Give Me Back My Compass!

It has occurred to me again and again over the past few months that this blog has started to drift away from its moorings.  There was really not any defining purpose to what was here, but it seemed that posts would orbit around the general themes of families and their aftermath.

By that, I meant always to write about coming from a big family, how it has affected me, and how it makes my life now different from how it might have been otherwise.

For that reason, some of my posts about adoptive parenting, bad haircuts, my parents, my siblings, a love of reading, cooking and frugality…some of those posts have been solid and well-received.  And I think it’s because those have been posts that were of use to people.

Someone on the radio today was saying “I read ‘WE’ blogs, not ‘ME’ blogs.”  It made sense.  Blogs about things WE have in common, or blogs that can impact how people think about things, give them a new outlook, change routines – those are the ones with broader appeal and that’s what I want to get back to.

My core readers have been so very patient with me over the past year, as our family experienced my father’s death and the subsequent upheaval in our lives and the grieving process unfolding. Nobody came out and said “Hey….uh….we used to come here to find out about soup or laugh about haircuts or hear about how you accidentally walked into the Walmart men’s room.  What happened?”

What happened was that I allowed this to turn into a “me” blog, insofar as I began writing about things that didn’t really apply to anyone but me.  And that’s not what I want for this space.

Starting this summer, I’m going to begin archiving the old posts from 2006 through 2008.  I’m going to post more pictures, more helpful things, more positive things, or at least things that can make a difference.

When I gave myself permission to not post every single day, it relieved some pressure I’d put on myself, but I think not having that as part of my daily routine has hurt me more than it’s helped.  I’ll give myself through the end of June to ramp that back up and by July 1st, I hope to be posting daily again, and in a way that’s more productive and helpful.

I can’t promise I won’t occasionally just post what we had for dinner, and I will never abandon my occasional rants.  I just want to get back to thoughtful, funny or helpful topics.

Easter Eggs, Reading and Weather Update

Yes, I’m still alive.  I just haven’t been blogging.

I just read today something attributed to Ben Franklin:  “Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.”

I kind of feel like I’m in a holding pattern between those two things.  I’ve been reading a lot, and we spent time with my niece and her family over Easter.

We colored Easter eggs together on Saturday night — my niece and her husband and their five-year-old son, along with PC, Rabbit and me.  We spread paper over the table and dyed 36 eggs.  Rabbit and her little cousin kept looking for the cracked eggs so they could peel and eat them; my niece’s son probably ate ten boiled eggs during the course of their visit, but without the untoward side effects because he only ate the whites.

Sunday morning we went to my sister’s house for brunch and then the kids hunted for the eggs after my niece’s husband hid them in the back yard.  After all the eggs had been found (we thought), my sister’s dachshund, Toby, found the last one between two landscaping blocks.  He scampered up to Joan with the egg and put it at her feet.  Later, he was chewing on it and spitting out the shell.

We’d been inside for a while when Toby came running up to Joan and she thought he had a ball in his mouth.  After he coughed out his prize, we all laughed hysterically at the hard-boiled egg yolk he’d spit out on the carpet.

While we were outside with the kids, my sister and I were swapping stories with my niece about childbirth, cramps, feminine hygiene….we all talk so often by phone we really have no filter any more.  PC and my niece’s husband were nearby and suddenly one said to the other “Uh…you wanna go inside and talk about Kung Fu movies?”   So they did.

In other news, I finally went through all my papers, books, stacks of miscellaneous crap and cleaned my home office.  It was a mammoth task, but my little sanctuary is finally organized again.

It has been miserably cold and drizzly here for over ten days, making it difficult to get motivated about much of anything.  I’ve spent much of my off-work time reading on the Kindle, trying to get through the over 40 books I’ve received for my Kindle from publishers so I can write reviews. Most of them are really very good, but there have been a few that are so loathsome I couldn’t even finish them.

And I found out last week that later this year, over 11,000 U.S. libraries would be making their electronic book content available for Kindles, which is a major bit of good news to me!  Previously, Amazon wouldn’t participate, which I believe was so people would buy books instead of checking them out. However, I think the surge in sales of competing e-Readers was a big part of Amazon reversing their position in order to stay ahead of the competition.

That’s about all I have for today – I’m going to go outside now, because the sun just came out and I figure I’ll only have about ten minutes before it goes into hiding again!

Popping In For A Quick Update

Oh dear.  ”I am not going to post every day” was not supposed to turn into “I will post and then forget to do so again for SIX DAYS.”

Maybe I need to get back into that routine, huh?  We’ll see.

PC and I celebrated our 23rd wedding anniversary this past weekend.  And by celebrated, I mean that we didn’t do anything because there was an ass-ton of snow on the ground and neither of us felt like changing out of our flannel pajamas and Rabbit was hanging around complaining about our choice of food for dinner.  PC’s dad stopped by with a card full of cash for us to go out to dinner later in the week, so we’ll celebrate then.

Speaking of snow, I hate it with a passion.  There is about 8 inches of snow on the ground, total.  My father in law has come over three times in the last 2 weeks to remove snow with his snow blower, God bless him.

Aaaannd:  we got a Wii.  That was kind of our Happy Anniversary + PC is working so dang many hours gift.  Along with it we got a Wii Fit and I’m here to tell you that sucker gives me a workout.  It is humbling to step on and find out that my clothes at the doctor’s office do not, in fact, weight 24 pounds when I go there and they weigh me.  The Wii Fit tells me I am just slightly overweight, and the little icon I made for myself on the screen looks stricken and gives me a dirty look.

I have done at least 30 minutes a day on the Wii Fit every day we’ve had it.  And I’ve gained one pound.  At this rate, I’ll be over 200 pounds by my next birthday.

My final update is that the Diva Cup arrived.  And that it is currently in use.  And I have mental/emotional trauma from it but am soldiering on.  But damn, there are just some things men reaaalllly need to thank their lucky stars they don’t have to deal with and this is one of them.

Finding a Way Back to Funny

Remember back in 2008 when I used to be funny?  Yeah, me neither.  Until this evening when I glanced back through some old posts and laughed out loud.

Truth is, life just hasn’t been very funny lately.  God bless the patient and loyal readers who have continued to click over to this blog, often hopeful of some lighter fare.  I’ve been trying to keep things light, but some evenings I sit down at the computer and stare at the keyboard and my hands and there’s just nothing.

About eleven months ago, my dad’s illness began to consume the family.  And then it just spiraled into worse and worse and the nightmare quieted to a harsh reality that he would be leaving us.

In the middle of all of that, a sibling who had struggled all of his life began to unravel, and our family clashed in grief and anger about how and whether at all to help him.  We finally got our butts in gear and figured out a plan for him and he is getting some help.

THEN, we’ve been dealing with my dad’s estate, including rental houses that need to be sold in a tiny town in a depressed economy. One of the rental houses was occupied by a family of meth-cooking squatters with a box full of goopy-eyed kittens, junk cars in back and extended family of all ages sleeping on filthy mattresses throughout the house.  After they were finally evicted, we discovered a poster on the wall of the house in which one of the former occupants referred to my sister (whose husband gifted her with a new sporty car after she underwent cancer treatment last year) as “that bitch in the red Camaro.”

On top of it all, here at home we’re battling a bleak economy and PC has been desperately searching for work.  He had found a job doing some painting for a person who promised all the hours he wanted, and then within four days, the work dried up.  We discovered that the employer had some disturbing marks on his criminal record for assault against employees, so it was back to the drawing board.

PC did get a job offer last Friday, though!  Full time with benefits, to start in two weeks.  The pay is not much, but we have not had medical insurance in almost three years, so it is a Godsend.  We hope for the real estate market to pick up, but in the meantime have worked out an agreement to not incur a late penalty on our October mortgage payment and just need to tough it out through October.

So this is why 2010 hasn’t had its “Hair Retrospective” post, its more clever or witty essays.  Sometimes life just isn’t hilarious, and when it is, sometimes I’m just so consumed by everything else I forget to write it down. For those of you hanging in there with me, I appreciate it.  For those of you just finding your way here…stick around.  Things are getting better.

ONE THOUSAND

I’ve spent a lot of time thinking to myself:  what’s it all about, Mary?  What’s the point of this blog, because now that I am at the computer and tapping out the contents of post number ONE THOUSAND (yes, really!) I should have an idea of what it is I’m trying to accomplish besides getting something out of my system.

Having a platform for expression is fine.  But it’s also an opportunity. Am I a mommy blogger?  A women’s blogger?  A family blogger?  Recipes, food, families, life in general, struggling to balance career and creativity?  What is the point of this? Because if a blogger can’t figure out the point of her life, she can’t figure out the purpose of her writing, and if that’s the case, then what the hell business does she have writing every day?

I’m not on the map in the blog world.  I don’t have a goal of exposing corruption, or getting people to eat better food or raise the minimum wage or create some new policy and affect public opinion.  I’m intelligent but not wired that way.

My goal in life has always been to help people.  To live a decent life that brings illumination to people and makes the way a little straighter, the load a little lighter, the going a little easier.  It’s not much.  I just want life to be better for people for having met me.  I just want to love people and provide a piece of the universe, a little space that makes them forget for a time that things out there are so hard. 

When I was a teen, there were times of chaos and fear and loathing that felt so impossible to overcome that life was untenable.  I’ve been trapped in those times occasionally throughout the years, and I always managed to find my way out through a combination of pulling myself up and being pulled by others.  What I’m trying to say is that none of us can get through this stuff alone.  If someone reads me every day and something I say can help them find their way through something untenable, then I am happy to continue this. 

If I write something entertaining and it illuminates the way for a while, that’s great.  If I share a struggle and someone says “Hey, that’s what I’m dealing with,” then that’s great.

At its heart, this blog is for me to express myself, get better as a writer and practice the discipline of consistently putting down what’s on my mind.  But I could do that in a journal, or on the computer without publishing it online.  By making it available publicly, I’m holding myself accountable.  I don’t flatter myself that anyone depends on what I write.  But now I’m part of a community of writers, readers, and people who have shared their lives online.  I’ve learned from the blogs I read and I hope to God I’ve been able to touch others with what I have shared. 

My life is not a box with perfectly filed categories.  I can’t just take one category and blog about it.  There are those who can and do compartmentalize what they believe and share only a portion.  But my life is made up of a lot of ingredients:  family, friends, my present life and my past.  Nothing is separate from anything else.  You may be an appetizer or a perfectly presented entrée with garnish and white space on the plate between foods.  You may be a palate cleanser, a sorbet in a goblet.  Me? I’m stew.  I’m a tasty mess that might not always be pretty to look at, but I feed you, I fill you up and I’m made up of a thousand ingredients that have combined to make something comforting.  If you want to get all metaphorical, you could use my argument to say I’m sausage:  a bunch of leftovers stuffed into an unappetizing shell in a process nobody likes to see, but the finished product isn’t half bad if you don’t examine it too closely.  Whatever.  I’m what I am because of who I’ve been. I’m the average of the people with whom I’ve spent my life and I write about that life because I don’t know anything else.

I used to imagine myself teaching in a university.  I used to think about knowing everything in the books I would have on a shelf, being an expert in literature or writing or poetry.  I would imagine greeting students in a classroom, an academic with the respect of her students.  I never got there, and at long last I’m okay with it.  I fell in love, fell into life, fell apart, fell into jobs, fell into parenthood….I missed the mark I had set for myself and instead of regret, I have learned to like this life I have. 

A blogger I love and admire recently wrote about the trajectory of her life and the impact of the disappointments and pain she had suffered.  She wrote that instead of learning to survive, she learned to grow wild. 

Think about that for a minute:  plan out your life and despite your best efforts, you get something different.  Is that failure? No – but it’s hard.  And instead of looking at it as “Well, I guess I just need to make do and get through it,” you can think of it as an opportunity to be where you are and grow where you weren’t expected to.  Don’t just survive.  Grow wild. 

And that…THAT is what this blog is about.  Families and their aftermath. Being who you are because of and in spite of where you’ve come from.  You can be an only child or one of twelve. You can be childless or child-free or a parent or an aunt or uncle.  You can be estranged from your parents, orphaned, adopted, abandoned, a caregiver or someone unmoored from all family obligations.  But everyone comes from someone else and we are all marked by that. 

From the sacred to the profane, the minute to the divine—what we experience can resonate with others.  That’s why I’m here.  I could watch my daughter fly a kite or see a dead tree and find something in it that reminds me of something else, and it usually comes back to family.  Whether it is a time of unmitigated bleakness or incandescent joy, I know how I got there and I want others to know about it.

Thank you for reading.  Thank you for making the world a little smaller.  Thank you for telling me about your lives, because I am better for it.  I hope you can say the same.

In Celebration of the Imperfect Life

I once subscribed to a blog I found through another blogger’s site, and for a few weeks loved the pretty pictures she took of her house, of her hand-crafted items, and of the beautiful neighborhood in which she lived. 

After a while, I noticed that beneath the veneer of good photography, I was seeing things I didn’t like.  Not evil, per se.  Just the insidious perfection that robs you of confidence and causes you to take a good hard second or third look at your life and think “Well, my God, look at the state of my wood floors, and would it kill me to tie some raffia around the guest towels, and what kind of person buys greeting cards instead of making her own paper from dryer lint and then hand-stamping it with ink made from organically grown indigo from her own back yard?”

Mentally shaking myself, I began to notice the hundreds…nay, thousands, of blogs out there that blythely chattered on about how easy and fulfilling it is to make dozens of miniature wood burning stoves for a cute craft giveaway.  How darling it is to put up Victorian wallpaper in your laundry room and get relatives and friends to help you make 400 dozen tiny cupcakes for your dear sorority sister’s second wedding, which you are hosting in your palatial home with a theme party centered around the word “BLISS.” 

It was reading a blow-by-blow description (with artfully shot photos) of one woman’s just-as-easy-as-pie baby shower gift of a three tiered “cake” made of different sizes of clean disposable diapers rolled together into tiny white bales and bound together with grosgrain ribbon and topped with chenille animals and tulle bows when I finally felt a blood vessel in the side of my brain give way and I swear I began bleeding from the eyes.

My life is not necessarily a train wreck, but it is real.  It is a real life.  Yes, those Stepford perfection women with their blogs and expensive cameras and photos of their be-diamoned fingers languidly ironing bed linens probably feel that their lives are real, too. 

But I would far rather read about women whose lives are more average.  I want to know about people who don’t have daughters who are models.  I want to know about people who can barely keep it together but still make me laugh.  I want to know about my friend Stacie’s eternal quest for tortilla chips in the barren grocery stores of Angola, or my friend BonBon’s conversations with her daughter, who can’t seem to get along with her college roommates.  I want to read about RyterRytes’ lesson plans, Janice’s adopted sons, and the hysterical, hilarious train wreck that is Jenny the Blogess’s everyday life. 

I don’t give a rat’s ass if you sew your own re-usable organic free trade sandwich bags, or that you raise tomatoes that thrive because you read scripture to them, or that you have once again spent an entire day posting one essay after the other about your quest for the perfect bechamel sauce. 

You see, it’s one thing to blog about a life of perfection.   It’s another thing all together to write about an imperfect life in an inspiring and engaging way.  Trust me, that’s harder than starching baby bonnets or finding the perfect caterer.  And if you think it’s hard finding a good pool installer, try finding a pair of matching socks in my house five minutes before we all have to leave in the morning.  My blogroll is full of sites that celebrate the imperfect life.  Check them out.  They’re real.

What’s the Roman Numeral For Milestone?

I don’t know, but I want to find out

because this is my 500th post!!!!!!!!

fireworks

I don’t have anything profound or special to write today about this milestone, other than that if you had told me in 2006 when I was messing around with Picasa on the computer and saw the button that said “blog this” under a picture in my file, that I would two and a half years later be posting my 500th addition to “The Eleventh” I would have –well, I probably would have believed you.

Thank you for reading, and for continuing to read. 

xoxo

A Giveaway

Dudes and dudettes, I am nearing a milestone. Two milestones, actually. But the first one is this: we’re getting close to reaching 3,000 comments on this blog!

THREE THOUSAND!!! COMMENTS!!! ON THIS blog…okay, you get the point.

And I just decided right now that the three thousandth commentor will receive something very fun from me. It’s a surprise. Even to me, because it is almost 10:00 and I’m sleepy and forgot what it was I wanted to send, but if you are the 3,000th commenter (commentor? I’m exhausted), I will let you know and then bestow upon you a lovely piece of kitsch or treasure for your very own.

This is just a stopgap post; tomorrow is my mom’s 80th birthday, but every time I start writing about it, I start crying, so that post will probably be a day late.

xoxo