Sunday, October 11, 2020

Genuine Friendship

Genuine friendships can be hard to come by, and I value the ones that I have in my life. Sometimes I think I struggle to truly show people that I care for them, or that I'm "here." a friend I haven't seen in 12+ years today asked to buy a signed (haha) copy of my book, once it is done. We were friends in high school and had a couple of classes together. We have chatted on Snapchat and via text randomly a handful of times, but beyond that, we have really only kept up with each other through comments and clicking the "like" button or double tapping photos on instagram. When I thanked her for her support, even after all these years of not seeing each other, she simply said, "Distance doesn't change friendship, girl! I've treasured your friendship since high school, you're the most genuine person and I love you. You're loved, girl, and you deserve every amount of positive karma coming your way." 

I was struck by her words, because I always doubt that people actually see that I am here and that I care, and that I will always do everything I can to help, when I can. I have always been someone that functions so well on structure and routine, and when things get in the way of, or interrupt, my daily routines, I can definitely get a irritated. I feel as though I thrive when I know what is coming next, and sometimes that can get in the way of the time and attention I give to those in my life. 

In all honesty, this is also why it has taken me this long to take a leap of faith and steps towards publishing something of my own, and letting it be put out there for the world. It's certainly a tiny step, towards the ultimate goal, and it is a simple children's story, but the fear of how it may disrupt my life is still present--the fear of failure and disappointment are both still present. 

Her simple words today (which were "piggybacked" off of someone else requesting the same) made me realize the value of the people in my life beyond what I already know to be true. I may not venture out often, or make time for people the way that I probably should, but I realize that I am seen, and that people do care. My heart has always been tender and overly caring for people. I see it as both my greatest strength and greatest weakness. I want to help everyone and to be there for everyone. This has always been true. This last couple years, though, the tables turned a LOT, and I needed people to be there for me. It was a struggle to accept, and to realize that some days were going to be harder than others, but so many of you were here for me, listened to me, sat with me while the fear of the unknown with Emma set in and the tears came pouring, and you were always present when I needed you. 

Now I'm turning the page to a new chapter. I'm happy. I'm chasing my dreams and taking risks, and after all the struggles and dark times, you are all still cheering me on, still supporting me, and still routing for me--even those of you I haven't seen in 12+ years, and those, like Dina, who I fail to communicate with as often as I should. 

I just wanted to take a moment (okay several moments) to say that I cherish you all, I value your steady belief in me, your unfaltering friendship, even when I fall off the communication map, and the genuine and true friendship you have all always provided. If ever you're going through it and needed an ear, a shoulder, or just someone to distract you, never forget that I am here, even when it seems like I am not. 

Monday, August 17, 2020

Control

Handing over control wasn’t something I was comfortable with--not in my own life, but more specifically not in the life of my daughter.  For as far back as I can remember I’ve held tight to three things: writing and running and reading. There were days where I would be running and simultaneously be writing on my phone. These were the things that brought me peace. The main character of my stories, from the age of 12 forward, was always Emma. Emma was always the protagonist in the magical worlds I would create, and I knew one that day she would be the protagonist in my life--I knew I would have my own little girl that I would get to watch grow and see her story unfold. When life doesn’t always go how we want it to, sometimes we are forced to hand over that control. I wasn’t, and am probably still not quite ready to do that to the fullest degree that I have to.

     I had my Emma in October of 2017 and she is the life-force that keeps me going. The first two and a half years of her life she slept solely in my arms. I nursed her for 2 of those years, and I held her close. It was me and her against it all, and we were inseparable. I struggled to even dedicate time in the days for “self-care” because I didn’t want to leave her, and I just considered her a part of my daily routine. She was this little fire-cracker, running around by 9-months old, talking, babbling, getting into everything, and making me laugh every single day. It was as if my heart removed itself from my body and just began running around in front of me. All my life I knew I would have my “Emma,” but now if you ask her what her name is, she will proudly proclaim, “my name is bug bug!” I clearly call her by her nickname far too often. 

         Life took a turn, as it does for all of us in differing areas, and when she was two and a half she had to start leaving for overnights. First it was just one, but eventually transitioned into two overnights away, every other weekend. It isn’t easy for me, and I don’t suspect as a mom that it ever truly will be. I’ve had “Emma” as the protagonist of my stories for so long, and now I have my real-life Emma as the lead character of my life, and every two weeks I have these 2 days that I don’t know what is happening on those pages. I don’t know if she is laughing, smiling, crying, hurting, or any other emotion; I’m not in control of those pages of her life and it is incredibly hard for my mind--and heart--to let that settle. I’m getting better. We are approaching month 5 of these overnights now, and I am getting better. I can’t imagine it will ever be easy, but I am learning to use those weekends to get longer workouts in, spend time with my friends, uninterrupted, enjoy my family without having to be responsible for all the little things. The truth is, though, I enjoy all the little things. Even on the days she is intensely needy and loud, I enjoy the moments with her, and I enjoy just the simple gift of being her mom. 

          Control isn’t an easy thing to hand over, but I am getting better at it, and I am learning--and growing--along this journey and these new chapters. I’m finding peace in the quiet moments, and I go for a workout or write/read when I can’t quiet my own mind. Being a mom is such a gift, but it is also terrifying, in its own way. You always want what is best for that little person, and you question, over and over, if you’re doing it right, if you’re enough, and if you’re giving them enough of your time and energy. We can always do more and be more, and I think it’s important to always strive to do better, but also accept that failure is part of that process along the way. 

    Cheers to the mom’s out there, getting by, learning that they can’t control everything in their child’s lives, and embracing the beauty of this chaotic job we call “mom life.”


Sunday, March 1, 2020

49 hours

        Yesterday was the first entire day I have had to go without seeing you. You've done overnight before, but I haven't woken up without seeing you that day by evening time. To say my heart struggled is an understatement. I didn't sleep, I laid in our bed and I didn't sleep once. I had plans with friends for months, thinking I would need to get away, and I canceled them, probably more because I didn't want to be too far from where you are than any other reason I came up with. I bought you things to come home to, and I will probably get you a few more things today. These weekends away will get expensive. I am going to go running later, and try and let go of my own fears when you aren't near me, and also remember that I have to take care of me, as well.
        It's amazing, though, how much a little person can become such an anchor for your heart. Before Emma, my focus was my work caring for kids, personal training and taking care of clients, being there for Matty and caring for him while I was in Louisiana for that year, and then helping with my niece and nephew once I moved home. My secondary focus was always my health and fitness, but ever since I was 12 and started babysitting, I have always been in jobs where I help others, or jobs where my sole purpose is to care for children. It became a theme before becoming a mom, and having a daughter of my own magnified that responsibility beyond comprehension. I become a headcase when she isn't with me because I still don't quite know what to do with myself and I just break down inside. I know I have to find things to do, and I have so many people that ask me to come hang out, visit them, go out with them, but I rarely say "yes." I suppose I feel guilty. Mom guilt is such a real thing. I feel as though I should be caring for Emma, or I should keep myself readily available, should something happen and she have to come home. I have to learn how to cope without her.
        It's funny, actually, before Emma, I used to tell my friend Heather that I was a relatively emotionally detached person. I loved people, but I was fine without them in my life. I laugh about this now, because she always knew that it was just a wall I had built around my heart because of the past, and that once it fell, I'd see how wrong I was. Having Emma made it melt away like ice by a fire. Now my desire and need to be maternal and care for people exceeds almost every other instinct or rationale. It's just who I am, but in hindsight, I realize that it is who I've always been. I just love to care for people and to love them. A constant bleeding heart. It makes motherhood, when I have to be away from Emma 20% of the time, both beautiful, and difficult.
        Eleven more hours until she is home, and it can't get here soon enough. At the end of the day, though, as much of a mess I may be inside when she isn't with me, I know that it will get easier and I will learn to find my emotional balance on those days. I'll begin to use them to work on my creative writing, not just blogging, and running again.  I'm eternally grateful for my friends who listen to me on the phone, for my family who I am with daily and miss her as much as I do, and just for the beautiful people in my life.

Friday, January 24, 2020

Reassurance

A week or so ago I was trying to get Emma out of the car. It was night, and it was extremely cold outside. She didn’t have shoes on, and she had taken off her socks. She insisted on “no, mommy, I do it.” I tried to pick her up when she got to the ground, but she didn’t want to be carried. I let her walk for a second, until she cried out, “ouch! Mommy, feet hurt! Hold you!” I picked her up and she asked me to kiss her feet. I kissed them both and held them in the grip of my warm hands, to shake away the cold that stung her. 
In these simple moments I was reminded of both the stubbornness of our human-nature and the patient consistency of our Father in heaven. How often we are told in the Bible to trust in God; how often we are reassured of his steadfast love for us, and yet we still, so often, fail to trust in Him. It is okay, though, to admit that sometimes we do not trust God. God already knows this, and it is okay to ask Him for help in trusting Him in areas that are a struggle for us. We want to do things for ourselves, and to be the author of our own fate, but there are so many things in this life that are better left in the hands of someone who is so much more than we are. We cannot force things, and by trying to, we often cause a disaster that we end up pleading with Him to fix. 
God is patient, and He forgives us unconditionally, should we choose to turn to Him and ask. What a wonderful blessing that is. We all struggle with different areas of sin, not one person is perfect. Whatever that area may be, gluttony, sexual temptation, laziness, anger--whatever it is--God just wants to help us and heal us. He desires for our hearts to be pure, to be cleansed, to be beautiful, and to be happy even in our suffering. We have to be willing to trust Him, though. 
Isaiah 43:2 tells us, “When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze.” 
What beautiful reassurance this gives us. I was reminded recently that I need reassurance these days like I never have before. I had never in my life been the person to NEED to know and hear often how someone feels, or what is happening. I’ve always been very stable and strong-hearted. Through the things I have endured, I have fought extremely hard to keep my heart kind, soft and gentle, but in doing that--in not putting up walls around my heart and shutting the world away from it entirely, it has also become laced with fears and anxieties. This is something I am newly discovering, as I try to let people in again. But God reminds me that it is okay to need reassurance, and to allow Him to be all the comfort I need, and allow Him to be the strength and caretaker of my heart. My heart should always, first and foremost, belong to Him, anyway, and in allowing that, no pain will ever be strong enough to pierce past the love that is so deeply rooted there.
    Psalm 46: 1-3 and Psalm 73:26 read, “God is our refuge and our strength, A very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth should change and though the mountains shall slip into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains quake at its swelling pride”
“My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.”
These verses remind me of the faithful endurance of God, but also of the weakness of the human heart. As a mom I have been able to receive of glimpse of the intense love and consistency of God, through how I love my daughter. I will let her make her mistakes, and allow her stubbornness to sometimes (like her cold feet) teach her that it is okay to ask for help. God does this with us, too. He has given us free will to choose, and He wants so desperately for us to choose Him. He will not force it, though, because forced love isn’t true love. Forced love isn’t lasting love. And how beautiful it is when someone chooses to love you, even in your darkest, ugliest moments. God has chosen to love me through all of my ugly, through all of my crazy, and through all of my mistakes. God looks at our hearts, he looks at our human-nature and he says, “It is very good.” He knows we will fail, He knows we will slip up, fall into temptation, make daily mistakes, but He knows that our hearts are good. He knows that our hearts are filled with love and good intention, though maybe clouded with fear, pain, and desperation. He knows that this world has shaken us, but He tries to remind us daily, if we should choose to listen, that  we are not made for this world. 
Strive daily to turn to God, strive daily to trust in Him, through the storms, through the trials, through the sun and through the rain. Close your eyes and allow Him to guide you. Breathe and take the steps placed before you, remembering that in His care, with His guidance, the road traveled may be scary, but the destination from the top is beyond what you could have ever imagined.


Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Finding My Voice

When I was 23 years 17 days old, before the late hours of the night, I was a virgin. When I was 23 years 17 days old, at an hour I cannot know, I was dateraped and the biggest piece of my heart, at the time, was taken from me. When I look back, I sometimes associate this with the first trauma I had with men in my life, but I know in my heart that that isn’t true. I know that my story started much, much before this horrific November 12th night. When I look back on my childhood, I don’t view it as traumatic, though I know that trauma happened. I didn’t truly face it until I was old enough to understand, but the images played in my mind. When I was 4 years old I was molested, time and time again, by our neighbor, a late twenties or early thirties man, who was sick in his head. We didn’t know. I didn’t know. It was “our little secret,” he would tell me, as he would take my little delicate hand and lead me down the hallway, closing the bathroom door behind us, beginning to take off his clothes, instructing me to do the same. I thought it was a game. I wasn’t old enough to understand the concept of “good touch” and “bad touch” and I thought we were simply playing a game. 
When I was 23 years old, I knew the difference. I knew what good touch was, and I knew what bad touch was. When I was 23 years old, I wasn’t able to stand up for myself, or stand at all. I was all but defenseless, and yet again was put through a situation that would shape me for the future--a situation that I would have to learn how to become better from, to grow from. 
I don’t associate my life with trauma. I don’t look at my past and think “oh, poor, sweet girl, you’ve been through so much.” I see my mom, in her ninety-six pound frame, coming home from the grocery store to my brothers and I and shouting, “Who wants to have a shaving cream fight at the park?” We would run down to the park in whatever clothes we had on, and the war would ensue. Whoever ended up the most white would win. We would all come home completely covered, head-to-toe, and my dad would come home and be furious with the mess we made getting ourselves clean. My family dynamic was dysfunctional, but filled with love, filled with laughter and filled with faith. 
My mom taught me to cast all my cares unto God, and to always know that He is taking care of me, that He is holding my heart, and that He is the writer of my fate, should I choose to allow Him to take the lead. My mom may have lost sight of this, though I would never know it, when I finally told my closest-in-age brother about the secret I had with our grown neighbor. He gripped my wrist and yanked me down the hallway, saying, “I’m not letting you go until you tell mom. I will tell her if you don’t.” He knew the difference between good touch and bad touch, and he was livid. I told my mom, and I don’t remember her reaction. I’m sure she cried later. I’m sure she went through a period of blaming herself for trusting him enough to allow my brother to mow his lawn and for me to sit there and watch him do it. She didn’t show me that reaction. I’m sure her heart was angry with God for a moment, but I don’t remember her faith ever wavering. What I remember is that I wasn’t allowed to go outside when his black car was in the driveway. I wasn’t allowed to play basketball if he was home, or be outdoors. I would peek my eyes out through my blinds and I would check to see if his car was there, waiting to be able to go play. I remember sitting at the police station and the cold feeling of a metal chair under my legs. I let my legs swing back and forth beneath me while the officer used toy dolls to ask me questions, “did he do this?” “did he do that?” I responded simply, “yes,” “no,” “I’m not sure,” all while looking at the ground and letting my feet swing in and out of that chair. What I remember most of all was the day that I snuck out when I saw him outside. I didn’t understand the extent of what he did, but I knew that the police were here often and that he was made to move. I also knew that I couldn’t let someone disappear without knowing that they were forgiven. I ran outside when I saw him, and he waved to me. I walked over to him, wearing my light-up sneakers, and I told him “I forgive you.” He looked down at me, with his blue eyes and blond hair, and he thanked me. He hugged me, and he thanked me. This moment haunts me now, knowing I was in the arms of my predator, but I will never regret forgiving him. I will never regret granting forgiveness to a sinner, when I, too, am constantly being forgiven. 
Life carried on. Soccer was everything I ever wanted to play or do, and I often got ready for practice hours before I had to go, cleats and shinguards on, kicking the ball around the house or in the yard. On games days I would have my uniform on at 8 in the morning, even if my game didn’t start until 2:30 in the afternoon. I dreamed about playing, and I loved the feeling of the grass under my feet, and the rush of adrenaline I would feel when I broke away with the ball and sprinted towards the net, hearing the swish of the ball sliding against it as the cheers began. My nickname quickly became “diehard,” because I would get injured, tear a tendon, dislocate and relocate my shoulder, and keep playing. I never quit. This would be a theme in my life. 
When I was 23 years and 17 days old, I wasn’t able to fight how I wanted to. I tried, I remember telling him to stop many times, but the weight of his body against mine was crushing me, and I was too dizzy to move or stand. I didn’t invite him into the room. I barely got there myself. I walked away from him because he was bothering me, after having made me a couple of drinks. I told him I was going to sleep, and I had to hold on to anything I could find just to get to an open door. I remember shutting the door. I don’t remember laying down. I don’t remember him coming into the room, or the door opening and closing again. I remember his weight. I remember crying. I remember him telling me to relax and my telling him repeatedly that he needed to stop. I remember pain, and I remember giving up, for probably the first time in my life, truly accepting defeat and giving up. 
The next morning I told myself I chose it, even though I knew I hadn’t. I didn’t want to face reality. Still intensely dizzy from whatever was placed in my drink, I went running. Running had always been my escape from reality, and I had to drown out the noise of my own brain. I had to run. I got a couple horrible feeling miles and vomited all over the side of the road. Just as my vomit would be washed down the drain, I washed the events of that night deep within myself, not telling anyone for over a year. 
My mom raised us all to turn to God in hard times. She taught us that it was important, more than most other things in life, to have a constant line of communication with God, and to pray unceasingly. I didn’t know how to pray after this had happened. I didn’t know how to talk to people. I moved out on Thanksgiving day, and into a friends house in another town. My family was hurt, but they didn’t know that I, truly, was the one hurting. I couldn’t be in my hometown anymore. I couldn’t run the risk of seeing him, or of seeing his friend I had been dating that cheating on me that very same night. He was supposed to be at that house with me. I wasn’t supposed to be there alone. The universe had other plans. So I ran away for a while. I worked, I went to school and I focused my attention on running. 10-13 mile tuesday’s became a thing for my roommate and I. I ran until the pain stopped, I ran until my mind stopped. I ran until running became my way of praying and finding peace with God again. 
When I was 12 years old, I decided I wanted to be a writer. I started writing poetry and short stories and I decided that one day I was going to write a story and get it published. I began working on pieces and never finishing them, afraid to let the world see the creative side of my writing, the fun side, the fantasy side. What I didn’t realize was that God was allowing my life to become a story. God doesn’t make bad things happen, but He does allow good things to come from those experiences, if we allow Him to guide us. Writing became my first outlet, before distance running. The first long novel-type story I ever wrote began while I was running. I pulled my phone out, the only music playing was a piano player, and I started running and typing away with my thumbs on my phone. Writing, I thought, would be my future. I didn’t know the events that would transpire that would lead me to this point, but I know that God has a purpose, and a plan, and that I have a story to tell. When I was 4 years old something terrible happened, but when I was 23 years and 17 days old, my whole world changed and it would set off 8 years of a series of decisions and events that would alter the course of my life, leave me scared, vulnerable and broken, give me the most amazing miracle baby I could have ever asked for, and finally give me my voice, my story, my writing. 

Friday, January 3, 2020

Peace, Trust, Control

Peace. It doesn't come easy sometimes. For the most part I have always tried to maintain a positive attitude and accept whatever comes in life. This last month I have realized that I am struggling with handing over control to the God who loves me so very much. Why is that, though? I look back at old writings and old posts, that I did nearly daily, and I know that something has shifted. This morning I realized what that is. I've been spending so much time in prayer these last several weeks, trying to rebuild the relationship with God that I have had before and I crave. I went to the chapel yesterday and I prayed. I prayed and I cried, and I didn't know why I was crying. I wasn't sad, I just felt overcome with peace for a moment, and I cried. I left the chapel and I went to confession, and just took a few minutes to thank God for everything I have been blessed with, which is so very much.

What I realized is this: I am a mother now, and that is what has changed. I feel this overpowering need to be in control and to take care of, not only Emma, but everyone. The maternal side of me wants to help everyone, do everything, love everyone, and make sure everyone knows they are loved and cared for. It's exhausting, and I'm wearing myself out. I have always been told I was a natural born leader, but I've never actually wanted to lead in many aspects. Now, though, I want to be "in control" and to lead, but it is in things that I have no power over, such as Emma's time without me.

Why do I need to take control, though, when God is trying to show me daily just how much He is in control? Do you ever feel like you're saying "Okay, God, you can take the wheel, but I'm just going to open Google Maps in my phone, just in case." Emma is the greatest blessing in my life, and she came forth from one of the biggest mistakes of my life, and something that brought me the most pain my heart could have endured. It made me strong, but it also made me intensely fragile. Have you ever felt this way? As though you are stronger than you've ever been, you know yourself more than you ever have, but you are also your most tender and fragile yet?

What that experience taught me is that my job, simply put, is to love people and to be kind and honest. I was lied to and deceived for SO long and I never knew it. I was married to a complete stranger. So now my heart is so much stronger, but also very open and very exposed. The friendships I have, though, have been able to grow so much stronger because of this, and for that I am eternally grateful.

I'm learning to navigate it, though, and I'm learning to give God control of everything that I can't control (which, in life, is essentially everything except myself, and sometimes that is even a struggle). Emma will always be cared for, and God will always protect her, in whatever way that means. My friends, near and far will always know that they are loved and cherished and that they can always lean on me, call me, and depend on me to be there. Sometimes I believe God wants me to simply let Him be here for me. That is what I felt in my heart in the chapel yesterday. "Let me take care of you. Let me be here for you." My 4 best friends all moved out of state in the last 1.5 years and it has been rough. I miss them, and they're people I can talk to about everything and even when they do visit, there isn’t enough time. This is the season of my life I am going through. Resetting, restarting, and rediscovering the beauty of being "alone" but surrounded by love and family.

Life is a journey, and the hardest things we go through can shape us into the strongest people, if we learn to weed out the negative impact they have had. For me that is trust and handing over control. I still care deeply for everyone, but I do so with so much fear in my heart because trusting is hard now. I have always believed in the goodness of people, though, and so now I am going to hand God the reigns, as He has wanted me to do for some time, and trust that He is taking care of me, of Emma, and of those around me that I love and hold dear. It isn't my job to take care of everyone, but it is simply my job to be kind, to be loving, understanding, patient, and gentle. Those are the things I can control.