• Blog
    • A journal: 20 Days during the Pandemic. Getting back in the studio. Daily Writing and Studio Practice September 21st to October 10th 2020.
    • Blog
    • Catitudes
    • Dirty Laundry Blog
    • My Peloton version 2
    • Portfolio
    • Random Tips for twin parents
  • Portfolio
  • A journal: 20 Days during the Pandemic. Getting back in the studio. Daily Writing and Studio Practice September 21st to October 10th 2020.
  • Random Tips for twin parents
www.jennyhynes.com/

Dirty Laundry Blog by Jennifer Hynes

  • Teenage Automatic Lies

    May 14th, 2015

    We all turned to look as the principle came to the door of my tenth grade English class. He was with two people dressed in brown suits. I can’t remember what we were learning, what my teacher even looked like or if it was a man or a woman. We spent whole class periods writing notes to each other. Sometimes long letters, telling each other about who we kissed last night or if we snuck out of the house and what drugs we took. We wrote about how we would run away from home or steal a car and drive to the beach. Or just “Meet me on the corner after school and we’ll take the bus to the boardwalk.” I was instructed to go to the principal’s office. I’m scared shitless, what did I do? What did I get caught doing? Then at the end of the concrete path, in front of the administration offices I see my mom. We get closer and I can see she’s been crying and has a worried look on her face. I’m in big trouble, my legs go weak. In the office we all sit down and the mysterious couple flashes me their gold badges. Cops.  I have to escape, I’m thinking. I’ll climb out of a window. “I have to go to the bathroom.” I say. The female officer accompanies me. She waits outside the stall, there’s a window but it’s too small to crawl out of. I’m panicking, I don’t know what I’ve done but I have to go back to the office to be questioned. “Do you Know Darnell Penkerd?” One of the cops asks me. “No.” I say. “Did you write this letter?” They show me a letter. “No.” I say. Automatic Lies. I do know Darnell, I did write the letter. I keep lying even though they tell me, “just tell the truth and you won’t be in trouble”. But I don’t, I can’t, the truth is buried so deep. After an hour the interrogation ends. For now. My mom has to go back to work. The cops leave and I’m walked back to class.

    Saturday morning we get a visit from the same two cops. They bring the letter in a plastic sleeve and ask me the same questions again. I lie. “I didn’t write the letter.” “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Keep saying things like this and begin to believe my own lies until they say, “The handwriting specialist said the writing in the letter is a match to your handwriting.” Oh shit. Then my mom asks me, “Have you been accepting collect calls from jail?” I lie. “No.” She had asked me about the collect calls awhile back when we received a $400 telephone bill. “No I don’t know anything about that.” I told her.  She had been trying to convince the telephone company there must have been a mistake. Now all the evidence was pointed against me. I am starting to realize the next time someone says, “Just tell the truth and we’ll go”, I need to start thinking about how exactly I can do just that. I’m in big trouble. O.K., I break, I tell the truth. Yes I wrote the letter, I was just joking when I said “I’ll kill the judge if he doesn’t let you out of Jail.” Of course I was. I’m fifteen years old. My mom is crying and mad, so mad. We can’t afford a $400 phone bill, “Who were you talking too? Who do you know in Jail?” she asks. I could have told her everything, all the guys I know in jail. One:  The guy who got me pregnant. Two:  The first guy I had sex with.  Three: The guy who tried to rape me but I got away, but still talk to. Four: Guys I don’t even know, but accept collect calls from instead of doing my homework.   I could have told her, “Mom I’ve really messed up, I’m really messed up, I need your help. I need lots of help.” But I didn’t and she didn’t try to help, she was so mad she sent me to my room and said I was grounded for ever.

    Share this:

    • Tweet
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
    Like Loading…
  • Keep On Keepin’ On!

    May 13th, 2015

    As I sit down at my computer I realize I’ve just gone through another transformative experience. I’m about to document it. It won’t all be revealed at a single time, most things with so much impact never do. Jack and Fiona are down for their morning nap. (Twin Tip:  Now that the babies are fourteen months they have to be separated for their naps. Otherwise they wind each other up and won’t go to sleep.)  Bruce just left for Southern California. I felt sad as he walked down the stairs. But we will meet again. My house is quiet and clean, peaceful. Jack is still sick, it’s possible I’m fighting off the cold myself, but hoping it’s just allergies.

    I was raised by scientists. My mom was a Chemist, Bruce an Engineer. I think of my mom as an Artist though. But Bruce, a true scientist.  As I spent time with Bruce the past three days I realized how much he shaped me, taught me, took care of me, helped guide me in becoming the person I am today. We are family, we are so much alike. I am more like Bruce than my biological father. I’m so glad that Jack and Fiona were able to spend time with him and through the years will know him as family. My instincts were right when I felt the need to reconnect. It’s important to me to be around people who make me feel good about myself, who aren’t judging me, who trust me and believe in me. That’s how I felt yesterday hanging out with Bruce, Danny, and the babies. We were a team. Bruce made Shepard’s Pie, a dish he would cook for Danny and me when we were little kids. I made homemade chocolate chip cookies. Danny played with Jack. (He wouldn’t take his nap because I made the mistake of putting the babies in the same room. I got mad and took jack out because they were goofing off then Fiona fell right   to sleep) Danny put together the babies’ new basketball hoop. Alan got home and we all had dinner together. I put the babies to bed. We watched two episodes of Wentworth, another Australian TV series on Netflix and I ate like ten chocolate chip cookies. That’s the kind of family time I love.

    We talked about my mom a lot. He confirms my memories of my mom’s sadness and emotional distance. Why didn’t she get help I wonder? She lived a very tortured inner life. It was very difficult to be raised by a person so emotionally unstable and has taken me years to overcome. But it must have been just as heartbreaking for my mom. To be depressed and not be able to engage with her children. I was so afraid that would happen to me before Jack and Fiona were born. I was very depressed, I had days of crying spells that couldn’t be broken. Now I know it was instigated by all the years of stress and trauma I went through. It hasn’t happened to me in quite a while. But I did go through that. My dad told me my mom was manic depressive. I was afraid I may have gotten the same ailment. I don’t know if it’s true what my dad said. Her childhood was horrible.  She told me both her parents were alcoholics and emotionally abusive. She needed help to deal with that but she was too busy surviving, putting herself through college, raising kids as a single mom, just trying to make it. My mom was tough. Tough as they come. Maybe she thought dealing with her parents and childhood would make her weak. I feel bad for her. I know stress and sadness caused her heart attack.

    It’s crazy, life is crazy. There’s been over twenty years of missed time and experience Between Bruce and I, but it’s like there’s no gap at all. Now here we are starting a whole new chapter. With fresh eyes, open and closed wounds, and new experiences to be had.  We just keep on keepin’ on! That’s the only thing any of us can do. But along the way close the doors to added stress and negative people and open the doors to people who help you with keepin’ on!

    Share this:

    • Tweet
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
    Like Loading…
  • The Power I Have.

    May 12th, 2015

    Yea! A break! Babies down for the morning nap. Jack’s fighting off a bad cold, poor little guy. We have a visitor, Bruce. He was a father figure to me when I was a kid. That makes him like a grandpa to Jack and Fiona. We lost touch for over 20 years, reconnecting again last year. In my life simplification/rebalancing process I felt the need to make contact with him. I didn’t feel right that we all left things the way we did. The last time I saw Bruce was in PB when I was strung out, right before I hitched to NY. When I called him last year he didn’t know my mom had died. They lost contact after breaking up, my mom just moved up North and closed off her previous life and contacts. None of us know why. It’s been great reconnecting with someone who meant so much to my brother and I growing up. I was six, Danny was four. I remember asking Bruce how old he was. “I’m over the hill” he’d say. I had a picture of a hill in my mind and a man walking over it.

    Jack and Fiona are reaching new dangers this week. They can reach the window sill, put their toes on the base board, and pull up to see out the window. It’s bad. I could never understand how moms could let their baby’s accidently fall out of a second story window, now I can imagine that happening. They are fast. I’ve been working hard introducing the word, “NO”. I’ve had some success, but sometimes it turns into a fun game. Last night they were banging on the window. Bruce said, “NO”. Jack and Fiona turned, looked at him, smiled, hit the window, “No” says Bruce again. They look at him and laugh, they repeat this process over and over again until we give up. I’m hiding my face because it’s making me laugh. Linda said I really need to work on my facial expression when I tell the babies “No”. Jack and Fiona make it hard to have a stern look.

    2013-06-19 18.49.15

    Bruce said he was worried about me. He started reading my Dirty Laundry Blog, said it sounded like I was really stressed out, especially in the first posts I wrote. He said I should go back and read them, it sounded like I was going to have a breakdown. Maybe that’s a testament of the power of writing. Maybe getting it all out makes things seem less stressful because I can see the bigger picture. I’ve also been able to do yoga and meditation a lot more regularly in the past month and a half than I have since Jack and Fiona were born. I stopped taking klonopin at night for insomnia. I stopped taking Zoloft. This week I stopped taking Benadryl and Tylenol PM at night. I think what’s made the biggest shift, I learned this from myself, is that I’m not supposed to be perfect. Life isn’t easy. I won’t feel good all the time or be in a good mood. I’ll get depressed sometimes and that’s totally normal. I’ll be tired, I’ll get a stomach ache, it doesn’t mean any more than that. It doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with me. I might not “Fit in” or “relate” to a lot of people but who cares! I’m learning to follow my heart and not second guess myself, my art, or my writings. When I do start having anxiety I know have the power to “Stop”, get off the “Merry Go Round”. I know I have the power to clear my schedule and just relax with the babies all day and sometimes that’s what I need to do. I know I have the power to NOT feel guilty about it either!

    Share this:

    • Tweet
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
    Like Loading…
←Previous Page
1 … 211 212 213 214 215 … 244
Next Page→

  • A journal: 20 Days during the Pandemic. Getting back in the studio. Daily Writing and Studio Practice September 21st to October 10th 2020.
  • Blog
  • Catitudes
  • Dirty Laundry Blog
  • My Peloton version 2
  • Portfolio
  • Random Tips for twin parents

 

Loading Comments...
 

    • Subscribe Subscribed
      • Dirty Laundry Blog by Jennifer Hynes
      • Join 330 other subscribers
      • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
      • Dirty Laundry Blog by Jennifer Hynes
      • Subscribe Subscribed
      • Sign up
      • Log in
      • Report this content
      • View site in Reader
      • Manage subscriptions
      • Collapse this bar
    %d