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Every year on Valentine’s Day I feel so exposed…a slug resting comfortably until you lift the rock over me. I go to work but, being single, I feel shame and hurry home to hunker down where I can’t be seen.

I eye roll all the posts about how VDay is just commercialized horse shit “we don’t believe in. We believe in sharing our love every day.” Notice the “we.” It’s pretty easy to dismiss one day when you are coupled up and know you are loved on the other 364 days.

Each year I lament the ones who got away. They probably wipe their brows in relief they got away. I get sad when I recall the boyfriend VDays I have experienced…all 3 of them I think.

This year is different. I felt like stopping for a drink and a write on the way home. Why should I hide? Why should you not have to see me? That’s right ladies. I am the girl he hits on at the bar all the other nights he doesn’t take you out with him. I’m the dating profile he is swiping right on when you head to the ladies room. I am out. See me.

I am not sad or ashamed this year. I decided to love my dog, my friends and my co-workers. I was goofy all day and I ate cupcakes. There is an abundance of love in my life.

This morning I went into my guest bedroom and looked at my Starry Night framed painting…my favorite VDay gift. I usually avoid it. The guest room is designed around it but I never go in there. Today, I just stood there with Fergus sitting by my leg and I really looked at it. Know what I thought? Someone loved me once enough to pay attention to the things which moved me and to bring it into my life. Someone loved me enough to know how I took my coffee and bagel at the time and showed up with that framed painting first thing in the morning. Someone loved me enough to buy a ridiculous cheesecake to bring to a party a few hours away. The bakery insisted the cake be transported in the trunk of the car to keep cool enough. Someone loved me enough to spend the weekend on the ocean at my best friend’s house. Someone loved me enough to let me smoke in his car even though he didn’t smoke. Someone loved me enough to watch me put my makeup on and wonder what the eyelash curler was because he hadn’t seen one before. That’s really cool. I think I still remember part of my gift to him…

“I don’t know what it is about you that opens or closes

I only know the blue of your eyes is deeper than all roses”

ee Cummings

Driving out of work tonight “In Your Eyes” was on the radio which brought me back to high school. Someone loved me enough to go through my friends to find out my locker combo so he could leave me a card and a rose. Someone loved me enough to leave a dozen roses on the passenger seat in his car so that would be how I was greeted for our ride home for school. That’s really cool.

Another year, someone loved me enough to watch Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind because he knew it was my favorite movie. He didn’t know that movie always brings me back to the Starry Night guy. Regardless, this was really cool. It’s a beautiful movie.

So, I’m ok. I have been deeply and creatively loved. I have loved intensely. I have the coolest friendships which span my entire life. I am so in love with my friends and what they offer this world.

I have had 2 dogs of my own as an adult. Emmett and Fergus. My boys. They are so different from one another. I am ashamed to admit how much of Emmett I forget but the pain of losing him is still incredibly intense.. even after 8 years. I don’t have kids but I imagine my love of my boys is just as much as if they were real children.

I am not getting a card or any kind of written expression of love. No flowers or declarations of affection. In fact, I have been buying VDay candy for myself 5 weeks in a row now because I like it and I want it and I shouldn’t have to go without it just because there is no one buying it for me. I am drinking beer alone at the bar because I feel like it, not because I am trying to reel anyone in. I don’t have to. I’ve got what I need. In fact, I’ve got what other people want, need and can’t have.

A couple weeks ago I was on my LinkedIn account and checked “people you may know” to see if there was anyone new in there. Right at the top was a guy who used to sexually harass me at work long ago. Hadn’t seen his face in close to 20 years so it was a bit of a startle.

If you remember a few months back, it was one of my dating websites where my rapist popped up. That was fun.

A couple weeks ago I went to a wake for friends in the old neighborhood and one of the guys who came to pay respects is the same kid who used to call me “pink porker,” egged my house, prank called my house many times and shaving creamed our front door with “pink porker.” I have rested easy over the years knowing he has only daughters so there would be high likelihood he would experience as a father some of the things my parents experienced as they watched their daughter get bullied and their home defaced. I certainly don’t wish these things on his children. I just know the odds of karma getting him are very good should one of his daughters not be skinny or pretty enough….or, heaven forbid she is creative instead of an athlete.

When I talked to my mom the day after the wake I told her I saw him. She vividly remembered him. She also easily recollected the time she used *69 to call him back and threaten him. I mean really, descriptively threaten him. She was no joke back then. Although I did joke with her and say “see, that’s why no one wanted to play at our house.” She laughed but then asked me if I would have had her do anything differently. Absolutely not, Mom. You were flawless in that moment. You scared the shit out of him because that phone never rang again from his house. Then I told her that, while I may still not be skinny, he is little, overly skinny with a big nose and his head is too big for his body. I am far more attractive than he will ever be. He married his high school girlfriend which makes him lucky because he wouldn’t have done that well on his own down the road. Like my mom always said when I was a kid “you are pretty and you can always change your weight. There are plenty of thin people who are ugly and you can’t fix ugly.”

Today, someone doubted my honesty or thought I was overreacting to something. Whichever one it is upsets me equally. I have many dents in my personality. I have been eating tuna casserole for dinner for the last 4 nights and there is a box of Russell Stover valentine’s candy in the food cabinet….for the 4th week in a row. I harass the guy who runs my townhouse association to tell him when it’s going to snow and when I will be home from work so that he digs out my parking spot and walkway since it wouldn’t get done otherwise. I am ridiculously direct in the way I speak and sometimes don’t think of how that feels on the receiving end. I have hurt a lot of feelings. I fell in a bathroom stall once and cracked my skull open on a toilet – ambulance to the ER and 14 stitches on my scalp. And yes, I was drinking heavily which would have been explanation enough but based on how I fell, I really know I was sticking my fingers down my throat trying to throw up bar peanuts.

I pick at my zits even though I am 43 years old. Honestly, I don’t even know why I have zits at this age. I can’t get the dog to stop licking the floors constantly and giving himself hairballs. I watch Real Housewives on Bravo – just OC, BH and NYC. I watch Vanderpump Rules. I have even started watching Married at First Sight. I drove into my parents’ mailbox last year and fled the scene. I embarrass my mother a lot still, I think. I wear the same sweatpants in my house for a couple weeks before washing them. I shop at Market Basket…but not in my dirty sweatpants. I don’t actually leave the house in them.

I have PTSD. Sometimes I can’t control my reactions to things in the moment. I get angry quickly which wouldn’t happen if I had time to think things through. I frequently have to double back with people to apologize or clarify myself. I was in a 1 hour active shooter training last week and had to pinch my finger under the table for a good chunk of it to keep from throwing up. Everyone else was trying to imagine how awful it would be to experience a bombing or active shooter situation. I was actually reliving it. It’s embarrassing to not have control over that. I proceeded to wake myself and the dog up the next few nights because I was yelling in my sleep.

I have to take medication so I can get out of bed every day. I sometimes have to take medication to sleep at night. I have to take medication to keep from over eating. I lost 80 pounds having surgery because I failed at 30 years of dieting. I’m still afraid to wear the color pink.

I orate stories and throw a little flair and humor into the telling of them. I guess that makes people think I am making things up which is definitely a misconception because that I don’t do. I find colorful ways to share but what I share is truthful. I have a weird life, I don’t need to embellish. It speaks for itself. I value my integrity and honesty above everything. For the most part, my reputation is those 2 things. Most people know they can trust me and that I will bust my ass to do the right thing even if it causes me criticism or difficulty. If you tell me something really personal, it does actually stay with just me. I’ve always got your back and everything I do is done with consideration of what’s best for others…even when I make mistakes in my approach. This world doesn’t build that many people like me. When it does, they are usually broken down. I have people coming from every direction always trying to break me down and I am still solid. That’s really rare.

Driving home tonight I couldn’t understand why I started to tear up today when I realized someone thought I was either lying or being overly dramatic. I didn’t cry when looking at online photos of my harasser or rapist. I didn’t cry after I saw my bully at the wake. I started to cry when I realized there could be a perception of me as a liar or exaggerator. And then it became clear. Being harassed and assaulted were both stories where I was thought to be lying or overreacting. I wasn’t in either case. But everyone thought I was. There were times in court when that concept was more painful than the attack itself. It was a secondary attack.

I have spent my life under attack. “You are too sensitive…too lazy…too fat.” “Why can’t you be more like so and so…why don’t you sign up for soccer like so and so?” Every family issue that happened when I was a kid was my fault, never my parents. Because I am a writer and was an English major in college, I must had been making up my rape because that’s what creative writers do. I was an extra talented, trained, workshopped, college published liar because I knew how to use my words. Funny…. I remember using my words when I said “no” but I guess that’s an exception.

Sarcasm, creativity, good vocabulary, a writing hobby and story telling personality do not equate to dishonesty or overreaction. They are just personality traits I happen to have. For some reason, they are considered bad and things I am supposed to apologize for all the time. Fine. But to equate them to anything other than what they are – someone who can be interesting at a party once she overcomes her shyness; someone who can express herself in writing without the fright of making eye contact – is wrong. I should not have to accept anyone’s perception of me being dishonest or overreacting. Those are not fair leaps to make.

What I share so openly with so many people is a bit of a privilege, I think. I am comfortable letting people into my world and being vulnerable because I trust the people in my world to understand the heart of me is pretty pure and if I am willing to share my stuff, it’s safe for you to do the same. I’m the friend who makes it ok for you to be you including all your flaws and bad television choices. I can feel your soul when I am talking to you. That’s a nice thing.

So yeah, this one got inside the armor today. I don’t lie and I don’t overreact to important things which impact outcomes to others. I don’t fuck around with making decisions that impact the lives of others. I fuck around with myself but never with others. And a liar doesn’t tell you she was trying to vomit purposely when she split her head open. She also doesn’t put herself through 2 rape trials because she is experimenting with creativity. That’s what blogging is for.

You invaded my life, my home, my safety, my heart, my possibilities.

I was falling in love with him. We were having so much fun figuring each other out. We didn’t argue. We were intellectually matched. We had similar humor. He was quiet and I was the loud. The balance in the middle was the divine attraction, the push and pull of us craving the other to experience pieces of ourselves we had never met before.

We laughed the night I came home from the dentist drooling because I couldn’t feel part of my face. We froze because the heat was so slow to pick up at night. He snuck out to the kitchen in the middle of the night to grab a brownie and I could hear his teeth crunch into it which wasn’t supposed to happen. Clearly a bad recipe and it made us laugh in the middle of the night. He remembered everything I said and could bring something up months later. He listened to me. We were so fun. We were discovering happy.

I hadn’t known much about you. You were the ex who moved away. I was The now and ready to move on. You weren’t a factor in my life, or his anymore.

But you came back. You missed the attention. You needed to be the center of a universe, any universe I think. You took a risk and it didn’t pan out so you ran home looking for the safety of your past. You didn’t care about him or his happiness. You just wanted what you wanted. I was small collateral you didn’t care existed. You came running back wanting to be with him because it was your safe and familiar. Never mind the pain it brought him. You teased him with your eating disorder and made him think you would die if he didn’t turn his attention to you. And so he did. But it wasn’t easy for him. He was invested with me. Leaving me for you wasn’t at all a no brainer for him like you think it was. He was torn up and would continue being a part of my life for several more years.

Common sense tells us we should be mad at the man who leaves, not the woman who lured him away. Trust me, I was mad at him. Not for the betrayal or the loss so much but more for his naiveté and blind trust in you because I knew he deserved better than your vapid offering. He is a trusting man. His guilt is very easy to manipulate. I think somewhere in his upbringing he was made to believe the happiness of others depended solely on his actions and responses to them. He would never and has never turned away a woman declaring need. You knew that and used it. I was mad at him for not listening to me when I warned him about what you were doing. You valued only yourself. I valued him.

But you, yeah, I am mad as hell at you because you knew what you were doing to him and you did it anyway. You knew you just had to threaten to starve yourself or put your fingers down your throat and he’d be in the car on his way. And even when it eventually didn’t work out for you the second time around, you made sure to keep him around by introducing him to your friend. If you weren’t going to have him, you were going to find a way to control who would.

I saw you. I still see you. In fact, your behavior is what eventually helped me see moments I tried to manipulate him and I was ashamed of myself for that. Looking at what you did made me stop doing what I did. I walked away and didn’t come back. I let him move on with his life even at moments I didn’t want to. But I loved him more than myself. I don’t think you know what that is.

You are the kind of debase woman who makes women unable to trust each another. You have no girls code, no empathy, no lines. You adore yourself. You hate yourself. You think of little else but yourself. I wonder what your daughter learns from you. You know how to make other women become the second choice and spend their lives second guessing themselves. You are the kind of woman who would step over the injured body of another woman if it advanced you to your goal.

I think every woman has a little of you in our souls but we must make choices thousands of times as to who we want to be inaction. Many of us can suppress that demon to do what’s right and to lift each other up. We believe there is a space for all of us. You just want all the spaces to yourself. You get your husband but you want to be sure another husband or two is paying attention to “sweet and cute, adorable” you. Simply put, you are despicable. You make all women look bad.

For years I beat myself up for not being enough you. Not thin enough, not pretty enough, not historical enough, the wrong group of friends….how silly. You are a “townie” who took one shot at a life and quit only a few months later to go back to the life you knew and never again move forward. There is actually nothing attractive about that. It’s actually rather sad and small and timid. You take big swipes for what you want but you do it from the confines of a cage you built yourself. You aren’t such a formidable threat behind your little bars, are you, average girl? You couldn’t survive a day in my world. After all these years hating you, I think I am actually content knowing I could likely decimate you with nothing more than a sentence. And I would be doing it on behalf of all the good women out there who have been forced to survive women like you invading their lives.

Picture by Ryan McGuire

*While I write pure memoir style, it’s not my place to tell the stories of some of the non-fictional characters in my narrative so I will use different names in this one.

“We thought because Kelly was your friend, it would make it easier for you to get involved in sports and activities she signed up for.”

“Whenever you came home from Lara’s house you were brutal to deal with…spoiled and high on sugar. We would have to threaten you that you couldn’t keep going over there if you couldn’t control yourself.”

“Well you said you just don’t do polyester.”

These might be less annoying and tragic to remember hearing several times over the years except that I heard them again last night. It just gets more aggravating the more I hear them.

Until about 6 months ago, I was still carrying the shame of things from my childhood. I didn’t play sports that much so that was wrong. Despite being outside all day, riding my bike, playing with friends, I was an overweight kid which was wrong. I didn’t go along with my parents’ perfect child playbook when I would express emotions or a differing opinion. That was wrong. I cried when I got exasperated trying to explain myself (something which still sometimes happens.). That was wrong. My father could be cold, mean and verbally abusive but I defended myself and talked back to that. I was supposed to understand he was a Vietnam Vet. So, that was also wrong. I asked questions. That was wrong. I had free will. That was wrong. I saw things that weren’t glorious and likable about Kelly sometimes and would try to point them out when I was being compared to her. That was wrong. I most loved Lara and her family. That was wrong. I loved Kelly too but it was different.

I got caught playing doctor. That was VERY wrong. My mother acted as though I was some kind of pervert and this was going to be a dirty secret we would never discuss again – that is was so deviant and absolutely no other child would have been doing that. According to my therapist, most kids do that. Someone recently asked me what the “birds and the bees” conversation was like with my parents or how I learned about sex. I said there never was a conversation. It was just expected we didn’t have sex. One day, Kelly and I were playing at my house (a rarity as my house wasn’t known to be the fun one) and we found my mom’s maxi pads in the linen closet. We didn’t know what they were but we thought they were cool because they were adhesive so we could stick them to things…which we did. They were stuck all over my room when my mom came home and she freaked out on both me and Kelly. She threatened both of us and Kelly went home. Heaven forbid my mom cool off and maybe circle back to ask if I knew what they were for and have a mature conversation about that. Nope. When I had my period for the first time years later, I tried to tell her and she cut me off mid sentence and just said “there are things in the closet.” It was never discussed beyond that.

The fact that my parents continue to go back to their “go to” childhood statements about everything which was my fault or wrong with me makes me think they actually believed that when they tell a child what to do or what not to do, the child would just obey. Every time I fell out of line, they were generally shook and confused. The only explanation they had was that I must have been a highly sophisticated, Machiavellian adult trapped in the body of a child. I controlled the home and if they acted badly it was because I forced them to.

I know it sounds nuts but I hear it on occasion now in reference to my nephew when he errs off the playbook. Suddenly he is really smart or manipulative or somehow mentally fully formed and in full control of his reactions in their minds. I look at him and see he is 4. He has tantrums. He lies. He has ideas about what he wants even if they don’t make sense. He is just trying to figure out who he is in relation to the people and world around him. I don’t think he lies in bed at night scheming against his parents. He reads a book and zonks out the whole night until about 6am. But he does try to figure out during the day how he can get gummy bears or go bowling or not have to do things he doesn’t want to do. Normal child. Sometimes I think my parents truly believe I must have been up at night with scrap paper planning intricate, terrorist attacks that I would strategically play out over a campaign of days. In reality, I was just a misunderstood kid who had to advocate for herself.

When I was with Lara’s family, we shopped. We watched movies and ate candy. We went to the beach. We did beach walks and collected shells. We learned to dig clams with our feet. We went to her grandparents’ house and helped can jelly with her grandfather. We colored. We played Barbies. We talked. If we fell off our bikes, her mom baked us cookies. That didn’t happen at my house or Kelly’s. Lara’s Mom didn’t have a playbook. She let kids be kids. It wasn’t that we were completely undisciplined. We just were allowed to be kids. That wasn’t allowed at my house if it was outside the playbook. The stuff Lara and I did was more my speed. It was more artsy, freeing and cerebral. All the things we both grew up to be.

Another example is when we were college age, Lara’s Mom let us have strawberry daiquiris at their summer house. My mother was horrified by this. It wasn’t her mother’s place to decide I could do that. That’s because my mother believed that underage children shouldn’t drink. Lara’s Mom believed that too but also knew we would do it anyway so she preferred we do it out in the open where we were safe. Sorry, Mom but her mother had the more realistic approach on that one. Your ostrich approach encouraged us to do it in hiding and in ways where we could get hurt or in trouble.

What is really fascinating is how open minded my parents really are in general. Back when my sister was wedding planning my mom did get weird about some stuff. Appearances and tradition are important to her so she wasn’t thrilled my sister wasn’t going to have a DJ or band for her reception. She also wasn’t thrilled with the food station idea and the sliders. I don’t think she ever came out and said it but I think she was genuinely worried about what her 6 friends, invited to the wedding, would think. They would expect a DJ and a plate of chicken. We also had this one really old aunt my mom was worried about. My mother was concerned that this aunt would see my tattoo in my dress. Oh, and her friends would also see it. I had to point out to my mother that all these people were attending a gay wedding. Sliders and tattoos weren’t the most controversial items they would experience. And yet, had any of her friends expressed concern over her gay daughter, she would have walked away from those friendships. She was more worried about what I might say or look like.

Every holiday and family gathering growing up I was told what I couldn’t talk about. Basically, I was being told who I couldn’t be. Who cares if I embarrassed myself? If I didn’t care, why should anyone else? I guess I embarrassed them and that was different.

Last night I said that for the last 20 years I have worked jobs that were expected of me and, in turn, have been stifled and miserable and judged and a Misfit in my life. I have had to apologize for it the entire time. I was supposed to feel embarrassed for being different or seeing the world through a lens different from the majority. I have been treated poorly and humiliated many times at work. Yet I know I have created my own monster of salary dependence and financial responsibilities which cannot be unwound and would allow me to just walk away and take a lower paying job that might actually make me happy. I said I wished in my early 20s I had the self esteem to take a chance and that I hadn’t thought odd jobs like waitressing were beneath me. I should have been ok with scraping by on odd jobs so I could write and pursue that path. That’s where she said “well, you said you don’t do polyester.” Seriously? Not every argument had to be go to college or work at McDonalds.

When their child expresses a distaste for polyester but a dream of being a writer….they just “won” by luckily stumbling on my distaste for tacky service uniforms and let it go. But they had no problem having me wear a polyester uniform at age 14 when I waitressed at the function hall where my dad bartended. Old men grabbed my ass at the tables and that was ok because I was bringing a paycheck into the house at an illegal age. But it wasn’t ok to delve more deeply into helping me work through a “What if?” What if you did try to pursue writing? How would you make a living? How can we help you brainstorm a way to make it work? What if you try it your way for a year and then after that, re-evaluate? You can always still finish college or look for a full time job. Nope. Had to follow the playbook. And stupid me, for once I actually did.

20 years of depression, medication, anxiety, weight problems, discrimination, harassment and a killer 401k later, I am trying to figure out how to do what would have been far easier to adjust to at 20 than now. I still feel like I have to ask permission to leave my current job for another one because my father thinks I am stupid for considering it. In fact, my Masters is now 3 years old and stale because I couldn’t find a comparable salary and benefits package to replace what I would walk away from. So even my Masters has no value now.

I know I sound like some whiny brat who can’t leave her childhood behind. It’s not that, really. I have made peace with so much of it over the years and understand all my actions as an adult are my choices and no fault of anyone else. But I am trying to make sweeping changes to grab back the life I really wanted and see if I can make it work somehow now. As I do that, I have to navigate a lot of insecurities and barriers inside myself to see which ones I have honestly recovered from and which ones are still there despite thinking they were gone. Whenever my parents make commentary on me as a child or notice similar behaviors in my nephew, it takes me back and I get angry. Angry because I know now there was nothing wrong with me as a kid. I was challenging but I was layered and that is so cool. I wasn’t like the other kids. That’s cool. My nephew is ridiculously cool. He is forming his own one man band because of his apt for music, rhythm. He sees the world through different eyes than us. He sees patterns in ordinary places. That’s how I also see things. When I am around him, I make sense. He has such a cool life ahead because his parents are open to all his possibilities and they talk to him. They want to know him. They tried the sports thing with him and it isn’t sticking yet. They are ok with that. They aren’t trying to make him conform. They are just letting him evolve and make sure he gets the space to try anything which fancies him.

My sister recently mentioned to me that she has a new appreciation for our dad’s experience returning from Vietnam. The vets were frowned upon. He had to worry about what people might say to him at parties. He didn’t talk about anything and he stuffed his uniform into the back of the bedroom closet like he never wore it. In recent years, he has talked more openly about his experience and goes to my sister’s school and speaks to the students every Veteran’s Day. Her being gay, she understands what it feels like to compartmentalize your life and keep certain things stuffed away in the closet in order to survive. I also get it as I compartmentalize my life too.

I am part of the same family. My entire life has about being stuffed into a closet or thinking I needed to change or be more like Kelly and all the other Kelly’s out there. Because it would have been easier for me to just be a happy soccer player and cheerleader than a brooding writer who listened to the Cure in my bedroom. I think my parents were terrified I would be “the weird girl” as an adult and my life would be harder than it had to be. Yet, my family fully embraces my sister and dad whose lives are much harder than their peers because of things outside their control. Since when was it in my control about who I would be? Why was it assumed I could or should change? That any difficulties in my life were brought on by me because Childhood time with Lara resonated more with me than playing soccer with Kelly? As if had I continued playing soccer I never would have suffered depression, eating disorders, anxiety. I bet Kelly wouldn’t tell you her life was easier than mine because she played soccer. In fact, of the three of us, I think Lara is the one who is most steadily living life on her terms and achieving her dreams more consistently than Kelly or me. Nobody ever asked her to be someone she isn’t.

Old neighborhoods

Kids don’t have these anymore

Sherwood

Barnesdale

Surrey

Nottingham

Greenwood

Buckingham

Doncaster

Before cable

Pre internet

Thousands of meals at each other’s houses

Living rooms children weren’t allowed to enter

Pool parties at the Joneses

Sally and I throwing barbies out the window

Tv and candy in the pit

CCD

Saturday mass at St. Linus

Swimming lessons

Gymnastics

Melissa threw up on Meri, Jenny threw up on Mom

Mike, Melissa, Kathy, Meri and I got chicken pox together

Mrs. Jones babysat the 3 of us when Mom worked …tried to get Melissa to eat foods she wouldn’t eat

Braided my hair

Poolside all day with the Joneses

Back to school shopping together

Soccer practices

Amy riding her bike into the Watsons’ car- the only mean old people in the neighborhood

The Dobermans

Rocky

Tough skins and swing sets

Riding our bikes home super fast at night to get home before the bats came out

Crushes and pigtails

Sleep overs and tree climbing

One of these families lost their matriarch this weekend.

Childhood ripped away.

Skinned knees

Barbecues

Hula hoops

Badminton

Wagon filled with caterpillars

Bloody noses

Kick the can and ding dong ditch

653 3104

655 3680

653 7640

The Kennedy path

Hot dogs with macaroni and cheese

The goldfish on their kitchen table

Tippy

The Weston car accident

Old neighborhoods sit in the marrow of our bones

Our safe place, our magical Sherwood Forest

Memories

Ashes to ashes, dust to dust

Skeletal Flower Congratulations Friendship

Driving to the gym from work tonight I heard two songs, back to back, which were in heavy rotation at the bars 5 years ago. This, of course, brought me back to memories of that time in comparison to where I am now. You know – my parents thought I was that kid who would probably kill the neighbors pets because I talked back to them so I was in therapy at age six and have grown to see the world through a lens of self analysis. I can’t just appreciate a good song or allow a memory to come and go.

It was just over 5 years ago, Thanksgiving week, when we found out about my dad’s first round of cancer….yes, there would be 2 more as well as Afib and passing out in malls. But the first time was the one where I felt like the floor of my life disappeared so that I landed with a heavy thud into my new reality without support. Synapses didn’t just fail to properly connect. They blew up and set everything on fire.

My biggest fear (outside of flying) has been my father dying. We have had a tumultuous relationship over the years and I feel like I missed out on having a real dad until my 30s. So the idea of losing him when I was 30 years behind my siblings is more than devastating. Just weeks before finding out he got sick, I started going back to therapy simply because I was ruminating on the idea he could get sick any time with some Vietnam cancer because he was hitting the age when other Vets were coming down with Agent Orange related illnesses that incubated in their bodies for a good 40 years. I felt I might be being paranoid because I felt like I was sensing something so I diagnosed myself as crazy and got a therapist. It was only 2 visits in when my dad got diagnosed. Not crazy after all. More like a dog that sniffs out tumors in humans.

But I did go crazy after that diagnosis. Until that time, I was a girl who always did the right things. I hardly drank. I never drove after drinking. I didn’t sleep around or do one night stands. Yes, I was still willful and talked back but there is nothing wrong with those things. I did not need childhood therapy because of that. Not every child “falls in line.” This is not 1980s Russia.

I was so sick of being a “good girl.” I was used to being shit on or treated as though I were invisible in many aspects of my life. I just took it and didn’t complain. But having my dad get sick made me feel like I had earned the right to be selfish and irresponsible. No longer did I feel like solving everyone else’s problems and worrying about how my behavior might impact them. It was my turn to be a jackass so I just started getting wasted on the regular. I became a high school reunion cliche by hanging with my ex and proudly declaring I would never sleep with a married man. I woke up with him in my hotel room the next morning. At first, I as horrified and thought I was going to burn in Hell. I was thinking about going back to church and confessing even. But a couple days later when he asked me to meet for drinks I said “Fuck it. It’s my turn. I’ve earned this.”

With the exception of yoga nights, I started drinking every night of the week. I stopped at the bar on my way home, got drunk and texted back and forth with him or met up with him. There were some Fridays I would go to work not having slept the night before because I was walking into my house at 5am after shutting down the Boston bars with him. It was so wrong but so freeing and fun. It was my secret and I had something to look forward to; something to distract me from my dad.

It was really messy and super high charged with emotions. He was incredibly self absorbed and immature which was the perfect enabler for me because nothing I could do was worse than what he was doing. He was the one person who couldn’t judge me or tell me what to do and that’s exactly where I wanted to be. I wanted to be with someone who would let me self destruct because it was beneficial to him. I could see it. I was aware he would let me be messy so he could get laid. I detested him. And I loved him. It depended on who I was trying to be at the moment. What’s shocking is that I thought this was the rock bottom of my life. I had no idea that April 15th would change everything and far worse was to come even though I had rid myself of him at that point.

5 years later, I still think about him when I hear those two songs. It’s not fondly I recall him. I get a little angry and resentful still. But that’s because I have managed to circle back to the roots of me who would never behave like that girl from 5 years ago. Whenever he had tried to start things back up with me, it’s significantly easier for me to resist. I don’t identify with that girl right now. In some ways I am far better and stronger now. In other ways, I have some permanent damage which leaves me a little vulnerable….not to him, but to myself if ever I decide I have had enough again and want a “good girl” pardon.

I can never be steadfastly promising I won’t screw up again. I will never have that confidence in my resolve again. It will always be a process of fighting the angel on one shoulder and the devil on the other. Once you’ve invited the devil into your life, he never leaves. He can only be exhaustingly mitigated with every time a choice is encountered. Yet I am hopeful because I have been humbled. I also receive those health problem phone calls from my mother much better than I used to. I expect them and am always prepared now. I try. I fight madness.

Did you know I am 25% Italian? Probably not. I talk about my immediate family a lot but never much about our origins and history. I am primarily Irish and most of my relatives are on the Irish side. But I have one aunt on the Italian side who is my mom’s sister, Ann.

Ann is 77 and lives alone, never married and no kids. She has never had any major health problems and only just needed a hip replacement 2 years ago. Because she is alone, she needed a lot of help and my sister took on all of her care at that time because our parents were both laid up themselves. I look after them on weekends. To help my sister out, we set up a phone rotation to ensure one of us kids was calling my aunt every few days to check in on her. I have kept this going and call her every other Friday night when I am driving to the Cape.

My aunt is a complicated woman. It’s very hard on my mother. They grew up in the same house with the same problems but took drastically different approaches into growing up. My aunt was petulant, stubborn and always talked back. My mom kept her mouth shut and got along. My aunt and her mother fought all the time but my aunt didn’t move out until their mother died. My parents helped her figure out how to do it. My aunt also wouldn’t get her license until her late 40s so she needed rides anytime she needed to leave her town. My mom was married at 21 and living in Oklahoma where my dad was stationed before Vietnam. By the time their mother died, I was around and a year old. I could relay years of stories about my mom and my aunt but it’s not really my story to tell. I just know who my aunt is, that she is hard to deal with and understand.

Growing up, whenever I was being difficult my mom would threaten that I would turn out like this aunt or my dad’s sister – another complicated person with a bevy of undesirable behaviors. I was terrified of that. I knew I was a screwed up kid and I could see the outcomes of my two aunts. I grew up dreading growing up as I didn’t think I had any hope of a normal life. I didn’t want to grow old unmarried and bitter. Here I am unmarried and trying not to be bitter.

Anyway, I love my aunt. She’s just had a tough life and didn’t come equipped with the mental tools my mom has. It happens. If my aunt were growing up now, she’d get support and probably be ok. But mental illness grew untended in her generation. She is someone with valid, deep psychological wounds that didn’t get help because no one did in her day.

When we talk, we often start out speaking of my nephew and any recent visits either of us has had with him. Then she runs down all the celebrity news she has from tv or Trump’s latest gaffe. About the time I am a few exits into route 3 and maybe an hour out from my parents’ house, she starts delving into parts of her childhood. I have been learning a lot about their family through her lens. And while vastly different from how my mom views the world, I am learning about the landscape of mom’s life in ways my mom has never shared. I know my grandfather died when my mom was very young and that it was just the 2 girls and their mom. Their mom was pretty strict and argued all the time with my aunt. She made the girls have terrible haircuts they hated when they were young. That’s about what I have known from my mom.

Last night we were talking about how she and my mom are not adventurous with food and have always been very picky. She started telling me what they ate for dinner when their dad was still alive. Pork chops, steaks, pasta. They would each have their own steak. My aunt and her dad shared salad because my mom and her mom didn’t eat salad. If it was pork chop night, everyone had 2 pork chops. When they had pasta my grandmother made a sauce that cooked all day and filled the house with delicious aromas. On Saturdays they would go to the bakery and get snowflake rolls fresh from the oven which they would use for hamburgers later that night – 2 hamburgers each. They also bought a lemon tart and a blueberry cake. On Sunday’s they would go out and buy potato chips and a quart of Brigham’s ice cream which they would take home and eat for an afternoon snack. They ate a lot of food. Every day focused on large meal preparation and large portions of food.

When my grandfather died, my grandmother stopped cooking. They ate out several times a week instead. Then they had their standard places they would visit, their “go to” meals. My mom always ordered a tuna fish sandwich and they would fill up on desserts every time.

As my aunt was going through this list, my childhood dinner table appeared in my mind. Dinner staples at our house were steak, pork chops, pasta, lasagna and chicken. Every meal was huge. We had “seconds” meaning there was always enough for everyone to have a second round. Most of the time pasta sauce was meat and tomato sauce from a can. But every once in awhile on a weekend, my mom would make her mom’s sauce and I would salivate at the smell of impending dinner. In fact, I am going to ask my mom for the recipe this weekend. There were always “bedtime snacks” of cookies, ice cream – whatever dessert we wanted before bed. Eating out was more of a special occasion. We didn’t do that often as a family of five. But there was Sunday breakfast and we did go out a lot for that during the years my dad was working full time during the week and bar tending on weekends. If we didn’t go out for Sunday breakfast, dad would get donuts or fresh bagels from a nearby bakery.

When things went wrong when we were young, there was food. My mom baked a lot back then. She decorated cakes beautifully. She baked cookies and brownies for around the house. When she worked part time at the grocery store, she frequently brought items home from the bakery. When we went food shopping with Mom, we each got to get a candy bar in the checkout line. We also had a lot of control over what she bought – pop tarts, toaster streudels, Cinnamon Crunch cereal – absolutely nothing healthy. Sometime around my early teen years, the dynamic shifted and dad took over the grocery shopping. No more pop tarts. And lots of stir fry dinners.

In my 30s, when I found out my dog, Emmett, had a brain tumor I came home from work the next night to my dad making homemade macaroni and there was dessert. When I had to put Emmett down, the whole family came together and we went out to dinner, had a feast, drank and got dessert.

The way we ate growing up and the way I have eaten on my own as an adult is the way my mom grew up with food. And it’s not as simple as it just being sad comfort. First, it was celebratory in nature as that is how they celebrated being a family. When their father died, food became solace. My mother never had emotions – good or bad- which didn’t involve food as a treatment. We prepare elaborate meals to celebrate family when we are all together. We go out to eat when we are bored or sad about something. We get dessert when it’s been a bad day; of which there have been many in the past 5 years.

I have been very wrapped up in my food and body journey since I was about 12 years old. I take responsibility for my choices with both food and alcohol. It’s always been about what I put in my own mouth. Nobody did this to me once I was old enough to live on my own. It’s just that I find it fascinating the way my mom’s dinner table looked so much like my own growing up – just how generational food really can be. I mean, when I had to go through group therapy before weight loss surgery we learned about generational changes related to food and how history and economy shaped family choices going forward. So it made sense how I got fat and why my parents also struggled with food. I just never realized my mom and I shared so many similarities and how she brought her childhood to our dinner table.

An overhead shot of a waffle, bowls of fruit oatmeal and a cup of coffee

 

6 days ago I started taking a new prescription to experiment with seeing if we can treat the addictive part of my brain in an effort to better control some of my food “binges.” What sort of binges can a girl with a gastric bypass stomach have? Well, instead of sitting down and eating large amounts of food uncontrollably in one sitting…..a box of macaroni and cheese, a whole pint of Ben & Jerry’s, half a box of pasta drowned in butter…I may still eat those sorts of things but spread it out over longer hours or even days. The last “binge” I had was eating Pepperidge Farm Milano cookies from October until a couple weeks before Christmas. Eat until I am full and then go back later for more when I am not full.

Sometimes I eat too fast which makes me need to puke. That’s a surgical reaction and not a binge and purge response. It tends to happen with pasta, chicken, most fish and sometimes steak. When it happens, I have to stand over a toilet as though I am going to puke and I spit up any saliva for a few minutes in preparation for vomit but the vomit never happens. For some reason, hanging over a toilet and spitting makes the nausea go away.

This medication has side effects and it requires routine blood testing to check liver function. That’s scary. Some side effects can be headaches, nausea and abdominal cramping. I have head headaches every day since last Tuesday and abdominal cramping on and off. On my way to the gym tonight the cramping got so bad I ended up coming straight home and skipping the gym. I then became ashamed of missing the gym so I jumped on the treadmill at home despite not being able to stand up straight. I have a litany of blood tests I need to get done but am afraid to do them in case they make me late for work. My priorities don’t always make sense.

I don’t know if this drug is doing what it’s supposed to. I certainly have had far fewer sweets in the past week. But that could be the whole New Year’s thing where I am focused on eating my healthy meals and snacks consistently. Am I riding the bike by myself or is someone holding me up? I think about looking for chocolate but I don’t do it. So maybe it’s taken a little bit of the edge off that. Normally, I would start hunting for snacks and not stop until I satisfied the craving. I wanted Chinese food this weekend- more likely because I didn’t have it NYE and always do so I think I was overly focused on it. Plus, it seemed like an economical choice because one 11$ sampler would cover my whole weekend of dinners. I barely ate any of it and threw out a fair amount. Is that the drug working or a mental placebo thingy where I am talking myself out of bad decisions because I am aware I am taking medication to the same effect?

I do feel calmer and less agitated about things which can annoy me. I only had one beer this weekend and didn’t finish it. I went to Market Basket yesterday and took my time. The place was packed but I took my time thinking about what I really wanted and planning a meal as I went. I did not leave in a rage which I always do after just 20 minutes. Although, I did still beep at cars in the parking lot. Even Ghandi would have found himself doing that had one of their lots been presented to him during his life. I have also been picking up after myself more quickly. Things that normally don’t bother me sitting on the coffee table or dining room table are getting put away. Books are being re-arranged. A reading nook has been created. While meal prepping last night, I was playing music and dancing in my kitchen making high protein banana pancakes.

Are these responses drug related? Or just me being me after being well rested from vacation? Or, am I cooperating with what I think my brain should be doing? I don’t know yet but it’s important to capture these observations, I think.

Tomorrow I increase my dosage. Not sure what side effects that will entail or if the stomach pain will come on stronger. I worry about my liver. I know…..with all the drinking I have done and sometimes still do, that holds a bit of irony. You can laugh.

I need to lose weight. I just do. I have said this before – I can’t be someone who accepts my body the way it is. I have surmounted a million mountains in my life, have had phenomenal enlightenment and am embracing feminism but I can’t give in on body acceptance. It’s a forever flaw I will always have. A societal and male suggestion I give into by believing my body is subpar and socially unacceptable. For it means my problems are visible and comparisons can be made. Don’t get me wrong, Health is my number one driver. Fat people in my family don’t do real well so I have reversed many impending consequences of that. This is mainly a superficial thing I can justify as preventative so I don’t get any fatter.

Eating disorders, body dysmorphia never goes away no matter what progress you make. At least I don’t think there are pills that do that yet. But I am doing my best. Headache and all….

Take a deep breathe in

Then out

Relax

The swoosh of waves in

Then out

Along the rocks you appear

Jeans rolled up

Your fisherman’s sweater

Squinty eye smile

Compass in hand

Wishing you had been there

Instead of the pay phone

Wishing you had made different choices

Asked different questions

Wishing I were different

I wish I had been different

More me

But sooner

So much sooner

I never could read a compass

“Our time here has ended” she says

“Take your time getting up from the table” she says

I don’t necessarily have a reputation as a big planner. Some of the things I do may appear to come randomly. But I actually spend a great deal of time kicking things around in my head. It could be something as minute as deciding to buy a stool for my living room or when to drag the Xmas tree out to the trash. Or, it could be thematic such as “how do I change my life?” That means I am opening my mind up to anything like moving cross country for a job or landing on Amsterdam as my summer trip last year when it probably wasn’t even near my top 5 list of places to go. It may seem “random” but opening my mind is actually a form of planning.

When I had weight loss surgery in December of 2010, it had been kicking around in my head for a few years. I had asked my doctor about it a few times but she didn’t think I was fat enough. That was my doctor when I lived in Marlboro. I wasn’t fat enough but she also didn’t look for ways to help me manage my weight issues either. She sucked but she had evening and weekend hours so I never had to interrupt work to get appointments which is pretty important to me. Once I finally moved to a Tyngsboro, I was fatter but got a new doctor. She asked me an important question after hearing about all the dieting I had done since I was a kid. “So, you have been dieting your whole life and you are 100 pounds overweight, how is that working out for you?” Needless to say, we dove into my eating disorder issues to realize I wasn’t a bad person for being fat. But it wouldn’t be as simple as having surgery (which actually is not at all simple.). I was going to need to do a decent amount of therapy around it.

Here’s where the planning kicked in. I was 36 when I started the surgery process. I figured if I did it then, I would still have enough time to meet a great guy, get engaged and be able to buy a small sized wedding dress before 40 so it could still be a pretty dress. I would have years of recovery and healthy routines underway in case I decided I wanted to also have a baby. I figured, if I decided to have kids with great guy I would quickly find when thin, 39-41 wouldn’t be the end of the world for getting pregnant. Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t want kids even then but I was also open to the idea that maybe I just hadn’t met the right person who would make me want to flip on that. So I was allowing for that to be part of the equation.

I went through a 6 month process of therapy and screenings for this surgery. You have to prove you have grit to do the hard things and stick to them after the surgery. You have to learn how to eat food properly and to listen to your body. You have to admit to all your disorders and to the ones your loved ones have. I remember having to plan ahead how I was going to be around my family with food because my parents have problems with it too. I had to consider what social life would look like after surgery when I wouldn’t be able to eat the way my friends could. I had to give up booze for awhile. I gave up caffeine. I had to go through a series of tests and examinations to prove I wasn’t crazy. I wasn’t. I enjoyed that medical stamp of approval when I spent my 20s being called crazy by my ex. It was nice to know I was physician approved as mentally stable. Depression is an illness but it didn’t mean I was nuts. It’s funny how much confidence I got from that.

I am not going to bore you with 7 years of my process since surgery. That’s probably 18 different blogs I will get to eventually. The point is, that 7 years later, I am not in a relationship. The beautiful white dress shopping is a missed opportunity. I am at Justice of the Peace white suit wedding point now. And kids can now never be part of the equation – at least not one of my own. I haven’t had trouble getting dates over the years or attracting men at bars when I have wanted to. It’s certainly easier when you weigh less. At least you know you aren’t attracting some guy’s fat fetish which is always a lingering doubt when you attract a “normal” guy when you are super fat. You know your motives are usually pretty parallel to his which is comforting when you know you can even the playing field and even become the more successful one at playing said field.

So why didn’t my plan work? Because being fat was a symptom of a hundred other things I hadn’t dealt with. When you are fat, everyone can see it and, therefore, that’s your big “problem.” It wasn’t until I had lost 80 pounds and remained single for awhile that I started to discover, through therapy, that I was ridiculously fucked up going back to childhood. I was going to have to sort through ALL of that first. And then 2 years in, I had to add bombing PTSD to the table. The PTSD was also a fresh turd on top of my father’s first brush with cancer which has gone on and off for 5 years now. While sorting through all these piles of crap, I also didn’t make the best decisions in how to deal with things. I added booze back in when my dad got sick. Not only did I start gaining weight back from that, it metabolizes far differently for me now so I am drunk before I have time to make a decision not to get drunk. I had to spend time cleaning up those messes too.

2017 was great. A lot of messes had been cleaned up. I had healthy plans I adhered to. I traveled and started a blog which were goals I set going into the new year. Tons of therapy breakthroughs throughout the year. My doctor is kind of amazing. But it’s taken that guy 5 years to crack open some things. You people think I am open book. That’s one of my tricks. Yet there are things buried quite deeply I don’t even give to him and that’s his job. I am tough. Lots of scar tissue to get through.

So, yeah. My wedding plans didn’t work out. And no kid either. I still resent that I can’t do a big, poofy, wedding gown if I even get married ever. I am beginning to start admitting it won’t happen and experimenting with seeing if I can still breathe after I say that. Yep, still breathing. This past year has been pretty fulfilling to the point the scale on marriage may actually be getting outweighed by all the things I do have which I think might actually be better. Even as a feminist, I am ok with being proven wrong on that if my prince should finally show up with a nice ring. But I am not sitting on the couch checking out the front window periodically to see if he might be trotting down the street. I’m too busy. He’ll be lucky if I am even home when he gets here. He’s going to have to start searching for me instead. I may be fat. I may lose weight again. Who knows? I just know all my plans fell through related to my weight loss and I may actually be better off for it.