I’m sitting here at my kitchen table looking out the window at the giant Sycamore tree, full of leaves fluttering in the wind. I’ve been watching this tree grow for eight years. I was training for the Folsom Olympic length triathlon the year the Sycamore was planted. I would ride my bike up the steep hill, seeing the Sycamore as I approached the top. My legs would be weak and my skin salty from sweat. I felt strong that year. It was right before I received the diagnosis of “Infertile” and six months before my mom died. The tree started growing in a five gallon bucket to what it is now, HUGE. Things have changed so much since then. Now it’s late July and within a month the leaves will begin to turn orange. Fall is always an exciting time, it reminds me of my anticipation about a new painting class or about obsessing over projects I want to start. I looked forward to critiques and meeting new artists. I have a collection of work in folders and frames from all the semesters of classes I’ve taken for the past eight years I’ve lived in this house. Many of those semesters I felt I was living a double life, trying to get pregnant and start a family, never talking about it to anyone. Consumed with “next steps” on the road of fertility treatments. When that wasn’t taking over my entire existence I focused on developing my portfolio to get into grad school. Sometimes I would also be training for a 10K. I’ve been working on something, some kind of major project all these years. Last year I didn’t take a class, but felt like I was in school with my six month old twins. I read all the books about development I could and taught the babies everything I was learning. I had to learn all about Fiona’s hearing loss and how to teach her language. I was also busy working on myself, going to therapy, healing from all the trauma I had been through and becoming “Me” again with my new responsibility. Now Jack and Fiona are enjoying spending more time with other kids away from home. In the fall they will be at Early Start three mornings a week. (Fiona’s school for hearing loss, vision loss, and mobility issues) Jack gets to go too, as a sibling. I’m done with therapy for now. I want to take an art class but I looked through every school and art center’s catalogue in my area and found nothing. I am ready to connect with my art life outside these four walls. But maybe it’s not time yet. I will miss that new class feeling this fall and meeting people. I always feel like I need to have a plan, to accomplish something, finish something. Maybe I need restraints and restrictions, somewhere or someone to be accountable to and now that’s me. Life is different today for me than it was when that tree was planted, I’m different now, but I still want to learn and grow. I am learning and growing as a mom though. Jack and Fiona just woke up from their nap. I change their diapers and for now, I will enjoy lunch with my biggest project. We eat quesadillas, three bean salad, raspberries, apples, and chocolate chips. I turn on the wiggles and we sing while we finish our lunch. Next we play, I read Dear Zoo, and later we will take Billy for a walk and continue watching the sycamore tree grow a little bigger and the leaves turn orange.
Month: July 2015
-
The top floor is almost entirely safe for Jack and Fiona! Today lindsey and I organized the rest of the drawers in the kitchen, we locked up the tupperwear, got rid of all the Dr.Brown bottles but six, it felt so great! Clutter be gone. I took the microwave out of the kitchen because the babies figured out how to turn it on. I have a bit of time left before Lindsey goes home, wanted to paint but my closet is a wreck.
Sometimes when I start the purging process I can’t stop. I start tackling everything and find it hard to do anything else. Except Lindsey has decided to take the babies out to play in the water and eat melon and I want to go too! But I think if I get my closet done I’m going to feel really happy!!
This morning I made the mistake of giving Jack and Fiona their cheerios and they had great fun throwing them down the stairs while I was getting ready for our walk to the park. They’re so cute though I can’t get upset at little things like this. I don’t really get upset about much that they do anymore. Sometimes when I read through my old posts from several months ago I am amazed at how much I’ve changed. I was so stressed about cleaning cheerios off the floor and changing the diapers so many times. Sometimes I will get angry at the whole idea of making everyday duties meditative but it really does pay off. I think since I started doing this, taking the deep breaths when I feel myself getting annoyed and remembering my new best friend Patience it’s begun to actually change me. I feel more relaxed over all but also better at identifying when I’m getting stressed.I don’t think it’s true that people can’t change. I think people can change, it just takes time and hard work. Maybe people give up too soon, thats why they think they can’t change. I didn’t know I had a problem until I got the facial twitch, I suppose many people don’t know they need to change until it’s too late.
I’m glad I have been able to change. This painting behind me was painted almost five years ago. Many people have told me the painting scares them or makes them feel sad. It’s not a happy painting, I was going through a very difficult time when I made that. It has stiching in it, my hands and fingers were all cut up and sore from pushing the needle through the tight hard canvas. I obsessed on this piece, working on it over and over. That’s how I used to work. Then get really depressed when I didn’t like what I made. These tendencies are still inside me. They always will be, but it’s a place that’s not healthy for me to live in.I like where I am at present. Now I’m going to clean my closet!
-
I don’t have any pictures of me and my dad when I was little or old. I’m sure there’s some around, but I don’t have any. Sometimes I wonder how much that lack of photographic documentation plays a role in my memories of my dad when I was a little girl. Or how much the photographs of me and my mom influence my feelings towards her and her role in my life when I was a young girl. Or how much did my unstable teenage years give me my childhood narrative that I live by today? My dad was an absent parent indeed, he left my mom, me, and my brother to fend for ourselves. That’s not totally accurate because my mom did kick him out! But that was no reason for my dad to abandon us too. When my dad left yesterday I was overcome by emotions, I cried which was something I wasn’t expecting to do. I felt sad like I would never see him again. Growing up he never did anything to hurt me on purpose. His bad parenting was a product of his youth and the way his parents treated him. My mom and dad both had very rough childhoods with terrible emotional support. They had no idea how to be psychologically healthy people. They both had shortcomings as parents in their own ways. I’ve paid for that in my life and I’m lucky I’m a strong person or I probably wouldn’t be sitting here right now. It was extremely damaging to me going through what my dad put me through as a little girl. I had no self-esteem and things just got worse and worse. But I don’t feel mad at him. I feel happy I saw him and wish we could spend more time together. So much time has passed and I made it through, I’m doing fine now. I don’t hold a grudge and I understand how difficult it must have been for both my parents. I have to believe deep down my dad had my best interest at heart and cared about me and Danny, he just got lost at sea.