My Mother and I, and The Ways We See Parenting

Inspired by Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop.

2.) Not your mother’s daughter…how do you parent differently than your mother did? Is it a good thing or a bad thing?

When I saw this prompt, an overwhelming sense of dread came over me.  I do not want to write it, I do not want to think about it, and I know I will cry as I write it. But yet it finally must be said.

I credit one of my best friends for saying, “Once you become a mother, your have the right to judge your own, and a lot of issues come up.”

Ain’t that the truth!

Growing up, my mother would say, “We should have named her Joy because that’s what she is to us.”  I was beautiful, talented, smart, and a good kid.  I graduated college with honors and went on to have an eight year career as an on-air radio personality.  I changed careers and became a recruiter for eight years.  I was good at everything I tried.  I became more beautiful. My mother was so proud of me.

And then, I got sick.  Starting from being diagnosed with Rheumatoid Arthritis in 2003, fast forwarding to me now with Lupus and a dozen other things wrong with me, including Mental Illnesses.  Now I am the child who has not worked for over three years, the child who lives under the poverty line waiting for her disability, the child who, if she doesn’t have to go out, spends most of her time on her lap-top in bed. The child with a beautiful little boy of her own who has to stay in day care because she cannot take care of him full-time.

And now, the woman today is a far cry from the child who was her mother’s joy.  I KNOW it, I FEEL it, it just IS.

But she did her job, she parented me well, I am well over the age of 18.  She does not owe me anything, she does not have to take care of me, support me or help me.

Except that, now that I am a mother, I think she still should.  And I know that, God forbid, should anything of this nature happen to my child, I know I WOULD.

Because for me parenting does NOT end when one’s child is 18, and love is NOT based on what one’s child looks like, what they are capable of, or whether or not they can do fun things like go to a museum or travel or walk without a cane or a wheelchair around a pretty town.  It is unconditional and it is forever.

My son is four-and-a-half years old now.  He has Tourette’s Syndrome, OCD, Anxiety and maybe even more.  When I look at him all I see is how beautiful he is, inside and out, how talented he is and how smart he is.  I can’t go into the ocean with him, or the pool, and a dog cannot be near us, but he is still lots of fun. He coughs, his shoulders jerk, he has to walk a certain way around our home, he has to touch things, and he has to move back and forth while we walk, but he still makes me laugh and still fills my heart with joy.

Maybe my son will be one of the lucky ones.  Maybe he will grow out of his Tourette’s and eccentricities.  Or maybe he won’t.  It doesn’t matter, because he will always be my perfect son, and if he needs me I will be there for him, even if he is 50 and I am 86.  He will always be my child, the unborn baby that I fell in love with, the preschooler that I am still in love with.

One of my son’s fears is that when he becomes a “big boy” or a man, that he will have to leave our home.  He gets scared that if he learns to dress himself, that it is one step closer to us pushing him out the door.  One day he asked me if he ever smoked a cigarette, would I make him leave?

He asks if he can always live with my husband and I, over and over again.  And the answer is always, “Yes, honey, yes, you can live with us forever, you never have to leave us.”

Of course I know that one day he will leave me, and most likely will marry and become a father.  One day he might be yelling at me, and running out of my home with my car keys.

But do you have to leave me, baby?  No never.  And can you come back to us?  Yes always.

For I am your mother and you are my son.  My love for you will only grow stronger.  And I will take care of you always, and help you as much as I can.

Because parenting doesn’t end when you turn 18, my angel. Parenting is forever, until I die, and even after that, know that I will still be watching out for you.  Our parent/child bond will always be.  I am willing, for as long as you are, and for as long as you need me.

I will ALWAYS be your mother.

“Grown don’t mean nothing to a mother.  A child is a child.  They get bigger, older, but grown?  What’s that suppose to mean?  In my heart it don’t mean a thing.”  ~Toni Morrison, Beloved, 1987

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My Grandmother and I

I read Tiny Sunbirds, Far Away, by Christie Watson as a member of the From Left to Write book club.  I was given a free copy as part of the book club.  This post was inspired by this book.

(I am writing this post on my husbands laptop, as mine has crashed.  His laptop has a possessive/quote key that works about 25% of the time.  As he is a professional writer I do not know how he can stand this, but there it is.  I write this to let people know that my grammar and editing are much better than it would appear. Thank you.)

When 12-year-old Blessings mother leaves Blessing and her brother Ezikiels father where they had lived a comfortable life in Laos, Nigeria, she takes them back to where she grew up, in a village in the Niger Delta, a very poor and dangerous area.  Blessing and her brother had never met their grandparents, as they had never accepted the fact that their daughter had married out of her tribe.

As I read this marvelous book, with the theme of the relationship between Blessing and her Grandma, called Grandma by all, I could not help feeling the parallels of the relationship between my Grandmother and me, although this is not Africa, and although we are white people, and the lives lived by Blessing and her family could not have been more different.  What I saw was the strong bond between a grandmother and her granddaughter, no matter where you live or who you are.

My grandparents, Papa and Nanny, were Jewish and so were not too pleased at first that my mother was going to marry a Catholic man, and even less pleased when my parents were going to raise us Catholic.  As a child, I never really felt that to be an issue.  My grandmother was born in 1912 in Portland, Maine, and her neighbors were Italians so my fathers beliefs and cultures were not foreign to her.

I was her first grandchild, and it appeared that she loved having a granddaughter, having raised two daughters of her own. She always called me Dollface and I always felt so special whenever I was with her.  I always felt I was the favorite of her five grandchildren, but perhaps my brother and cousins might have felt the same feeling!

Like Blessings Grandma, she loved to tell stories, and I loved to listen.  About how she came to New York to live and work when she was around 20. About how she and her friend were lost in the city and how she remembered that her mother told her that if you were lost you should always ask a policeman, which she did, who wound up giving them information about a blouse factory who was hiring and how she got a job working there.  How she worked as a runway model for the buyers as a side job and got to keep all the clothes.  Oh, how I wished she still had them, blouses from the 1930s, but she had so many she would give them to her friends.

And the most famous story, of how she met my grandfather, the one she told me over and over again.  Her maiden name was Hirsch and suddenly Hershey Bars began appearing in her top desk drawer.  She thought it was a homely and heavy man named…Oh, who knows, I might insult his grandchildren.

She went over to him and said, Paul, thank you very much but I cant accept these chocolates.

Ill take ONE, but it wasnt me who has been buying them for you.

Do you know who is?

Yes, Ira.

Nanny was pretty happy that it turned out to be Ira.  He looked like Clark Gable, she told me, and I guess I saw the resemblance a bit.

They were married in 1939.  They waited a long time.  My grandmothers parents were both sick and she felt she could not marry because she had to take care of them.  As Grandma told Blessing, We must row in whatever boat we find ourselves in.

My grandparents had a lot of trouble making ends meet and supporting their two daughters.  Papa worked as a manager of a chain store called National Shoes, and also worked as an usher at a movie theatre.  I dont know how many full time working moms there were back then in the 1940s and 50s, but my grandmother was one of them.  The only job I remember her telling me about was that she worked in a bakery.  Much later she worked as a bookkeeper for her landlords chain of buildings and received a salary and a free apartment, I believe. She worked her whole life, until she retired in her late 60s. It kept her young, I believed.

Nanny and I had so much in common.  We liked the same foods, the gossip magazines and even game shows.  I often thought my mother was jealous of our relationship, but it was as if a generation had been skipped, and I was more her daughter than her granddaughter when it came to being so close and being so similar.

I always felt I could tell her my secrets.  I remember one day we were playing the card game Gin.  She was amazing at all card games and numbers, the one thing unfortunately I didnt inherit from her!  I usually always lost, but I just liked playing with her.  One day while we were playing, I was in my early 20s, and the issue of sex came up.

You havent had sex, have you?, she asked me.

I had had only one real boyfriend and yes, of course we had sex but I couldnt tell even tell my Nanny that one!

You have! You have!  I can tell by the look on your face!

She knew me so well.

Well, you havent done it a lot have you? She was grimacing.

No, I said quickly, for her own sake.

Well, okay then.

Afterwards I lost every gin game for the rest of the night.

My grandmother lived until her early 90s, but unfortunately developed Alzheimers in her mid 70s.  She never stopped recognizing her immediate family, but never could grasp the concept of boyfriends or husbands, or having a great-grandaughter.

A swift bout with cancer, over just a few months, ended her life.  I never cried over her death for two reasons.  One, because to me, she died a little ever day due to the Alzheimers and two, she was very scared to die, she wanted to live forever.  She had lost that concept when the Alzheimers fully set in.

Like Blessing and her grandmother, and like my Nanny, I too am a storyteller, except now we call it…blogging.

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My 2nd Blogiversary! The Mission Continues

(I am writing this on my husbands computer because mine is temporarily out of commission.  His plural/quotation key does not work, I do not have that bad of a grammar problem.  Okay, on with the show!)

I have to say that I am pleased and proud of myself for making it thus far and thank God that He has allowed me the health to continue to do so.

Here is my First Blogiversary post if you are so curious.

Like many chronically ill people, I wondered why it was ME who had to be so sick, why I had to hurt every day.  I have been chronically ill since 2003.  Also, like many, I wondered what I had done to deserve this life of pain and fatigue, when there were so many evil and nasty people who walked around on top of the world?  Was God punishing me?

The 5 Stages of Coping With a Chronic Illness was originally used by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross in her book, On Death and Dying, but it works for the perpetually feeling like you are always dying very well.  For so many years I was caught up in a Denial-Anger-Bargaining-Depression cycle.  Acceptance my ass!  Acceptance to me meant giving up and I was never going to do that, I was never going to stop fighting, looking for answers, looking for the cures.  How could so many just lay down and Accept?

Yet, in a way, I was jealous of these people too, those who were so wise and so at peace with themselves.

Why, why, why??  What was the purpose of this pain and suffering??  Why me??

But little by little, I realized that my illnesses did have a purpose and there was a reason this was happening to me. Through my blogging, my writing, and using my actual voice in casual conversations with strangers, I slowly began to realize that I was making a difference.  That I was comforting those like me and that I was educating those who were not, and sometimes it was even both at the same time.  The comments, the emails, the vision of the lightbulb clicking on in someones head.  Thank you, Emily, thank you for helping me, for showing me that I am not alone, thank you for telling me about Lupus, I feel wiser for having met you.  Almost every day, the evidence was mounting.

And so I have come to believe that if someone was to have a chronic illness it should be…ME.

On Tuesday my computer crashed, it would turn on but show nothing but a blue screen.  I was crying as my husband sat on the phone with tech support.  My laptop is my life, as it is for so many chronically ill or disabled people.  The techie couldnt get my computer started so he suggested I make an appointment to take it in, which I did yesterday.

When the young man who came over to help me said hello, I jumped.  I told him that if my computer was dead and my data could not be recovered then I would probably start crying.

Dont worry, he said.  A lot of people cry.

I explained that my laptop was extremely important to me as I was disabled.  My laptop was my life, I was a blogger, a writer.  I told him that I had many physical illnesses such as Lupus and Chronic Fatigue, and Mental illnesses such as Anxiety, Depression and Mania.  That my physically tired and achy body was constantly at war with my go-go-go brain and that the only time I felt brain and body coming together was when I wrote.

I chatted and chatted, as my mania makes me do, all the while thinking This guy is probably thinking I am a freak.  I felt like he was humoring me.

The only time I got something back from him was something like, I think many of us all suffer from sort of depression at one time or another.

Oh, yes definitely, I said, as I was thinking This guy probably cant wait to get me out of here.  Whoa, slow down lady!

When I left the man said to me, What is your blog?  Ill take a look at it.

Yeah, right.  Youre just trying to be a good customer service rep.

What happened with my computer is not important to the story but here is what is.  Last night I got this from the CONTACT ME section of my blog:

Met you earlier this afternoon in the mall. Just wanted to say thank you. It’s always nice to meet somebody else who also suffers from severe depression. Although I can’t relate to your situation with your family, I can relate to struggling with bipolar disorder. It’s hard to admit to another human being the severity or even the existence of your disease. I wish you the best of luck with everything. You’ve got a friend…(ending left out for privacy sake)

I frantically thought and thought.  Who the Hell was this? Is my brain turning to so much mush that I dont remember meeting someone at the mall???  Who? Who?

And then, I got the clever way he ended his message to me (which I cannot print to protect his identity) and I knew.   It was the computer guy! The young man who just nodded and smiled and whom I thought was thinking that I was a freak…was a freak himself, just a quiet one!  And when I say freak, I mean that in the nicest way.

I asked him if I could include his message to me in my Blogiversary post:

Absolutely! I’d be honored and look forward to reading it.

It helps to know you’re not the only “crazy” one 🙂

Why yes, yes it does help to know that you are not the only crazy one, doesnt it?   Would it also help to know that one out of four American families has a relative who has a mental illness?

Why didnt you tell me, computer guy, that you too have mental illness?  Did you know that every time I tell someone I have a mental illness almost everyone tells me ME TOO! or I TAKE XANAX FOR… or MY HUSBAND… or MY MOTHER…?

Im not yelling at you, computer guy, it is perfectly alright that you did not offer this private information up about yourself.

I will do it for you.  I will speak about mental illness and I will speak about chronic illness and I will speak about people who dont look sick but are, and I will blog about it. I will try to touch thousands with my writing, and just one person with my voice, and I will do it every day I am able.

And I will join others.  Others like Christine Miserandino and Jenni Prokopy and those on the National Association of Mental Illness Blog.

Because this is my PURPOSE…and I ACCEPT it.

Two Candles for My Second Blogiversary and One For Good Luck

Two Candles for My Second Blogiversary and One For Good Luck


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NJ Moms: Win Tickets to See Barney Live in Concert!

Kids and Barney go together like macaroni and cheese!

And now, the State Theatre in New Brunswick, NJ along with the Vee Corporation presents “Barney Live in Concert – Birthday Bash!”  A brand new, interactive live stage concert, this show features more than 25 fun songs, including old favorites like Dino Dance, Baby Bop Hop and Rock ‘n Roll Star.  Your children, and you!, will be singing and dancing with Barney, Baby Bop, DJ and Riff!  And just like any Barney stage show or television program, it’s all about caring, sharing and friendship…with the help of your imagination!

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I am pleased to be able to offer one of my readers a Family Four pack of tickets to attend “Barney’s Birthday Bash”!

There are two performance on Wednesday, June 15th at 9:30 a.m. and 1:00 p.m.

There are three ways to win:

1. Leave a comment.

2.  Tweet out this contest, and let me know you did it in a SEPARATE comment.

3.  Post this contest on your Face Book page, and let me know you did it in a SEPARATE comment.

So, if you enter in the three ways above, you will have THREE SEPARATE comments.

The contest will end at 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, May 25th, 2011.

And if you do not happen to be the lucky winner, you can save $3 per ticket by using the code ERNIE online at StateTheatreNJ.org to receive a discount!

(Discount excludes Gold Circle & Sunny Seats. Not valid on previously purchased tickets. Discount cannot be combined with any other offer.)

For more information on ticket prices, VIP upgrades that include a Meet & Greet photo opportunity with Barney, and group discounts, check out the State Theatre’s website or call 732-246-7469.

Good luck!

Barney cast

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Tuesdays With Tyler: At the Dentist or “Marathon Man*”

Earlier this month, I took Tyler to the dentist.  Tyler does not do well with doctors or dentists, or even haircuts for that matter. He does worse that your average child because of his Tourette’s Syndrome, OCD, and Anxiety.  Whenever Tyler goes to the doctor or is sick he gets a “Well” Prize.  This time I had a big Lego set for him, his very first one, I’m talking big boy Legos, not Duplo!  I know that it may seem like an excessive “prize” but I recently learned that Tyler cannot tell the value of anything. He likes a little knickknack from a party goodie bag as much as he likes a Lego set.  He cannot tell the difference.  I am also starting to suspect that Tyler has Sensory Processing Disorder.  Any one of these disabilities can make a visit to the dentist ten times worse than the average child’s visit.   If you have a special needs child, you are sympathetically nodding, if not, just trust me.

Tyler was okay when we were in the waiting room but as soon we got into the dentist office, he started to scream in horror. Literally.  I told the dental hygienist his diagnoses.  He saw the light that the hygienist and dentist use that make you want to wear sunglasses or close your eyes and he started screaming,  “No light, not the light!” I was unsure if he was super-sensitive to the light or if it reminded him of the X-rays he had during his nightmare visit to the hospital last month.

The hygienist and another assistant who had to be called were very nice.  Tyler was shaking, just like he had at the hospital and kept saying, “I-I c-c-cant stop crying!” Suddenly I went into child psychiatrist/therapist mode.  It was like it wasn‘t my own child in terror and something in me made me very calm, I felt detached.  I needed to be, I needed to file “Mommy” somewhere else.  The hygienist said Tyler could take his exam with me holding him in the dental chair, as if I was his chair.  I kept rubbing his back and telling him if was going to be okay.  He covered up his mouth, there was no way to let anyone near him, much less examIne him.  Tyler kept saying, “I cant do this, I cant do this!” but the hygienist said, “I know you think you can‘t, Tyler, but I KNOW you can do this!”  The hygienist told Tyler that she was going to give Mommy a check-up and that he would see how easy it was and how it doesn‘t hurt.

I wish I went to a children‘s dentist because it was the easiest exam I ever had!  I told him how it didn‘t hurt and he knows that Mommy never lies to him.  He finally allowed the hygienist to work on him, an exam and a cleaning!  Then he asked  in a trembling voice “Is it over?“ “ No”, I said, “The dentist has to look at your teeth and then we can go.“

I dont know why, especially under Tyler‘s circumstances, but they had to move us to another office!  Tyler started to freak out all over again!  The dentist was nice but he said, “Are you the little boy that I have heard screaming throughout the office? “ Okay, I changed my mind about him being nice.  This was so bad, how was my child going to have a dental exam?  I looked at the doctor and asked, “Do you do…?”  “Sedation?  Yes, but something like that would have to be rescheduled.  He would have to wear a mask and that might be even more frightening to him.  Try to calm him down, I’ll be back.”  Once again I rocked him and rubbed his back, telling him everything was going to be okay and to try to think of the Legos waiting for him.  ”Eyes on the prize“, yes, I actually said that to him.

Tyler finally calmed down.  The dentist was annoyed when I said he could not have the big light on…I told him he would have to do his best with the abundant florescent lighting.  Finally it was over and I promptly gave him the Legos.  Tyler couldn‘t wait to beat it out of there and he immediately improved.

Tyler will be five for his next dental appointment.  I wonder how he will be, better?, worse?  Is this something he will outgrow or is it just the beginning of Tyler‘s occasional times of torture?

*If you havent seen Marathon Man with Dustin Hoffman, well, you just need to.  Unless you have an intense fear of the dentist, then you may want to skip it.

marathon-man-olivier-hoffman

Is it Safe?

Image courtesy of Alt Film Guide.


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How I Met My Best Friend

Inspired by Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop.

4.) Describe how you met your best friend.

I first moved out on my own for good when I was 26 years old.  I had moved in with a co-worker and towards the end of the lease she told me that she wanted to try to get her own place, that she wanted to live alone for the first time in her life.  I put an ad in several newspapers, “Roommate Wanted”, and Donna was one of the people who answered my ad. We had a nice conversation on the phone and arranged to meet.  She was about 23 years old and was an accountant working for a pharmaceutical company.  She seemed very mature and I liked that she had a secure job.

For whatever reason, I will never forget the first time I met her.  She showed up to my apartment wearing a long skirt and nice blouse, with her hair pulled back.  She was petite and attractive.  We hit it off and discovered that we had graduated from the same college, I four years ahead of her.  She was super-smart, and was the Valedictorian of her high school class and went to college on a full scholarship.  I knew I wanted Donna to be my roommate.  The only problem was that this would be the first time she would be moving away from home and her parents did not want her to go, and they had a heavy influence on her.  Despite my getting on the phone with her mother to assure her that I was not an axe-murder, Donna told me that her parents said they would disown her if she moved out and she was not ready to lose them at this point in her life.

I was very disappointed but I said that I wanted to keep in touch with her, and she said she felt the same way.  Both of us single, to our mutual dismay, we would go out with each other almost every weekend, usually going to restaurants and trying different kinds of food, like Jamaican and Ethiopian, Donna was always game.  Often we would go to church together.

I found I could tell Donna anything.  She was the most non-judgmental person I had ever met. I had been having an on again/off again relationship with someone.  Most of my friends were telling me that I needed to move on, especially my then best friend who didn’t want to listen to my crying any more and told me that I was just being plain ridiculous over him.

Donna never said anything of the kind to me, in fact she never said anything one way or the other about him, she just listened to me.  Listened to me cry, listened to my good times and bad times with him,  sharing my joys and my sorrows during this up and down period of my life.

Eventually “Larry” became engaged to someone who worked with us.  Seeing them every day was extremely painful and I dreaded the date of their wedding, August 14th, 1999.  I don’t know how I would have gotten through that day, I honestly don’t know if I would still be here, but Donna and I went out to dinner and then to a classical musical concert at a park, under the stars.  I was experiencing something so beautiful, but also knowing that at that moment the then love of my life was celebrating his new marriage.

When I met Grant and he moved in with me in 2001, Donna became Grant’s friend too and now it was the three of us going out to dinner and having good times.  She was my Maid of Honor when we married.

Donna continued to excel at work.  She was also an adjunct professor teaching a Master’s degree Accounting class at a local college.  She had a beautiful car and owned her own townhouse.

Unfortunately, the mental illness that she had been fighting for many years began to take over her life.  Constantly in and out of hospitals and mental facilities, she eventually was unable to keep a job and had to sell her townhome.  Donna lost a lot of friends during this time, people just couldn’t deal with it, or didn’t want to.  But Donna was my angel and I never considered ending my friendship with her.  I never forgot what she did for me in August of 1999.

Eventually, Grant and I s’ illnesses also worsened.  Donna and I took care of each other as best as we could and we still do.  She is the only friend I can tell absolutely anything to.

Despite Donna’s many mental and now also physical illnesses she is the most amazing, smartest, courageous woman I know.  She is good at  everything she tries, even blogging, poetry and Six-Word Memoirs!

I am also very pleased that there is a mutual love fest between Donna and my son.  Tyler loves his Aunt Donni. She has now become friends to us all.

Donna is one of the reasons I know God loves me.  She is my Angel on Earth and I could not imagine my life without her.

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Tuesdays With Tyler: Mother’s Day Weekend: Chronic Illness Style!

Mother’s Day weekend was kind of a mixed bag for me, of good, bad and ugly.

My mother is here visiting until tomorrow and we both attended Tyler’s school for the annual Mother’s Day “Muffins With Mom”.  We were the first to arrive to Tyler’s class and one of his teachers asked if either my mother or I would read a book to the class and the moms.  My mother had always wanted to be a children’s librarian so she gamely stepped up to read the book Love You Forever. If you know this book, you are thinking “oh no!”, if you do not, as I did not, you are thinking you are going to hear a beautiful story about the love between a mother and her son…which it was, until the mother DIES!  My mother was reading it and crying.  I was hysterical since it is my mother up there reading it and I have a disease that can be fatal, and most of the other moms were crying too. The kids didn’t understand why we were crying.

I was so pissed!  Who’s brilliant idea was that horrific book?!  I could think of a hundred others more appropriate! Still, the kids sang and signed a song for us and we did have some nice muffins, and Tyler had made sweet cards for my mother and I, plus a gift for me, which you can see in the picture below:

Was this before or after I bawled my eyes out?

Was this before or after I bawled my eyes out?

On Saturday, my mother and I took Tyler to a Mothers’/Kids’ Day at one of our local farms. When I woke up my lips were swollen, chapped and stinging.  It seems that the lip gloss I wore to the Mother’s Day program to “glam” myself up a little had caused an allergic reaction.  Thank you, Lupus!  (I am still reacting to it four days later.)

Mom, Tyler and I, before the back-breakingly rough hay ride starts.

Mom, Tyler and I, before the back-breakingly rough hay ride starts.

As part of the “festivities”, there was to be a sheep-shearing demonstration.  I had heard many people say sheep-shearing is abusive, but I wanted to see for myself, and they were doing it in front of the kids, so how bad could it be?  I think my view of sheep-shearing now that I have witnessed one could be another post entirely.  Let’s just say that when I saw the 8 inch gaping wound on the sheep I said, “Okay!  Tyler, why don’t you go ride the ponies now?”

Tyler also rode a tricycle around an obstacle course made of hay.  At four-and-a-half-years of age, I am becoming concerned, because Tyler still does have a bit of trouble pedaling and steering, but again, perhaps another post.  It was even harder with him crashing into the hay. My mother and I took turns helping Tyler steer and pushing him along.

Tyler really starts cruising now!

Tyler really starts cruising now!

At this point, if you know me at all, you may be thinking, “Why Emily, aren’t you overdoing it a bit?”  Except Mama wasn’t thinking about that then.

Sunday dawned.  I got up before everyone to go to the bathroom and I screamed in pain.  My right elbow felt like I had broken it and my left didn’t feel too much better.  I could not open my non-child proof cap pain medicine (which I keep locked in a safe), nor my already opened bottle water.  I had to wake Grant up and then everyone got up.  Not much of a Mother’s Day for me, nothing from Grant, as I had asked him not to buy me anything, since we cannot afford it, including cards.  But besides the gift and card Tyler had given me on Friday, Grant told me Tyler had another present for me that he was very excited about. He came up to me and said, “Mommy, I want you to have this book.”  It was his own book, Gallop, that Grant had bought Tyler a couple of years ago from a museum.  Tyler had picked it out for me and told Grant that he had wanted to give it to me.

Tyler was following our lead.  Since Grant and I are so poor, if we give our loved ones gifts, it is usually a “re-gift”, something nice that we had when things were much better for us.  I thought it was so sweet that Tyler knew that he did not have any money either, so he had picked out one of his own things to give to me.

But as I said, I did have this horrendous elbow pain that I had never felt before.  I’m thinking, “Lupus, osteoporosis…I need to have this checked out.”  I knew it was from helping Tyler on the tricycle at the farm.  I called up one of those immediate care places.  There I was on Mother’s Day with my mother at the doctor’s office.  I was taken in quickly and diagnosed pretty quickly as well.  Lateral Epicondylitis, or the more common term, Tennis Elbow in both of my elbows.  One usually gets this from repetitive motion but because of my other diseases, I didn’t need much repeating.  The doctor said I had to be careful not to bend my elbows at a 90-degree angle or more, no lifting, pulling or pushing…and no computer!  You see how I am listening to that one?

My mother and I went to the pharmacy.  It was 12:30 and my brother and his wife are coming at 1:00 for Mother’s Day and my brother’s birthday.  Grant called me and told me that Tyler was sleeping in our living room.  What?!  He never naps this early!  My mother, brother, his wife and I all got to my apartment at the same time.  Tyler of course was still in his pajamas, I had not showered.  Grant tried to move Tyler to my bedroom but he woke up and now he was a complete grouch.  He hated everyone, and told them so.

My brother, his wife and my mother went to pick up food we had ordered from an Italian restaurant.  It was a lot of stuff and some of it was in a box on a chair in the kitchen.  Tyler walked by and by accident knocked the food onto the floor.  My dinner and my sister-in-law’s dinner are laying on the floor!  My head was spinning.  My mother and I looked at each other, and started just putting the dinners back on the plate.  I will probably get some rare infection from this.

Tyler got cheerier after eating his spaghetti with meat sauce and having birthday cake! Everyone decided to go for a walk, play mini-football and go to the playground.  Everyone except Grant and I, who got into bed, and slept.

So, no pictures of the actual Mother’s Day as I never showered and got back into my pajamas.

Like I said, the good, the bad and the ugly and at some points, the very sweet.

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Can You Help?

I have had been friends with Karen through Twitter, ButYouDontLookSick, and she is also a reader of my blog.

She is temporarily in trouble and all I can do is ask for your help.  She has Fibromyalgia so badly that she is wheelchair bound.  She lives with her mother and three cats.  They are in North Carolina, living in a hotel temporarily until they can move back to Alabama where they have family support .  They had to move into a hotel because their lease was up.  Her and her mother thought they would be able to use her mother’s income tax refund to stay longer in the hotel but it had to be spent on other things.

Karen has emailed, called, and texted friends and family members asking for help, but no one has gotten back to her.  I know how that feels and it hurts and is scary.

Her mother gets paid again on May 12th, so things will be better then.  $184 would get them the hotel for Sunday through Wednesday nights, including a bit of food for them both.

In order to donate via credit card, you can call The Red Roof Inn at 919-469-3400.  Because this is a third party payment they will fax you an authorization form to make the payment at 919-460-9027.  You will then fill out the form necessary to allow them to charge your credit card.

New!  Easier way to donate!  Karen has set up a Pay Pal account.  keddins3@marykay.com

Every little bit helps, no amount is too small!  I am proud to say that my mother is going to be the first donor, as soon as we can get to Staples in the morning!

Please do consider helping Karen and her mother during this temporary crisis.  Thank you.

Karen, along with her friend's daughters

Karen, along with her friend's daughters

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My Teenage Crush…Where is He Now?

Inspired by Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop.

workshop-button-1

3.)  A Boy You Had a Crush on…Where Is He Now?

I was a “late bloomer”, dating no one and kissing just one boy in my four years of high school.  I “blossomed” into a very attractive young woman my senior year of high school, but I wasn’t any where close to being ready for any kind of sexual behavior.  I was asked out by two boys for my senior prom, but I didn’t like them in a dating kind of way, and I didn’t want to go as friends, so I politely said no to both of them.

But boy, did I have it bad for a first generation American Turkish boy who was a grade ahead of me!  Picture the classic tall, dark and handsome.  I knew “Adem” from a girl in my choir class he was dating.  She was a junior, he was a sophomore and I was a lowly freshman.  They broke up in her senior year and it wasn’t until I was a sophomore that I felt comfortable approaching him.  When I say approach I mean I would consider me saying “Hi Adem” at his locker and him saying, “What’s up?” to me a victory.  God, I was pathetic!  So pathetic, in fact, that I worked at his junior prom just so I could see him in his tux…with someone else as his date.  Oh, God, why did I do that?  The pain that I felt watching him dance with this FRESHMAN, blonde bombshell who looked like Madonna broke my heart!  Of course, Adem knew what he had coming to him with her after the prom, and I had never even kissed a boy!

It turned out that Adem and “Madonna” had a fight at the prom.  All my friends were telling me, “Come on, ask him to dance!”, but I just couldn’t.

I never got to tell Adem how I felt, I just was too shy and not ready for someone as advanced as he was.

But this story is just beginning.

By college, I had turned into a brunette bombshell and I had gotten some “experience”, well only the one THE EXPERIENCE with my now ex-boyfriend.  My best friend at the time ran into Adem a bar.  She asked if he remembered me and he said, “Yeah!” and she gave him my number.  And he called me and asked me out on a date! If you are keeping score this is about nine years later from when I first had my crush!

So, we went on the date and in five minutes I realize that this guy is kind of a dope.  Why had I never realized that in high school?  No offense meant to the police, but he had become a cop.  Yes, so now he was STILL hot and he was a sexy cop!  The Twenty-Something Me is thinking, “Ugh, first date, last date.”, but the Teenage Me is screaming, “Say yes if he asks you out again!”

And he did, so I did.  We are on another “stimulating” date.  “Go home with him!  Please, go home with him for ME!”, the Teenage Me is begging.

It was a bit of a power trip and a payback to poor Teenage Me for the Twenty-Something Me to go to his place after dinner.  We are making out, “YES!!!”, but then I pulled back.  I had only slept with one guy in my whole life, who would be the second was, to me, still a big deal.  When I told him that he said, “Now I want to sleep with you even more!”  An almost-virgin, I guess, was a big appeal.

And so…I DID IT with him and it was great.  The Teenage Me was high-fiving the Twenty-Something me.

I never fell in love with Adem and he wasn’t interested in having that kind of relationship with anyone.  But, ahem, a woman has…needs, and so Adem became my…”booty call”, “friends with benefits”, whatever you want to call it for about three or four years!  It was fun being with a cop, doing IT on his police car, him ignoring minor crimes while we had sex, you know.  Please note there was never any handcuffs, I am not in to that sort of thing.

When my husband came into the picture, I told Adem I that I was seriously seeing someone and he politely bowed out.

About six years ago I was with my mom, getting my wedding and engagement rings cleaned and there he was.  He had a second job as a security guard at the jewelry store.  He told me he had become a father, by accident, but that he had custody of his daughter.  I told him I was just starting to try to have a child.

No sooner had we left the jewelry store than my mother exclaims, Oh my God, is he HOT, he is SO HOT!”  My mother had never acted that way in front of me ever. It was so awkward, knowing that I had slept with him about a hundred (more or less) times.  I said, “Mom, calm down, stop saying that!”

Now we are Face Book friends, but that is all.  He is 43 and has never been married, but because of this post I looked on his page and his status says, “In a Relationship”, which for him is something to say.  He is a nice guy and I do wish the best for him.  And the Teenage Me thanks him very, very much.

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Mama’s At..

Technorati today, talking to a former classmate of mine who’s father died in 9/11.  Chris had some powerful views on the death of Osama Bin Laden and he wasn’t afraid to get his opinion out there.  I hope you will take a look at this courageous man and if so moved, comment and share this via Face Book and Twitter.  Thank you.

Joe Driscoll, 9/11 Victim

Joe Driscoll, 9/11 Victim

Chris Driscoll, 5th person from the left, his wife Erica Driscoll, 4th person from the left.

Chris Driscoll, 5th person from the left, his wife Erica Driscoll, 4th person from the left.

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