Saturday, August 24, 2013

This can't be real

This isn’t real.

This cannot be real.

This. Is. Not. Real.

Dirty handprints on the back door. All that’s left. Shattered world, never restored.

Baby in my arms who will never know. Brother whose memories more and more go.

The spinning, reeling, tilting world. The fear, the loneliness, the desperate twirl.

The lovers fighting to stay intertwined. The exhaustion, the hiding, the silence that binds.

The world moving forward. Time marches on. The normal the happy. I don’t belong.

The drowning the drought, fragile, fearful creep and crawl tossed and thrown by anything at all.

The memories that cannot escape my head, clamped to my heart heavy as lead.

Sadness, blackness drags me down. I failed. I failed just let me drown.

No one gets it, doesn’t it show? Death would be mercy. I can’t take the blows.

Doubts and questions all drenched in fear. No relief, not even in tears.

I MISS HIM! I WANT HIM! My heart wails. No such thing as justice scales.


My constant mourning appeal. This can’t be real.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Stuff and stuff

This weekend was one for huddling in the dark, realizations, and attitude adjustments. It seems that anytime I feel that I may have some semblance of a grip the world whips into a tailspin and I go flying again. Have you noticed how NOISY it is out there? Geez... Turn it off already.

Huddling
I was reminded just how broken I am and just how far I've come all in the same experience. Even now I really don't spend a lot of time around people. My introversion has fooled me into forgetting that my mind as well as my heart is shattered. After spending a relatively short period of time fighting to interact normally in a friendly social setting I completely stopped speaking for nearly three hours. I curled up in the dark in my room and disappeared. When we were leaving the gathering Will said "you did so well talking to people today babe." Wow, I'm so broken, so so broken.

Realizing
My oldest has inherited his mother's complete scatter brain. My poor husband is the only one in the house who ever knows where anything is. We send Isaiah to another room to accomplish some task and without fail find him wondering aimlessly having forgotten there was a task to be accomplished at all or having actually made it to his destination happily destroying something there. I really can't blame the kid. Like I said, he's got lots of stuff you can't point at his mom for but that one is all me. They say its a sign of brilliance. I'm going with that.

A side effect of the complete inability to focus on any one task for any length of time results in some serious messes. Again, this is one I try to be patient with. While now that I am mature (coughs) I am the resident cleaner/organizer/declutterer it took a loong time to get here. Saturday I decided I was going to tackle my big boy's room. He was out of town and I was determined to get things under control.

After digging my tenth "I don't even want to know" out of a nook or cranny and opening his toy box to find an empty cereal box and an egg crate (that was just in the first layer) I uttered about my hundredth variation of "I'm gonna kill him."

But over the next 5 or so hours as I slowly worked my way over, under, and through mounds of junk my attitude  did a 180. When Will came in to make sure I hadn't been eaten by whatever was living in there I looked up and said "I'm a HORRIBLE parent!" While my penchant for the melodramatic may have taken that statement a bit over the top the truth is I was feeling like I had failed my kid, majorly. I was buried under piles of STUFF. It took me hours to clean and organize it all. I was stressed by the clutter and the claustrophobic feeling in the room. Why does my kid have so much stuff? On what planet can i expect him to keep this clean?! Ugh, Mommy fail. I purged and purged and purged and promised myself this was going to change.

Adjusting
Isaiah is a typical kid. Anytime we're anywhere he wants two of everything. I usually say something like "Babe, you have tons of stuff you don't even play with" but this weekend I think a change that has been working itself in my head finally clicked into place. Stuff is stressful! Today when we went to the grocery store and Isaiah asked for a pillow pet even though he already has one (but that one glows!) I said "having too much stuff just causes stress babe. Let's work on enjoying what we have." - attitude adjustments

I've been purging my own stuff for a while but now I'm even more motivated. Stuff is stressful. I want to spend my time loving on my guys not doing piles of laundry. Seriously, why on earth do I need a closet full of clothes? I so don't. So I'm hoping to keep my eye on what's important and start removing what's not.

By the way, when Isaiah explored his room after the massive toy/junk purge he said "it's so calm." From the mouths of babes.

Friday, August 9, 2013

Why Adoption?

This morning I was talking to my Papa, by far the kindest, truest, most steady person I’ve ever known. He’s one of those people who loves you even when you don’t think you want to be loved. Strong when strength is required and gentle when gentleness is needed. If you can’t tell I adore the man.

I’ve been asked a lot lately why we choose to found a fund in honor of Damon that assists families with adoption expenses. Why adoption? Damon wasn’t adopted.

The short answer is it never occurred to us to do anything else. Adoption was just right. It just was.

I’ve been exploring myself lately wondering if there is a longer answer. I think yes… and no. The short answer is plenty but maybe our choice tells us something about ourselves. I’ve been considering what that might be.

I’m not entirely sure where this story begins… so I guess I’ll start at the beginning. I’m adopted, in a manner of speaking. The man I introduced you to at the beginning of this post shares no blood with me. Neither do my aunt or uncle or cousins or the man who has been my only dad. The entirety of my extended family folded me in when I came to them at two years old, likely clinging to my mother who married their son and brother. Every Christmas memory, every Thanksgiving, my graduations… all populated with people who adopted me. They are the only family I have ever known.

There was pain, and brokenness and challenges. I struggled, battled, and wrestled with my identity. The desire to belong is hard enough when you’re 15 without the drama of convincing yourself you don’t even belong in your family. It wasn’t always pretty. It was hard and I was a real jerk. I think sometimes I had every right to be but that doesn’t make life any easier on the people who deal with you. Maybe because such a huge chunk of my biological family had just walked out on me I was convinced my “adopted” family would, too. Sometimes I think I tried to make them. They never did.

Very slowly, as an adult I’ve confronted my demons and begun to settle into the place my family has been holding for me all these years. This morning, talking to my Papa, I realized that it has been a long time since I’ve even thought about the fact that I’m not their blood. Papa always answers the phone “How is my Jodie-girl?” when I call. He’s called me that all of my life, his. It’s a beautiful thing.
I wonder if my ache for adoption stems from this? From knowing what it’s like to be taken in, wholly loved by people who didn’t “have” to?

I don’t know but I think this is a piece of the puzzle.

It’s just wrong, babies should be held, loved, kissed, adored. Two of the best parents I know, people who, whether they know it or not, taught me so much about how to be a parent got to be parents through adoption. I feel like people like them should get to raise ten kids if they want to.

So, adoption. It’s sooo expensive. I know what it is to ache for your baby to come home. Mine never will again but we get to help adoptive moms and dads get their babies in their arms and that is just plain good.


Until next time… 

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

And it's ok...

Somewhere along the line I’ve realized that I think I’ve lost the right to admit that sometimes my kids drive me bat (insert expletive if desired) crazy.

Today a friend and I were discussing how ready we are for school to start. I am so ready for school to start! My seven year old is off the charts brilliant and loathes ever ever ever being alone… like ever. So, he gets bored in roughly 37 seconds and follows me around the house saying repeatedly “what are you doing, Mommy?” or “How long until (insert event here)?” Yesterday we were heading from my bedroom to the living room. Halfway there it occurred to me that the air-conditioner had cranked itself up to 85 and I should crank it back down lest we all melt (the constant thermostat battle is a whole other story for another day). In the time it took for me to turn around, take three steps back and push a button a few times Isaiah had realized I was no longer following him, retraced his steps and was asking “Why did you turn around!?” like I had kicked his puppy. Oi…

In short the kid is driving me nuts. But at some point somewhere in my head I decided that I wasn’t allowed to admit that.

I know. I know how much I would miss absolutely everything about him, even the things that drive me nuts now. I know.


But here’s the thing. I’m a mom. I’m human. The death of my amazing, beautiful, beloved son did not transform me into a perfect human being. If anything it made me more frail, more prone to slip ups and certainly more emotionally vulnerable. I’m stressed. I’m sad. I’m tired. I’m incredibly grateful for my children… and sometimes they make me crazy. And that is ok. 

*I was interrupted three times in the writing of this post by said precious seven year old*