Blogging has been on the horizon for quite
some time. I love to write. Always have, hopefully always will. I’ve been told
more than once in my life as a journalist, as a director of a study abroad
program, as a daughter, as a mother, “Never underestimate the power of a good
story.” I’ve always loved to tell stories with my words—and my favorite story
to tell has often been my own. As an undergrad at OU, I faithfully kept a journal
through break-ups, family drama, good times with friends, stints abroad, road
trips, Palmerfests (!), Halloweens in Athens, you name it. As an M.A. student
at IU, I moved from less journal writing to redacting epic e-mails during my
summers abroad, my painful semesters of ready theory, transcribing data
phonetically and memorizing studies that I may or may not ever even remember
reading. Once out of school, my epic e-mails were published less and less. I
began taking pictures more and more, as I relied on images to tell my story. I
began to rely on music to chronicle life’s events, as I burned CD compilations
to reflect my feelings and state of mind. But while a picture can paint a
thousand words, a picture still needs a caption. It still needs words.
And while music can take you to a place and time, it conjures up feeling that,
yes, requires words to express. Words, words, words, it’s no wonder I am a
linguist at heart.
So yes, I’ve always valued stories and words—now
it’s just a matter of finding the time to write that’s the kicker. When I used
to hear people say “I just can’t find the time to X, Y, Z,” I would always
take mental note and say to myself (never out loud!), “No, you don’t make
the time to X, Y, Z.” Then Real Life
(i.e., post- education life) took hold—I married a wonderful man, took a fulfilling
(but taxing) job and gave birth to two pretty awesome kiddos. And suddenly I
understood, related to, became the person who says ‘I just
can’t find the time to X, Y, Z.” Who has time for X, Y, Z? If you do, don’t
tell me. Or at least tell me gently, nicely, and after an appropriate amount
(three glasses? a bottle?) of wine.
What does all of this have to do with Mother’s
Day? I’ll get there, bear with me.
Lately I’ve not been the best mother. Or best
wife. Or best professional. Let’s just be honest, here: I haven’t been my best
self. In late March, my husband and I came back from a remarkable trip to
France and Germany. I was there for work, polishing up and maintaining
important relationships abroad, and he tagged along. He had never been, and he
loved it. I had been there, and I loved it even more in his presence. The food,
the scenery, the people—the time together, talking, reconnecting. It was just
what I needed professionally, which was what I expected. A beautiful, but
unintended side effect, was that it was just what I needed personally, too. The
hubster and I fell in love all over again, got to explore new territory
together, got to reminisce about our last five married years together—and celebrate
his 35th birthday. The ideal trip. Then, we returned and all Hell
broke loose.
Soon after we got home, the kiddos both got
sick, recovered, and got sick again. Work picked up for me as we headed into
our busy season, and work went down the tubes for the hubby as the direction of
his lab took an unexpected turn. It was a cycle a bit like this: get to work
late because sick kiddos kept us up, cram as much in during the work day as
possible, often forgetting to eat lunch until much too late, rush to get kids
from daycare, do the normal night routine and get kids to bed, then get to work
from home to catch up on what we couldn’t do during the day, stay up with the
kids part of the night because they were sick, repeat cycle. The lines between
work and home became blurred to the point that even though I was physically present
with the kids at dinner, my mind was making to-do lists for work AND home so
that I wouldn’t forget anything. Result: I was fulfilling all of my roles, but none
of them well. I found myself checking my e-mail on my dumb phone (I refuse to
call it a smart phone, because it’s making us dumb) while putting my baby girl
to bed, talking to my hubby during our treasured twenty minutes alone but not
really listening, ignoring the voice in my head that was telling me to take a
bath instead of a shower to give myself some me time before I crashed and
burned. Yuck. They were a few months that I don’t care to repeat again. All
felt like it spiraled out of control and it left me feeling icky all over. We’re
still coming out of that funk now—we’re over the hump, I can feel it, but still
not fully out from under that cloud.
All the while I was asking myself how I used
to handle stress before Real Life began. I needed not think too long to
remember that I used to do two things to keep ME on track: 1) write and 2)
exercise. When I asked myself really and truly how long it had been since I’d
done either on any kind of regular basis, I felt myself not having to count in
months, but rather in years. No wonder my head was a bunch of clouded thoughts
running together and my life was following suit.
The solution became pretty clear: I needed some
time to myself. And I’m talking more than 10 minutes in the shower, more than
the 10 minute drive to work once every two weeks when I have my 8:00 meeting
and my family can’t get out the door so I drive in on my own, more than the 10
minutes I spend cleaning up the downstairs to make it somewhat presentable the
next morning (for you, you might ask? Good question.). I mean real time.
And that’s what this has to do with Mother’s
Day, folks. All day yesterday, I was trying to figure out how I would want to
spend my day. Just right before bed I figured it out, but couldn’t share it
with my hubby as he was sound asleep on our son’s trundle bed. He was, after
all, just as tired as I. So this morning, I woke up (at 8:15, I might add—my blessed
husband let me sleep in after Miss P got up just once last night), and went
downstairs to make my request.
I was greeted by Joe, who told me in his
sweetest, most demure voice “Happy Mother’s Day, Momma.” As the smile across my
face grew, the smile across his grew, too. He likes when I’m a happy,
well-rested Momma, which made me feel even more confident in my choice for how
to spend the first part of my day. I kissed Joe, kissed P, then told the hubby
that I wanted to spend the first three hours of my day…by myself. I told him I’d be back before lunch. He looked at me,
kind of confused, and said, “OK.” He gave me a bit of a hard time first (I would
not expect anything less, and if you knew my hubby, you wouldn’t either), but
when he saw I was serious, he stopped kiddin’ around and wished me well.
I knew right where to go—to the Bakehouse for
some breakfast and time to spill my thoughts on paper. I chose this over having
a nice workout because my body is just not ready for that yet, and neither is
my head. And here I am, one and a half hours into my three hours, and I feel
like a brand new person. Heck, I may even head home early. That’s the funny
thing about getting what you need—once you get it, you don’t need as much of it
as you thought you did.
So, Mommas out there—take some time today for
you. I mean, really for you. Mothers are supposed to be selfless and love
unconditionally—there is no question that we are, and that we do. But we are
also human and can’t ignore our own needs. We can’t run on empty, and we can’t
run well even on fumes. I’m not sure what I’ll do when I don’t have a day that
I can proclaim my needs and how I want to address them—that’s the next
challenge. But I do know that I’ve finally owned up to needing some time for me,
and that’s the first step towards making it happen, right? Right?
Before signing off, some special thanks need
to go out to some special people on this Mother’s Day.
First, thanks to my mom. For what? For everything. Thanks for being an inspiration.
For being a strong, working mom, independent and loving, who always made time
for me and always knew—and still knows—just what I need. For reassuring me and
supporting when I need it and for questioning me when I need it, too. I’ve
always said it and I’ll say it again: if I can be half the mother you were to
me to my kids, I will have succeeded. Thanks for being my constant, and my best
friend. Thanks to you and for Dad to loving one another so much you decided to
bring me into this world…you not only gave me the gift of life, you’ve been
instrumental—no, the driving force—in helping me figure out just how to live it.
I’m so glad God (and la Virgen del Pilar, of course!) gave us Pili so that I could
be on the mother’s side of a love between a mother and a daughter. Being on the
daughter’s side has been a joy; being on the mother’s side has been a miracle.
Thanks to my hubby. The fact that he honored
my Mother’s Day request without question (and with a little bit of razzing) shows
you how awesome he is. He is a modern daddy-o and hubby—often takes the night
shift, is a great cook, is my equal and my greatest companion. I love him more
than words can say, and would not want to be on this crazy rollercoaster ride
with anyone but him, and he knows that. Thank you, handsome, for always loving
me and for letting me shine when necessary and crumble when necessary, both in
your arms. Thank you most of all for giving me the best gift and the best job I’ve
ever had: being a Mom. I will not ever forget, and know you will not either,
that our love is the reason for their being.
Mamaw, with her great granddaughter, P |
Thanks to my Mamaw (my Mommas’ Momma) for so
many things—but the one that comes to mind today in particular is for how you
signed the note you wrote to be before I went abroad for the first time: “To
thine own self be true.” I’ve always tried to live out that motto—thank you,
Mamaw, for giving me the courage to do so. And thanks for being so selfless to
all of your kids and to us grandkids; your love knows no boundaries.
Thanks to Joe and to P: you are the lights of
my life! You test me in ways I thought I could never be tested, and reward me
with smiles and kisses, with gentle hugs and snuggles. The highlights of my day
are seeing you first thing in the morning, putting you to bed at night, seeing
the look on your face when we pick you up from daycare. Your daddy and I are
lucky and blessed to have you.
Thanks to Kelly. A fantastic teacher, an
amazing friend. Thanks for being the mirror that helps me to see me clearly. I only
hope I can do the same for you.
Thanks to all of my family and friends who
have lived life by my side, who have laughed with me (and not at me!) and who
have helped me along el camino. You are the reason I’m able to find my way.
Steph I love you so much and I'm so dang happy you're writing a blog. I miss your epic emails!
ReplyDeleteTracita, you're reading? What a compliment. Miss YOU.
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