A Stormy Wake

In the dead of winter when the sun rises cautiously and sets eagerly, when the temperatures are bone chilling, and the snow stands tall, we can count on the predictability of the season like following a good roadmap.

But today was a dark, stormy Monday filled with torrential rains, hurricane force winds, humid warmth, and a foggy mist enveloping everything. The familiar was foreign, much like my life. Mr. Ex does not live here anymore and when I opened my eyes on this first Monday morning I heard the storms outside, and in the discomfort of my warm bed, was smacked with the reality of life as I now know it.

Still trying to see through my tired eyes in the darkness of this morning, when I turned on my computer I noticed a comment on yesterday’s post (The First Day…Again,) from a fellow blogger who said “Congratulations!” At first I was not sure what to make of that sentiment, after all I’m still raw and disoriented. I go from moments of regular routine to ultimate surreal living as I try to maneuver through all the emotions and logistics of this situation. “Congratulations.” Interesting.

Before I realized that the comment was from a very articulate, veteran divorcee with a wonderful blog, I immediately thought one recently removed husband, Mr. Ex, wrote the comment. He has been fairly unpleasant to me in the past, so I unfairly accused him of sending me a sarcastic and nasty remark.

I try not to get lost in the evil events of our marriage, but sometimes it’s hard to forget what has left our family with unhealed battle wounds. The scars of addiction, betrayal, distrust, and emotional torture exist right at the surface of our daily lives. A wake of destruction.

The recent job loss brings up a chain of emotional reaction starting with the anger that if there was no gambling addiction we would not be left here drowning in debt and now unsure of any financial stability, let alone security. Our lives, our children’s lives, our family was destroyed in years of wasted misery. I hate thinking about it, talking about it, living it, but it exists. Even now, with the dissolution of our marriage, it exists.

Today’s angry weather exemplifies my life. The flooding, the power outages, the traffic accidents, the crowded emergency rooms, all byproducts of the elements…the shredding, the tears, and the pain, all byproducts of a marriage filled with many recent storms and devoid of true love.

As I move from the illusion of a happy marriage into the reality of the death of an unhappy one, I will learn to embrace the congratulations I received on this bleak morning of painful unfamiliarity. What we can really only count on is the weather changing. Feelings changing. People changing. And life changing.

Uncomfortable Unknowns

The house of cards keeps tumbling down.  One minute I’m in a very relaxed place of deep yoga peace, the next I am jolted and shocked by a phone call from one now unemployed Mr. Ex.  He was laid off from his job today…after just moving out of our home a few days ago.

The changes keep coming, faster than imagined, and certainly without predictability.  I began this week realizing that Mr. Ex’s recovery and the rest of the family’s ability to heal could not happen under the same roof.  I learned a little bit each day about what that meant and how that feels, nothing I had ever experienced.   

Then before I could even settle into that change, at the end of this already difficult week of serious happenings, he unexpectedly lost his job.  Not exactly what I planned for.  But we aren’t always given warning when the curve balls of life come out of left field.   

It’s the unknowns that can be a little unnerving–the discomfort in the not knowing.  This is especially tricky for somebody who tries to fix things, who seeks resolution, who needs answers and predictability, something to cling to in the moment to get through to the other side. 

But that’s not always possible.  Sometimes we have to hang around with our discomfort, and find peace in that.  In yoga it’s referred to as comfortable discomfort.  Holding poses until you think you can’t hold on anymore, then just going for another minute, another breath.  I have practiced this for years, I should be used to it by now. 

But it’s not easy, living with uncomfortable unknowns requires strength, patience, and remembering that the unknown is opportunity in disguise.  One leap of faith can change everything.  Unexpected news can actually get you going, propel you into a better place, into a change that makes sense, that makes a difference. 

I’ll cling to that as I live through these uncomfortable unknowns, and let them enlarge the future.  The stars are aligning and what is in store will be revealed, and it will be all good, and right, and peaceful, and fulfilling.

A Time for Change

Once again I find myself facing change.  Somewhere deep inside of me I drew out the courage to tell Mr. Ex that I can’t live with our situation the way it is anymore.

Not sure where it came from, but after a lot of conflict resulting from his addiction and struggles of recovery, a lot of hard work with clinicians, a lot of soul-searching, and a pause away from the daily grind, I realized that we needed to break from the pain we continue to cause each other.

I surprised myself when I heard the words coming out of my mouth…even though we have gone through this in the past when I first found out about the addiction.  But it was deeper than that for me now, and for him.  Looking back through the years there have been multiple emotional balls we have both been juggling, but instead of juggling we have just thrown the balls at each other.

Neither of us wanted to recognize the emotional disconnect that we have had, which then became complicated with an addiction.  His gambling was a byproduct of all of his personal internal issues, and he turned to gambling to try to fix them.  This of course led to disastrous results that he is now working hard to overcome. 

I fought my way through my own demons on a different path, seeking fulfillment of my destiny and dreams through empowerment, truth and wholeness, and we found ourselves on two very different roads. 

I hoped and believed that he could be somebody he is not, and learned to see that in the context of my reality.  His internal unhappiness, my inability to fix that, and our differing needs have propelled us both into change.  So I stopped and asked myself if I am willing to see and do things differently for the greater good of both of us.  I had to come into an acceptance of what is, instead of having unmet expectations that then create sadness.

So as I figure out how to move into this change I remind myself of a few things:

The best thing I can do is to take care of myself and focus on what is in my control.  Change is a chance to grow.  It can offer hopefulness, provide opportunities, new paths to follow.   I move forward with a mind to persevere, a smile, and courage in my heart.   I hope he will do the same.

Every Day, A New Dawn

I never know what the day will bring when I put my feet on the floor in the morning.  I used to wake up and feel apprehensive about what might happen…be it more discovery on the gambling problem, or emotional fallout from my son’s autism, find another problem with our 250-year-old house, have some kind of health issue re-surface, there was a period of time that I did not feel optimistic about the sunrise leading me into a day that was not full of chaos and confusion.

But that changed.  I don’t know how or when or what even caused the shift, but I began to greet each day with hope that things would be ok no matter what, and I could handle whatever came my way with strength, grace, and courage.   I think I just got tired of being miserable and changed my mind.  Literally.

With that subtle shift in thinking, my days became more tolerable.  People started to notice my ability to smile no matter what was going on around me.  My wise friend B was the first to ask me how on earth I looked and sounded like my life was fine and peaceful when in fact it was not…and I was unable to answer that with any kind of factual basis for my presentation.

But each day it became more clear to me that with each new dawn there is an opportunity to be open to what comes your way and in that receptiveness, find something good…even when it may be otherwise disguised. 

I recently had one of those days.  I began with the normal routine of kids going to school and my daily administrative management of my family’s life.  But I later learned that my teenage son had done some experimenting with tobacco…which left me upset, confused and unsure how to address it.  I did not feel good at first, in fact just the opposite.  But I turned it around and found some positive.  He told me the truth, on his own.  He knew it was wrong, and he told me he needed to be honest.  We talked about it and we ended the day with a stronger bond because of it. 

Every day unfolds like a story in our lives.   How often do we notice what that story is?  I like to look at the dawn of each day as a fresh start, and a chance to use yesterday’s gained wisdom and experience to create a better today and an even better tomorrow.

Surviving Teen Angst

“Mom don’t freak out when I tell you this.”   Not a sentence a mother really wants to hear from her 16-year-old son while she’s doing the dinner dishes.  I took a deep breath, and I said, “What.”   I prepared myself for what I thought might be coming…only listening to the very silent pause from a boy who wanted to share with his mother that he was not passing half of his classes and was sidelined from the basketball team until his grades came up.  Basketball is his life.    

There were so many other things that he could have told me…I silently breathed a sigh of relief.  This was not a surprise since I had already heard about it from his therapeutic school social worker, but I did not tell him I knew.

What I wasn’t prepared for was what came next.  “The problem is that Dad…”  His father’s ears then perked up from the other room when he heard “Dad,” and he came in and sat at the kitchen table with us.  Our son went on to tell us in a very escalated tone that he had been holding his anxiety inside for a very long time about his father’s gambling issues and fallout, the need to sell our house, his lack of freedom and space, his proximity to age 18 and his desire to leave home, and how now his whole life was suffering because of it.

The father handled the situation very well, he listened to his son and he interjected thoughtful, supportive, and heartfelt responses.  But that was not what the teenager wanted to hear.  He simply wanted to express things that had been upsetting him and now his grades, his mood, his personal world was shaken by his feelings. 

As I listened to my son I recalled a time during my teen years that I felt very much the same way for different reasons.  As hard as I tried to validate his feelings, they were rejected, probably the same way that I responded to my own parents.  I survived, so did my parents. 

The more my son spoke, the more upset he got until his fuse popped.   It was hard to watch him express his angst.  My son had recently discovered that many people knew about his father’s issues, and he felt his own persona had been destroyed.   Teens lives are very public now, with social networking websites, cell phones and texting, there is very little privacy.  The easy access to the outside world, being conscious of perceptions, feeling judged, he was hurt, he was angry, and it was affecting every area of his life. 

While having a parent recovering from an addiction and its side effects is hard enough, experiencing overall angst is such a normal part of being a teenager.   I remembered some advice I had recently gotten from one of my son’s clinicians:

She told me to be the voice of reason and calmness when my teen tells me something…freaking out won’t solve anything.  Check.  

She told me to give my teen my undivided respectful attention when he wants to talk.  Check. 

And she told me to not give him too much advice, to let him think through the problem on his own and help him have confidence in himself to problem solve.  Check.

Before he went to bed he seemed a little better.  I listened to him, I stayed calm, and I told him why I was proud of how he was handling his feelings, even if his grades had slipped and he was off the basketball team for the moment.  It’s fixable. 

He still has a few years ahead of him on the rollercoaster of teenage angst, part of the journey to adulthood.  Now I just have to learn to get through the teen years from the other side.  Survival at its best all over again.

All You Have Is All You Need

Coming off of a holiday filled with abundance, presents being dropped on our doorstep anonymously, gifts cards arriving in the mail from far away places, enough food to feed a small village, it gave me pause for thought on having, needing, wanting, and achieving abundance and prosperity.

My family does not lack.  No, we do not have an unlimited bank account, in fact, just the opposite with a substantial gambling debt, but we still do not lack. Mr. Ex has a good job, two in fact, and the bills are paid on time.  The children are involved in many extracurricular activities, often on scholarship or through state services provided due to my son’s circumstances, but they are all afforded opportunities to participate in many things. 

We have a house (albeit we are selling to pay the debt,) two cars, an overstock of food, nice clothes, computers, game consoles, televisions in almost every room, music systems, high-speed internet, cell phones, and I haven’t even mentioned heat all winter, central air all summer, trips along the shore (thanks to a mother who lives there,) and the list goes on.

Looking around at what we have fills me with gratitude on a daily basis.  But this was a learned concept, I grew up with material abundance, and I never knew any differently until surviving the life changing school of hard knocks in adulthood.  I have to work hard to instill gratitude into my children, who are used to having what they want, but maybe don’t have an understanding about what they really need, which is internal happiness no matter the external situation.

Mr. Ex did not grow up the way I did, he had what he needed physically—food, shelter, clothing, but not what he needed emotionally—a loving family providing emotional nurturing.  He has worked hard to offer that to his children and did up to a point when his addiction took over, something he is now trying to fix.   But he still yearns for material things on a regular basis.  The conflict is a very real, visible struggle.

This is not about Mr. Ex’s want of things, or my children’s worldly desires, or even my own wish list; this is about understanding that all we have is all we need.  And really, all we have in the material world is much more than what we need. 

Abundance is much more than having things.  Abundance is about an overflowing fullness of the heart.  It is simplicity of life, grace, ease, comfort, cheer, happiness, sufficiency and satisfaction.   It is looking around your life and seeing the reality of all that you have and feeling how prosperous you really are over and above your tangible environment.

Prosperity is often defined in a financial context, but we forget that we can be prosperous in other areas of our lives…health, well-being, peace of mind, restfulness, friendships, values, favor, joy.  It is what truly exists for us in a more ethereal sphere. 

We can even be abundantly prosperous…living a live filled with gratitude for everything around us, everything in us.   Committing to feeling good, optimism, and back to a familiar theme of mine—hope and belief in all things, present and possible.

Feeling abundant and prosperous in our lives despite our situation and circumstances is a personal choice that must be grown and nurtured, felt and cherished.  It’s about shifting thinking from lack to plenty, to soundness and stability both physically and emotionally. 

Just for a minute each day think about all you have and be grateful for it. Then watch what you attain and feel it start to fill you up in ways you never imagined.

Anniversary Cupcakes

Mr. Ex and I recently had our 20th wedding anniversary.  This momentous occasion certainly was not what I expected when we said our “I do’s” 20 years ago.  Time has changed a lot of things.

I knew the anniversary was coming of course, but did not know what to do about it since our marriage has been strained with the discovery of his gambling addiction.  The toll on the family and the toll on the couple is substantial.  But the lack of the partnership is enormous.

A person with an addiction focuses on one thing and one thing only—their fix.  I was not part of that and most of the time unknowingly got in the way.  With addiction comes a great internal lack of fulfillment that is sought through the addiction but never obtained except for a fleeting moment.

No one can meet the needs of an addict, it must come from within, something I have recently learned.  Mr. Ex has also recently learned this and is working to fill a lifetime of a fairly empty inner well of unmet needs.  This is no easy task.  The road is a terribly difficult one for him and for those around him.

So our anniversary came.  And I got him cupcakes.  Two big, fancy, beautifully decorated, frosting-laden, cupcakes.  Why?  Not sure.  He had admired these artful cupcakes several times when passing by an upscale bakery, so that is what I got him.  One vanilla, one chocolate, different in flavor and color, different in style and decoration, decadent but sinful.   The yin and yang of our lives together.  They were each put in their own attractive box surrounded by pretty and delicate tissue, to protect each cupcake in its beauty, to not damage their edible perfection…cupcakes to be cherished, not broken or crumbled by stronger forces.

After I brought the cupcakes home in their two separate and unique square boxes, I stopped to think about this gift gesture on a milestone anniversary when the miles have worn us down.  I wanted to embrace the occasion but was having a hard time.  It was a day to celebrate but was cloaked in disenchanting sorrow.  

Mr. Ex rose to the occasion with a bouquet of beautifully colored roses in an elegant vase tied with a big, fluffy ribbon, and a box of gourmet chocolate chip cookies…my favorite.  The card was lovely, filled with sentiment about our years together.  He did a great job of trying to make our anniversary special, even after working all day at two different jobs—his regular job and the second one that he has to pay the gambling debt.  I tried to be happy but had mixed feelings.  I let him down by not responding to our anniversary with similar enthusiasm.

Being married to a recovering addict and the impact of that is not what I had hoped for or dreamed of as a young bride.  The realization of the loss of the fairy tale has been hard for a girl who believes in them. 

The two, big, sparkling, fluffy cupcakes partly symbolize the hope, but not the reality of our time together.  We didn’t eat the cupcakes.  They are still sitting in their separate boxes next to a bottle of champagne and a vase of beautiful roses.

Not As Clean As The Pure Driven Snow

There is nothing like a beautiful powdery snowfall…white, crisp, clean, pure.  But it doesn’t last.  It melts, it gets dirty, muddy, and it’s messy, kind of like the heart to heart I had with my husband this morning about my internal conflict over where we each are in our own lives.  It started out well and ended up messy. 

I’m a fairy tale type of girl and for years have always thought it possible for that clean, pristine snow to last forever.  But I’ve slowly begun to realize that is just not based in reality.

I have always tried to fix things, people, and lives to keep things neat and clean.  But I recently had an awakening that maybe things can be different and maybe I need to rely on myself, not other people to keep my world in a semi-pristine state. 

If you’ve read my blog at all, you know that my husband is recovering from a gambling addiction, one it looks like he had for longer than I realized.  It was a shock that rocked all off our worlds.  He has come clean with me and we have struggled, as with any addiction there are relapses and recovery periods.  While he does get therapeutic help, there are still repercussions.

Don’t get me wrong, my husband has provided well for us for many many years.   But as a result of this addiction, I have felt that a lot of my children’s and my emotional needs have not been met.  This has been devastating.

On the flip side my husband frequently points out to me that the reason this addiction started is because his needs were not being met, originally by his parents, and later by me.  While I know logically that someone’s addiction is their own and people make choices, I still have a hard time reconciling the fact that I am often partly blamed for this addiction, and I cannot seem to give up the hope that my needs will eventually be met.

So what do you do when you have a marriage that is in two totally different places and each of you has very different needs?  That is my dilemma right now, it’s quite a struggle. 

I know my husband is trying, and I do give him a lot of credit for that.  He is holding down two jobs, is providing for his family, taking care of his children, and is in therapy.  A lot for anyone to manage. 

In a perfect world he would be in a more intensive recovery program, but with the reality of what has to be done to pay off the gambling debt he has very limited time.  He does choose to spend the free time that he has with his boys, re-building the respect and trust that he has lost.  The boys are slowly coming around, but it takes time.  They love him dearly and they want nothing more than to believe that this is as real as the fresh-fallen snow.

I, on the other hand, like everything in a neat little box tied with a white satin ribbon.  I would like guarantees of no more broken promises and no more hurt.  But I know that’s not possible.  Right now at this period in my life I am struggling with the fact I may never be able to meet my husband’s needs, nor he, mine.  So where we go from here, I don’t know.

Carefully Clean Part 2

Sitting in the waiting room of the ophthalmology office today I noticed some strands of hair on my clothing, so I started to pull them off one by one and without thought dropped them on the floor.  I then decided to brush my hair.  It’s long, I was running late this morning and instead of being late to my appointment (although why rush, the wait at the eye doctor is always atrocious,) I left my hair wet from the shower, grabbed a Poptart and hit the road.  When I settled in to my waiting room seat I noticed the hair…the picking and brushing ensued, and the lady two chairs down from me said, “There is a trash can somewhere you know.”  In my quiet surprise I realized that I had offended her with my minor grooming, and as always it gave me an opportunity to reflect.  (And also noticed the trash can right next to my chair—egads.) 

Yesterday’s post (Coming Clean,) was about my innate nature to clean and clean up my home and those around me, but I apparently gave NO THOUGHT to that in public.  I do, of course, at other people’s houses, but not like I do at my own, and not at all in public?  What’s that all about?  It’s not like I was picking my nose and wiping it on the waiting room furniture, and my hair was clean, still damp even, so is that as disgusting as the lady sitting two chairs away thought it was, enough to say something to me about it?  Apparently.

Then I was called to be seen and the first thing I did was ask the nurse if the eye machines were cleaned in between patients.  I never saw anyone wipe them off but she assured me they do.  Ironic after being called out loud on my public hair dropping.

I love my eyes, they are probably my favorite vital organ.  I am so grateful to see.  As I’ve gotten a tiny bit older I’ve noticed my vision seems to be deteriorating a tiny bit right along with me.  The doctor reassured me that this is normal at this age and will last about 10 years before leveling off…great.  So does that mean that my mother, who after years of instilling a perfectly clean, neat and tidy environment into my consciousness but then at midlife sort of gave up caring about dirt just did that because she couldn’t see it anymore?  Not being able to see less than perfectly clean surroundings may be a double-edged sword.  I can’t see it so I don’t clean it, which then lessens my habitual clean and germ-free “problem,” but my eyes aren’t as good as they used to be and they are my most valued and precious organs?  I would not trade vision for dirt any day. 

My friend G said in her comment to my Coming Clean post that she has started to leave things a little unorganized and maybe it has to do with middle age, but I’m not so sure yet.  My friend J may have hit the nail on the head when she said that she never believes I will play in the mud with my grandchildren and to let go of that dream… But I really did stop today when someone I did not know looked me in the eye and was grossed out by my strands of hair being dropped on the floor.  Now I actually can’t believe I did that.  If my kids did that I would have been a little upset…and if they did it at home I would have made the get out the vacuum… I guess I am a little over the top when it comes to cleaning up at home.  But why not in public?   Why would I not think about the fact that somebody has to clean up whatever mess I make?  I know firsthand how exhausting and annoying it is to clean up after other people having three sons, a cat, and a husband.  And worse, why would I not care enough to even not do that in front of other people?

Not sure I have the answer to these questions yet.  But I certainly did realize that I need to be a little more conscious of how I could do something offensive to a stranger in public.  The woman sitting two chairs down probably had no idea what a profound effect her question had on me today.  We made eye contact once more before leaving the office.  I looked at her hair.  It was short.  It probably falls out too, she may just not realize it.  Wonder what her house looks like?  I bet it’s clean.  And my eyes got a clean bill of health too.  Whew. 

 

 

Coming Clean

Tonight as I wondered what I would write about, I was talking with my friend J on the phone who heard the smoke detector go off when too much shower steam was filling the hallway and we got to talking about how my kids shower nightly, go to bed clean, and then rolled into a dominoing conversation of my clean house, clean laundry, clean dishes, clean everything, and she told me I had to come clean with my borderline obsessive cleanliness “problem.”    

Many people have told me that I remind them of a famous blonde haired woman with eight children who has a popular reality tv show…a little obsessive about cleanliness, neat and tidiness, and even with eight children sticks to certain rules like washing hands before and after eating, bathing nightly before bed, and sometimes more if needed, never wearing the same thing twice without washing it, clean feet as much as possible, really running a tight ship on how to keep her family and house clean.  I can barely do that with three kids, let alone trying to keep eight kids clean and germ-free.  But I have been sarcastically compared to this “Great Mom of Eight” over and over again.

I grew up in a very clean, very neat and tidy household, where trash was really not allowed in the wastebaskets, bathrooms and the kitchen were cleaned daily, and you could basically eat off of the floor.  Clothes, toys, any and all items, were always promptly put in their proper locations after use or by the end of the day.  Beds were made every morning no matter what.  There were no stacks of papers, no piles of shoes, the house was dusted weekly, everything was organized, color-coded, arranged by size and shape. 

I thought I would grow up and be a little less stringent on being neat and tidy, but sadly did not.  In fact, I continued on the path of the perfect presentation, and came to recognize the pattern fairly quickly, but didn’t do anything to stop myself from being Mrs. Clean.  I almost prided myself on it, people always commented on how clean and organized everything always was in my home.  Eventually I realized that this was my way of controlling things, the only way I could feel in control was to have my surroundings clean and in order.  Less chaos in my environment=less chaos in my mind. 

Then I had children.  Messes got messier, time moved more quickly, there wasn’t enough energy or time in the day to keep the house and the children clean, cleaned up and organized, but somehow I managed to figure it out, regardless of how worn down I was.  I was one of those moms that never let her kids play in the dirt.  Sandboxes, sure, dirt and mud?  Not so much.  I had sparkling clean kids from head to toe.  Family members used to say that the reason my kids eventually became easily susceptible to sickness was because I never exposed them to regular old dirt and germs so they never built up their immune systems. (I don’t disagree with that now.)   If I had purchased stock in baby wipes, which I quickly learned cleaned a lot more than diaper areas, we would be very very wealthy.  I buy enough of them to this very day, and use them on everything, they make keeping people and things clean a lot easier, and then they go right into the trash.  Brilliant concept!  

A couple of years ago I got very sick, worse than I ever had in my entire life, and I became quite afraid of germs because of it.  It was a virus that has taken years to recover from, and I’m not even there yet, so I’m still working on not cleaning my family and house in disinfectant wipes anti-bacterial soaps and gel on an hourly basis.  I think having that illness was the only time in my life I was too sick to worry about whether things were clean or not.  It was almost a little free-ing, it was a relief to not think about it, but I had to get so sick that I was hospitalized to not care.  It didn’t last long, as soon as I could put my feet back on the floor I reverted to my old ways.  But my wonderful family did do everything they could to try to maintain themselves and the house in their cleanest states as best as they could while I was unable.  God love them for trying. 

When our house went on the market I had an excuse to perpetuate the perfectionist nature of my personality.  I didn’t have to pretend that I wanted to keep the house cleaned up, but I truly had to.  Actually it was even a little pressureful for me, when keeping it like that was on my terms that was fine, but now I had to do it on other terms.  Well, I supposed I didn’t really have to, but that old pride kicked in and I needed to have the cleanest, most presentable, magazine-perfect house on the market.  And I did.  A year into that it got very hard to keep up, but I forced myself to do it day in and day out.  It was exhausting. 

It’s not OCD, it’s just habitual.  It doesn’t really affect all aspects of my life, other than the fact that my children mock me continuously but have caught themselves doing things and then under their breath say, “Thanks to my mother I am now a little germaphobic.”  I even heard my oldest son offering to go clean up and clean my friend J’s house, she is the opposite of me (in a good way,) and he said, “My mom and I would have your house cleaned in no time.  I think I her OCD ways have rubbed off on me.”   Oops. 

I vowed to never do that to my kids, but I have, indirectly.  I know that it is a learned behavior, I got it from my mother, who ironically at some point just past midlife gave up cleaning.  It was a shocking and disturbing thing to see happen after growing up with white glove tests and having perfect presentation be everything.  Now when I go to her house I clean it, I’m not sure if she doesn’t see it or doesn’t care, but it’s definitely not the kind of clean environment I grew up in.  Can’t wait for that gene to kick in on me so that I can stop wanting everything to be clean and picture-perfect.  I also noticed that my Mom of eight role model has eased up off of her semi-obsessive, clean and germ-free living. 

A very famous comedian has a book coming out next week on this exact topic—germophobia and what it’s like living with that, for many years secretly, and now in the public eye.  He referred to his “meet and greets” of his fans after his shows as “germ and squirms.”  Sadly I get that.  I carry antibacterial gel in my purse, have it in the car, all over the house, in the kids’ backpacks…you get the picture.  I am looking forward to reading the book so that I can have a little insight into how I might be able to learn to let go of clean, learn to love dirt, and be able to not care so much about germs.

In the meantime I have vowed to let it all go when we move.  (Yes, that’s procrastinating letting go of control.)   It is my quest to give up the need to live in a completely clean and organized environment.  Wonder if I can do it.  Doubt it.  But I’ll give it the old college try, and I’ll name my future book, “Desiring Dirt.” 

Ps—For all of my friends, partners, cohorts who lovingly tease me—ok so I admitted it.  Outloud.  In writing.  For my mother–it’s great that you taught me how to have that perfect presentation, even if we both took it a little overboard (ok a lot overboard.) I hope I can learn to live not worrying so much about it like you have. For my children–sorry.  Really, I’m sorry.  And for my future grandchildren–we’ll play in the mud, splash in puddles, roll in the leaves, have food fights, and then I’ll send you home to your mother, who hopefully will fully embrace messiness…and my conscience will be clean.

« Older entries

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.