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Friday, December 28, 2007

A wide range of emotions

So I'm sitting here at work not wanting to be here. I am feeling such a wide range of emotions right now...must be that time of year. Truthfully, I'm thinking about how I want the new year to evolve for me and what I have to do to make that happen. I am definately in the planning stages for 2008. I'm leaving a lot of things behind in 2007 and it's truly about time I do that. I've said some goodbyes, met some new and amazing people, fallen in love, prepared myself for some farewells, and re-established some old friendships.

The highlight of my year was most definately the publishing of my book, Manifesto of a Menopausal Woman. It's been slow going, but I am attributing that to the time of year. As the new year comes in with a bang, my primary focus will be on marketing my book and getting it out to the public. I'm in the process of laying out the new projects I'm planning and will likely be working on several at the same time. I know if I try to focus on just one project, the boredom will surely set in.

I did receive some very exciting news last night that has me flitting about today. I've often mentioned a man that has created such a profound change in my life that I still have a hard time grasping it. I haven't seen him since April of this year and it seems he might be able to arrange a visit in January. I'm on the edge of my seat. I really want to spend some time with him and catch up on the past 8 months. I remember how energized and reviatilezed I felt after our meeting in April. It was a rebirth of sorts. Now I'm at the point where I crave his presence to help me digest the changes that have taken place and figure out what to do and where to go next.

Another issue that has been niggling at me is the desire to move or travel. I love it here in PH and coming back after the fiasco of Gainesville has been one of the best decisions I've made. However, I really feel the need to be somewhere else to further feed my spirit. I'm not sure about the traveling right now, but I do need a change, a new place, with new people and new experiences. Now that my children are grown and I have the freedom to explore being on my own, I revel in the idea that the time is drawing near.

Time will tell...

Saturday, May 5, 2007

The Last Days...(4/28/07-4/30/07)

Those last three days were amazing. We partied, we wrote, I got a beautiful tattoo of a lotus flower on my right upper arm, and then it was time to say goodbye. There were four of us left in the house on Sunday night and it was eerie. I could feel the ghosts of so many amazing people. I walked around the house and rewound the fun, laughter, tears, and every emotion I could muster. Part of me was so glad to have experienced it and part of me was so sad that it was over. There was a lot of love flowing through that house and I reveled in it every day. What an amazing gift.

I got home late Monday night and was totally exhausted. There was a sense of frustration that I had to return to my every day grind, but I also held close the excitement that a new journey awaited me.

I'm finally going home, back to Clearwater, back to the place I've been happiest in. It's been three years coming and though circumstances have not changed that make it a bit of a rough trek ahead, I don't mind. It will all work itself out and that makes me happy.

There are many things that have come to the surface that I have to work through, but I can deal with all of it, because I'm coming into my own now. The tides are turning at last.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Day three to day six...4/22/07 - 4/27/07

It would take me days to relay everything that has been going on, so let me just say that it's been filled with laughter, tears, creative energy, new acquaintances, and old friends. We've experienced things we will talk about for a long time to come.

In all of this sensory overload, I have found my own serene and solitary place to dwell amidst the chaos. My mind is pumping like erratic heartbeats absorbing the shock of feeling like I just jumped into a mountain pool, ice layer protecting its frigid liquidity. Words are battling, bumping, grinding into each other fighting for the opportunity to spew "a cappella" first.

I have found my voice, my muse is now flourishing inside of me, fueled by the external stimulation of great minds. I am allowing all of it to swirl to the surface and ultimately escape through every pore, open and ready to grease the slide. I'm ready for the ride. And still, I think of him...

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Day two continued...(4/21/07)

We began our trek out of the city, B, K, I, T, G, P, and I were tightly packed in the mini van and ready to enjoy some beautiful scenery across the way. It's about a nine hour drive from Chicago to Lake of the Ozarks. We made a few stops along the way and stopped in Peoria to meet a fellow writer, T. There I was meeting yet another talented artist in the ever growing network of connections gathering from Witer's Cafe. I had to smile for a moment and let out a low chuckle when I saw how people were looking at us. Actually, we did look like a motley crew of strangers breezing into the local gas station to fill up, use the restrooms and buy a few libations! We hung out with T for about an hour before we headed out for the rest of our long journey to "the house."

It wasn't long before we were like kids heading to Wally World and wondering, "are we there yet." After our fourth trip around the lake, and it is a rather large lake, we finally arrived at the house. The nine hour journey had graciously extened itself to fourteen and a half hours.

I couldn't believe what stood before me. The house was amazing. There was plenty of room to stash the influx of writers heading this way. Our first evening was filled with requanting ourselves with old friends. meeting new ones, and strengthening bonds with certain people the connection went deeper with. I loved being surrounded by such an amazing aura.

After much hugging and just an all out glad to be together again party, I headed out to the dock. There was a deep and intense silence and serenity surrounding me. Nightingales sang harmonious tunes and fesh leapt from the water. The moon shone bright light over the water and it all brought tears to my eyes. I never felt so surrounded by loved ones, yet so alone and solitary at the same time. There was a drifting irony to all of it. Here it was Saturday night, or should I say Sundy morning and my thoughts drifted to him...

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Day two...(4/21/07)

I walked around the studio marveling at the eclectic artwork all over the walls. The guys that ran the studio were two of the most interesting characters I've met in a long time. I was immediately at ease and very comfortable with the two Chicagoans! The idea of being in the city was a head rush in itself, but there I was in a recording studio with an amazing mix of people.

After wolfing down the Chicago style hotdogs, enjoying some drinks and getting into a relaxed mode, we listened to some of their music, which was fabulous. "Z" set us up for recording time and the excitement grew. There were three of us that recorded and we were mezmerized as we listened to our playbacks and realizing what it meant to hear ourselves in a professional environment. I can't speak for the others, but for me it was a rush and an experience that I definately want to repeat. The whole experience gave me such a sense of understanding where I want to go with my writing. I realized what another writer's retreat related experience this was that would create change in my life yet again.

We stayed at the studio until about 5:00 a.m. before I punked out and said I just had to sleep. I was exhausted, but hung in there until the absolute moment where I couldn't keep my eyes open anymore. I spent about 20 minutes looking out of a window at an empty lot and the highway just beyond it. I saw more things out of that window in those 20 minutes than I've seen in years out of my own windows. It was a beautiful thing.

We headed back to the hotel and I crashed on the floor by the hotel room door, a smile on my face and a sense of fullness in my heart. I was looking forward to the road trip to Missouri and as I closed my eyes, I felt a sense of peace and fulfillment in the knowledge that my life was going through yet another metamorphisis. I love them all.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Still day one...(4/20/07)

So, I got to Chicago safely and the flight wasn't too bad. O'Hare is a hurge airport, but I made my way to the shuttle service and paid for my ride to the City (downtown). My arrival was awaited by my fellow travellers at the Intercontinental Hotel and I was definately eager,to get there. After being dropped of at the hotel, the elevator couldn't move fast enough to get me to the 24th floor. As the door was opened and I entered the room, I saw familiar faces along with a couple of new ones. The exhiliration of spending time with old and new friends sent rushes through me.

The plan was to stop for something to eat and then head to the studio to do some recording. I was nervous about that since I read like I have a stick up my butt. Gotta learn to relax. So, eventually with everyone excited about the evening, we headed out for some real Chicago style food. Hot dogs with the fixins'. I'd heard you couldn't get them anywhere else like you could in Chicago. It was really cold, coming from Florida I'm sure my teeth were chattering a bit more than others! We stopped at a roadside and ordered our dogs loaded, then headed to the studio. A guy we'd met, I'll call him Z, was definately an interesting character. He was a free spirit if I've ever seen one. Livin' life like life should be lived, free and doing what he loved to do.

It was pretty late by the time we got to the studio and the people I met there were by far and inspiration to continue crawling out of the box I've been living in for so long. They were real people, with real lives, and more in touch with reality than the people I've had to associate with on a regular basis for so long. It was refreshing to say the least. We commenced wolfing down our hotdogs, which were amazing, and just chatted, getting to know each other. The stress and strain of daily ho-hum, humdrum existence got checked at the door, and I got to be me. How refreshing, liberating, and totally eye opening.

It was well after midnight before we got started with the recording and that was an amazing experience, I'll share in the next posting.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Day one...

The journey has begun. I'm sitting at the Jacksonville Airport just about ready to board my flight to Chicago. The Burger King fish sandwich I just ate is sitting in my stomach like a rock, but the hunger is quenched. I'm so excited. I'm making my last call to work, just to touch base and make sure everything is cool, and then I'm cutting the ties and going off into writer's land. Wow, awesome, no work for ten days.

I'll be posting daily blogs of events that occur about good, good times! I'll post more after I get to Chicago.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

A few updates...

Much has transpired since my last entry. On April 12, 13, and into the morning of April 14 I was in Georgia. My journey there served many purposes and had some interesting outcomes. There were several reasons that I wanted to take the trip. Firt and foremost, it was to meet the man behind the words. It was well worth the journey to meet him. He exuded such a radiant light and I immediately felt connected to him. You will see great things come from him and it fills my heart to know he will make a difference.

Secondly, I needed to get back in touch with nature. I've been in the box, in the city for so long, I stopped looking at what was around me. I'm surrounded by nature where I live, but over time it blended into the rest of the scenery around me and I closed my eyes. Though I didn't get to venture into the heart of the Okefenokee Swamp, I felt it's beauty and it's amazing presence. I wanted very much to drift down the river and marvel at what natures provides that so many try to destroy. Circumstances did not bring that about, however the exposure I did get gave me such a sense of peace. It was truely beautiful.

Third, I needed to get away from the familiar surroundings and responsibilities like work, home, being mom, and being discontent. I had a lot of time to think and assess what my life looked like to me. I didn't like what I saw. Changes are taking place as I write these words.

All in all my trip to Georgia was much needed, much appreciated, and very inspiring in many ways.

Tommorow I will be on my way to Missouri with an initial stop in Chicago. I'll be in Missouri for nine days for a writer's convention, though I see it more as a retreat. I've met these other writers in a website called Writers Cafe. It has had a fundamental impact on my life. It's where I met the amazing man I wrote about in the beginning of this blog, it's where I've met some incredible new friends that have become like family, and it's where I learned to spread my wings with my writing. We had the initial gathering in Encino, California in December of 2006, the second in NYC, and now this one in Missouri.

My belief from this artist's heart is that this trip will bring everythng together as it should be. My wings are spread wide and I'm beginning to fly.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

An adventure...

I just wanted to jot a quick entry since I'll be out of touch for the next four days. I'm off to what will likely be an amazing adventure. I will be sure and recount the highlights of this trip. I'll be in Georgia on Thursday and Friday and in Palm Harbor on Saturday and Sunday. Whew, a lot of driving, but it's well worth it.

There will be lots of pictures I'm sure and if I can figure out how to post them on the blog, I will be sure and share some of them.

It's been a very stressful week and I'm looking forward to the down time. The best part is that I finally get to meet one of the most amazing people to ever enter my life. That will truely be the highlight of this expedition. The second treat is the idea that I will be surrounded by nature, beauty, and wonder while meandering through the Okefenokee Swamp. Now that's what I call a good time!

I will most likely post on Sunday night to fill you in on the happenings over the next four days.

Sunday, April 8, 2007

Time to think while out of touch...

I've had time to digest some things while on hiatus from my male guide. We've spoken regularly for a few months now, and I came to look forward to his emails and occassional phone calls. It was something positive and exciting that made me smile each day. This weekend we've been out of touch and it has caused a pause, time to decipher some things that have been drifting through my mind. I will admit, I miss talking to him, but I have been afforded the time I needed to process this influx of change that has taken such a strong hold on me and my life.

First, let me start by saying, he's an amazing man and overall person. He has played the greatest part in helping me to see my potential in so many different aspects of who I am as a whole. I've learned so many profound and exciting things that will be revealed over time in these blogs. I quiver at the thought of finally meeting him in person, seeing his smile, hearing his words, and spending time revealing myself to him in more ways than I already have. I have the deepest respect and admiration for him. He is one of the few people I have met that lives his dream, makes a difference, and genuinely cares about people. He's what I would term a "humanitarian."

The human spirit in most people is fleeting at best, which is a sad thing, but he has a spirit that shines through the universe and lands at my doorstep. Each time he appears, another door opens and another revelation takes hold. There is no greater gift than the sharing of ideas, dreams, emotions, and the merging of two minds that think so much alike. I'm thankful each day...each day.

Exciting Times!

I'm processing thoughts at lightening speed this evening. I started writing a spoken word piece, as I was inspired by watching Def Poetry jam performances on YouTube, and found myself staring at an empty screen. I say empty in the sense that I wrote three stanzas, and as far as I was concerned, the page was still blank. I've been fighting the obvious message that there has to be a departure from the familiar, be it for a short time, or permanently, there are more important outlets for my work. The problem is, I don't know what they are, but I'm "allowing" so it will come to me. I'm doing something I've had a hard time doing in the past, and that is, letting go of the need to control what direction my life takes and just going where it takes me.

Funny how this works...I understand there needs to be a change, and I feel that what my next level of writing should be is hovering just on the periphery where I can't grab it yet. So, here I am, ready to take the plunge and have no idea what to plunge into. With each day that passes it gets a little closer to the forefront and should surface very soon.

There are three very powerful influneces going on, one of them being me, that are opening doors in my mind sure to create profound changes. This is an exciting time.

Saturday, April 7, 2007

Thoughts...

I'm in an Enigma and jasmine candle sort of mood right now. I am reeling and my mind is going an infinite number of miles per hour. It's like someone just turned on stadium lights in my room, and I am visually blind, which has caused all of my other senses to kick into overdrive. The word "understanding" never meant more to me than it does right now.

As you know, I've been going through this process of transformation, and I have to say, it's far beyond anything I could have ever imagined. Boy, I thought I was empowered to the hilt when I wrote my last blog. That's nothing compared to how I feel now. I can't believe it's that simple, that logical, and that obvious. Okay, you're thoroughly confused right now. Let me explain.

Again, through the direction of my physical guide, I have been led in a direction and to a necessity I couldn't see on my own. I was told to buy a book titled, "The Secret," and to give it to my son as penance to read for some recent misbehavior. I bought the book today, tossed it on the front seat of my car, and was glad it only cost me $17.50. I dropped some McD's off for my son and headed back out to get my hair cut. Just before I got out of the car, (at the dreaded mall) I realized there would be a long wait since it was a day off for a lot of people. I grabbed the book thinking, "It's got to be better reading than fashion and hair magazines." I battled my way throught the throngs of people - all in a hurry - and made my way to the salon. As I'd suspected, there was going to be a 30 minute wait. I plopped down in the wooden chair and instinctively grabbed a hairstyle book to see what magic I wanted the stylist to create today. I got bored with that quickly and resolved myself to a trim. The usual drama was going on around me, crying babies, toddlers smashing cookies on the floor, people with blank faces, and all the vibes that go with it. I opened the book and began to read the introduction. I was about two pages into it when it was time to hit the chair. I didn't want to close the book and almost decided to skip the haircut and find a nice quiet place to read. Well, as fate would have it, I looked in the mirror and realized I had wings that just had to be chopped. The chair won at that moment.

After rushing through the rest of my hectice day, I sat at my computer and just fiddled around. I knew I had to pick my daugther up at work , so I didn't want to get too involved with anything. After picking her up, stopping at the gas station for goodies and my loathed pack of cigarettes, we headed home, just chatting idly about nothing really. I wanted to get home so I could read some more. I'd been very intrigued with the DaVince code for a while and couldn't read enough about it, but that is nothing compared to this. It was like some kind of magnetic draw. My next destination was a sea salt and lavender bath.

I put on some mellow music, drew my bath, and enjoyed the wonderful lavendar aroma permeating the air. The jasmine scented candle I had burning meshed well with the floral scent. I slid into the tub, the hot water drawing me in. It was blissful. I opened the book and began to read. The words shot off the pages like little needles and covered me with a physical sensation I will never be able to describe. Each word seeped into my brain like water into beach sand, and opened my mind beyond places I thought it could stretch. The last lotus petal opened up and revealed the heart of the blossom.

My existance will change now. Everything will be as I want it to be, because that is what my thoughts will attract. My thoughts are and have been my life. Now my life is and will be my thoughts.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

The Influence of music...

Music has always had a tremendous impact on me. It defines my moods, thoughts, and ideas. I'm not particularly picky about what type of music I listen to, though I have my preferences. I've never really been a country music fan and opera is something I can only take in small doses. I choose what I listen to primarily based on my thoughts. When I first get home from work and I'm all wound up, interestingly enough, I like to play something upbeat, as a matter of fact, it's the only time I listen to female artists like Michelle Branch, Dido, Alicia Keys, and others like them. I have to laugh because the music, the lyrics, give me pause to sing along and feel upbeat, only realizing afterward that most of the songs have to do with some painful aspect of a relationship. There has to be some humor in that!

Once I've relaxed and I sit down to check out my writing site, I listen to, yep silence. I download the day, all the crap that comes with it, and prepare myself for me time. My favorite time. I make it a point to lay down and relax my body, along with my mind, for at least ten minutes each evening. Creating a comfortable enviornment is not only important, it also adds to my ability to write. I have an antique, wrought-iron, gothic-looking, pub lamp (well, I don't know how antique it really is) that has a red bulb in it. It casts just enough light to smooth out the darkness, but puts a peaceful hue into the room. My favorite incense is Goloka NAG CHAMPA Agarbathi, very heady scent, but drifts around the room nicely. I turn on my small fountain (water is very important to me, must have been a fish in another life) and relax into the sensation of sound that reminds me of rain. Finally, I titillate my aural craving for music that will put me into the zone. Oh, I forgot to mention, an occasional glass of wine adds a nice touch.

Now is when I like to listen to Electronica/Trip-Hop, like Massive Attack (my favorite group and not one I would have thought I'd listen to with a name like that. It is deceptive), or Alternative music like, Mercury Tea Company or Portishead. This type of music puts me in a writing mood, as a matter of fact, I'm listening to it now, so this will probably be a lengthy blog entry. I'll apologize in advance. I fluctuate between writing and talking (via Internet, what a great invention) to the dearest person I know. Now, talking to this friend begins to evoke another thought process...

Yeah, the time comes to play Enigma, Opeth, or A Perfect Circle. This is the time I begin to realize the amazing life I lead. After fulfilling my obligations as mother and provider, I retreat into a place that is peaceful and safe, a place that gives me comfort in my solitude. Being alone is probably the hardest trial we as humans face in our lifetimes. We're not meant to be solitary creatures, every whole is made up of two halves, on equal levels. So, back to the music...This type of music makes my body feel alive. It makes me realize I feel comfortable in my skin, and I have no need to try and turn back time, I'm not so bad at this stage in my life. I feel the joy of just feeling, a new sensation that has developed. I need not go into detail about particulars, but suffice it to say desires arise...

Just before I go to sleep, I put on Amethystium or Bluestone, to accompany me into slumber, and then I dream...

While writing this, I had to smile, because I've lived in the pits of hell, and here I am, reveling in my freedom and strength. I feel empowered enought to say that I can achieve anything I set out to do, and I plan to do much.

Now, if there is head scratching going on, wondering what the hell this blog means, each of these entries is a piece of the puzzle that is me. As each piece falls into place, the big picture of who I am will become a realization. I hope to inspire women out there, who think they are stuck in a hopeless nightmare, that there is absolute peace (despite the daily struggles to make ends meet) in regaining their lives. There is nothing more precious than that.

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

The darkness is fading...

The visions are becoming obscure to say the least. I reflect back on a time when moments of standing still in my life would evoke memories of a very painful past. The snipets of emotional peace were few and far between the darkness that enveloped me. Eventually the "why me's" became "when does it stop." I tried to come to terms with the reasons for events in my life, but the answers never really seemed to come to me.

I developed an aversion/fascination with men. The underlying current in my life was that I was destined to gravitate to the "bad" ones, either that or they gravitated toward me. I must have had that "treat me like shit" magnet. The progression of my male influences set me on a path that was bound for destruction. Self-destruction.

The beatings and emotional abuse as a child didn't begin until I was seven. There was no escape, no way out, after all, I was just a child. The feeling of being trapped became a reality that developed over time and placed me into that pattern for years to come. I spent a lot of time alone as a child and teenager. My comfort zone was in my room, listening to music, reading, writing, and dreaming of the day that I would be free. In the meantime, I tried like hell to avert the abuse by putting every ounce of effort I had into being the perfect daughter. I had no idea what perfection was, but I still tried to obtain it. My last beating was at the age of seventeen, I finally stood my ground with no regard as to what the repercussions would be. My father must have sensed a certain danger in my words and actions, because it stopped as quickly as it had begun ten years earlier. The sense of empowerment and control over my life created a change in me that was profound. I would never be a victim again. Little did I know that ten years had already created the need to please an "audience of one." The path was set and I was on it for the long haul.

At nineteen I met the "man of my dreams." The abuse began early on; however, the need to please, to love, to be loved, was paramount and strong enough to make me ignore the reality of where I was headed. At twenty I was married, and at twenty-one I had a child. A daughter. At twenty-four I was divorced and broken in every way because of the emotional abuse. He never laid a hand on me, but at times I'd wished for that, at least bruises heal. The attack on emotions is a difficult demon to battle. The nightmare was over, but the path was even deeper ingrained in me.

At twenty-five I was remarried to a man that had witnessed much of the trauma I had gone through with my first husband. He was a friend, a confidant, and someone that reiterated on a regular basis that he could not understand the reason for the abuse I had endured. It sickened and angered him; he could never fathom treating me that way, because I was an amazing woman. I trusted those words. The next eight years would prove those words to be chains that bound me to an even darker and soul draining existence. At thirty-four I was alone again, this time with two children.

For six years I struggled through days and nights trying to survive in a harsh world while battling the unforgiving self-blame that consumed me even further, then I met "him." Tall, dark,handsome, intelligent, and very kind. On the surface. His brand of abuse was one I had not yet experienced. I was convinced that I loved him more than life, and I spent every day trying to show him that. He was an alcoholic, like my second husband; he just disguised it better by lulling me into that world. Though he wined and dined me, took me places, bought me gifts and was nice to my kids, there was a darker side to him. As time passed, I found myself crying more and more on lonely nights while hugging my pillow and asking "God" to make it better. I needed a reprieve from the bad. We were together for two years, until I walked away from him. I was devastated, crushed, emotionally destroyed and determined to never get involved in a relationship again. I didn't have a problem with the idea that I would spend the rest of my time here alone. It gave me a bizarre sense of peace and tranquility.

Eight years have passed since then, and I am still a single woman, still raising my children, and still fighting the world. Though I have become stronger, more determined, and much more forgiving of my choices, there was a sense of something missing. The solitude of my life has given me a sense of comfort and stability in the reality that I am not being abused and never will be again.

I only realized recently that there has been an overwhelming amount of love buried deep in the recesses of my being. The fear of letting it go was more intense than any fear I have ever felt before. There has always been a very real and very healing sense of being for the love of my children, but in that reality I came to understand something that rocked my world. Through the role of daughter, wife, girlfriend, and lover, I had never really given or recieved love. I never shed a tear during the "it's over phase," and just moved forward in life with the understanding that I could heal quickly, because I had never really opened myself, mind, heart, body, and soul to anyone. I had never received it either. The risk of being hurt beyond repair has been a powerful tool to keep me from taking that step.

That has changed. I have felt a deeper sense of love for who I am as a whole, and I have given a deeper level of love than I thought possible. Not storybook, cliche love, but love for what it is meant to be, the acceptance of myself as a beautiful spirit with much to give and the ability to receive in return. It has all come from "allowing," and I am grateful beyond words.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Breaking the Cycle...

I felt the need to share this memoir I wrote several years ago. It's appropriate right now, because I have a family situation that made me reflect on it. I have changed the names of my children to grant them privacy.

WHEN I WANT TO HIT THE KIDS:
Breaking the cycle of child abuse


Sitting here at my kitchen table, the odor of bacon, eggs and burnt toast lingering in the air, solidifies the rough night I had. God, I’m tired. Keith, my five-year-old, was sick last night, depriving me of sleep. When I looked in the mirror this morning, horror was the best description available. The bags under my eyes attested to utter fatigue. With hair sticking up like I had electric shock, combined with the jaundiced color of my skin, thoughts of famine relief entered a fuzzy brain.

This total exhaustion continually wears me down and causes reflection on this situation. I just lost my job because of a car accident, the bills are piling up, and I’m alone. The tears have all dried up, there’s just no crying left. Hope, faith and strength have fled through an open window. What now? The children are squabbling.

“You took my marker!”

“Did not!”

“Did too!”

“Don’t hit me!”

Then, the dreaded ear-shattering scream. “Mom! Amy hit me. Mommmmy!”

Keith runs into the kitchen, grabs my leg, clinging like an octopus…and whining. That incessant whining. It drives me crazy. I intervene as always and restore peace and order. Back to the kitchen table, maybe to grab just a few minutes of my own peace. Without even making it to the chair to sit down, the children are at it again.

“Mom, Keith is in my room. He’s bugging me.”

“I am not, Mom, she’s lying.”

When does it ever end? The constant fighting and arguing is stressing me out – thinking straight is not an option. That’s it. I’ve had it. I can’t take it anymore. It will be made clear who’s in charge here.

Thinking back on that minute between the kitchen and the bedrooms will forever be emblazoned in my mind. As I raised a shaking hand to my son, I looked down at his little innocent face and froze. He gazed at me, his beautiful blue eyes tinged with fear. It made my stomach turn. How could the thought of striking him even enter my mind? My frustrations are like demons nipping at my brain. The anger at my situation uncoiled serpents, ready to strike with no regard to who my victim was. At that moment, my mind flashed back to my childhood.

I was about eight years old. My father was on military maneuvers, and I was allowed to have two friends over to play. Mary, the trouble maker, sneaked into my parents’ room. When I found her in there, a bolt of anxiety gripped me. I yelled at her to get out and slammed the door behind us, sure the thing was ripped off the hinges.

A few hours later, my mother, screaming like a mad woman, came raging down the hall. “What were you doing in my room?” she demanded.

How she’d figured out anyone was in her room was beyond me. “Mom, I’m sorry. Mary was in there, but I told her to get out.”

My mother’s reply stung me. “You’re lying. I called your dad and told him I can’t handle you when he’s gone. He’s coming home.”

My heart hammered in a tightening chest. Surely, death was imminent. I tried to convince myself there was no way he could abandon his exercise, leaving me a few days to live. Later that evening, as mom ironed and I lay on the couch coloring, the door burst open. There he stood in all his Army gear, covered in mud and filled with rage. It brought to mind the monsters at the Saturday matinees. He stalked toward me with fists clenched so hard the veins protruded. He reached down, grabbed me by the shirt, hoisting me to dangling feet. He shook me till my teeth chattered, as he screamed in my face, his foamy spit spraying like a rabid animal’s. Trying to wriggle free only managed to anger him more. He reached out and grabbed teh iron, raised it over his head and in what seemed like slow motion I saw the glint of silver descending upon me. My mother grabbed the cord and pulled the iron from his hand, the only time she ever intervened in a beatin. When he realized his hand was empty he balled his fist. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw his fist coming at me; the ceiling light danced on the red stone of his Army ring. His fist and my eye connected. A split second later, a sticky wetness was flowing down an already swelling cheek. In that moment of confusion, my chance for escape came. Lumbering down the hall to the safety of my room, my bed, was the only thing on my mind. Reaching for my face, shaking fingers traced the swelling. Though my vision was blurred, crimson snakes running down my fingers were clearly visible. My terror-filled scream brought mom and dad running. One look sent mom wailing to her room. Dad scooped me up in the blanket and rushed me to the hospital. Another emergency room visit. Another lie to another doctor.

When I snap back to the present, Keith is frozen like a statue in a red-light, green-light game. Lowering my hand, I turn and leave the room. How could the thought of putting my child through that brutality even enter my mind? The anger does not lie with him. It’s just anger. This moment of reflection forces me to step back and think about the situation. I go out on the stoop, count to ten, recite the National Anthem, whatever it takes to get a grip. Once I get myself on an even keel, the situation will be handled calmly, rationally and with love. I have made a conscious decision to stop the cycle of abuse that has existed in my family. I must keep reminding myself that physical and mental abuse is not the answer to any dilemma. Children should never be the victims of everyday stresses and problems that push us to lose control. The trust my children have in me must never be destroyed.

I am a survivor of such destruction. If the pressure becomes unbearable, I’ll find help before there are regrets and actions that cannot be reversed.

You can do the same...

Misjudging the flow of thoughts...

I'd convinced myself that I could write these blogs in chornological order regarding the events as they occurred in real time. I realize now that these blogs will be snipets not in order of age, severity, or impact. These will simply come in the order that my mind allows me to purge them. While waiting for one of these "memories" to come to mind, another question arose in my thought process, so I digress.

Why did I allow myselft to be beaten, degraded, and humiliated with no resistance? I suppose the guilt comes into play often with this question. Who can I blame besides myself for enbling another human being to do those things to me? I'd imagine a shrink would have standard textbook answers; talk of childhood trauma and issues with self-esteem. For me, it still comes down to the basic desire to know why after the first strike; I did not turn and walk out of the door. Was it such a desperate need to be loved, that any punishment fit the reward of those rare moments when it felt like love? How is love defined in these types of scenarios?

Here's what I came up with, and this of course is solely in relationship to my personal universe.

Failure. Now that word evokes a strong response from me. This would, by psychiatric standards, fall into the childhood trauma arena. Looking beyond the physical and emotional abuse, I ponder the pshcological abuse. The molding of a young and impressionable mind is the most powerful tool we have, which can be a blessing and/or a curse. Perfection is my least favorite word in any language. It was the primary expectation imprinted into my brain; there was no room for "failure."

My upbringing was quite sterile. My parents did not show physical affection, or impart it on me. As time passed, I actually acquired an aversion to being touched. There was a certain discomfort with the feelings that coursed through me when there was human contact. This was not a major issue when I was younger, however, it did create a serious problem in adulthood. It was my double-edged sword, the desire to be loved, but an aversion to experiencing it through physical contact.

Don't get me wrong I had the desire to make love to my husband, at first, it was the affection he expected outside of the bedroom that I couldn't give. He would hold my hand when we were walking and I would pull away. I can't say this was the catalyst that made him angry enough to hit me, hurt me, and scare the hell out of me, but as victims do, I internalized. I justified each "incident" by convincing myself it was my fault, and I had to try harder to be "perfect."

Again, over time this became my reality. Every beating, every degrading word, plays through my mind like a flickering, black and white movie. As the reels run their course and the pictures jump by, I grasp a moment, a thought, that if love hadn't been so important to me none of those things would have happened. The logical solution to the problem was to castrate love from every part of me, including myself. It worked quite well for a few years, until recent events. I've learned that love is not always associated with pain. I've also learned that love for myself and those I treasure, creates passion, and this passion translates into every part of me, especially my psyche.

One of the largest transitions I've made, is the realization that I crave the human touch in many ways. Commonplace for most, profound for me...

Friday, March 30, 2007

My thoughts were intense yesterday...

I am remiss in not having posted yesterday; however, much has transpired just in the past 24 hours. In a sense, it's been a personal revelation, a deeper understanding, and a profound sense of fate taking place. I am filled with emotions that have overflowed my capacity to put words to screen right now. The weekend is upon me again, and I plan to formulate those words and put them into a coherent post.

In order to adequately portray my life, there will be moments of insight into what is transpiring in me now. I feel the need to step away from each post that depicts the pain and suffering and balance it with the goodness that flows through every day of my existance at this turning point. There is so much inside of me, so much that I have pushed away and told myself I'm over, but the reality is that I embrace it, all of it, because it is the foundation to my purpose.

The best part is that I've met someone who is willing to take the journey with me, without judgment, without condemnation, and without pity, but with a deep sense of love and understanding. He sees the vision as I do, a means to do something real, positive, and very necessary.

Lives will be changed, survivors will be forged out of the wreckage of devastation, and peace, personal serenity, will come at last. Life doesn't get any better than that.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Seven Days Into Life, Death Tried to Claim Me

My father was obsessed with having a child. He wanted a son more than anything, someone to carry on his name, his legacy. They were told my mother couldn't have any more children because of what had happened to her during the war...the rape. Dad being who he was, felt that he could prove that wrong. For two years, my mother took her temperature and called him when she was fertile. He would jump in his jeep, rush home to "do the deed" and produce this miracle child. Finally, it happened. Mom was pregnant. My half-sister (I'll call her Helen) was about 11. From what I hear she wasn't too happy about this revelation. I laughed years later when my dad told me that he knew exactly when I was conceived. He's quite pompous as you will discover.

Nine months later, on February 14, I came into this world - blue. The city was gripped by one of the worst snow storms in decades. Power outages and blocked roads created chaos, especially on a military base. My mother and I spent a week in the hospital (as was the case back then), and on the day we were released it was snowing like hell. We were all bundeled in the car and on the treacherous journey home. Just as luck would have it, about a mile from our destination, the car died. My father pushed it all the way to our apartment with my mom steering and me bundled up and lying on the passenger seat.

When our little family arrived, the discovery that there was no power, therefore no heat, set my father into a rage, my mother into tears, and me into the first major struggle of my life. It was like an omen of things to come. Mom ran over to the neighbors apartment, an elderly lady, and asked if she could borrow a blanket or two to help keep me warm. The woman was so touched by my mother's panic that she lent her an old, faded fur coat and told her to wrap me up tightly. Her thought was that if it could keep the animal who once wore it warm in freezing weather, it should do the trick for me. Interesting logic to say the least.

We spent that night huddled together, candlelight casting a warm glow about the room, deceptive comfort at best, and relied on body heat, blankets, and that old fur coat to keep us warm through the raging onslaught of nature. The next morning I awoke with a cough, which quickly developed into pneumonia. We couldn't make it to the hospital until the following day and by then things had worsened. I struggled for five days to survive the onslaught of fever, dehydration, and chest rattling coughs.

I came into the world blue and beat the odds. I fought with every ounce of my tiny body to battle pneumonia and I beat the odds. I've been beating the odds ever since.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

The Foundation of Me

It's funny when you imagine your parents meeting, courting, getting engaged, married, the whole ritual of a man and woman connecting and making the committment to stay together til death do them part. I actually enjoy hearing stories of how my friends parents met. Then, they ask me. In the beginning I hesitated to tell people; however, as time has passed, I feel it has some relevance to how my life turned out.

My father (then 19 years old) was a GI in the Army and stationed in Germany in 1954. One night he went to a Gasthaus (like a restaurant/bar in America) and saw my mother. It was post WWII and most of the GI's were warned that German girls were trying to get married to Americans so they could get out of the country. There was my dad, an African American male reveling in the beauty of my mother's Aryan features, blonde hair, blue eyes, alabaster skin. He immediately fell in love, and tried to woo her. She would not give in, but he continued to frequent the Gasthaus leaving my mother good tips, hershey bars and Marlboro cigarettes. I forgot to mention, my dad was a miliary policeman. Since it was postwar, he carried his weapon (concealed) at all times. So, one night he went into the Gasthaus and sat down for his nightly meal of schnitzel, sauerkraut, dumplings, and a Lowenbrau beer. He noticed a GI harrassing my mother, when suddenly the man pulled out a gun and put it to my mother's head. Apparently this man wanted my mother to sleep with him. Most of the GI's had perceptions that the German women were easy. My father jumped up from his chair and approached the situation. He pulled his gun out and put it behind his back, and approached the other GI, who wasn't really paying attention. He put the gun in the mans back and asked him if she was really worth dying for. After just a few minutes the man relented and gave himself up.

From that time on, my father endeared himself to my mother, her daughter, and my grandmother. My mother had been raped by GI's at the age of 19 and my half-sister was the product of that. Nonetheless, my father took care of all of them and then my mother finally agreed to marry him. The military did not look kindly on this for three reasons. He was black, she was white, and he was in the military. Believe it or not, that was an issue then. It took quite some time to get permission from his superior officers, but again he was relentless. My parents were married an 1955 and one year later my mother became an American citizen.

Two years later, I was born.

Monday, March 26, 2007

The Transition Begins...

To start at the beginning would not explain the impact of my life adequately enough, so I'll start with a journal entry from a few weeks ago.

I'm sitting in a bath of sea salt with 8 drops of lavendar oil, as per my physical guide''s instructions. Last night was difficult for me. I went through a transition that physically and emotionally rocked me and depleted me. My body and my mind hurt in unison. I am still trying to grasp all of this. For the longest time, I thought it was my imagination, wishful thinking, but I realize now that is not the case. This is all being driven by many forces that have gathered together to take me to a higher level of consciousness. This is the second wave of the overall transition. Each one becomes more intense, more profound. The fear, however, is gone.

I suppose my biggest fear was driven by the idea that something I have searched my entire life for might disappear one day when I awaken. I realize now that is nowhere near the truth. I've been assured of that in more ways than one. I have learned that it is okay to "allow" to "trust." I appealed to the powers that be in answering the question that has driven me to the brink of tears so many times. When I reach the apex, when the crown is completely open and I finally realize my potential, will the one thing that I've searched so long for be taken away from me? I know, it's a selfish want in the bigger picture, but I won't lose sight of the fact that I am human, therefore, I have dreams and desires. I did realize though that it was something I placed in my own mind to prevent me from forging ahead.

I lost sight of the demons I have to realease, solely out of fear of what would happen if I did let them go. They have become such an integral part of who I am. There is a large part of me that is embroiled in my past, so much blame I have shouldered for the chain of events that have caused me pain. The burning question in the forefront of my mind has always been "why me?" I couldn't begin to grasp why these things were happening...relentlessly.

I do understand now, and the release will come in waves. Along with that release will come the ability to affect a change not only in myself, but in others as well. I am beginning to understand my purpose.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Traveling through the past...

Recounting situations of the past is not a healthy way to deal with the present and future; however in this instance it is important that I share the past in order to bring to light the amazing turn of events that have taken place over the past two months.