Archive for February, 2007



Green-eyed monster

Jealous.

At this very moment, I’m feeling very jealous.

Our friends who are having a baby, managed to get an offer on their house in 6 weeks, also just got the house they wanted to buy.

I want to sell my house.

I want to adopt again sooner rather than later.

I don’t want to live in an apartment again.

I don’t want my parents to get a divorce or separate or any of that.

I don’t want to be struggling with depression any more.

I am tired of feeling like this.

I’m tired of being crippled with heartache over situations where I ought to be happy for the people I care about.

I’m tired of being caught up in this endless cycle of thinking my life is the way it is because of my inherent failures.

Bag of Rocks

Someone posted this on one of the adoption forums I check out in a post about healing and grief.

I don’t know who wrote it but I’ll try and find out where it came from.  It is just something that resonated with me.

A Bag of Rocks

When you carry a bag of rocks around, day in and day out, you will inevitably become tired. No matter how far you walk, how hard you work, how much you try, you are still tired. Even sleep is ineffective, because you are sleeping with your bag of rocks, and when you wake in the morning you continue throughout the day carrying the bag of rocks.

Some people would ask, “Why not just let go of the bag of rocks? Stop carrying it around with you, just put them down. Can’t you see that would make it easier?” But, you see, I am afraid that if I let go of the rocks there will be nothing left. The rocks are all that I have, all that I have carried with me throughout my life, all that I trust. Certainly, carrying these rocks around makes me tired. But being tired is familiar, and safe. Would you let go of all that you have in the world, if you were not certain that by doing so you would gain more?

And yet (the irony is) we cannot have the certainty of more, until we let go of what we have. As long as I am carrying this bag of rocks, my arms are much too full for me to accept anything else. Even when you offer me a bag of feathers I don’t dare to take it, for how can I trust that the load you are offering me is truly a load of feathers without opening the bag? Others have offered feathers, but given lead. How can I know that the bag you offer is not heavier than my current burden unless I let go of my bag of rocks, freeing my hands to open your bag? And I cannot let go of my bag, for if I put it down it might be taken from me. Or, even worse, I may find that my arms ache far too much for me to pick up the bag again, and then I would have nothing.

Can you understand why I would despair? You ask me to give up all that I believe that I have, all that I believe that I am, and yet I cannot. The fear of having nothing–of being nothing–is far too great. You want me to give up my hatred, my anger, and my pain (but most of all my pain, for the hatred and anger are mere masks for the grief and fear I hold inside). It will make me better, you say. And yet, how can I trust you, without first giving up all that I am holding on to? And how can I give up all that I am holding, if I do not trust you? Can you not see the confusion I am living with, the overwhelming fear that controls my actions? Can you not see why I push you away? Why I cause harm to myself, and to you? Can you not see why I am afraid?

Please understand, I don’t want it to be this way. I do want more, I really do. Perhaps you may have noticied how hard I try, before the despair seems too much to bear, before I give in. If only I could give up these rocks, I would have peace. I would be happy. I want to belive it, but I can’t. So I continue walking, dragging my bag of rocks, and wishing for something I can never have.

I wrote this just over a year ago, as an attempt to explain to my therapist why I was holding on to so many of my destructive behaviors so stubbornly. I finally found the courage to let go of the bag and try something new–and yet at times I still go back to that bag of rocks, because it is so familiar and safe, and the new ways are still uncomfortable and scary. I am considering adding more to this piece–as I no longer feel the hopelessness I ended on a year ago.

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Instructions for Hot Chocolate

My aunt gave us this organic hot chocolate mix for Christmas along with one of those handheld mixer/frother (is that a word? ;) ) things and some square marshmallows.  Tonight I decided to try it out since I was cold and I figured it is probably better than the Swiss Miss mix I have in the cupboard as well.  I look at the side of the container and here are the instructions listed and I quote:

We recommend slow heating one cup of milk or milk alternative on the stovetop till hot, stirring in a continuous clockwise circle eleven times, then eleven counterclockwise stirs.  Continue with this stirring cycle until vapors rise.  Whisk in 3 tablespoons of our mix and pour into your favorite mug.  Cordials may be added to taste to create a wonderful after dinner drink.

 Yeah.  So I put a mug of milk in the microwave, mixed in the mix, nuked it for a little over a minute, frothed it up and it tastes pretty good to me :P

Work, work, work

So I was at the library today on my lunch to feed my internet addiction and I saw on their website that they have a job opening in their business office.  Now I’ve always wanted to work at the library since I was a kid when I set up my own library, cataloging all the books in our house, which was more than a few *lol* but I was thinking more along the lines of a children’s librarian or research/reference type deal. This is all they have available for a job description:

Duties in this position are shared with another part-time clerk.The work schedule is approximately 20 hours per week during business hours on Monday, Thursday and Friday, with some flexibility.

Knowledge of spreadsheet and word processing applications, writing skills and the ability to communicate effectively with the public and staff are required.

Now my current job is blah, blah, blah BORING but it would most definitely have a very similar job description.  Yes, it was originally a 3 month project job that has lasted 16 months-there is STILL more that needs to be done- and now they have me on another project because the woman who handled it retired in December.

I have this paranoia of changing jobs only to find myself in another dullsville job.  I’m really great at thinking a job sounds like a good one only to find out it sucks and I’m bored, oh how I hate being bored.  Granted the salary range is quite nice- starts out better than what I make now, and I’m at the “top” of the range where I work- in fact, I think I’m above the range because they wanted to hire me back- and the schedule of Monday and Thursday is what I am working now, though I’d have to find a person to watch Widget on Fridays.  I have to make a decision if I’m going to apply because the deadline is Wednesday to get applications/resumes in.  Plus I have this ridiculous guilt about quitting the job I have now because my supervisor has been so wonderful with all my ups and downs and changes in availability. 

I am not good at making decisions…..

Believing in Grief

Nicole shared this essay from the NPR series on All Things Considered “This I Believe….” essays spoken by listeners.

A Way to Honor Life

Cortney Davis- nurse practitioner, All Things Considered, February 5, 2007 

I believe in grief. Almost every day, when I walk into the hospital where I work as a nurse practitioner, I hear crying, moaning or wailing: A young woman has miscarried. An elderly widower is holding his wife’s belongings. A mother stands guard over her badly burned child.

Once, I would have rushed to comfort these people. Uncomfortable myself with their grief, I’d want to ease their sadness with my cheer and consolation. I’d hug a patient and tell her to “try to get pregnant next month.” I would reassure the widower, telling him, “Your wife had a long life.” I’d enter the burned child’s room in intensive care with a smile, rather than encouraging the mother to weep in my arms.

When my own mother died, I was terrified, confused about how I was expected to act. Was I allowed to be the grieving daughter, or should I be the competent, grief-denying professional? I held my mother’s wrist, counting her pulse as it slowed. After her last breath, I rang for the nurse. Heart pounding, I waved goodbye to my mother, her gray hair bright against the sheets, and said, “Bye, mom,” in the cheery voice I’d practiced all my life. I didn’t know then that I could have climbed into bed and held her, that I should have wailed when she was gone.

It wasn’t until I had stayed with many dying patients and, finally, with my dying father, that I allowed myself to grieve — for my parents, for those lost patients, for all their loved ones who, as I once did, held back their tears. At my father’s death I cried like a child, not caring that I made the gulping noises of unrestrained mourning. Now, years later, I know that it is both necessary and human for us to wallow, each in our own way, in grief.

I no longer comfort others with false cheer. In the hospital, where my encounters with patients are ever more distanced by sterile gloves, computer protocols and the pressures of time, one way I can still be present is during their moments of grief. I don’t encourage anyone to move on, to replace, to remarry or put the photos or the memories away. Grief must be given its time.

I believe that both the caregivers and the cared-for should be free to scream and cry and fall to the floor — if not actually, then at least in the heart. I believe that grief, fully expressed, will change over time into something less overpowering, even granting us a new understanding, a kind of double vision that comprehends both the beauty and fragility of life at the same time.

When I grieve, when I stand by others as they grieve, even in the midst of seemingly unbearable sorrow, grief becomes a way to honor life — a way to cling to every fleeting, precious moment of joy.

Men

I am so frustrated with T at the moment.  He is on call for his job as a restaurant computer systems engineer this weekend.  Up until last night we were in a Blizzard warning and are still in a winter storm warning.  Everything I have read says to stay off the roads.  Church was even cancelled and, well, for church services to be cancelled around here, you know it has to be bad.  But oh, no he thinks that he needs to drive across Grand Rapids to his office, then back the other way all the way to the lakeshore to replace a power supply at the IHOP in Holland. 

He is sooo good at putting his job needs before anything else.  I got mad at him last night about it because he was going to drive to his office in the middle of the blizzard warning to get the part and I told him that this call is not important enough to be endangering his life by driving in this weather.  His reply- well I’m not going to get fired over not running a call I should have run.  My response to that was the job isn’t worth it and if his boss would fire him over it, then he is better off with out the f***ing job.

If he were a doctor, a paramedic, a nurse, a police officer, a fireman, some essential utilities worker, I would not have as much of an issue with him needing to go out because of the type of work it is.  But computer systems for restaurants?!? Really?  Somebody tell me if I’m being “nutty” about this.  Please.

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About Me

I'm Erin since May 1977

Wife to T since June 14, 1997

Mommy to Widget since November 2004

Widget joined our family through a domestic open adoption. We have a fully open adoption with her maternal first family, seeing them 3-4 times per year.
We have been waiting since July 2008 for adoption #2

About this blog

A place for me to ramble about my life as a Christian mom, wife, ethical adoption advocate, childhood cancer survivor, depression fighter.

E-mail Me

momtowidget at gmail dot com
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