in later writing….

I mentioned the storm. I was afraid of the storm and thought I couldn’t withstand it. I learned that I am the storm! I have a poster in my room gifted to me by our friend Nallely that says this. It sounds silly at first, but it’s true that with God’s power within us, we need not be afraid. I need not be afraid of coworkers, work stress, someone judging me, something I’ve never tried before, doing something someone says I’m not good at. I have the same Spirit in me that brought me so close to dying yet kept me getting up every morning to try again and kept me pushing forward to keep living. The joys in those hospital days were seeing the light in another person’s eyes when they were encouraged and when they shared their individuality. The joys in my days when I arrived home were seeing the light in your eyes, seeing the goodness in the spirit God has given you and the goodness in the spirit God has given Dad, hearing and experiencing life with you each day as I got stronger and my health is restored (I’m almost there), being grateful for experiences we have with your grandparents who love us just because (we don’t have to be perfect and it’s ok our house is often messy and looks lived-in!), and taking each moment at a time (each moment —- drinking a sip of water, walking a little outside, hearing some music or playing the piano, laughing, tasting food, breathing without tubes and without pain).

Shortly after I came home February 3, our precious kitty Nanuli needed to visit the vet, who told us she had a tumor. We said goodbye to Nuli February 8, and I saw so clearly that our pets too have souls, too. Nuli’s was a gentle soul. My heart ached with sadness for you boys who had seen me so sick, worried what would happen to me when in the hospital and when I returned, saw me lie in bed a long while when I returned home, and now had to say a permanent goodbye to Nuli. Thankfully our paths crossed with Bow, our kitty who we adopted a few weeks later, and who God has used to bring us much joy. In my first weeks home from the hospital, extra sleep, reading books, watching movies, and sitting with Bow were all great comforts. I took time to just reflect on the miracle that my second surgery had gone well and that I was successfully now living without any anxiety or depression medicine (cut those cold turkey the day I went back to the hospital for the second visit – not advised, not easy, but well worth it). Several weeks passed before I could fall asleep without my mind racing with thoughts about the hospital and my experiences there. They were “normal” as far as hospital stay experiences go, but there is still a trauma, i believe, that changes a person throughout the course of a hospital stay. Those thoughts have settled now, you boys have asked your questions (you both at your own separate times asked me if I could have died and all the variations of that difficult question), I started walking and driving a few weeks ago, and our lives have become more ‘normal” . On the day when I gave Dr. Pham thank you cards you and I wrote and cards to my nurses, I felt a surprising bittersweet emotion as this journey ended. That emotion doesn’t mean I’d ever want to experience the pain and sickness again. That emotion came because I realized how much good I saw in people throughout all of this. You boys have been very brave, your dad very loving, and the three of you have shown how you can pull together and help one another for our family. So many people, and not necessarily just close friends, showed us what compassion really looks like. As life returns to “normal”, a part of me fears we (me included) will not remain consistently grateful. Perhaps it would be impossible to always be; I’ve had to yell at Bow a few times as I’ve typed this long writing because he’s so curious that he keeps getting into things he’s about to break. I am grateful for him and his company but I still get annoyed and also need to look out for what he’s doing. On a different but similar level, I may do the same with you, Connor and Dekker, but please please know that if life gets so busy or so mundane that I forget to tell you how much I appreciate you, how wonderful you are, how I love you – please know that I have always felt this way and always will and would tell you a million times over if I could if it would help you feel it and make you believe it about yourself. Remember too that the little things you do for someone (even if you don’t feel you’re real close to them so maybe someone else would be the more appropriate person to send a card , say a compliment, give a gift, or whatever…) those little things truly are the big things –the stuff of life– the reason for our days here on this earth . Lastly, try to not let your confidence falter. You’re awesome and no challenge or circumstance can ever change that. The storm is no big deal when you’re a child and a friend of the storm’s Creator. That Creator dearly loves you and can be seen in the eyes and spirits of the people you meet every day, especially when you honor them and take interest in their uniqueness. As that song “It’s Alright ” reminds us with its lyrics : “When you wake up early in the morning, feeling sad like so many of us do – hum a little tune and make life your goal and surely something’ s gotta come to you!” Make life your goal. Don’t let the negativity of the storm sweep you away or scare you. You’re not in the storm alone. In fact, the stronger the storm gets, the closer your God will be to you and the tighter He will hold your hand. My friend Anna sent me a link to the song “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus” and this song helped me through some of the hardest moments of the hospital days. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that I heard this song at the close of the worship service we visited last week when I was praying through some of my thoughts and memories about these past few months. If we listen close, we can hear His gentle Spirit in the storm, hospital or normal day, in any situation. It’s not a coincidence; it’s your loving Creator telling you He loves you …(even more than I ever could – and that’s an awful lot!) Love always, Mom

Running out of time?

Just the other week I saw the recording of musical “Hamilton”. The lyrics “Why does he write like he’s running out of time?” repeat throughout the entirety of the show. Truly, why would someone, even today, write as if running out of time? Well, February 3, 2021 I returned home from the hospital- the second time home within a month. A frequent thought in my mind – almost constant – began : “I’ve got a lot of blogs in my head.” This was my mind’s way of wrapping up a complex experience into a simple thought – my life has been changed. Many people you talk to, if you take the time to ask them, will tell you that staying in a hospital for a surgery, particularly an emergency unplanned surgery, is life-changing. A desire grew within me to put into words the extent to how life-changing mine was. At first I thought I could fit it into one blog. I began praying and thinking and journaling to wrap my soul around all that I’d experienced– scratch that — am still experiencing- and found myself faced once again with what educators call “task initiation difficulties.” Heck, maybe it was/has been a task initiation deficit, not so much due to my ADHD diagnosis but perhaps because sitting down and putting it in writing makes something abstract more concrete. Taking the abstract and personal and putting it into a concrete written form puts it out there to be heard, read, seen, and you most likely still will not grasp the entirety of the experience. Sure, I’ve written personal narratives before: saying goodbye to maternity leave when my baby was growing so fast, sharing a testimony about my mental health, and others I’m sure that are personal to me and that I want to hold on to and not lose. Is this one different? Not really, except that I realize more than ever how important each narrative truly is to someday pass along to my children. If someone else reads it, well, I hope for you that you take from it what you can. My narrative will eventually wrap around to the point that life is short, time moves quickly, and I can’t leave much or take anything with me when it’s over. I want to leave, for my two sons and maybe someday grandchildren (God-willing), a history of what I have experienced and how it has shaped me, because this is story of love and hope that I want them to hold onto . As for the task initiation struggles, or as some may call it writer’s block? For me, I am learning that I live in a world of distractions. In 2021 my email inboxes (plural – there are 3) are always full with more flowing into them by the minute (some that “need” replies, some that just scream they want attention, and some just frivolous that contribute to the constant deluge of information that can make a person think they’re losing their memory when really they just have too much coming at the brain all at once) . These emails come at me when I sit down to quiet my mind to read a book or to breathe or to pray. That is just when I am sitting. When I am in my house alone, then there are the distractions of the untidy. Houses in magazines and on hgtv look dust-free, clutter-free, and oh -so-always-neat-and-organized. I may sit down to be with my thoughts – or to write – but find this and that need picked up, dusted, ordered, cleaned, moved. This could potentially go on indefinitely for all of life until no thoughts were ever written, no prayers ever said, no meaningful cards ever written, no peace ever really attained. There are varying degrees of how people want this perfection in how their surroundings look, and for some it’s because they want to impress others, for others because it feels the right way to keep things, still for others because of an innate state that just can’t relax until it’s all done. But I tell myself (and you, reader, should you care to listen): it’s never all done. When you think it is, give it ten minutes and it won’t be any longer. So I am taking this moment now to sit. Be still. Type. Empty my brain little by little (no, it won’t all fit in one blog). Read. Look at my child and take in the memory of his face as it is now. Look at my husband’s face and try to listen to what is going on in his soul today. Carve out the time for these thoughts, quiet, and what matters. My story, you will see, is wake-up call : a reminder that the next moment cannot be predicted, even on a regular old Monday morning.

Learning to be here now

It’s almost been a year since I started this blog site. The format of the website I chose has changed (something with a company change – I don’t understand that side of things) so logging in and getting started again was tricky, but that’s just an excuse. As I wrote in the few posts on this blog site previously, I have found establishing habits difficult, and have found taking time to be still– particularly for myself– even harder.

The Coronavirus quarantine began as two weeks, then morphed into a lifestyle we became used to over the next five months. We did puzzles, played cards, tried new board games. We rode bkes as a family and discovered the creeks near our house. We found crayfish, so many crayfish — small ones, giant ones. We gathered around simple backyard campfires thankful for a few genuine friends, seldom joining any outside our immediate family. Zoom became a regular form of communication. Brothers who started out fighting became friends and learned to play together better than ever before — made forts, hiding places, caught insects, set up races down the driveway and invited parents to be the pit audience, swam in the little pool in the backyard with the neighbor friends (now felt like siblings), and danced to Turn Down for What around a waterslide slicked with dish soap. The windows open, there were always happy kids running through, and the days were just about perfect thsi summer for a 7 year old, a 9 year old, and their mom (dad too when he was able to take a break from work) and seemed to have no end in sight. We knew the world outside our world was hurting; we talked about it and prayed together and cared for it but took shelter in the goodness of our microcosm of laughter and hugs and safety.

Mid-August came with a surprise that quarantine could not continue and my career would not be done remotely . I’d go face to face with people again — but with all the hate in the world right now in 2020 and having learned that many on one side of the political spectrum are decent seeming beings in one regard yet hold fast to those same “ideals” the party of hate pays homage to ….. this nugget was now permanently lodged into my thoughts as I ventured out of the safety of quarantine to my own encounters with those persons who someitmes mask the hate under the guise of something more palatable, like patriotism or religion (no religion truly wants to be like that, do they?) Not necessarily having the words, but especially not having the forum to voice even the emotions, my heart may as well have been squeezed and wrung out to dry on a clothesline.

I looked at my children whose legs had grown longer and wondered had I done enough to capture my gift of time with them these past five months. Their interests, their personalities, their vocabularly, their insight, their hopes, their perspectives…. all changed over the past five months. These two boys are precious and yet do my husband and I hold on to each moment enough? Or are the moments too often lost by the moments we need to correct, reprimand, remind, pick up after, make dinner for, and all the do-ing? Learning to be still is a balance of learning be-ing , not losing it in the do-ing, all the while accepting it will be now only for this moment. As the author of “Crazy Busy” writes, “we must take this time now or it will be taken from us.”

Being given a surprise gift of quarantine (two weeks that you, reader, may assume are not what you would consider a gift by the definition of all these two weeks have entailed,.,,) in late September into the start of October, was just the kick in the seat of the pants I needed to remember, once again, the lessons taught to be those five months earlier this year. The lessons of be-ing with family more than just do-ing and take-ing this time now, not later, to hold onto and, yes, to write now – have sunk in finally just enough that here I am, tonight, starting to blog again. My heart is full.

Giver.

A giver. An empath. These words define me, sometimes I’m told. Don’t get me wrong, they don’t always define me. But I’ve learned through some hard self-analysis done in the context with my own therapist (yes, counselors need counselors and often benefit from the growth that happens through that relationship) that I am utterly terrible at taking time for myself. When someone, anyone, needs something (a sandwich, a bandaid, a chore done, sleep, a resume, a new wardrobe, a meal or month of meals, school supplies, a big sister…) a giver and an empath is the first to step in and try (try being the key word) to save the day. When a giver does this, the elusive term “self-care” equates to selfishness in the mind and boundaries are irrelevant. Giving with this intensity, as you might guess, often leads to burnout if not kept in check. The burnout can look like the exact opposite of all I’ve described, looking something like a twisted version of introversion, like one who just wants to stay in bed alone all day and not help anyone or care about anyone because all that is needed is sleep and maybe a little food. Sound extreme? Maybe. But maybe this is what my brand of perfectionism looks like. I didn’t choose it on purpose. My parents, who have always loved me and are still married (50 years!), didn’t wish this upon me. Sometimes a blend of environment, genes, and one’s own perception of what life throws at them results in the morph of a very good thing. In my case, I unintentionally morphed being a giver and empath into a breed of person who needs to start from square one on the basics of that all-too-easily-tossed-around-in-our-culture-term “self-care.” How is someone like me to “do” self-care without constantly thinking in my head that it’s a waste of time? This is the post I should have written two months ago, before Covid19 transformed the world . Yet, the writing didn’t happen. Case in point: as I type this my son came inside crying that he needed bandaids for having skinned his knee. Yes, his dad is just around the corner, and it’s Saturday, and I told his dad that I was going to take 30 minutes to myself to write in the blog I started months ago. But I’m mom. Moms, you understand. So part of the lack of self-care time is this role. But for me I have learned it is even something more. I think my quarantine experience of Covid19 is starting to bring the blurry lessons into focus.

A hero and a habit

2 months ago I began to explore the idea of starting a blog. I purchased a chromebook just for this purpose and discovered a platform that seems to make it easy enough for even me to work through the technological tasks necessary to get started. I made up my mind to sit down and started blogging for several reasons. One, sometimes my mind fills with thoughts that beg my psyche to be put into writing. I used to write out in journals when I was younger, then I had kids, and the dust began to pile up on the journals. My thoughts began to get put aside a bit out of necessity to put my kids, family, and career first. (I”ll revisit this in just a moment). Secondly, my desire to put some of this life I live into writing sometimes finds its way into a Facebook post, only to end up longer and wordier than Facebook is probably meant to be. Sometimes this has been cathartic but in the past year, I’ve learned that is not the best platform for my thoughts. (The reasons why could be a separate post and maybe someday will be…) Yet a record of my writing is something I’d like to someday look back on when my kids are grown, when my hair is gray, and my memory is less than it even is now. A record of my writing is something I’d like to be able to share with my children and my grandchildren, a record to allow them to know me more deeply. So this blog will give me space to get my words out, will give a record for my loved ones, and thirdly will be an opportunity to learn. This blog is an opportunity to learn about myself and maybe even a reader out there will take something away as well. Learning about myself sometimes happens in the most unexpected of places and on the most unexpected of days. I’m 42 years old and just yesterday saw the movie “A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” with my kids. Of course I bought the ticket and made the time because had grown up watching Mr. Rogers Neighborhood on tv. Yet watching the movie so poignantly brought back childhood memories and connections to such memories that my eyes were opened to the fact that this television hero who I haven’t thought about for quite a while actually is woven into the very fabric of my heart, my soul, my personality, my choices, and my career. This realization sparked a fire inside me to commit to a habit of blog-writing consistently, beginning this year in 2020. The why of the choice of the word “hero” , a connection of Mr. Rogers to a personal connection of mine, and thoughts about habits (my simultaneous loathing of yet need for them) will be a separate post, a day soon, when my heart and mind are ready to go there. That’s how this blog will be — prompted by my emotions in some ways, which sometimes muse and wander to a place where they sit and are “stuck” until I write them out. For this reason, I won’t write to please a particular audience, nor to sound professional or literary, nor to be politically correct or funny, nor to share knowledge or right or wrong on any particular topic. The blog will be personal in the details (for an attempt at privacy), while stilling being a place for me to grow, for my family to enjoy (I do believe some friends are just like family, so yes it’s for them too), and maybe for you reader (if you’ve stayed with me this far) there might be something you find of value that you can take away, too.

A new hobby begins

When I was younger (before children, or “b.c.” as my uncle calls it) I loved journaling. I would sit down with a pen and the blank pages of a notebook and pour out my thoughts as if talking to a rapt listener. Journaling like this was such an experience of catharsis, of getting my deepest thoughts and musings off my chest, whatever they might be. Occasionally in life I have crossed paths with another with the end result being formation of a mutual “soul-buddy” kind of bond. These are the few friends who somehow resonate with my nonsensical catharctic thoughts, and who in turn have enriched my life by pouring out their own in return. These types of friendships were most often discovered over coffee cups in the dorm, when we were supposed to be studying for a test we’d take the next morning, or perhaps in a late night phone call with a fellow mom who understood how it felt to be sleep-deprived and listened as I rocked the sweet infant in my arms. Yet in the mundanity of every day life, these conversations have recently become more seldom, their existence smothered by the demands of our necessarily full schedules. No fault of anyone’s, life currently is filled with soccer games, instrument lessons, packing lunches, making sure we have enough peanut butter in the pantry, finding a few minutes here and there for a playdate if we’re lucky once every other month, keeping the head above water for work obligations, tossing toys into fabric bins (initially purchased to make the bungalow look a bit hgtv-ish (uh, that didn’t work for this mum at least), and fueling up with enough sleep to do it again the next day. In the midst of this, thoughts akin to the musings of my college-age-brain sometimes surface to the top and cross my mind in a form that seems louder than usual. It’s like the experience on the screen just now .  See, my son is watching Spiderman Into the Spiderverse c as I type this, and Miles just mused “why are my thoughts so LOUD?”) … These loud thoughts are those which sparked my idea for a blog, thoughts which might be worthy of capturing in writing or print. Journaling with a pen has become so foreign to me, but typing feels so familiar.  (Perhaps this is because typing feels a bit just like one of the tasks required of me each day that help me earn a paycheck.) In an attempt to fuse the old love and the current mundane, I have created this blog. When my thoughts get loud, I just might  sit down in front of this screen (maybe I’ll allow myself this luxury, feeling as if I am fulfilling the productivity expectation so often hung over my “good employee psyche” ), and  just might pour out words that come from a place close to my soul. Maybe someone like you will read them .  Maybe you’ll  find some meaning of your own to hide away in your heart for your own experience of life. That is my hope.