Archive for the ‘Daily Life’ Category

A Whisper Or A Roar?

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

We all want these big definable moments to happen in our lives where we can point to them in the  moment and say, “yep, this is it.”  But for the most part what happens is those definable moments come into focus in hindsight.  Those moments where we look back and either find validation for the decisions we’ve made or the actions we’ve taken or we sit there, munch on our carrot and declare, “I knew I should have made that left turn in Albuquerque.”

A wise friend of mine has told me for years, “life is what happens while you wait.”  I’m sure he’s smiling to himself now as he reads this because he’s right.  You’ve been right all along.  All these years while life has been happening, good or bad, those definable moments have happened as well.  Whether it was the heart wrenching loss of love, the devastation of losing our home because of a fire, or even the little every day joys all around me, all these details of life were not planned, not pointed out just before they happened (“pay attention Elle Dubya, something big is about to happen!”), yet they did happen.  They have all come together to define who I am. 

There was no blinking sign.  No bullhorn to call out signals.  No green arrow painted on the ground to lead the way.  Some of the moments came as a whisper in my ear from a 7 year old boy saying, “I love you right under God.”  Some of those moments, while whispered to me, came like a gunshot, “Lisa go home, your apartment is on fire.”  Some moments never came at all, and I find great definition in the things that didn’t happen as well.

It’s nice to go back and re-read some of the entries in this blog and be reminded of all the living I’ve done these past few years.  To have the written history is my own self-validation in some parts, self-pity in others.  The rest of my story is unwritten.  I have to be ready for it, live it, define it if it’s definable but most important of all – be ok with it if it’s undefinable.

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Yellow Paint

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Nearly every Monday night I meet a group of friends up at the football stadium and we spend about an hour or so running up at down the steps.  From the bottom to the top there are 90 rows.  Ninety up and 90 back down, multiplied by 8 or 10 or if we’re feeling especially competitive, we’ll do it a dozen times.  Then we want to puke but that’s another story.  We count these rows as our feet hit the orange painted square of concrete with a white row number in the center of the square.

When you get to the very top, row 90, there’s a metal railing to keep you from going over the edge but you can stand there and feel a very strong breeze that circles through the concrete and steel structure.  Some days when the sun is burning hot and the air is thick, that breeze at the top of row 90 is what keeps you going.

Then there’s row 68 (or maybe it’s 70, but let’s go with 68, it’s close).  On that concrete step there isn’t any orange paint.  Instead there is a bright yellow line of paint all along the edge.  I’m not sure why that one step is yellow, it doesn’t make much sense to me unless it’s slightly steeper than all the rest and the yellow is a warning.  What I do know is that ever time I make it to that yellow step two thirds of the way up, I hit a wall.  I can almost physically feel my insides jerk up as my foot comes crashing down on the cracked yellow paint and it takes every ounce of energy I have to make it the rest of the way up to row 90.  I have to imagine the breeze waiting for me at the top is pulling me forward.  Just keep going.  You can do it.  The yellow line isn’t going to beat you this time.

You push and you grunt and you growl your way up.  Your reward is a pounding heart threatening to leap out of your chest, a shortness of breath that makes you forget that you really did give up smoking 6 years ago, and a shimmy in your quadriceps that makes you wonder if you’ll be able to haul yourself back down those 90 rows.  You lean against the metal railing and listen quietly to the wind as it blows around you.  The sound of your own labored breathing begins to flow at a semi-normal pace and then you hear it…the hum.  The hum of the air as it whips through that concrete and steel structure passing through columns, support beams, ramps, and breezeways – and it hums at you a final reward for making it to the top and making it past that painted yellow line.

So, the questions for you are these:  What is your yellow paint?  What trips you up and arrests your progress in life?  What is your humming breeze, your incentive and reward for pushing through?  Think about it and get back to me.

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Get Busy

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

My son is 7.  S-E-V-E-N.  Just by virtue of his young age, doesn’t that make me young also?  I’m not delusional, I know I’m 38 years old.  But I, in no way, feel old.  Quite the opposite – compared to how I felt physically, mentally, and emotionally 5 or 6 years ago - I feel quite spry.  I like 32.  Can I just say I’m 32? Yes? Ok good.

So…back to my son.  My 7 year old.  Who makes me feel 32.  I remember myself at 7 years old, getting ready to go into Mrs. Campbell’s 2nd grade class.  I remember my mamma back then too and I compare my memory of her then to my idea of her right now, today, and I think, “holy smokes, a whole lotta time has gone by and just look at all the living that woman has done.”  (I’m thinking this in a very good way, b-t-dubs).  She’s done so much since I was 7.

And my son is 7 now.  And I have so much living left to do.  And a whole lotta time is still left to go by.

And here I find myself feeling the need to be in a hurry.  With what?  With everything.  I’m constantly looking for the fast forward button, or at the very least the play button, when life seems like it’s only moving in slow motion.

What I need to do is spend more time focusing on the things around me, the things that are going on during this whole lotta living, and be ok with what feels like slow motion.  Instead of allowing myself to imagine I’m getting bogged down I need to use the time to see the details. 

Ever see an “Eye Spy” kids book?  You glance at a page and are overwhelmed by all the buttons, dice, colored blocks and hair bows.  But take the time to go over each and every toy on the page and you see wood grain lines through the orange paint on the side of a wooden ABC block.  Flip the page and there’s a doll wearing a green dress and you can see each silken strand of her blonde hair pulled back with a yellow polka dotted ribbon.  The clown?  Ok, he’s scary so we’ll just turn the page again… 

But don’t you see?  Don’t you understand that within those details and the minutia of every day life…there’s a whole lotta living going on and I really don’t want to miss a single moment.

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Sum Sum Summertime Oh Summer Summertime (and some updates)

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

I absolutely LOVE Florida.  I absolutely LOVE summertime.  I ridiculously insanely LOVE being in Florida in the summertime.  Bring on the sunshine.  Turn up the heat. Heck – I even love those 30 minute rain showers every afternoon at 3:15 (you think I’m kidding, I’m not!).  I love being so close to the beach that I can pack a brown bag lunch and hang out all day with my toes in the sand.  Simply said, I.Love.Summer.

We’re spending insane amounts of time outside between biking around the new ‘hood, hanging out with good friends for a 4th of July celebration, and running stadiums each week with an ever evolving group of people.  The kids come out there with us and run around not even realizing that all this good fun they’re having is exercise.  It’s awesome.  Every chance we get we’re jumping in the car and driving over to the beach for the day.  I’ve even made a solo trip out there and it was so incredibly nice to lay there in my chair and not have to think about, or worry about, or look out for a single solitary thing/person/issue.

We were blessed recently with the gift of tickets to Disney World by some very dear friends.  Of course there was no way I was passing up on that!  We found a hotel for the night and the best part was I kept it a surprise from the kids until minutes before we hit the highway south.  Needless to say they were super excited.  The weather cooperated (somewhat) and the crowds really weren’t as heavy as we’d expected.  We had the chance to visit with several friends while in Orlando and ate ourselves silly.  Ol’ Walt really knows how to lay out a spread!

The only downer to all this summery deliciousness happened while at a friends 4th of July party.  We’d been at their house all afternoon and evening having a wonderful time hanging out, enjoying great company and great food.  After dark, and after the rain (Florida!), we all went outside in the streets and started shooting off fireworks.  Anyone who knows me knows how much I ADORE fireworks.  But this year it was different. 

I don’t know if it was the noise, the flash, or the smoke, but very quickly I began to feel my pulse quicken and my heart beat faster and faster as if it was traveling up my chest, through my throat, and making grand attempts to leap out of my body.  I broke out in a cold sweat and my hands started to shake.  I was having a panic attack.  I had to go back inside and get away from the noise.  I whispered in my best friend’s ear that I was going in and God bless her, she followed me inside and sat with me on the hallway floor by the bathroom while I cried and got through it.  She knows how to soothe my soul and it’s usually with laughter.  Before too much longer there were as many smiles as there were tears.  I had another friend texting and calling to check up on me once I told him what was going on.  Seriously y’all… I have been blessed with the best friends EVER.

I know that the effects of the fire will be with me in some part forever. I wish that weren’t the case, but I’m dealing with it and understanding it more and more.  I now know that fireworks are a trigger to a less than desireable reaction.  Next time I’ll know what to expect and hopefully this won’t dampen my love of the boom boom pow!

I’m ok.  I’m really ok, actually.  Probably in a better place right now than I’ve been in a very long time.  Ridiculously happy with this life I’ve been blessed with.  Can’t ask for much more than that…

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Posted in Daily Life, Parenting, The Fire |

Merry-Go-Round

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Imagine yourself on a playground merry-go-round. Not the fancy amusement park types with horses & sleighs but the average galvanized steel man powered type. The stronger the kid that’s pushing, the faster you all go around. When your the little kid, you sit at the base of a guard rail and wrap your arms and legs around just to keep yourself from being flung off. Your ok. As long as you can hold on, you’re ok. Your view of the playground is this fantastic blur of colors blending together like a water color painting that’s been rained on and has smeared. You can hear the sounds all around you but can’t place them with their makers. There’s no way you’re going to try and do something stupid like stand up or jump off of the merry-go-round as it spins. Hold on. Just hold on. Faster, faster, faster, faster. Hold on, just hold on.

After a while, the stronger kid stops pushing and walks away. The merry-go-round begins to slow down. You are able to start focusing on the faces and voices that before ran together. You try and bring yourself to your feet as the ride slows even further. Your legs are wobbly as you finally dare to jump off. You’re dizzy. You’re balance hasn’t returned and you’re afraid that at any moment you’ll fall and eat some serious pavement.

My merry-go-round has slowed down. I can finally begin to focus on all the things around me that need my attention. But my legs are wobbly and I’m scared to jump.

I am thankful that life is returning to a normal pace and the routines that I once found so normal, dull and boring, are blissfully once again normal. Boring. Dull. I’m ready to be bored. But with this slower pace, I feel like my emotions inside haven’t realized the ride is over and they continue to spin.

I’m not sleeping very well. Part of that has been self-induced. It’s so easy to stay up till midnight or 1:00 a.m. puttering around the house sorting through bags and boxes that are begging for my attention. Bookshelves and bar stools sit in their boxes waiting to be put together. Photo albums are stacked against a wall, at the bottom of a to-do list of things to be cleaned and re-organized.

I’ve tried to make a concerted effort to be in bed by 9:00 with lights out and computer off by 10:00 p.m. Some nights I’m better at this than others. Going to bed earlier isn’t always the issue. It’s staying asleep. Not tossing and turning for a hour when I wake up at 3:00 a.m. because of an unfamiliar sound or because I’m still not comfortable in a bed that’s not my own.

Hold on. Hold on. Just hold on.

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