Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Status update

I have to say, so far things are going well! I don't know if it is my change in outlook, the spring weather (because we all know winter makes everyone a bit more testy), or the fact that the kiddo is finally sleeping in 7 hour increments (I'm sure that getting sleep in 2 hour snatches has nothing to do with being in a bad mindset), but I feel much better with life. Daily life is still the constant struggle as far as the motions, and I do have to work at it to stay positive, but it is coming easier to me. I am able to accept that my husband coming home hours late just means he got wrapped up in work, and not wonder if he is avoiding me. I'm able to wake up and have breakfast without being annoyed that it's always me who has to wake up with the kid. It's a good week.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Who am I, part 2



Who am I – part 2 

Ok, so, re-discovering me. How the heck do I do that? Can someone please write to Stacy and Clinton and ask them to come do it for me? They certainly have one heck of a track record.

Here is the old me. This is what the old me would say when I ask who I am.

I’m a writer (kind of). I’m a mom (who’s struggling). I work (but my job isn’t special). I’m a wife (but kind of sucking at it). I’m no-one special.

Now I look at that, and I think “what if that was what my daughter thought of herself?” because, whether it is good or bad, she IS going to build part of her identity according to what I think of myself, for better or for worse. So no more being down on myself!

This is the identity of the new me.

I’m an author who has published an archaeology journal, as well as a fantasy fiction novel that is sold on both BarnesandNoble.com as well as Amazon.com AND is selling enough that I have covered my expenses and then some. My book is also going to be featured in a reading club of 50 teachers, has been accepted into a high school reading program where there is 1 (ONE) fantasy book selected per year by a panel of reading specialists and libraries, AND it was put into the pool to be considered for nomination for the VA Reader’s Choice Award (I will find that out next week hopefully). I will also be at an author signing this Saturday. So yes, I’m an author, a real one, and I will say that with pride.

I’m a mom and doing a pretty damn good job of it. My child is healthy, and happy, and growing and developing just like she should be. She is an extremely happy and well-adjusted toddler and I am so proud of how she is turning out to be.

I was able to have the med-free birth I always wanted (and will be proud of that. If people think that me being proud of something that was hard, was work, and yes, IT FREAKING HURT, means that I look down upon them – which I don’t – then that is their own issue and not mine), I pushed past a lot of difficulties and breastfed, and still am breastfeeding my child (and I will be proud of that too, even if other’s don’t think I should be).

I’m a full time worker who is an integral part of the education system. If it wasn’t for me, this building wouldn’t run. The computers would never get turned on, fixed, or replaced. The teachers would never be able to integrate technology into their lesson plans, and the students would not go into the world with a solid understanding of basic technology.

I’m a wife who works hard, every day, to keep her marriage afloat. I do my best to keep everyone fed, clothed, and happy. I clean my house every day and it shows (and I really want to throw a “but” in there. I will not!). I will not apologize for the fact that my house is not “showcase clean”. It is a house that is the residence to 1 dog, 1 cat, 1 chinchilla, 2 very busy adults and 1 very rambunctious toddler. It is a very well used, loved, and explored environment.

I read a wonderful quote the other day on a blog (which I cannot for the life of me remember, so if you are reading this, I’m sorry!) which says: “If you are coming to see me, then come on in. If you are coming to see my house, make an appointment”. From now, this will be my mantra. And if you do find yourself judging my house, the vacuum is in the closet, the laundry hamper in each bedroom, and the paper towels on are the kitchen counter. Knock yourself out.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Top 5 moments that changed my life



Top 5 moments that changed my life, and made me who I am today




This was an exercise that actually came from a spam email, but I like it so I’ll do it! The top 5 moments are not in significant order, just as they pop in my head. Maybe I’ll organize it one day, but it’s hard to know which had the most impact. I’ll probably write another post when I start thinking of more things that had significant impact.

1) Hearing Kaylee’s heartbeat for the first time.

There’s a story to this (isn’t there always?) but I will try to keep it short and sweet.

I had 2 miscarriages before I became pregnant with Kaylee, both around 6 weeks. It took an incredible amount of courage for me to take a hpt when I suspected I was pregnant, and part of me was waiting for the ball to drop.

At 7 weeks, I started bleeding. As I hadn’t visited my new OB yet, I was told to go to the ER. There they drew blood and set me up for an ultrasound. I waited for about 7 hours before we were rolled into the ultrasound room. On the outside, I was calm, collected, even joking with the nurses. On the inside, I was bracing my heart for the words no pregnant woman wants to hear. “There isn’t a heart beat.”

I go into the ultrasound and the tech began moving her magic wand. It was now 1am, so the tech was probably tired, and I imagine an ultrasound tech in the ER doesn’t often get to give good news, so her expression was unreadable. My husband could see the screen, but at 7 weeks there is not much to see, so his expression was also blank.

After looking around, she turns on the sound, and suddenly a rhythmic “thump-thump, thump-thump” fills the room. She flips the screen around and I got my first look at Kaylee, a little blueberry sized blip on the screen. Thanks to awesome imagining programming, we could see blood pulsing through that little blip and the tech told me that everything was currently fine.



2) Putting my pet rat to sleep. That was one of the hardest decisions I have ever made.

3) Having a kid. This post will be ridiculously long if I write how that changed my life. Here is her birth story, and maybe later I’ll write a post on how that changed my life in so many more ways than the obvious.

4) Living through a war (Desert Storm). Also will be a future post.

5) Ending the relationship with my high-school sweetheart. I think that was my first “grown-up” decision, the first time when I realized that sometimes love really wasn’t all you needed.

Friday, April 26, 2013

Who am I?



Who am I?

Does anyone else find themselves asking themselves this question? It came to me this morning at work and I realized that I have no idea who I am. This little kernel was also planted in my head the other day when I was talking with my dad on our daily, hourly, commute to work.

We were talking about college, and how I still felt some guilt over them paying for the bulk of my degree. Now, I did not go to a huge, fancy, expensive college, AND college cost significantly less 10 (eep) years ago than it does now, but it was still a lot of money. I wouldn’t think twice about it except that, minus a 4 month stint after I graduated, I have not had a job in my degree field in the 7 (really?) years since I graduated.

See, I got a degree in Anthropology, with a concentration in Archaeology. At the time, it was the best decision I ever made. That was the lifestyle that I craved, desired, loved. To 18-year-old Kristi, the nomadic lifestyle was the only lifestyle. Living in hotels sounded exotic, traveling the world and recording the lives of humans, both living and non, immersing myself in cultures, being the lone world, OMG it was a dream come true.

And for the 4 years I was in college, I was living the dream. I had a wonderful amount of experiences, met some amazing people, and loved my life. I was able to do archaeology work at several Presidential homes, pre-historic sites, colonial era sites, and everything in between. I formed bonds with people who were just like me, and found people just like me, for (what seemed like) the first time ever.

Then I graduated and realized that I didn’t want the nomadic life anymore. I had a cat, and a boyfriend, and realized that things like health benefits and a steady paycheck were a good thing. Full-time jobs in archaeology, within commuting distance of my home, were non-existent. So I went into retail, and from retail into education, and here I am.

What was I saying? Oh yeah! Identity. So dad and I were talking about how I don’t actually use my degree, and he goes “We (he and my mom) always knew you wouldn’t use your degree after you graduated, that wasn’t the point. The point was having a degree in general, and getting into the world, and just seeing you fit in to a group of people and be so happy to belong to a group was worth every penny.”

Cue…the waterworks. Especially because that group has since dispersed. Some of us keep up on Facebook, sharing wedding announcements and baby pictures, some I haven’t spoken to since they/I graduated. The group that I felt so happy being part of…has since moved on without me.

The real reason it cues the waterworks, though, is because I no longer feel like I belong anywhere. In fact, I no longer feel like I even have an identity. Due to a variety of reasons, I started shedding everything that had made me special or unique and became this…I don’t even know how to describe it. Indescript? Unnoticable? Empty?

Well, no more! I now will consider myself to not have an identity, but consider myself to be a blank canvas where I can discover who I am now. I’m not the same person I was in high school, or even college, so simply sliding back into those identities would not work, but I have the ability to rediscover myself, and that’s exactly what I am going to do.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Starting to write again



It looks like I am going to be around much more! (I can hear the eyes rolling, but this is my goal)

See, when I was younger I use to write in a diary. I wrote a lot. Some days it would just be a giant red-sharpy phrase of “LIFE SUCKS” but most days I would write pages and pages, analyzing my day, my actions, going into why I felt certain ways, what I wanted in life, etc. I had (still have) an old good old-fashioned foot trunk filled with these journals, each carefully labeled with the year. One journal is actually labeled “January 2002 – June 2002”. Yep. A regular journal sized journal that I completely filled in just 6 months. Those 6 months were packed. I got a boyfriend, got dumped by the boyfriend, got a new boyfriend, got my black belt, graduated high school, and went through some major spiritual changes during that time.

But then I stopped writing in journals. I’m not sure exactly why, mostly because I got busy, partially because I didn’t trust my roommates/boyfriend-at-the-time to not read them and distribute the information out to the world, or use it against me in an argument. I tried my hand at blogging, back when blogging was lifejournal/deadjournal or things like that (anyone else remember those? I wish I had printed them off before they de-activated my account, which I’m sure they did after a decade of non-use.

I think I also stopped writing because, once I hit a certain age, doubts and fears became all too real. If I put those doubts, fears, worries into writing, it was acknowledging they exist, and we all know that if we refuse to acknowledge something it totally makes it better , or significantly worse.

Or maybe that’s why I started writing fantasy novels. I started my first book, The Lady of Steinbrekka, during my struggles with infertility. I worked on my second novel, Heart of Kylassame (due out soon!) while I struggled being a mom and a wife and life in general. While LoS does not directly relate to what was going on in my life, HoK was therapy for me. I was able to take the hurt and betrayal and anger I felt towards life and put it into a different person’s life, a life in a different realm, and then I was able to fix it.

So now I’m going to start writing about my real life, because maybe that’s the only way I can fix it. I am probably going to be vague in places, because I do need/want to protect people, but I feel so much better after just doing 3 days of writing, that I feel like it’s a good first step.

Loss Journal



I’ve been reading this book   and it’s been pretty mind-opening to me. The first bit is on loss, and how loss affects us in so many ways, years and years later. I’ll admit, I cried pretty hard reading that section, so I advise for you to read it alone, or warn your loved ones that it’s going to make you weepy.

In the book, Lama Surya Das tells us to make a journal of our losses, because by better understanding what we have lost, we are able to move ahead. Sometimes they are big losses, something they are small. All are equal in our mind, and we must work to let go of them all.

Here are the losses that I come up with right off the bat. I am not going to list which are big and which are small in this post, but maybe I will after time for reflection. Big or small, they have stuck in my head, so they are likely still having an impact on me today. They are not in chronological order, just as they come into my mind

- My high school and college diary which was thrown away on accident by my husband

- The two pregnancies that resulted in early miscarriage

- Innocence and pure-joy of being pregnant which was lost both by the former miscarriages, and by a sub-chrionic hematoma that sent me to the ER early in my last (successful!) pregnancy

- Desert Storm. I was only 5, but we lost our home, our friends, and our safety net all in one day. I will write a post on that later.

- Lost faith in my body due to infertility struggles

- First break-up

- Loss of my image of life as a mother 

- the reality of me and my husband becoming parents, vs what I thought it would be like

- Loss of confidence in myself

- First time I owed taxes when I expected a refund

- First time my job was threatened

- Loss of a cookie shit (somewhat joking, but seriously, where did it go? It bugs me at night)

- Lost friends

- Deaths of pets

- Loss of time, or rather, losing the ability to get done what I needed to do 100% of the time

- Loss of memories

- Loss of energy

- Lost ability to cook (where did it go? It just went poof)

- The fear I felt when told I had gestational diabetes (loss of control, loss of confidence, loss of fairness in the world)

- Having to turn in my beloved VW Passat

- Having credit card debt (loss of financial control)

- Loss of identity (I just don’t know who I am anymore)

- Not knowing what I want to do/be

- My husband (accidentally!) wacking the head off my Amarylis plant right before it bloomed

- My gardens falling victim to the weed-wacker every spring

- Loss of control over my body (it just doesn't go back the same after giving birth)

- Losing my car keys when K was only a few weeks old which made me late for dinner at my parent's house

- losing a library book (I swear, there's a black-hole somewhere in my house where this stuff gets sucked into an alternate universe)

- where does that second sock always end up?

- having to replace our fridge when K was little

- losing power when I was 39 weeks pregnant. It was 100F out. It sucked

- losing power when K was around 1 years old. I had a chest freezer filled to the top with a breastmilk stash so that I wouldn't have to continue pumping at work. It was fine, but it was a terrifying 6 hours without power

- being in contract negotiations for a house for 8 months, only to have to walk away and start over again

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Top 10 Mantras for a new life



Top 10 Mantras to begin my new life 

Okay, so first I feel like I need to put in a disclaimer so no one panics or calls CPS or something. I have no intention (zero, nada,, zilch) of actually leaving my family and starting a new life. My new life starts within, and will soon encompass everyone who is in my current life, and maybe are being dragged through the muck with me.

1) Let it go, and let it be. – I dwell on things hardcore. It’s not healthy and it’s not helpful. I will let things go and let the past be, while taking those lessons and using them in a positive manner

2) The past is the past, I cannot change it. – Basic, but true. I will go over a past event in my head a thousand times, each time getting more depressed/angry/upset. Does this accomplish anything? No, it does not. I will acknowledge my mistakes or disappointments, and then I will move on.

3) I relinquish un-met expectations – Did I mention I dwell on the past? I think I actually get more angry about things I wanted to happen, but didn’t, than I do about things that actually happened.

4) I will do the best I can – What more can you ask for than that?

5) I will accept that doing the best I can, may not equal perfection – Because that’s what "the best" is in my my head. My best no longer has to be perfect, and expecting perfection is setting myself up for disappointment.

6) I am thankful for what I have – I have a lot to be thankful for. I have a wonderful family, a beautiful house, stable finances, and everything my family needs to go about our day to day lives.

7) No time, no whine – This applies to so much. In fact, this was the mantra that allowed me to lose 20 pounds fairly painlessly. I will not whine about my weight unless I am putting in the time to work out and eat healthily. I will not whine about how messy my house is unless I am putting in the time to clean it.

8) I trust in the universe – I’m working on this one. Some day’s it is very hard though.

9) I am who I chose to be – This is a hard one to stomach. I cannot change the actions, thoughts, or attitudes of other but I can control my actions, thoughts, and attitude.

10) I am worth it – I may not believe this one yet, but I will.

I'm done with the way things are


Anyone out there? *taps glass* Oh, there’s someone :)

Here’s the deal. I’m done with the way my life is currently going. I am unhappy. Deeply unhappy. So unhappy that I actually had a dream about being a teenager again when life was good. Why is this an indicator of how unhappy I am, you ask? Because the logical part of me still remembers being a teenager and it was horrible. Yet, the brain has a way of filtering out the bad when I’m in an emotional slump and going “Oh, being a teenager was awesome! You didn’t have financial worries or have to clean a whole house or be responsible for other things staying alive and could spend your day doing whatever you wanted!” Untrue!

I am unhappy with my marriage, my lack of career, my lack of  knowing what I want in a career, and unhappy with how I constantly feel like I am failing as a mother (something my parents and husband assure me is in my mind, you moms know what I’m talking about).

I am just done.

Then, last night I had a dream. I was my current age. I was standing in the middle of a very, very dirty house that was filled with someone else’s stuff. I was alone but had a sense of people waiting for something just outside the door. First, I got rid of all the stuff, saving only select pieces that really spoke to my heart. Then, I spent months (because it was a dream, mind you, so the months were seconds) cleaning every inch of the house. Lastly, I kicked up my heels and enjoyed sitting in the house I had rescued from the muck and turned into a sanctuary. Just before the people walked in to enjoy it with me, I woke up.

I woke up in tears because I had done so much work (in my dream) and now I was awake, drowning in my life. But that’s when I realized what my brain was telling me to do.

Clean up the muck and make your life your sanctuary, and that is exactly what I am going to do.