Saturday, May 12, 2007

Lessons Learned



I've been thinking about Mothers. Not necessarily my mother, but women who have been instrumental in my life...surrogate mothers, stand in mothers, mothers for a season. The fact of the matter is, we can learn lessons in the positive or the negative. Most of the lessons I learned from my mom was in the negative. I don't blame her; I've forgiven her long ago. I know she did the best she cold with what she had, but that doesn't mean the wounds aren't still there. As Cassie said on her blog...they aren't scars...they are stories. "I also came up with a new way to identify the hurts in my heart... they're not scars, they're stories. each hurting part of me really does have a story behind it. i never thought of it that way. hmm. things to ponder."

So what stories do I have from growing up? Roots do not come from where we live, but who we live with and what we do with them. We moved around entirely too much for the rest of the family's taste (I loved it till we landed in Bolingbrook), but some things remained the same. We did family dinners. They were often painful (sometimes literally) and humiliating (what passed for humor was emotionally devastating) but they were constant. I love family dinners now... we do them differently, but they are still constant. Sometimes we talk a lot, sometimes it's kinda quiet. Sometimes we do questions from a book that sits on our table. Sometimes we laugh until we cry over the silliest things. But we share a meal...and if we are lucky, two...every day. And when it's just Paul and I, we still sit at the table, a wee little family of two, and do the same thing.

We had responsibilities. We all had to clean on those Sunday's or Saturday's that mom got a bug. It wasn't an option. I had to cook dinner,help with the laundry (and that's where I learned so much about my dad...we frequently did it together at the laundromat). While I didn't really KNOW or LEARN how to keep a house, I got the concept that it was kinda important. Our house was way too chaotic from emotions and clutter. I learned in the vacuum what I didn't want. I learned that I wanted a home, not a dumping ground. I wanted a place that smelled good and echoed with laughter...a place that was peaceful and quiet sometimes and invited the individuals within its walls to grow into who they were created to be, not who I wanted them to be.

I learned that you can disagree with someone mightily and still love them. You can reject their values and lifestyle and choices and still love them. You can be hurt deeply, profoundly, life changingly, and still love them. That's MY choice...and nothing someone else does can take that choice away from me. I choose who to love and who to not love. Love isn't legislated; it isn't demanded. It comes from a well deep within. I learned that hurt people hurt people and that you can't learn to be healthy if you don't want to. It's not an easy journey, but it's one worth the effort.
I learned to respect authority...even when I disagreed. To show respect for the position.

I learned that I can make friends if I try hard enough.
I learned that traditions are only good if they are meaningful. We used to make Christmas cookies every year, but the cookies were not worth the belittling and angry words that were tossed like baseballs at our delicate hearts. I'd rather buy them and do something that everyone wants to do. I'd rather not have them at all then to create those memories for my kids.

I learned that sharing a room isn't the end of the world and having a room for yourself doesn't protect you from all the things you thought it would.

I learned to love education for the sake of learning. I learned that a dream postponed is still a valid dream.

I learned that it's hard to say goodbye...but we all need to learn how to do it.

I learned that prescription drugs and alcohol doesn't numb the pain...just delays it a while.


So what have I learned AS a mother??

I learned how to love unconditionally. From the time Cassie was born, she marched to her own drummer. Sometimes I could hear the beat in the distance, and sometimes I had to let her lead me in the march. But all the while, I have loved her. I have loved her through fear when she was sick and nobody could figure out why. I loved her through frustration, when she would become overstimulated and scream for hours, nothing calming her. I loved her through her dreaming and her tears and her rebellion. She has done things that has hurt me deeply, that I still do not understand. But it does not, for one millisecond, reduce my love for her. Never has, never will.


I've learned to be honest, in the most difficult circumstances. Growing up, I learned to lie. I was going to be blamed anyway, then I might as well do it. But with MY child's face looking at me with those innocent, trusting eyes. OH NO...I wouldn't lie to them. I didn't blab off all the gory details, but I did tell the truth. Even that day in the parking lot when I had to answer, "I don't know" to the question I never thought I'd have to answer that way. I learned that some truths just don't' need to be shared...there is no point and will do nothing but cause more pain. But even now, if the question was asked, I'd have to be honest. I don't EVER wanting my kids looking back and remember that I lied to them. No way. No how.


I've learned to be happy is a simple thing. Live in the moment. Enjoy the dandelions. Put them in a pretty vase...they'll be dead in an hour anyway. Take out the china. Have a tea party. Play with play doh. Read the story again. Go for that walk with your teen instead of doing the dishes. Sit out on the porch and watch the sun come up with a cuppa something. Breathe in those amazing giggles and laughs. Memorize the smirks and twinkly eyes. Tell jokes and laugh at lames ones. Share life. Smile. Hug. Yeah. it's a simple thing.


I've learned to laugh. My children are amazingly articulate and funny people. Cassie has a wit and quick response that makes me chuckle, giggle, smirk, guffaw. That girl gets it. I hope others can learn to appreciate it. From the time she'd tell interminable jokes and stories and announce the ending with "now laugh", to this day, I love her company and her humor. Joseph...well, he has such an amazingly funny take on life, we share a lot of the same thoughts and views on things. He can crack wise and make me laugh right in the middle of disciplining him. Darn it. And I do. I do it back to him when he's taking life too seriously. Besides their goofy kid stories, their silly outfits, Calvin and Hobbes and Garfield being quoted at a constant rate, they are just delightfully humorous, engaging people. I learned I can get out of Dr Seuss books because Paul would read them...woohoo!!


I've learned that wisdom doesn't always come with age. I've learned much at my children's feet and am honored to have been in their classroom. They are just plain smart and it's not all about books either.


I've learned to be strong. Holding a child while they are testing her in horrible ways, and knowing that I couldn't break down, I learned I was stronger than I thought and that strength can and should be combined with compassion. I've learned that battles aren't won in a day and that I, as their mother, needed to be strong for them. But to also allow them to see me cry and know that even when we didn't know how it would end, we knew where our strength would come from. I've learned to be strong enough to let go through my fear and sorrow. To be strong enough to let them grow up in their own strengths...and not demand that their strengths reflect mine. I've learned to be strong enough to let them feel THEIR pain and not need to fix it so they would learn to work through their own issues...and that I'd be here for them in whatever capacity they wanted but savior wasn't one of them.


I've learned encouragement. I taught my kids to trust their instincts, stand their ground and believe in themselves and not to take any crap from anybody. If you're in a situation where someone does not value you or see what a treasure they have in you, get out, leave, move on. Because you deserve better than that. I know other mother's have said that to their kids. But for me, it was not something that I ever EVER heard growing up. I heard "I wish you had never been born" I heard namecalling. I heard verbal tirades. So this is one of the lessons learned that I take the most comfort in. I could and DID break the cycle. My kids KNOW I believe in them and value them for who they are not what they can do. That makes me smile inside. Even when they don't act on that knowledge...they know it.


I learned to have faith in the big picture. To trust what I don't see. From that first night that Cassie slept through the night and I kept sticking my finger under her nose to make sure se was alive, I have had to learn this lesson. The hard way...every time....but learning it still is part of my journey.


I learned I don't need to know everything and I can let my kids see that. It gives them the courage to be real and admit that they don't' either. I've learned that losing sleep over a situation doesn't do anything but make me MORE tired and LESS able to cope.


I've learned that 10 years of the zoo membership and 8 years of the Field Museum builds memories and traditions and we do not need to go back there to relive them. That you can't feed the monkeys at the zoo and that you shouldn't lean against the rock wall at the Field. That some things are overstated but that doesn't make them bad...just a little disappointing.


I've learned that your children never outgrow your hugs...but they definitely DO outgrow your laps (at least mine!!) I've learned that quiet does return and it is still good. I've learned that growing up and moving away doesn't mean leaving your heart, your prayers, your family. I've learned that no matter where my kids live or move or have their being, they will always be my babies but that I need to let them be THEIR adults...and I've learned to let go. Not gracefully. Not completely. Not without tears or sorrow. Just to let go. To let them go out into the world and remind them they always have a place in our home. They brought treasures to our home and it will always be a soft place for them to land.


And I've learned that being a mother isn't just for the child you carry within you. Being a mother isnt always about the children you raise. Sometimes, if we are really blessed, we are given others in our life who need a mother-ish person. Not to replace their mom, but for a day or a season or a long time, to stand in the gap for their mom.


I'm so grateful that God saw fit to me to be a mother. I've never regretted it one day or one millisecond of my life. There is nothing more important in my life than being a good mother. And maybe someday, I will hear back that I have been...I'm kerflempt. I think being a mother is what I was born for...and I'm humbled and honored that God has allowed that for me...

Friday, May 11, 2007

useless trivia about me

There's this great scrapbooking site I go to alot...when it's not down. It's called 2peas. There's this thing on there...two about you. Here's my two about me!!

TWO:
Two Names I Go by: 1. Mom 2. Ger
Two Things I am Wearing Right Now: 1. Sparkly capris 2. white tee
Two Things I Want (or have) in a Relationship: 1. Trust 2. Laughter
Two of My Favorite Things to do: 1. scrapbook 2. hang out with peeps i love
Things I Want Very Badly At The Moment:1. this stuff at church to be resolved 2. be debt free
Two pets I have: none. zip zero zilch nada Sigh
Two things I did last night: 1. had surprise guests stop by 2. taped grey's and cut off the last 2 minutes
Two things I ate today:How bad is this? It's 1:00 and I haven't eaten yet. I had a cup of tea
Two people I just talked to last: 1. friend 2. other friend
Two Things I'm doing tomorrow: 1. Flyfest at the mall 2. scrapbooking hopefully
Two longest car rides:1. Joliet, IL to Lutz, FL 2. Virginia Beach, VA to JOliet!!!
Two Favorite Holidays:1. Christmas 2. my birthday, which is a weeklong holiday around here!!
Two favorite beverages:1. Bottled water (room temp not too cold!)2. tea with yummy creamer

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

In less than two weeks...

so many things will be changing.

My niece will be a high school graduate, heading off to college int he fall. Our little Meeshie all grown up into this amazing woman. Funny, articulate, enthusiastic, confident. She's so come into her own identity in the last few years; and it could have been so different. I'm super proud of her and just love hanging with her. If I had a myspace, she'd be in my top 8 for sure!! Her graduation is in 13 days.

We head for Spartanburg in 12 days...a long drive, but we have a commitment on Sunday night that will probably run late and I don't want to have to get up at 4:00 to catch my flight out. I hate role conflict. It will give Paul and I a good chance to talk. The last road trip we went on ended so badly we almost ended up divorced in the aftermath. It will be good to reclaim that activity...we used to take them all the time and i LOVED them!!

Speaking of road trips, still trying to put together a girls roadtrip...wouldn't that be fun? Just say : well, let's take two weeks and head west. Love it!!
MOPS will be over 2 weeks from today. Sigh. This has been a great year and I feel like I was able to really invest in the ladies, not distracted with my personal problems. I'll miss those meetings...they are like one big party for the most part!! And great food!! YUMMMMMMMM

We'll be done with school at the end of this week. It's the first year in about 7 that we were finished on time, without drama, and it sure feels good. No family health crises that derailed us for months. No marriage problems. No children problems. Yep. It's good to have peace.



In two weeks, my brother will be another year older...I miss him in my life. We used to be super close, but as most adult children do, we drifted apart. He's so busy working all the time. I do worry about him having balance. Doesn't seem to be much of it sometimes.



In two weeks, Mother's Day will have passed. Which reminds me I need to call my mom. Last year I didn't see Cassie at all on Mother's Day. I wonder what this year will bring. I'm glad for the healing in our relationship in the last six months. It was not without tears or grief, but it seems to me we are in a pretty good place now.



Hopefully, in two weeks the fires will be out in Fl. This picture is from my niece's friend. Its actually the smoke from a wildfire...which brings me to my final in less than two weeks...I get to see her!! WOOHOO!!!

Monday, May 7, 2007

Numbers game








5 everyday favorites(today):
a great cup of tea
smelling lilacs in bloom
walking barefoot
Taking a hot shower
Blogging



4 mood-lifters:
Working out and not having my shoulder hurt
Scrapbooking happy pix
Having interesting conversations with my friennnnnnnds
Listening to music really really loud in my car with the windows and sunroof open





3 reasons to get out of bed:
The doggone phone rings early (not a happy reason!!)
Paul's snoring and I won't be getting any more sleep anyway
I'm awake and done with praying and the day is starting goooooooooood





2 people you love:
My Friends (seriously, you think I could narrow it down??)
My Family (ditto that)





1 thing on my mind:
I'm so thankful for the freedom to express my faith



Four jobs I've had


1. Secretary
2. Accountant (about 4 different versions!!)
3. School bookkeeper
4. youth minister





Four movies I can watch over and over
1. John Q (and every other Denzel movie except Training Day, but that would be redundant)
2. The Seventh Sign
3. The Sixth Sign
4. Star Wars (yeah, really!!)





Four places I have lived
1. New York City
2. Milan, MI
3. Adams, WI
4. Bolingbrook, IL


Four television shows I love to watch
1. 24
2. Heroes
3. Brothers and Sisters (reminds me of my crazy family)
4. American Idol





Four places I have been on vacation
1. Florida
2. Washington, DC
3. Boston, Massachusetts
4. the Carolinas





Four of my favorite dishes
1. Corned beef and cabbage
2. stuffed shells, but only with my girlies around to share them with
3. Thanksgiving—all of it
4. Grilled cheese on whole grain bread





Four websites I visit daily (well, or almost daily)
1. www.sparkpeople.com
2. www.comcast.net
3. www.blogger.com
4. www.yahoogroups.com





Four places I would rather be right now


1. Lunch/Shopping with Cassie


2. Beeeuuuutteeeeeful Spartanburg with my nieces, then on to Huntersville for gelato w/Dor


3 Snohomish, at a little coffee shop with Judy


4 Somewhere scrapping or making cards with friends





Four favorite CDs right now:


1. Kelly Clarkson Breakaway


2. Nick Lachey What's Left of me


3. Mary J Blige The Breakthrough


4. Casting Crowns Casting Crowns





Four books I'm reading:
1. The Bible


2. Shift Happens


3. Grown up Girlfriends


4. My Heart is at Home

Friday, May 4, 2007

National Scrapbooking Day is tomorrow


so I thought I'd get a head start. I did all my little jobbies (ironing, dusting, putting away, etc) so I could scrap today. Guess how much I scrapped? Go ahead, guess!! No really...try!










NOT ONE SINGLE PAGE!! Nada, zip, zilch....

but I did find my scrapbook desk...

and get my card swap stuff ready...

and talk on the phone to an old girlfriend to set up lunch next week...she's in red on my calendar!!WOOHOO!! It's gonna happen!! If the kids don't get sick. No, I"m not going there. They WILL be healthy. They WILL be healthy....

and made a gift for a friend's bday...

and hung out with Joseph...

and talked online to all my scrapping buddies who also weren't scrapping. We are bad influences on each other...

oh...and uploaded a martini picture of moi!!

And now I"m off to a tupperware party...

Maybe I'll scrap tomorrow. LOL

Thursday, May 3, 2007

National Day of prayer



Today is the national day of prayer. A dear friend sent me an email that included this photo and it got me to thinking...

the contrast of these two sweet kids is stark, and beautiful. But look at how they are so comfortable and stare straight into the camera. I want to stare straight into the camera that God holds and see myself how he sees me. I want to choose to spend enough time with someone to know their character before I decide I don't like them. To make decisions about relationships based on what I have experienced, not what I've heard. I want to spend more time building friendships than building a wardrobe. I want to have someone say behind my back: she has character; integrity; honesty; kindness. I want more people to WANT that than to want money or things.

If I have a collection to gather, I want it to be of amazing and great people...tender stories of how we have hugged each other through life. I want a collection of memories that bring a smile to my face. I want a collection of battle scars because I didn't run from the fight just to keep the peace. I want to collect people's stories...because I spent enough time with them for them to feel comfortable sharing their lives with me. I long for a collection of hearts who see Jesus in my actions and opinions and attitudes.

I love how these kids don't look cynical. They still believe in facing life head on. We could learn a little somethin somethin from these little sweeties...that's my prayer for our country today. And for my family. And for my friends.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

the timetable of an insane day...


Ok, so I get up "early" to get some things done before this meeting I was praying for...

5:52: Wake up on my own (how sick is that????) My eyes just pop open like a cartoon and that's all she wrote on the sleep plan

7:00: Finish my morning routine of getting dressed, making my bed, etc.

7:30: Eat breakfast, quiet time (mercifully...that was the only quiet time in my day)

8:00: Quick email check and responses

8:45: 2 quick phone calls; leave messages; start to pray for meeting

9:30: Done praying; start toilet soaks and Kaboom on faucets and sinks

9:45: Sort through fall clothes; purge spring clothes and make bag for blessing others

10:00: Someone at door; stop what I"m doing with the clothes and answer door. Conversation for 20 minutes or so; do my business with her and she leaves. My marching orders: find two more people

10:30: remember that the toilets are still soaking and faucets need to be rinsed. Get the faucets done before the next interruption: two more incoming phone calls

11:00: Call Kimberlee about card swap and Saturday's gathering

11:15: Start laundry load: jeans; pack away winter clothes that were brought to basement

11:20: Phone calls begin to pour in (no kidding six calls in 10 minutes)

11:30: Paul comes home to sign something. I hang up from call number 3 and we touch base about the evening. We realize if we don't spend Wednesday together it will be Monday of next week before we have any real time together.

12:00: IN theory, my online crop starts (well, it did for everyone else anyway) Phone still ringing. I scrapbook for about 30 minutes. Get 4 pages done (page kits are fabuloso!!)

12:20: Catch Melissa online and chat with her for 10 minutes before the door bell rings

12:30: Lynda stops by for a brief chat and picks up something I have for her

1:00: Realize I never DID do the toilets and go to finish them. See the half sorted clothes and finish them up

1:15: Start second load of laundry: sheets. Christine calls and leaves a message somewhere in here! Eat lunch on the run.

1:45: Check laundry and realize that our water problem is back..the darn drain doesn't always work quickly enough for 2 things at once (Joseph's shower and my laundry!!)

1:50: Text Paul to let him know...made his day!!

2:00: Get back to my computer for multiple updates from Paul's family regarding his dad coming home today. Respond to the ones I need to. Ask Melissa when she was here when we were roto-rooting (correct answer: Christmas time because we were stuck making the cookies while Paul was stuck rooting the pipes)

2:30: Gal comes to pick up papers that needed to be signed. Ten minute conversation at door

2:40: Hang out laundry

2:50: Joseph reminds me that I have to pick his friend up in 15 minutes. Quick yogurt with granola

3:00: Leave to pick up Joseph's friend. Call Lynda on cell phone until I realize I don't know where I"m going and tell her I have to go.

3:45: Back home; take laundry off line

4:00: toss jeans in drier, fold what is in there first; contemplate starting another load to see what will happen. Decide I don't want to get my aerobic workout by mopping water and go upstairs.

4:15: Joseph's friend comes over; brief call to Kimberlee about retiring stamps. Realize I need to call my mom

4:25: Melissa calls on the way home from work and we chat about life, floods and Meesh's graduation.

5:00: Paul calls to say he's going to work late. I have an hour to do what I need to do.

5:15: Call Val and check Joseph's math (he got a 90% if anyone cares)

5:30: Start dinner: marinade the shrimp, slice the mushrooms, etc. Wipe off counters and make mental note to sweep

5:45: Les calls to say Lynda's driving the car and the brakes are going out. I tell him to have her come here since she was on her way to church. Call Paul and tell him (I find out later that he retrieves the voicemail at 1030)

6:00: Lynda and Hannah get here with the car; Paul comes in about 5 minutes later and says it's brake line rusted through. It will be a 3 hour repair.

6:30: We eat dinner, Paul goes out and finishes the car. I clean up dinner and print out retired stamp list to see what I NEED to buy!! LOL

7:00: My mind is now shot for the day...but there's at least 3 hours left. I figure out what papers I need to order and find out from Kimberlee that we are supposed to have these cards done and mailed today. Too bad the swap co-ordinator didn't tell me that. Mine are clearly not going to be done!!

7:30: I call Janine to confirm our 9:00 declutter session for tomorrow; get my labeller and put it by back door so I don't forget it. Remember to put the tag book by back door too, so I can get albums in fave colors tomorrow.

7:45: Pull out dead flowers, water plant, think 'I should exercise...nah.'

8:30: Jake's dad comes to pick him up. Another 15 minutes or so of small talk.

9:00: Paul's still out in the garage

10:00: I realize I haven't done any of my small group or bible study stuff for the week. Crap.

10:00: Paul is done with Lynda and Les's car...calls them to come get it after cleaning up.

11:00: We sit down to discuss the next few days...decide we'll ditch Wed. night class and spend it together...and that we'll go into the Bolingbrook Promenade on Sunday.


So when you wonder why I don't call you back right away, or it's a couple of days till I return your email, I probably had a day like this!! This day, or something similar, happens at least once a week!!