Friday, December 18, 2009

Saying Goodbye to Ben

As I stood near the swinging door into the hockey rink, I looked out across the ice to the group of spectators standing near the zamboni doors. It was the third period of the high school hockey game and the group of about 10 familiar faces were obviously very excited about the goalie that had just skated across the ice to assume his position. This was his first hockey game, ever. A couple of the people were taking pictures with their cell phones, a few had huge smiles on their faces, and I could see the jokester of the group saying something that had the rest of them cracking up. I imagine it was some kind of comment about how frightened the first-time goalie may be.

Seeing the camaraderie of this group put a smile on my face. It warmed my heart to see such enjoyment and ease between them, especially since my kids were a part of it. These are people that have, in a wonderful way, become a part of my life as a hockey mom in this rink. And as quickly as that smile naturally formed at my lips, tears sprung to my eyes. I was caught off-guard by the stinging in my throat and the welled up eyelids. Seeing the group made me happy but at the same time, it hit me that this would be the very last time I would see this group together like that. You see, one person standing there leaning against the glass, intently watching the game, and keeping everyone laughing with his spot-on humor, is leaving.

I can't recall when exactly Ben became such an important part of our rink life but I do know that over the past five years that he has worked at the rink, his interaction with my family has evolved into something that the kids and I will not soon forget. And all four of us are going to miss him. Especially Cody and Rylee.

Rylee, who at five years old doesn't know life without the hockey rink and Ben, flirts, teases, kicks, hugs, scares, and harasses poor Ben every time he is there. Some of the first words she learned to spell and write were: Ben, is, a, and baby. She has mastered drawing spiders just to scare him. She can get close to him by pretending to want a hug and then haul off and kick him before running quickly away, hysterically laughing and amused by her own trickery. And she has made sure that as long has Ben has his blue coat, he will never forget her since she streaked the back shoulder of it with a glue stick. Rylee, who has a huge spirit and loves with all her heart and soul, is definitely going to feel a hole when he's gone. I feel quite confident, that with her memory, she will be telling "Ben" stories well into her teenage years. He's been that much a part of her young life.

Cody, who some swear lives at the rink, is really going to miss Ben. Again, I can't recall when exactly they became such good "friends", or whatever it should be called, but I have to say that he enjoys listening to Ben's stories and receiving his own dose of harassment from him. Ben has really been somewhat of a Big Brother to Cody. He has taken him to a couple of River Rats games, harasses the crap out of him, embarrasses him (or tries to), wrestles with him, and throws insult left and right. But Cody loves it and I know that although he isn't showing it, he's upset that Ben's time at the rink is coming to an end way too quickly.

To be honest, it's coming to an end too quickly for many of us.


Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Never Forgotten

There are a handful of days or events from my past where I remember every detail of where I was, how I was feeling, who was there, what was said, etc. When recalling the memories, I sometimes feel the same excitement, fear, sadness, or happiness just as if the day were repeating itself in the here and now. My wedding, the birth of each of my children, the explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger, the shooting of President Reagan, the shootings at Columbine, and of course 9/11.

November 10th, 1995 is one of those days. A day that I vividly remember everything that happened the entire day, the entire night, the entire weekend, and the entire week that followed.

I worked that day but left early because I hadn't felt any movement from the baby that was a week overdue. My mother picked me up when she got out of work at 3:00 to bring me to the hospital so they could check on things. The nurse reassured me that the baby was very active and everything was fine. So we left, I dropped my mother off at her house since I was using her car (my brother had borrowed mine for a few weeks and my husband worked 2nd shift so he had our truck), I picked up Molly from daycare, and we went home.

After I fed her, played with her, bathed her, read to her, and put her to bed, I sat on the rocking chair in my living room surprised that I was still awake. I remembered that my brother hadn't called me back the night before like he said he was going to so I figured I'd give him a call. I got his answering machine and left a message. I didn't have anything important to discuss with him and we talked four or five times a week, even though it was long distance, and I was bored.

After reading the paper I went to bed and fell right asleep. A little while the phone next to my bed rang. Still asleep, I picked up and said hello. My mother was on the other end and asked me if I could bring her car to her. Obviously, I was quite confused as to why she needed her car all of a sudden but she just kept telling me that she wanted me to bring it over to her. Knowing something was wrong, I finally just asked her what was going on. That was when she broke down and said that my brother Bryan had been killed in a car accident.

I remember feeling the stinging in my nose as the tears welled up in my eyes. I remember feeling my stomach drop. I remember questioning "what?", and then "how", and "when". I remember saying "oh my god, oh my god" and then I remember thinking that I had to get control of myself and saying and repeating "I can't think about this right now" to which my mother replied "no Shelley, you need to". I asked if she had called my father and she said yes. I told her I'd be right over.

I hung up from her and called my father but neither one of us could say anything. I finally just said that I would see him at my mother's house. Then I called my husband's work. His supervisor answered the phone and I asked for Duane. He was all excited and asked me if I was having the baby to which I replied "No, but it's really important". He quickly got Duane and I told him the news and said that I would meet him at my mother's house. Before I had time to process anymore, I called my best friend. The first thing she asked me was if I was having the baby. I told her no and then told her that Bryan had died.

I grabbed Molly from her crib and loaded her and a bag of clothes into the car. I remember driving up Curran Highway and staring off into the fields wishing it were all a dream. I met up with everyone at the house. Within the hour the house was full of aunts, uncles, and close family friends. My mother was rightfully distraught. My father was withdrawn. My husband was quiet. And I was in the bedroom trying desperately to reach my sister. She lived in Maryland I knew that trying to reach her on a Friday night was going to be tough. In between phone calls to her answering machine and friends of friends that might know where she was, I was calling the airlines to book a flight for the next morning.

When I wasn't talking to her friends, or the airlines, I was trying to reach the police department in Rochester, NY that handled the accident. I wanted, or needed, to know what had happened. "Had he been drinking?" was the question that I really wanted to know (another day I may post why that was so important to me). It took many calls, many of which were 911 operators, before I was finally able to speak to an officer that had been at the scene. His assumption was that Bryan had been hunting and may have fallen asleep at the wheel. There were no other cars involved. I didn't ask details about the accident, probably because I was somewhat relieved that alcohol may not have been involved.

At some point during the night I was finally able to speak with Jessica. While talking with her, I realized why my mother had tried to get me to come to her house when she had called me earlier, she didn't want to give that kind of news over the phone, and I felt the same way. By the time I exited from the bedroom, most of our friends and relatives had left. I went to bed and tried to sleep, not too successfully.

Before daybreak, while still lying awake in bed I remember thinking "opening day". It was the first day of deer season in Vermont and it just didn't seem right that Bryan would never hunt again.

My parents went to the airport that day. Hearing my mother bawl while taking a shower was excrutiating. A few more people stopped by the house. Relatives, close friends who heard from friends, the funeral director. I went to Walmart to buy paper plates, knapkins, coffee. I ran into my mother's neighbor who was surprised to see that I was still pregnant. She had assumed that with all the cars and activity at the house that I had had the baby. "No, no baby yet". It was becoming an automatic response.

I slept a little better that night. Woke up at 5:00 with contractions. Knowing that it would be hours before the baby would come, I didn't say anything to my husband so he could go hunting for a few hours. I kept the pains to myself over the next couple of hours until my parents left for the funeral parlor so they could make all the arrangements and pick out a casket. The obituary ran in the Sunday paper so more people came by the house, mostly friends of my father's. I tried to play hostess but it was getting more and more difficult with the contractions increasing, both in frequency and pain. My friend Sue stopped by with a plate of food and she took over my hostesting duties. I remember sitting on the corner of the couch, tryint to focus on what my long lost uncle was trying to say to me but thinking "oh my god, will you just shut the hell up, do I look like I care about your stupid story". He had no clue.

The contractions were getting pretty painful so I tried walking them off a little but that just increased the pain and decreased the time between them so I sat back down. Soon my parents got home. My father panicked when he saw that I was in labor. He went in search of my husband, who was still hunting. I wasn't worried, I knew he'd be back soon, he never stayed in the woods that long. He was an amateur.

The television was on and I started to watch the Dolphins vs Patriot game. Once they got back, we headed to the hospital. ALL OF US. My mother, my father, my husband, my friend Sue. The nurse was not happy to have all those people in the room, especially my father who was going through all the cabinets, trying on safety glasses, or my husband who was turning the tv to the football game. She tried to tell him that it was my day and he should not worry about the game to which he replied "she told me to put the game on".

Soon the doctor came in to check on my progress. He broke my water and told me that the baby would be coming within the next hour. We didn't know if it was a boy or girl but we were all, quietly thinking to ourselves that it would be a boy.  And it was. 

Monday, October 19, 2009

Welcome Home

The first night of hockey practice at our rink a few weeks ago felt good. I quickly scanned the chaos as I walked through the large doors. A group of parents who probably hadn't seen each other since March were catching up. A few of the older, now much taller, Bantams were horsing around and teasing each other. Three hockey dads, whose kids are new to our league were conversing, probably dissing the program they left. A steady line of traffic was in and out at the Skate Shop, getting new socks, new mouth guards, skates sharpened, and looking through a large box of equipment, hoping to find pants or shoulder pads that fit better than the ones currently tossed beside their worn out hockey bags. One hockey mom, with her now walking toddler, was opening up the snack bar ready to brew the first of many, many pots of coffee this season.

Looking around gave me a small jolt of excitement but that small jolt failed in comparison to the feeling I got on Sunday morning. It was the first game and it was a home game. As I climbed the bleachers, with Rylee by my side, I felt a wave of pure happiness rush through my heart. I am not sure if it was the excitement of watching the kids play again. Or the anticipation of seeing how this group of kids play as a team under a new head coach. Or seeing new faces scattered among faces that I have known for years and years. Or just that I LOVE HOCKEY so much but it was definite happiness. And it felt great to be among these people, at this rink, watching these kids play hockey.

A fellow hockey mom must have been feeling it too because I heard her say "it's like we're back at our second home". So true! ........and there is absolutely no place else I'd rather be.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Floating Along With a Little Help

I never saw myself here. To be honest, I never really saw myself anywhere. I am just not one of those people who has goals and follows them, for the most part. I kinda just float through life, work hard, enjoy my friends and family, and see where life takes me. It's not a bad thing. It works for me. But every once in a while, I sit and think about where I am. Most of the time, I am in a good place. Sometimes, I am in a slump but know that things are okay. Every once in a while, I just can't bring myself out of a funk...but only for a couple of days.

Today? Today I am in a slump, and I'm not really sure why. Work is going well. Home is the most organized and clean and in-need-of-repairs free it has been in years. The kids are awesome. I am feeling healthy, eating right and exercising. BUT, something just isn't sitting right inside myself today.

I wasn't really sure what it was until about an hour ago. That was when I was skimming the Help Wanted ads and spotted "OFFICE MANAGER of medical practice". Something I have done and enjoyed. Something that paid well and challenged me. For a split second, I thought about sending a resume, just for the heck of it. Not half an hour later, Cody was reading the paper and read the same ad out loud to me. So I started to really think about it. And I started weighing out my options (as if I was offered the position already - what a dork!). And what I came up with is kind of sad and disappointing. And definitely eye-opening.

Right now, I work 30 hours a week at one of the largest employers in the area. The pay is not great but the benefits are tremendous, the commute is a mere 3 miles, the people are awesome, and the work is easy. Too easy. But that is okay because I knew when I started that it was an entry level position and my foot in the door. My history with employment has always been that I start off low on the totem pole but move up rather quickly, in pay and responsibility. It has always worked for me. And to be honest, when I started here, I was still in school full time, my house was a disaster, the kids and I were dealing with not one, not two, but FOUR major life changes in the span of just 9 months, and I really just needed a no-stress position, close to home and school. It was perfect.

Except that I can not provide for my family. Not without help. Help in the form of food stamps, MassHealth insurance, daycare vouchers, and fuel assistance. So I provide the love and shelter but the government provides pretty much the rest of life's necessities for me and my children. Just. Great. Most times, I know that the help was designed for people like me. People working and honest and not scamming the system. But every once in a while, I feel like a failure. And when that happens I start to question my choices in life. Like "maybe I shouldn't have left a promising career in DC to move back home to family after the birth of my first child". Or "maybe I should have just stayed working at that awful doctor's office 45 minutes away instead of quitting after I passed the teachers test to finish school". And the best one "maybe I shouldn't have pushed away from failed relationships". Those questions answer themselves though. I made those choices, not based on money, but based on love and based on the fact that not making those choices would have made me and the kids different people. And I like who we are. And so do they. But still.....

.....somedays I hate having to depend on the government. So when I see the job like I did today. I think about what it would take. There's a line that can't be crossed. Make too much and you get cut off. I rolled the numbers around in my head and what I came up with is....I need to make $20,000 per year more than I do now, just to maintain the life we have now (which isn't much but we are fine with that). So, the job probably would pay about that, but then I would be working 40+ hours per week and I would be traveling 45 minutes each way. Now I have carved into a large portion of my family time, time that I never get back. Time that I watch them play hockey, lacrosse, soccer, and gymnastics. Time that I drive them to doctor, physical therapy, and orthodontist appointments. Time that I am just not willing to give up so I can feel like I don't have to depend on the someone, or something else. Sometimes, it is okay to not be so independent all the time. And sometimes, I need to give myself a break.

So, no resume will be sent. No interview will be had. I know I am where I am supposed to be and I have faith that when the time is right, I'll cross that line with a position and the income that will make it worth it for me and the kids. Until then, I'll just have to deal with the occasional "slumps".....by writing things out or talking with a friend. Thanks for reading.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Happiness and Heartbreak

A week ago this morning I was sitting in Hartford airport with the kids and Rylee, waiting for flight 823 to begin boarding. I was thinking about how quickly the idea of sending the kids off to South Dakota to visit their father had evolved into reality.

I know that in my Looking Forward post back in January, it was one of many things that would be happening for us in 2009, but by the time I had the money in hand to purchase tickets for them, they had pretty much decided that they did not want to go out there this summer. At that point (probably mid April) neither one of them had talked to Duane since Christmas Eve and they felt that there were more important things that the money could be used for....like summer clothes for everyone, a mini vacation to the ocean in June, and the last few seasons of the Friends series (they love that show!!). So we all dismissed the idea of them flying out to South Dakota to visit someone they hardly knew anymore.

The beginning of June, his birthday week, their feelings changed. They were really missing him and they had so many things they wanted to share with him ---- Molly getting braces and being accepted to McCann; Cody's school closing and him heading to high school in the fall, etc. The last phone number we had for him was disconnected. So, on his birthday, I called the number I found online for his father and left a long message stating that the kids had not talked to their father and that they just wanted to wish him a happy birthday and if he could just please get Duane the message and ask him to call the kids.

A few days later there was a message on the answering machine from their dad. He left his number. They did not call him. The next day there was a message on the answering machine from their dad. He left his number. They did not call him. Two days later there was a message on the answering from their dad. They still did not call him. I was a little confused but I did not push them to do something they obviously were not ready to do, so I kept my mouth shut (very surprising I know!) and I let them handle it their way and on their terms.

Then one day, when Rylee and I walked through the door they both pounced all excited saying that they talked to their dad and he had gotten the letters that they sent him and that he was working at a printing company now and that he couldn't believe Molly had to get braces and that he wished he could see Cody's first buck mounted on the wall and that he had saved money for them to go out there this summer. I was stunned he had saved money for them to go out there this summer....WHAT???? This summer is...is....is like......NOW.....like RIGHT now.

And just like that, two weeks later, we were sitting in Hartford airport waiting for their flight to begin boarding. I was excited for them and to be honest, a little excited for me too (a little break from being the lone parent is always a good thing, right?). Which is why I was completely surprised by the sinking stomach I got the second they called flight 823 for boarding. A lump suddenly manifested itself in my throat and my nose began burning as tears formed in my eyes. I gave them each a final hug, as did Rylee, and we watched them move through line and hand their ticket to the ticket agent. The burning in my nose began to subside and the lump was minimal. Rylee and I waited to watch the plane take off...she was so excited to see it.

The second the plane lifted off the ground, tears instantly sprang to my eyes and rolled down my cheek. Rylee wiped one away and reassured me that Molly would be back in a week and Cody in a month. So glad I had a four year old there to comfort me! We hugged and my tears dried up and we continued to watch.

Soon after, when the plane was no longer in sight, her and I walked back to the parking lot and headed home. We sang songs, we played the alphabet game and then I put a CD in and we both fell into our own thoughts. A few minutes later I looked in the rearview mirror and saw that she had fallen asleep. And then the gates opened. I felt my heart break into tiny pieces and I began balling. I cried for what seemed like forever. My kids were gone and I wouldn't see them for a long time. I was heartbroken.

But what I was feeling was nothing compared to what Rylee went through the next day. She was actually limp on Monday. She did not want to get out of bed in the morning. She wouldn't eat breakfast. I had to dress her and comb her hair and put on her shoes. She didn't have a fever. She wasn't coughing or sneezing. She wasn't complaining of a headache or bellyache. I had to carry her to the truck. She started crying when I pulled out of the driveway. She became hysterical when I pulled into the parking lot at daycare. Something was wrong. I sent her to her Grandmother's house for the morning and then I left work at noon to bring her home. She was still limp. She laid on the couch. She didn't want to watch a movie. She didn't want to watch Friends. She didn't want to go to dance class. Then it hit me....she was depressed. She was heartsick. I told her that Molly would be back on Sunday and Cody would be back at the end of the month. Tears rolled down her cheeks. She asks me if she could call Molly.

I dialed the number and handed her the phone. She was sitting in front of me, her shoulders slightly drooped. I heard the ringing and then Molly's voice say hello. Rylee whispered "Molly". Then I heard "Hi Rylee". A second later Rylee tells Molly that she misses her and Molly says she misses Rylee too. I see Rylee's shoulders drop lower, I hear her swallow hard, she says nothing for a while, finally she chokes out "I love you" and quickly hangs up, hands the phone to me, runs across the living room to the other couch, and collapses into tears. My poor girl. I scooped her up in my arms, held her head to my chest, and rocked her back and forth until the tears subsided. That was the worst of it for her.

Now, a week later, Rylee and I will be heading to Hartford again. This time to pick up Molly who will be flying in at 10:00 tonight. Aside from my fit on Sunday and Rylee's fit on Monday, it's actually been a good week but I am really, really looking foward to seeing her.

And so is Rylee.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Happy Birthday Bryan: I Love and Miss You!!

Today is July 3rd.

And if it weren't for a tragic car accident on November 10, 1995, my brother Bryan would have turned 39 today.

There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think of him in some capacity. It could be a fleeting thought, a conversation with one of the kids, a song on the radio that triggers a memory, mistakenly calling Cody "Bryan", seeing a good friend of his, spotting a couple of deer out in a field, hearing a woman talk about her brother, seeing a young kid walking on the side of the road holding a fishing pole, hearing a commercial for Chilis or Red Lobster, someone talking about their vacation to Florida, seeing a Ford Mustang on the road, etc, etc. There are so many things that remind me of him and I am thankful for that because I would never not want to think about him. He was awesome. Really awesome.

The other night, after the hockey board meeting, I ran into a very, very good friend of Bryan's who was in town for a few days after attending a wedding last weekend. After a long hug and the normal pleasantries that occur when you haven't seen someone in a long time, the conversation of course got back to Bryan. And I am so glad it did because I heard a few stories I had never heard before. In turn, I relayed those stories to my father, who had never heard them which made him remember some stories that he shared with me (and the kids).

And hearing all those stories has made me remember Bryan in a more detailed way than the fleeting thoughts that cross my mind on a daily basis. It made me REALLY remember HIM and not just the idea of him. And as sad as it is, it is also very, very comforting to have him "close" again.

So today I wish him a Happy Birthday with a renewed memory of the fun-loving, sincere, good-hearted, funny, likable, hard-working, won't take shit from anyone, tough, hot hotted, hunting & fishing loving, brother that I miss so much.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Back to Basics

I have been in some sort of rut the past three or four weeks and to be honest, I don't even feel badly about it. It was just a really long and overdue time to just chill. I kept up on the housework but did not tackle any big projects. I went for a few walks and/or runs every week but did not hit the gym every day like I normally do. I brought the kids to their games/practices but with lacrosse ending and soccer coming to an end, there's been very little of the rushing and non-stop action that we normally have every day of every week. And it has been nice.....but it just isn't us.

Which is a good thing. Because today, Rylee starts dance for the summer and Molly has a soccer game, and Cody's lacrosse stick has to be repaired, and the bikes need air in the tires before we head out on our ride later this morning, and I have a ton of paperwork I have to get through at the house today. So for me, busy seems to be the key because I had absolutely no problem getting up at 5:30 this morning and heading straight to the gym. And it feels good.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Shelley's a Liar, Shelley's a Liar

So much for "IF I CAN....I WILL".

I just reread my last post and have to laugh at myself. Apparently, what should have motivated me to do more has actually had the opposite effect. The last few days I haven't even set my alarm to get up!!!!!

It seems like the more time I have to get things done, the less I get done......

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

If I Can........I Will

I have found that my best bet in making sure I get in a workout each day is to do it at 5:00 am. It's the only way I can be certain that nothing else comes up and snatches away my precious "me time". The fact is, if I try to plan on doing it after work or before bed, inevitably something comes up (picking up the kids from school, practices, games, gymnastics, running into someone I haven't seen and talking too much, laundry, dishes, supper, exhaustion, etc).

Every once in a while, I forget that important fact and I shut off the alarm to sleep a couple of extra hours in the morning. And at the time, it feels so wonderful....to pull the sheets up, relax, and slip in and out of consciousness. So Wonderful. But then, as the day unfolds I eventually begin to feel sluggish and wish I had just jumped out of bed and into my workout clothes.

This morning, I woke up before my alarm and started to get ready for a quick run outside before heading to the gym. Then I heard heavy raindrops hitting the aluminum roof covering the patio. Then I heard the raindrops, combined with the sound of the fan spinning in my room. Then I heard the raindrops, combined with the sound of the fan spinning in my room, and my pillow and still unmade bed calling my name. So I did the only thing I could do. I crawled back into bed, covered up snug as a bug, and let myself daydream to the sound of heavy raindrops and the fan. And I fell back to sleep.

Today, that was okay because I was able to swim during the time between bringing Rylee to daycare and heading to work. I enjoyed the workout and was in the process of getting dressed when I saw an older woman in the locker room. She had just changed into her swimsuit and was heading into the rest room before going to the pool. She had the hardest time maneuvering around things, was completely out of breath, and groaned whenever she moved her legs. Yet here she was at the YMCA getting in her workout for the day. Good for her!

It dawned on me that although I have some occasional aches and pains, I am fully capable of exercising every day. And I swore to myself that I will think of this woman if I ever again try to weasel my way out of a workout. If she can do it then there is no valid excuse for me not too (no matter how comfy that bed is)!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Monday, May 18, 2009

Yes I Did!

Ever have a conversation with someone that changes your life? Maybe it is a quiet hello with a fellow reject that blossoms into a lifetime friendship. Maybe it is a flirtatious teasing with a boy that later becomes your husband. Maybe it is an "I'm sorry" that leads to a long and overdue road to forgiveness. Whatever the reason behind the conversation, I am sure we have all had one that has made an impact on our lives, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse; but always with a memory that stands out.

The past few days, I have been recalling a conversation I had with a woman who I am certain would have no idea who I am if I were to bump into her on the street today. A conversation that snowballed into a long, hard road of achievement for me.

In the summer of 2001, I was in the process of losing my job. A job that I enjoyed. A job that paid me really well. But most importantly, a job that allowed me the opportunity to send my children off to school in the morning and then welcome them home when they walked through the front door at 3:00 in the afternoon. A job that I was definitely sorry to be losing soon.

Knowing that the loss would be soon, but not knowing how soon, I was kind of lax in applying to every position posted in the newspaper. You see, I was being a little particular. I wanted the same things I was losing: enjoyment of the position and full time pay for full time work packed into part time hours. As expected, I was not having too much luck.

The last week of summer, I went to an outdoor wedding in New York and I struck up a conversation with a woman who was a classmate of the bride. It turns out she lived in the same town as I and was just starting her teaching career at the high school that I graduated from. She was enthusiastic and excited and it reminded me that teaching was always something I had thought about pursuing but never had the opportunity to dive into the required schooling. I mean how does the mortgage get paid if I am not working? The rest of the weekend I ran that question over and over in my head. On Monday morning, I went to the local college in search of an answer. As it turned out, I received an answer AND since I was already there, enrolled as a full time student for the upcoming semester; which started the next day. Nothing like jumping in full speed ahead.

The classes that my adviser and I chose were pretty specific. I had a broad range of interests - from computer programming to teaching - and I was on a semester by semester basis. Another words, I had no way of knowing how long I would be able to maintain full time student status so I tried to choose classes that may not be offered in the evenings. Computer programming, Intro to Psychology, Child Development, and Foundations of Education. My goal was simple: To do the best I can do in the time that I have. I mean really: full time school, full time mom, and working 25 - 30 hours per week until who knows when. My goal HAD to be simple.

Little did I know how often I would recite those words to myself over the course of that semester. To do the best I can do in the time that I have. As it turned out, the best I could do in the time that I had was a 4.0 at the end of the semester, along with a large thirst for more. More knowledge, more stress, and definitely more teaching and psychology classes. The two areas, according to my professors, that I had a natural intellect for.

And so it continued. Through the loss of my job, the loss of unemployment, the loss of my pride when I was forced to apply for food stamps and fuel assistance, the loss of a child that I had only begun to accept was growing in my belly, through the strength of my family and friends, through many seasons of travel hockey, travel soccer, gymnastics, lacrosse, etc, through the acceptance of another awesome job, through the pregnancy and delivery of another child, through sickness and many surgeries, through the loss of yet another great job, the loss of two very important people in my life, through the strong bonds of my friends, through the love of my children, but most importantly, through the tenacity to get through anything...it continued....right up until this past Saturday. When I graduated, Magna Cum Laude, from MCLA with a bachelors degree in Psychology.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

In the Blink of an Eye

Saturday morning I sat at my dining room table and looked out the bay window and for what seems like the first time, I noticed the lilac bushes to the left of my yard. As much as I love the beauty of nature, I have never found the inclination to prune or garden or educate myself in anything having to do with gardening. In fact, if it were not for the fact that I feel every sinus cavity instantly fill up when I am around bloomed lilacs, I probably wouldn't even know the name of the pretty flowers that bloom from those bushes every spring.

But this spring feels different to me. Or maybe I feel differently this spring. This spring, I have a an urge to do things to the yard. Things that are foreign to me. Like follow through with Molly's desire to have a garden. Like cut away at the dead branches from the three towering pine trees that separate my yard from the neighbor's straight behind me. Like tame the wild overgrown lilac bushes before they start to bud.

"Before they start to bud". That was what shocked me when I looked out the same bay window on Sunday morning. There were buds on the lilac bushes. Just. Like. That. Saturday morning, no buds. Sunday morning, buds.

Monday morning was a whole new experience. As I drove through town I felt a quiet excitement growing inside my belly. Everywhere I turned I saw buds and leaves and blooming trees. And then I remember how much I love this short span of time every spring. It is so magical and I want to share.
Main Street with blooming trees
Looking up the street where we live

A beautiful and very historical cemetery

And there you have it. Spring has sprung...in the blink of an eye.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Try As I May; Try As I Might...

...I just can't stop thinking about the desserts in my sight.

In the spirit of my wish to become a healthy person this year, I try to keep at least one piece of fruit on my desk at all times. That way, if I am hungry when I get into work, or need a sweet snack in the afternoon, I always have a healthy option right at my fingertips.

This morning, after not eating breakfast, I came into work and had the option of an apple, an orange, or a banana. Within a half hour, before I had a chance to choose a healthy option, I had three rugelachs (nuts, raisins, cherries rolled into a pastry with cream cheese - YUM), a slice of banana bread with chocolate chips, a loaf of homemade grinder bread, and a dish full of harvati cheese sitting on the counter RIGHT in front of me. Like at EYE LEVEL.

So for breakfast, I ate one rugelach, half a slice of banana bread (it had me at chocolate), and some harvati cheese on a hunk of the grinder roll.

Sometimes it is absolute hell to work in dining services. This was Recipes from Home Day so the chefs were pleased to pass along samples of the selected recipes. No arguments here.

As for the apple, orange, and banana....well, there's always tomorrow.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Wordless Wednesday: Cute Drawings

Rylee: Here's a picture I drew of me and my boyfriend today

Rylee: Here's a picture of me and my boyfriend, again.

Rylee: And here's a picture....pause...of I don't know

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Wordless Wednesday: She's a Good Mommy

I glanced through the pictures on my phone while waiting for Molly to get out of drama practice yesterday and found these pictures that Rylee must have taken of her babies.


She's A Ticket

For the most part, Rylee has been doing a great job of sleeping in her own bed at night. There have been a few times when she was way overtired and wanted to sleep with me that I let her and there have been a couple of nights where she woke up scared and Molly carried her into me (Molly's just awesome). Well, one morning last week, I awoke with Rylee in my bed again, for the 4th night in a row. Knowing full well that this will continue if I don't do something soon, I casually mentioned to her that from now on she needs to stay in her own bed at night. To which she replied "I was just saying that to myself".

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The last two weeks I was on vacation from work but I still sent Rylee, my 4 year old, to school, most days, so I could get some things done around the house and workout without feeling rushed (it was glorious). On Friday, the last day of my vacation, Molly, my 14 year old, was staying home because she was still in a great deal of pain from getting braces plus she was getting a sore throat and felt a little feverish. I tried not to let Ry know that Molly would be home all day but somehow she just knew, and she was not happy about it.

The two of us were sitting at the counter, eating breakfast, when she says to me "I can't go to school today because I'm sick". Knowing she's fine, I impatiently look at her and ask "Oh yeah, what's wrong with you?". Without missing a beat she replies "I think I'm going to start".

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Sometimes not laughing is the hardest part of parenting.

Monday, March 30, 2009

I need to find my THING

Every successful weight loss story starts with the THING. You know the THING that made them realize how fat they were. Or the THING that made them wake up. Or the THING that was rock bottom.

Me? I have had plenty of THINGS. There was the time that I was curled up in the front of my truck, barely able to squeeze by fat self into a comfortable position, so I could enjoy the fourth eclair from the box I bought "for the kids". There was the time that I was walking down the street and could feel my top back fat rubbing against my side back fat. There was the time that I walked up the stairs at work and was having such a hard time breathing that I secretly wondered if that was what a heart attack felt like. There was the time that I jumped up and froze when I landed so I could see how long I jiggled (5 seconds in case you too are wondering). I mean seriously, how obese is someone that jiggles for 5 seconds after motion stops. 5 SECONDS!!!! But did any of those propel me into a life style of salads and fruit and no chocolate? Absolutely not.

I think I have disorder. A disorder that is the complete opposite of anorexia. My problem is that I don't see how fat I am; and I KNOW that I am. For some strange reason, I still choose to see myself as pretty and athletic instead of bloated and fat. The images I see of me are not real, just like an anorexic.

Reality is; I have never been thin but I was always okay with that. Seriously. My ideal self is 180 pound size 12 woman. At 180 pounds I was very comfortable and had no desire to lose weight. I was okay with the jiggle in my stomach and ass. I was okay with the double digit clothes. I was okay with it because I was healthy and I felt good. I could run 5 miles and go mountain biking and play soccer with the kids. I could eat a candy bar if I wanted to without any thoughts. Did you read that? Without ANY thoughts. I can't even think about the last time I ate something without debating it beforehand, eating it anyway, and then feeling guilty or angry for doing it. I mean seriously, is that sick or what. Why all the THINKING about food????!!!! It's ridiculous. And it appears, that ever since I have set out with goals about my eating habits, I have steadily climbed the scales. It's because every weekend I am going to start on Monday, and every Monday I am going to just finish off the day. And every Tuesday I am going to start on Friday, because Fridays were once lucky days for me. And now, at 225 pounds, I need to STOP thinking about the food. I need to STOP setting goals. I need to STOP obsessing about this.

One of my psychology professors once told us to NOT think about polar bears. Whatever we did or whatever we thought, we were NOT to think about polar bears. And guess what? Every newspaper, or yahoo or page, or text book, had a polar bear in it. Every hour in the day I thought about polar bears. I had all kinds of images in my head. Big polar bears. Little polar bears. Swimming polar bears. Playing polar bears. Get the picture? The more I was NOT to think about polar bears, the more I thought about them. The same goes for eating; "good" or "bad" eating.

So going forward: I am NOT going to think about food. I am never again going to write out what I will eat the next day. I will never again feel guilty about what I ate. I will never again waste any more energy on thinking about food.

Stay tuned.....

Friday, March 27, 2009

Learning to Relax

It's hard for me to sit still. I've always been one to go, go, go. There's always someplace to be, something to do, and someone to see. Home is just a place to sleep, shower, and house our clothes and sports equipment. Weekends are busier and crazier than the work week. Even holidays and vacation days are jam packed with action. In fact, I was so busy this winter that I had to schedule a personal day off from work JUST so I could finally go snowshoeing. Something that I used to do all winter long!!!

But not this week. Or next. Two full weeks off from work AND the kids are in school AND hockey has ended AND travel lax and soccer have not yet started. OH MY GOD. What to do what to do. I was so excited the first morning I had to write everything down that I want to accomplish during this time: reorganize the attic, spring clean every room in the house, clean the xterra, workout without time limits, go to a matinee by myself, have lunch with friends, catch up on the blog, go trap shooting, read a book, lose some weight, etc, etc, etc.

So far I have tackled a few of those things. The good news is that working out without time limits is the one that I have enjoyed the most. It's been especially great that the weather has been so awesome so I could actually be outside for a change. The REALLY good news is that I don't really care if I don't get to all of those things, like reorganizing the attic, because I mean who really cares? But the REALLY REALLY good news is that a few hours of each day so far this week....I do nothing. Literally, nothing! And I don't feel guilty about it.

Hmmmm......me relaxing without guilt. Awesome!

Friday, March 20, 2009

The Day After 40

Soooo, I turned 40 yesterday. And as much as I have been looking forward to the BIG DAY, it was pretty uneventful for me. Work, gymnastics for Rylee, 10 minute dinner at Subway, science fair for Cody (eventful for him...he did make it to the next round YEAH!!), hockey rink, laundry, bed, sleep.

I did look at myself in the mirror for a bit in the morning. Definitely noticed the bags rimmed with dark circles that seemed to have found a home under my eyes. Definitely noticed some deep lines around the eyes and now around my lips. WTF? DEFINITELY noticed the glimmer coming from the sides of my head when I pulled my hair up (so not just the patch of grey on top of my skull anymore). SO.GLAD.I.DID.THAT.

Let the fun begin....this old hag is ready for it!

Monday, February 23, 2009

Thanks for Nothing

I was feeling rather generous on Saturday morning so while at WalMart, I picked up a pack of gum for each of the kids. I got Molly and Cody a minty flavor and I got Rylee a sugar free fruity flavor. I thought everything was fine until my conversation with her this morning on the way to daycare.

Rylee, holding out a stick of her gum towards me: Mom, you want a piece.

Me: No thank you.

Rylee, giving me a yeah I know look: Why not Mom?

Me: Because I don't like fruit flavored gum.

Rylee, a little exasperated says: I KNOW. I don't EITHER so why you got it for me?

OK, note to self, no more fruity flavored gum for the sinister one!

Every single day she somehow manages to crack me up.

Friday, February 20, 2009

She's Growing Up and Moving Out....

...of my room that is. A while back I purchased a bed that Rylee had picked out for her and Molly. I wrote in that post that the sleeping arrangements at our house desperately needed revising and the bed would solve a lot of it.

Well, Molly and I finally got the bed fully set up correctly and we re-arranged her room so it is truly "Molly's" room (except for the little sidekick sleeping next to her at night). Rylee was so excited. She was going to be sleeping in her own bed for the first time!

I didn't hold out too much hope that she would make it through the night. I mean she has slept with someone next to her pretty much since she was born. She's not a fan of sleeping alone. She always has to have her hand or her leg or her foot resting on me while she sleeps. And she knows when I leave the room, even when I leave for the gym at 5:00 in the morning, she wakes up within a half hour and either calls out for Molly or gets up and lays down next to Cody until I get home.

BUT...she has done it!!! She is officially in her own bed at night! She was sooooo cute. And what was even cuter was how excited she was to be sharing the time with Molly. She asked Molly if they could "talk" before they went to sleep. Just "girl talk" she said. "Like boyfriends and crushes and stuff". Too funny...as always.

Monday, February 9, 2009

The Wheels in the Head go Round and Round

So, so, so many things to blog but never enough time!!!

As a reminder for some day soon (I hope) I'm making a quick list of things that I'd like to express:

* The pride I have for Molly for really stepping outside her comfort zone this year and amazing me with her courage.

* Rylee and how she really, truly is a teenager trapped into a little 4 year olds body

* My resolve with getting healthy this year and my realization that age is a big factor now

* The games we play in real life and in our own heads to make things right for ourselves

* The Angelina lookalike mom that just gave birth to EIGHT babies and has SIX others at home, presumably with the family that gave her the dysfunctional life she claims she had

Will post soon.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

A Morning of Teenage Angst

It was bound to happen. Things have been going just too well. In fact, I was just telling a good friend yesterday that the kids have been awesome and that we have been doing things every weekend for a month now and have had the best of times. Sliding a few times, watching a few high school hockey games, a nice dinner out, going for a couple of walks, visiting with some friends, playing games and singing along to the radio on the way to out of town hockey games. It has actually been fun hanging out with the kids. No major battles or backtalk. No screaming or playing the blame game. No sarcastic words and rolling of the eyes. Did I mention no backtalk?

But all good things must come to an end. And the end was this morning. As of now, Cody is grounded for the weekend AND he has to do dishes AGAIN tonight and Molly, well she can't ever seem to just shut her mouth when we are having words. She always has to get the last word in and it is always a word that pushes me over the edge. This morning it was "awesome" after I told her that she needed to stop with the attitude. But I don't think it was so much the backtalk, I think it was more the attitude of when she said it, staring at her image in the mirror with a smirky kinda curve to her lips, totally not even looking at me. WTF?!

Monday, January 19, 2009

Yet Another Great One

The weekend was awesome. The kids were awesome. The games were awesome. And, in my opinion, the weather was awesome too!

We headed to Springfield on Saturday morning for a 10:00 hockey game. We won by 2 goals and the kids really played together as a team. There were only a few penalties, there was plenty of passing, lots of shots on goal, and some great saves. Molly is doing so great on defense. Not too many people get by here, she just plucks the puck right away! Cody had a solid game and a few shots on goal himself. After our game we stopped over to Rink 2 to catch the rest of the PeeWee game. It was good to sit and watch hockey with some of the parents on that team. I miss them!!

Saturday night we went to the high school game and watched tons of hits, a few fights, rowdy fans, crazy (and I don't mean "crazy busy" like the meaning behind my blogname) parents, and quite a few temper tantrums. It was like daycare on steroids.

Sunday morning we had a home game against a local team. Molly and Cody played so well together and when they weren't a defensive team, then they were giving each other "congrats taps" on their way on/off the ice. Cody's game is back (I think he has been holding back a bit since hurting a kid with a legitimate check and getting illegally checked and hurt a few games back). He protected the goalie, he pushed some kids into the boards, he fought for the puck, and he had fun doing all of it. Molly stole tons of pucks, battled it out in the corner with the biggest opponent, and started to FINALLY communicate with her teammates. The coach for the opposing team is her coach for the girls' team and he was impressed with her defensive playing (she plays a wing on his team).

Later in the day we were back at the rink for open skate. Rylee skated for an hour and half while I worked the concession stand. Yes you read that right, my 4 year old skated all by herself! And she loved it. Her little friend Bella was there and her big friend Kate was there and she just had the best time. At one point, I caught a glimpse of her as she was pulling on her skates and I was filled with so much pride. I am always amazed by her but at that moment, I was just so proud of the little girl she has become.

Friday, January 16, 2009

All Choked Up



Every time I hear or think about this crash and the heroism involved, I can't stop the tears from forming.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Monday Morning Blues

Years ago, when the weekends officially started on Thursday evening and ended late Sunday night, and the fun was non-stop, and the days were filled with four wheeling or swimming or sledding or tubing, and the nights were filled with bar-hopping or pitch or crashing weddings, I discovered the Monday Morning Blues. Mondays were always back to reality. Back to work. Back to the real world. It was always the hardest day in the week to get through because of coming "down" from such a great four day weekend.

Well this past weekend was one of those kind of weekends. I laughed and cried and reminisced and flirted and laughed and laughed. It was just so much fun and it felt so good.

So thank you Mia, Sue, Karl (packets of sugar were not a bad bribe), Upchuck, Molly, Cody, Rylee, the guy with the "L" on his forehead, Aimee, Joanie, Robin, Chris, Thomas, Joyce, the boys, Hannah, Mellon, Sheryl, Jordan, Connor, Abby, Jeff, Barb (hopefully you got some quality study time), David, Pauly, Jenn, and even Art, who took some pictures of us, for giving me the Monday Morning Blues. It's awesome!

Friday, January 9, 2009

The Humor in OCD

At about 13 months of age I started to wonder if Ry has a touch of OCD. What triggered it was her constant need to arrange all the shoes, dolls, clothes, toys, books, and whatever else intrigued her, into neat and orderly rows. What really pushes me towards that thought is her inability to let something that isn't "right" go. For instance, at the ripe old age of 18 months, she zipped up the door to her tent and started to walk away. She got about 10 steps away, gasped, turned around, went straight back to the zipper and "fixed" it. By fix I mean the zipper was stuck facing up instead of laying down flat. Once she corrected it, she could continue with her playing.

Since then, I have learned to pick my battles with her. I allow her as much independence as she can safely handle, I explain any changes to her schedule as far in advance as possible, and I sure as heck cut the crust off her toast, even though she eats them anyway (thanks Mom for doing that "just for fun").

Now it seems to have spread into how she sees herself. She is having meltdown after meltdown over her clothes! It started with her "hating" the clothes I picked out. Soooooo, I let her pick out her clothes. Then it was getting to take too much time in the morning because she would need to change three or four times times. Soooooo, I have her pick out her clothes the night before. And that was working well, until now.

Now she starts trying on her clothes, for the next day, at night. And the belt is stupid, the jeans are too tight, the dress is ugly, the shirt doesn't match, the socks do match, the heart on her pants is covered by the shirt, etc. This is what she does at night, before bed. Then we repeat the whole thing in the morning.

This morning, she put on jeans and a blue shirt with sparkles. I told her how pretty she looked and I went into the bathroom, asking her to get her shoes on. In the time it took me to blow dry my hair, she had changed in and out of the jeans three times and swapped shirts twice.

We had plenty of time so I just let her do her thing. And when she emerged from the bedroom the final time, she had the sweetest smile, so proud of what she looked like, I couldn't help but kneel down beside her, give her a big hug, and tell her how awesome she is. She is just too funny and I love it.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Wordless Wednesday: A Brother's Love








Cody sometimes gets irritated with Rylee and he sometimes acts like he could care less about her....but now I have proof how much he really truly loves her. Ahhhhh.