Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Our Way

During my divorce I was on the receiving end of many comments. These comments varied widely, and generally said more about the speaker than me, or my situation, as comments often do.

"You mean you won't see your kids EVERY SINGLE DAY?"  Nope. "I would never allow that to happen". Okay. 

"But, won't you miss them?" Yup. 

"What kind of a mother doesn't have her kids ALL the time?" This one. "Even sharing custody with their father is unacceptable."  Actually, studies show that is the best arrangement for the kids. 

"Don't you want to be home with your babies?" Well, they are 3 and 5, in preschool and kindergarten. As a working mom with a career, and now a single mother, It would probably be irresponsible to quit my job and attempt to live off child support and state aid. Not a very good example for my kids either. 

"Maybe you can work it out".  Wow. What a great idea. I guess the last 2 years of both couples and individual therapy was just for giggles. 

People are judgey. We all are. We look at the world through our experience, knowledge and belief filled lenses. When something doesn't fit, we pass judgement. Sometimes in words, sometimes in actions. 

On the soccer field I was the only mom coaching boys kindergarten soccer, AND I was a divorcee. I say divorcee because it sounds sexy. Really I was chubby, hair pulled back, in fleece with a whistle. Still, I felt a little judged being out there, 3 year old on my hip, teaching the boys to kick with the side of their foot not toes, and to spread out for Christmas sake! I
Got some looks. 

Now my kids are 8 and 10. Life is still very challenging. Being a single mom is not easy. I co-parent with someone I would prefer not have as a regular part of my life. I struggle financially. I am
always in a hurry. With all that stress I try to be patient but often fail. If I lose my temper on a walk with my kids, judgey mcjudgerton is sure to walk by with words of wisdom, at the exact moment I DO NOT want to hear them. 

On the upside, I have found love again. For real this time. In it for the long haul. No, we aren't getting married. We are a family. Try explaining that. 

"You're not getting married?" No. "What are you doing". Being in a relationship forever. "Is that a new thing?" Nope. 

"Why don't you get married?"  Been there, done that. 

"What about major healthcare decisions? Death benefits". We will cross that bridge when we get closer to it. 

Domestic partners. Partners for life. Spiritual partners. Lovers. Best friends. Shacking up. Living in sin. Blended family. Call it whatever you want. Give us the stink eye. Support us. Love us. Hate us. 

We are a family. My family. And I would not have it any other way. 

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

True Confessions

While I have spent the past month downsizing, freeing my life of excess and renouncing materialism, I have one secret. I can not downsize my purses. 

I have a lot of purses. Quite possibly somewhere around 50. I can not be sure because an entire bin of "winter" purses is in storage. Right now I just have my "summer" purses out. 

Not long ago I started sharing. If I get a new bag (or two) I give one of my old purses to my friend, Lee. Reduce/Reuse/Recycle. Well, techically I am not reducing. Now Lee has a lot of purses too!

I have consigned at least six bags of clothing, 2 coats and some shoes in the past month. But no purses. 

Bags are my thing, I guess. No matter what size I am they always fit. They can be functional, a fabulous accessory, or both. As far as collections go they are useable, don't collect dust, and sometimes I get lucky and find cash in them!

So, the purses get to stay. I may be downsizing. I may be releasing myself and my family from the burden of "stuff". But I have some great handbags!  Or as we say in olde timey Boston...pock-ah-books!

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Our Cottage

Downsizing is fun. Surprisingly therapeutic. I feel like I am "living my truth" as the big O would say. (Oprah, for all you non-followers). I have happily given away one dining set, 2 bookcases, 2 desks, and (soon to be picked up) a computer armoire and file cabinet. We sold our futon. I brought FIVE car loads of home goods and clothing to the thrift sale at my church. 3 trash bags to the charity bin in town. One car load to Goodwill. I even donated old glasses to the box at the library!
My mom will be storing 9 bins, a bassinet, and a faux Christmas tree in her basement. I will deal with those next winter. Some toys and the dollhouse my dad made me will go to my kids' room there. 
My brother will take the 65 inch tv and the glider with ottoman for his finished basement. I can't part with the glider. I nursed my babies in it. 
The rest will go with us. I anticipate getting rid of even more when I clean out the kitchen and, again when I unpack. 
Our new house is more like a cottage. We have not named her yet. The fact that she is on a lake fills us with so much joy that all other homes pale in comparison. Being on water is the new standard for this family. 

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Catharsis and Keys

Shortly after I wrote my February post, the "The Bitter Taste of Divorce" I finally figured out how to forgive my ex and move on. I just did. Sure, he can still be annoying, challenging, passive aggressive, a bit narcissistic. But at least I am not married to him. 
It was pretty cathartic figuring out this forgiveness. A downright epiphany. Let the trumpets sound! And, then...I realized I was not living the life I want. 
Like, not at all. I have the man, the kids, the dog, the education, the career. But not the life. 
I want vacations. I want date nights. I don't care if I own a home. I am enjoying renting. If something breaks, I call the landlord. 
I want to be debt free. I want to save money. For trips. To Paris. Milan. NYC. LA. Hawaii. 
I have cut every corner, but my life is still too expensive. My upper-middle-class, suburban, Boston community is sucking me dry. 
The good news is, my lease is up. So I can move. And we found it!!! A house on a lake!!!! Only one mile from the town where my kids will continue to attend school. 
Our new house is tiny. TINY. We may as well be camping. And we are all thrilled. There will be fishing, kayaking, ice skating!
This was no small decision. Friends were surprised. They thought we loved our house. We do. But not for the price. And not in any sort of attached way. We like the design. The hardwood floors and real mouldings. We like the idea of being able to hop on the bus to Boston. But we never do it. We never did at the lat house either. 
Some friends were a sounding board for this decision. They were divided as to whether or not this is move is a good idea. 
It wasn't their words of wisdom that guided me to knowing this is right for us. It was my reaction to their advice that led me to my truth. Let's face it, that is where the truth always lay...not on the heads or tails of the coin but rather in how we feel when we realize on which side the coin landed. 
My truth? There it was all along. I don't want all this STUFF. I don't want any more than we need. I want more time. I want more money for travel and fun. I will never get jazzed about being a homeowner. I will never be excited about renovations. If I get psyched for new appliances it will be because the landlord bought them. 
Maybe financial experts would say this is not the best long term investment. Renting. Saving for the trip to Paris I have wanted since I was 12 years old. I have come to realize though that I am not really. looking for financial advice. I was looking to unlock the secrets of a happy life. I finally found a key. Now to see if it is the right one. 
Our adventure has already begun. We are cleaning out, purging, selling, donating. 
We get the key to our new house on July 1. A new chapter. A new day. 

Monday, May 5, 2014

Small Business Mamas

Did you know that more than 80% of women who make more than six figures annually do so through direct sales/network marketing.  I am currently a Mary Kay consultant, and I am building an Isagenix business!

My hometown and fellow Clark University Alumni friend Nicole, and her friend began a super-cute business of their own.  If you have a young child or new baby in your life, please check out Grow with me tee!

http://www.growwithmetee.net/friends-of-gwmt.html


If you use the code hotmama15, you will enjoy a 15% discount! 

And if you are looking for more energy, to gain lean muscle and/or release extra weight, please contact me.  The products I am using are life-changing and I can not recommend them enough!

Monday, April 21, 2014

Deep Thoughts

1. If Maxim has photoshopped women on it's cover every month, why doesn't Cosmo have photoshopped men? I don't need to see MORE photoshopped women, thanks. 

2. Crutches have been around since, like 1527. Why hasn't anyone invented something better yet? #milliondollaridea

3. It's 2014, people. Why isn't Rosie the Robot cleaning my house? Why don't cars fly? #jetsons

4. I hope that people who clean the port-a-potty at concerts and so forth get paid a shit ton of money. 

5. Why is there only one version of the alphabet song?

Sunday, April 20, 2014

How to thank a teacher...

There are several ways to thank a teacher. A simple note will do. We love gift cards too. But an often overlooked show of gratitude is to write a letter to the superintendent. You can cc the teacher, and it will go in their personnel file, especially if you mention in the letter that you would like it added to their file. It is kind of a big deal. Often parents chip in for a class gift, send in goodies or a gift card. These are all appreciated. A well crafted letter is free, and an especially appreciated way of letting us know we are doing a good job. By "we" I mean all school personnel: guidance counselors, nurses, ot, pt, speech pathologists, admin assistants, anyone who has helped you and/or your child navigate the public school system in a helpful or meaningful way!

Sunday, February 9, 2014

The bitter taste of divorce.

People can be mean. Downright, cruel. I have experienced my fair share. Believe me, when I tell you, that despite any kindness and honesty that I put out into the world, I have actually been confronted with evil. 

I believe in forgiveness. Even when all is lost, and you don't think that you can forget a wrong, forgiveness is a gift you give yourself. 

There is one wrong, however, I don't think I will ever get past. 

When I was going through, what both parties agreed to attempt, an amicable divorce, my now ex-husband, tried to prove me "unfit" as a mother. 

My lawyer laughed in his face. She said this would cost roughly $200,000, take at least 2 years, and in the end, I would still win custody. I could see the fear in his eyes...not that I would end up with custody, but that he would have to pay $200,000. He really loved HIS money. 

After our daughter was born, I had a lot on my plate: a two year old son, an infant daughter, a commute that included driving 30 minutes in the opposite direction from my work for the only day care I felt comfortable with (I later found someone near my work who was wonderful) and a husband who refused to help with the drive to and from daycare, housework, and with whom I was rapidly falling out of love. 

I will give him this...he was a hands on dad. He changed diapers, gave baths, cooked, and was present. However, as our marriage was failing, he spent more and more time in the yard doing landscaping. Eventually, this was all he did on Saturdays and Sundays. 

Meanwhile, when my daughter reached 6 months, I stopped nursing. It was sooner than I had hoped but there was insufficient time in my workday to pump, and the whole experience was more of a challenge than a pleasure. I could not handle any more stress. 

At this time, I was also experiencing a flood of emotions. Hormones were in flux.  I was overwhelmed. Sadness turned inward to a very dark place. Twice I thought about ending my life. 

I was sleeping a lot. I could barely wait for my husband to get home from work (about an hour after me) to get into bed. Eventually, I was only awake to function and was skeeping whenever I could. 

I was diagnosed with post-partum depression. Started medication and felt better! However I still had little energy. I was still sleeping a lot. I tried exercise but felt more out of shape then ever, even though I was back down to my pre-pregnancy weight. I was fatigued. 

My ex and I went to counseling. He kept complaining about how I was not myself. He refused to believe he needed to do anything different. Our therapy was all about me and how I needed to change. "This is how I am and I am not changing anything" he said. So I refused to go anymore. 

Of course, our life together got worse. We tried counseling again, to no avail. At home we weren't arguing, we were merely co-existing. Roomates with separate lives. 

And I was still tired when we decided to divorce. Exhausted. It was a Friday night at our last counseling session. I had brought it up the week prior. I said something like, "I can keep trying for another year but then we will have to revisit this". He sat with that for an entire week then drove me to counseling knowing he was about to ask for a divorce. He could have let me take my own car!

I have to  be honest, I was shocked! I always thought I would be the one to officially end the marriage. I truly believed that my statement the week prior had bought me a year. A year to either fix my marriage or get my ducks in a row for life on my own. I spent the whole weekend functioning in between bursts of the worst sobbing episodes if my life. I asked him if we could stay together for the children, multiple times. He just kept saying no. I suggested we take a vacation, just the two of us, go away for a week, and try to reconnect, for our kids. He said, "In this economy? This is no time to take a vacation!"  It was 2009. Vacations were cheap and he had over $400,000 in the bank. Right then I knew that I was crazy to even be trying. Embarrassed, even. I did not want to be married to this person any longer. 

I really have no idea what he was thinking in the months that followed. I did discover several disturbing things as we went through the process of deciding custody.  He did not want me to be the custodial parent. He claimed that it wasn't about money (I am sure learning about child support was a rude awakening) but that he "had just as much a right to the children as I did". 

I came up with a plan that my lawyer said had "generous" visitation. The kids would live with me but he would see them every Tuesday and Thursday 5-8 and every other weekend Friday night-Monday morning. 

He did not agree. He said they would live with him and I could have that visitation. I said "no way". And so it began. 

I learned that my then husband would use my mental health problems against me. Although, I had been well for over a year he tried to make it appear as though I was actively depressed. I was still sleeping a lot (hold that thought). I learned that he had saved a phone message that I had left him a year prior, asking him to come home because I had a challenging day with the kids. He had also acted concerned to our daycare provider, and asked her questions about my disposition then took things she said out of context and included them in our custody battle. He took conversations with our wacky neighbors, comments I had made on a blog I shared with 3 girlfriends about parenting and even gave his lawyer an incorrect diagnosis and wrote all of this in an affidavit to attempt to prove me unfit. 

I was devestated. How could someone who 9 years prior, stood before friends, family and God (my God, he is an atheist) and say for better/worse, richer/poorer, and in sickness/health, turn around and use those very things against me? How could someone who allowed the brunt of parenting to fall on my shoulders, who left me alone with our children for a week while he went on a business trip, say that I could not parent?

I had plenty to say about this. Both to his face and in an affidavit of my own. But I did not want a war, even knowing I would "win". That win would be at my children's expense. I just wanted out. 

So I talked to people. Experts. Social workers, psychologists, friends, parents with varied arrangements. I researched. I came up with a shared custody plan that we could all live with. And I got the hell out of there. 

Barely four months after agreeing to divorce, we stood before a judge and severed our marriage. A week later I bought my own home. This was an exciting, trying and exhausting time. 

There it is again. Exhausting. Tired, fatigued. I figured it was stress. Or leftover from my battle with depression. But it was more. 

Three months after moving into my own home I suffered an acute coronary incident. Chest pain that had been lingering for several days was something very serious. My left, anterior, decending artery was clogged. The nickname for this type of heart attack is "the widow maker". Bad genes, stress and the extra twenty pounds I had recently gained created a perfect storm. 

I had a good attitude though. I was neither male, nor married, so I figured I would survive...since I had no one to make into a widow. 

Survive, I did. Who took the day off to see me in recovery after my cardiac cath and stent placement? My ex. And I was upset. 

Not just a little either. Stark, raving, mad. Very angry. Pissed. My cardiologist wanted to send him away. My family thought I was out of line. They thought it was nice of him to show up. 

I though to myself, "Really? Seriously?" This man, who abandonded me when my health problems were MENTAL HEALTH problems and not only ignored me, but used those health problems against me in our divorce, is now going to show up because I am at death's door with medical issues that he is more comfortable with? Seriously? Go away!

I have forgiven many things in my life. I can even forgive all of the ways his actions hurt me. But I am a mom, and his actions affected my kids, and continue to do so daily. I have my own guilt to contend with. I don't know how I will ever forgive him trying to prove me unfit. 

I love my children more than anything, ever. I would do anything for them. I would have even stayed in a marriage I did not want to be in, if it meant their happiness. I will be a better parent if I learn to let the pain, bitterness and anger go. I constantly try. I am amicable with their dad. I communicate with him constantly. We still make decisions for them together and rarely argue. I want to forgive, for myself and for my children. But I have not figured out how to let it go. Not yet.