One Proud Wife!

Finish Line 2What a day! Today my husband Keith got to cross something off his bucket list. He ran a half marathon. But let me tell a little about why this is so special. Six years ago on March 29th, my husband was undergoing cancer treatment for stage 4 cancer in his left tonsil. Running in anything was the farthest thing from our minds. We were in survival mode. He had three weeks of two a day radiation treatments and weekly chemo therapy sessions left and let me tell you, it was brutal. Every day as I drove him to radiation, I was so proud of his courage to undergo the treatment necessary for him to keep being my husband but it also broke my heart because it was really taking a toll on him. It has been six years and thanks be to God and his amazing doctors, he is still cancer free. We are well aware of how every day is a gift.

So shortly before his 60th birthday last summer, he decides he wants to run a marathon. OMG I thought. He has been running 5K’s for the last several years and has recently bumped his running up to 8 or 9 miles 3 or 4 times a week. Even when we were in Houston getting rid of my brain tumor, he was able to take time out and run for a few hours. Later he told me that running helped him get through my surgery and hospital recovery time. But as we got closer to the event, he began to realize that he just wasn’t ready for 26 miles. Hey, there is no shame in 13.1 miles. Right now I’m working at just running one mile without stopping.

So this morning at 5:30 he is up, ready to go and headed to the bus to take him to the starting line. I got up just in time to kiss him bye and wish him luck. Got a quick text from him on his way to the starting line to tell me that the wind was up a bit out of the south, which might slow him down. I had to remind him that he was participating not racing. He can be a bit of an overachiever and is quite competitive. Oh and hard headed too. But that’s ok, I think I may have some of those same attributes. Probably one of the reasons we are such a great pair.

Shortly before seven my son Craig shows up. He’s excited about Keith’s event and wanted to be a part of the morning as well. We watched Keith’s progress on my Find Friends app. When he was about 3 miles out, Craig and I headed for the stadium, which is right by our house. Very convenient. We waited patiently and then we saw him coming down the road in his lime green hat. Then he is coming through the cones and into the stadium. We have our cameras out and we are cheering him. After he whipped passed up, Craig and I shot back into the stadium to see him make the final lap on Noble Stadium’s track and ultimately cross that finish line.My guys 2

As he rounded the first corner on the track, he rang the bell. The A2A Marathon is a fundraiser for our cancer center. The bell is on the track for everyone to ring signifying that they have survived cancer or are running for someone who did. When I saw him ring that bell I was immediately transported back to Houston. On April 24, 2009, he had just received his last cancer treatment, rang the bell at MD Anderson and we were headed home. I remember praying with all my heart that the treatment he received had rid him of cancer. When my thoughts finally returned to his final lap on the track, I noticed that tears were coming out of the corner of my eyes. This very brave man that I love more than anything was running a half marathon. He is a cancer survivor. He is living life to the fullest and best of all, I am getting to share it with him.

Just a little bling, or is it something else?

Mom & DadI had a realization this week while getting ready for work. I had taken my rings off to put on some hand lotion. As I was putting them back on a thought crossed my mind. It suddenly occurred to me that I was viewing these three rings as symbols of something. They weren’t just pretty on my hands, they meant something. These three rings were my wedding ring, my mother’s wedding ring and my dad’s wedding ring.

It got me to thinking about how pieces of jewelry have affected me over the span of my lifetime. I remember in junior high that when you had a boyfriend, he would buy you an ID bracelet with his name on it or a bracelet with your name on it with his profession of love for you on the back. How vividly I remember those times. You know when you are junior high and a boy likes you, it turns your whole world upside down. I wonder what ever happened to those bracelets?

In high school the jewelry changed to an item called a “drop”. Who makes up this stuff? Anyway, a “drop” was on a chain and was an item that was created with your boyfriend’s initials on it. If you were going steady with a guy, you were honored to wear his “drop”. I had a boyfriend during this time. In fact it was the same one who had to buy me the bracelet in junior high. But he didn’t have a “drop” and I can recall badgering him to “get me a drop”. Hey, I wanted to be like all the other girls who had boyfriends. Isn’t that what high school is all about, fitting in? Well he finally put a “drop” around my neck, but as I recall, we didn’t last too much longer. Maybe I was a little too pushy. In fact, my mother told me years later that I could be a bit “overbearing.” Can you believe that? My own mother. Well she was right, as she usually was. I was a spoiled little girl who was used to getting her way. So I apologize to my junior high/high school boyfriend for being so overbearing. You were a nice guy.

Now the latter half of high school there was the “class ring” thing and many times the boyfriend would put his class ring on a chain for his girl to wear or wrap wads of tape around it to fit your finger. If you were walking around with a class ring hanging from a chain or on your finger, it was pretty powerful. The only problem with both the drop and the class ring, when you broke up, you had to give them back and that was difficult if the breakup wasn’t your idea.

Then there was the “promise” ring. Remember those? I had two from two different guys. Not sure what they were “promising” me though. I remember going to Drakes jewelry store with my then boyfriend to look at promise rings. We were seniors in high school and I think he got it for me for Christmas or my birthday. I can recall his mother being “less than thrilled.” It was a little gold band with a diamond “flake”. Yes, I can call it a “flake” because it was so tiny but I loved it. So what was he promising me? To love me forever? To marry me some day? To break my heart? To move on without me? Good question. I moved on without him….. The second promise ring came during my freshman year of college and it came from the guy that I had moved on with….. then he moved on without me. I still have this little ring and I turned it into a pinky ring. In fact, when my daughter was 4, she wore it when she had her four year old portrait taken. How fun is that?

I went on for a couple of years without any significant jewelry from a guy until I got married in 1981.   I don’t know that I could call it significant, it was just a gold wedding band. No engagement ring. In fact, there was not even any mention of getting me an engagement ring. Now this was an entirely new twist for me. I usually insisted on things (so my mother tells me). But I had not pitched a fit, carried on or insisted on an engagement ring. The simple gold band around my ring finger was all I needed. I apparently had lost my mind. Over the course of that 9 years, 9 months and 20 days or so, I wore that ring with a plethora of emotions. I loved this man, but I was never very sure from day to day, week to week, just how much he loved me. I had two children with this man, which were the best things to come out of that marriage. I wore that ring every day, it meant something to me. Him, well he wore his ring at first and then it conveniently got lost. Then he asked me to buy him a new one and seems like that one got lost too. I remember that it took me several days after a judge granted the divorce for me to officially take that ring off. I had such high hopes when I got married. I was not that same little spoiled girl my mother talked to me about and yet here I was divorced. Taking that ring off, I felt like a complete failure to myself and to my children. Yet in reality, I had very little to do with that failure.

Two short years later I put on another wedding ring, but should not have. This ring I already owned. The new man didn’t even care enough to put an engagement ring or “new” wedding ring on my finger. But that’s ok because there were too many things wrong with this scenario to elaborate. Besides, it’s that five year period of time I don’t discuss very much. This ring had no trouble coming off my finger and I no longer have it in my possession.

So back to my three very special rings. Nine years later, the love of my life and now husband got down on one knee inside of a horse drawn carriage in downtown Oklahoma City, proposed and put a beautiful diamond “engagement” ring on my finger. That’s right, an actual diamond. The most beautiful diamond ring I had ever seen from the most beautiful man. Now that’s how you show a girl you love her. The following year he added a wedding ring to it and every day when I look at that ring, I am proud to wear it and am proud to be his wife.

So that takes me to the other couple I knew who were deeply in love and committed to each other for 60 years, my parents Lonie and Margarett. Over the past few years, I have lost them both and it’s been very difficult. They were always such big influences in my life and their unconditional love of me and my children kept me going on days I wasn’t sure I could keep going. I now have both of their wedding rings and I wear them on my hands each day. It is my constant reminder of how much they loved me and how much I love them. Seems silly I know, but it helps me to feel close to them. They are never far from my mind and my memories of them are strong in my heart.

So to answer the question “bling” or “something else”? For me it’s “something else.”

Preparing

Grapes 2This time next week I will be on the other side of my brain tumor surgery. Whooohooo. I find myself thinking of little else as the countdown begins for our little trip to Houston. Today I am spending some time just enjoying the simple things in life. This morning it was hot coffee in my favorite chair covered in dogs with a fire in the fireplace. Later it was a trip to “Christmas in the Barn” south of town. Since it is a bit chilly here today, we bundled up and walked hand in hand around the craft fair looking at all the fun stuff. Wafting through the air was the smell of pinion wood and if you got a little cold, just stop by a fire pit to warm yourself.   Yes, today I am beginning the mental preparation.

I had planned in my mind to work until noon on Monday so I can come home and get ready for the trip both mentally and physically. But I think my boss may have other ideas. I’m pretty sure I mentioned in our staff meeting last week that was my plan, but yesterday he started talking about us meeting at 2:30 Monday. Well, what is he thinking?   Not sure by 2:30 my mind won’t be already moving on, but will stay as long as he needs me to, but after that 2:30 meeting, I gotta go. Not only is he worried about me, but I’m worried about him and the office. Hope it’s still there when I return. [wink/wink] They’ll be fine.

When I was trying to decide when to have this surgery, all I really looked at was what would cause the least amount of disruption at work. When was the best time to be gone? I figured that time frame out and scheduled my surgery. Well let me tell you what I did not consider and I may need to receive some kind of worst grandma in the world award for this one. The day before my surgery, my grandson turns 6 and the day after my surgery, my granddaughter turns 3. I can still recall my daughter reminding me that she will be missing her children’s birthdays. OMG. What kind of Mimi does that? I do have a brain tumor you know and can’t be held accountable for my actions. That’s my excuse and I’m sticking with it, for another few days anyway.

So what do you pack for this kind of surgery anyway? I have already been told by my doctor that the day before my surgery, I can have no makeup on because they are going to put some kind of dots on my head and face. Great, no makeup. I hope he recognizes me and that I don’t scare the living daylights out of people. AND, that morning will be the last time “I” can wash my hair until the staples come out of my head. Um let’s see, that’s 10 or 14 days. Are you kidding me? I am thankful my husband doesn’t love me for my beauty alone.

So back to this packing thing. Ok, I don’t need to take hair care products and I guess I really can leave my make up at home. So If I have to be in the hospital for 4 or 5 days, what’s a girl to wear? I refuse to stay in that stupid little hospital gown beyond the day of my surgery. I have a couple of cute comfy shirts I was thinking about taking, then I remembered that they would have to be pulled on over my head. Hmmm, not sure about that. I have soft stretchy pants that I certainly will be sporting. I have also been told that the next day they will have me up and walking. Walking may be a bit of a stretch. Let’s call it preparing to walk in case I have balance issues. I just really don’t know. I’m telling myself it will be no big deal. They will tell me it’s time to get out and do a little walking and I’ll say, well ok, let’s go. Guess I should take a pair of walking shoes. Keith has reminded me that I will probably have to use a walker for a while until we are sure about my balance. I’m ok with that.

Keith, Craig and I will start our little journey to Houston some time Tuesday morning. I would like to get there and get settled in and eat at one of our favorite restaurants. My pre-op stuff starts at 8:30 the next morning and I literally have something every half hour with my final appointment scheduled for 5 p.m. I did notice they gave me an hour for lunch. My daughter’s plane arrives from Little Rock at 6:30 p.m. and Keith will go out to the airport and retrieve her. We will have a nice quiet evening together and then Thursday morning, it’s removal of brain tumor time.

Yes, I’m nervous but I think I’m handling it ok. I have heard several time frames for the surgery: 4-6 hours, 10 hours and 12 hours. I’m hoping for the 4-6 hour option myself and I know my loved ones sitting in the waiting room will be as well.   I am so grateful to have the three of them there with me. They are my three favorite people in the whole world and I love them so much. I am also thankful for all my friends who are praying for me and for those who are praying for me and don’t even know me. I am humbled by all the support I have received. Thank you all. I know that God will be with me during this journey and he will guide the hands of my surgeons.   So I’m signing off for now and as soon as I get rid of this brain tumor and my thinker is working again, I’ll let you know how it went.  Peace be with you.

 

I Can do This!

pigeon 1Sometimes things in one’s life can be a bit overwhelming. The decision whether to get rid of the unwanted guest in my head by surgery or gamma knife has been consuming most of my thoughts.

Keith and I zipped down to Houston this week to talk to doctors at MD Anderson in their Acoustic Neuroma Center. Who knew? It’s a God thing remember? It did feel very odd being on the other side this time. My place there has always been as caregiver now I am the patient. Can’t say I like that very much. We met with some very nice and well respected doctors in this field. While none of them really told me anything I didn’t already know, I felt at ease with them and began to trust that I had come to the right place.

We did have to get out of our comfort zone though. We always stay at the Rotary House, which is just across the street from MD Anderson. We did not have enough preplanning time to make a reservation so rooms were available.  We picked the next thing we knew which was the extended stay hotel a few blocks away.  This was our home for 3 weeks when Keith first started treatment. The same place where we got our car broken into. The place where we met another couple from Ardmore whose husband was being treated. A place that allows you to bring your dogs with you. By the time we got there, it was after 8. When we were checking in, they informed us that they had given our queen bed away and we were given a room with two double beds. I could see the lines of concern forming between my husband’s brows as he said, “Why do I have a confirmation number for a queen bed, if you have given it away.” We were both too tired to argue so we made it work.  It actually felt plenty big because there were no dogs between us hogging the bed.  Sometimes our big king bed at home feels very small.

Our morning started bright and early as I had to check in at 7 a.m. for an 8 a.m. doctor’s appointment. Now I will tell you what the MD in MD Anderson stands for: Most of the Day. We experienced that over and over five years ago and we were starting our morning off the same way. Checked in at 7 a.m. and was told my appointment had been moved to 10 a.m.

After a quick breakfast in the cafeteria, we decided to go outside into their beautiful garden areas. It was a warm morning, flowers were blooming and the birds were out singing. We plopped down in the area where we always go to and up comes a pigeon and little scraggly bird with no tail. I never seem to have food at these times. Keith was prepared with a granola bar in his bag. The pigeon looked very healthy so I worked on feeding the little no-tailed bird. He got his fill and went on. Not the pigeon. Is it possible to fill them up? We decided to get a little creative and see if we could get him to eat out of our hands. Nope, not going to do it. Next we put food on the end of our shoes. Success. Then word spread and all of a sudden we had 6 or 7 pigeons. The one little pigeon did his best to shoo the others away, but alas, there were just too many. I am breaking up more of the granola bar when one of the pigeons fly’s up and gets on my hand! OMG! I am hand-feeding this pigeon. It was the greatest thing ever and what a way to start my day. Then Keith thought he would give it a try. Success. It was awesome. As we walked back across the street to head for my doctor’s appointment we see a sign that says, “Do not feed the birds.” We both agreed that there was no sign where we were sitting telling us that.  No rules broken.

Finally in the docs office and I start off with his “fellow”. This is a young man that I swear to you could have been my son-in-law Charles. He had different hair, but he was tall, skinny, sounded like Charles and had Charles’ eyes. It was like Charles was there. I found that very comforting. Then the surgeon came in and visited some more and answered more questions. The doc told me that if I were younger, his recommendation would be surgery. If I were 10 years older, his recommendation would be the gamma knife. Because I am the awesome age of 54. I can do either. So much for a recommendation.

So again, a big decision to make and I have to weigh the pros and cons of each.

  • Gamma Knife:
    Pro: It is outpatient, pretty much painless and I go on about my life the next day. I like the sound of that. Con: It doesn’t get rid of my tumor, just zaps it. I would also continue to lose my hearing in that ear as the tumor is still there mashing on my hearing nerve. I would have to have an MRI annually for the rest of my life to monitor it. There is no data out there beyond 15 years on its success rate of keeping it from growing back and growing back cancerous. YIKES.
  • Surgery Let’s start with the cons here: It’s brain surgery and they have to cut open my head. I will have some discomfort for 7-10 days with the incision. I may have some dizziness or balance problems for a few days. I would have to spend 3-5 days in the hospital and miss 4-6 weeks of work. Jeez. Pro: The tumor is removed and I don’t have to worry about it anymore. I may be able to salvage the remainder of my hearing in that ear and the ringing in my ear has a 50% chance of going away. I would REALLY love that.

It’s times like these when you just have to put your big girl panties on. While I am scared to death of the surgery and the days after, I am even more scared of the thought that when I’m 70, it could grow back and it could grow back cancerous. Do I really want to deal with brain cancer at 70? Maybe medical technology will have come a long way by then and it wouldn’t be any big deal. But do I really want to risk it. These are the thoughts that have just been churning away in my mind…. What to do, what to do. Keith and I have talked and talked and talked about it. He even told me he knew what he would do if it were him, but wouldn’t tell me so as not to influence my decision, because it is after all MY DECISION. Maybe I don’t want it to be my decision. I really would like someone to just say, “THIS is what you MUST do. Alas, that isn’t going to happen.

So I have decided surgery. I indeed have put my big girl panties on and tomorrow I’m emailing Houston with my decision. My husband, daughter and son are also going to have to their big boy britches and big girl panties on. It is going to be a stressful and draining experience for us all. I am hoping to be able to do it the first week of December.  That’s the plan Stan.  I just have to keep my chin up and my nerves at bay. For all of you out there that are praying for me, thank you and keep it up. This Episcopal gal accepts prayers from all religious denominations.

Yes, I can do this. Hey, I survived natural childbirth, I can do anything right. Oh and FYI: After I told Keith my decision, he said that is what he would do to.

My First Father’s Day Without Him

DaddyToday is Father’s Day and it marks the first Father’s Day without my dad. It also reminds me that I have now lost both of my parents and at a much younger age than I had expected. As an only child, this past 10 months since my dad’s passing has been difficult. When my mom died four years ago, I really didn’t go through very much of the grieving process, I had to pick up the pieces and take care of my dad. That’s what I promised my mom in her final hours of life that she didn’t need to worry about daddy, I would take care of him. I really had no idea what a job that would be, but I knew my mother well enough to know she needed to hear that, even if it was sub-consciously. Now that they are both gone, I have been grieving for the loss of both of them.

I had very different relationships with each of them. As a child, I was a daddy’s girl. My father could do no wrong and I always wanted to be with him wherever he was. I followed along behind him at work at the bowling alley for many years. He picked me up every day after school and it was off to Mac’s for a cherry icee and an Archie comic book. When I couldn’t spend the night away from home without crying, he was the one who would pick me up at 10 p.m. and bring me home. When he went to a football game, I went to a football game.  When he went to a Golden Gloves boxing match, I went to a boxing match. Sometimes, I even went fishing with him, although I always felt bad for the fish and was worried about snakes. When he took up golf, I went with him many times and drove the golf cart and I always unloaded the golf cart from the trailer when he returned home.  Of course he would let me take the olf cart for a spin around the block, with all the neighborhood kids on board. When I was in the 4th grade, he would put me on his lap and let me drive the car down the country roads on the way to my grandparents.  By the time I was in the sixth grade, he would just move over and let me drive.  The man never said no to me and he never disciplined me. He didn’t have to. All he had to do was say, “well I guess you don’t want to … the next time I go”. That always straightened me right up because I never wanted him to leave me behind. When it was time for him to come home from work, I always knew the route he took home. I would walk down to the end of the block and sit on the corner just to ride in the car with him that half a block to our house. I still remember the time I was in second grade and we had a tornado scare at school. The sirens were blowing and we all had to get in the hall and assume the position. When it was over, all the parents had to come into the school and get us. I still remember seeing him come through my classroom door and just falling apart. My hero had come to get me. In the summer, he would come pick me and my friend up at and take us to the community pool for an afternoon of swimming, he would take me and friends to Lake Murray to ride horses and he would buy me whatever I wanted, within reason. I never got a pony (ha ha ha), but I did go through two mini bikes and three cars. As a teenager, I spent most of my weekends with him at the bowling alley. I always regarded my father as a handsome man and I can remember vividly getting so upset when other women were a little too friendly and flirty with him. How dare them, don’t they know he is married and to my mom? I remember asking my mom about it once. She wasn’t worried, my dad was devoted to her.

They were great role models to have. They never fought and really never argued. I don’t know if that never happened or just not in front of me. In daddy’s much later years after mom was gone, he took great pride in that and would always say, “How many times did you ever see me and your mom argue?” Growing up with them, that is what I expected a marriage to look like. I found out pretty quickly that not all marriages looked that way and no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t make mine look that way. In 1981 my dad and I were waiting to walk down the isle and he decided he needed to give me some advice. “Always keep your house neat and clean.” Really dad?

My parents were wonderful people and I had a great childhood. They were with me through a difficult divorce and subsequent difficult marriage. When I moved back to Oklahoma in 1991 a broken woman with two small children, there they were with open arms. They never asked questions, they were just there to support me. I am very grateful that they didn’t ask too many questions, because quite frankly, it was just too embarrassing to talk in depth about some of the things I had allowed to happen. You see, I didn’t want to worry them. I didn’t want them to know just how bad things were at times.   Secretly, I think they may have known.

Now my dad had three of us to spoil, me and my two children. My daughter was nine when we moved back and she slipped right into my old role with him and he loved it and she loved it. He was more of a dad to her than she had ever had and I was thrilled. My son, not quite three, got to grow up spending lots of time with his grandparents.

As my dad got older, I began to notice that some of his jokes that used to be funny to me, were just not that funny anymore. He would say things that quite frankly were terribly embarrassing and would infuriate me. Before my mom died, she said to me one day, “I’m worried about your dad. He seems to not be able to remember things very well.” My response to her was that he was fine, just stressed worrying about her. Truthfully, I think maybe she was right and he was in the early stages of dementia.

After my mom passed in 2009, I really began to see the difficulty he was having. Even though I knew this was an illness and something that he could not help, I could not accept it. Why was my dad acting this way, why was he saying these things and did I really know him at all? It’s hard when your hero is falling apart and you can’t fix it. I tried and tried. I answered the same questions over and over and over, each time getting so mad because he kept asking me the same thing. His embarrassing and hurtful comments about people he would see in restaurants got so bad that I stopped going out to eat with him. I felt bad for him, for me and I certainly didn’t want those around him to be hurt.

About two years ago, I began to notice that he was either having very vivid dreams or he was hallucinating. He would tell me that he had seen mom that she had been there in the house with him. People were also visiting him right out of the TV. He could no longer remember if he had taken his medicines or what they were for, even with home healthcare coming in. Even though I lived right next door, he let me know how lonely he was, but he would never take the initiative to do anything about it. He was just closing up in a shell. We finally talked him into moving into an assisted living and that helped for a while, but his dementia continued to spiral. His hallucinations were getting much worse and he no longer understood why my mom had left him. I would get call after call asking where his wife was. He no longer referred to her as “mom”, but his “wife”. Sometimes, I wasn’t even sure he understood who I was. I found myself being so angry every day. I was ashamed of how I felt but didn’t know what to do. I felt like I was trapped in a bubble and couldn’t get out. A couple of wonderful people gave me a copy of a book on Alzheimer’s to read with some great insights and tips on how to deal with a loved one who is suffering with losing their minds. It was eye opening and it allowed me to put on my big girl panties and respond differently. I began to feel my anger diminish and just be replaced with acceptance and heartbreak. A few short months later, his confusion ended and he was reunited with his beloved wife in a place where there is no more confusion, just love.

So today, as I work through my first father’s day without my father, I am flooded with all the wonderful memories of a man who stole my heart and showed me unconditional love; a man who taught me many things and the man who made me who I am today. Thanks Daddy, I love you.

Ten Years of Wonder and Amazement

Pidgeon Pt 2On May 29th, Keith and I celebrated the 10 year anniversary of our first date. Ten years! In many ways, it seems just like yesterday and I remember our courtship so well, or at least I think I do.

As you know from a previous blog, we met online. Best $19.95 investment I ever made. His “marketing plan” sold me the minute I read it. Now our first date was on May 29, 2004, but my $19.95 email to him was in late November of 2003. That’s a difference of 6 months. Are you wondering why the time gap? Well let me just tell you.

I emailed this man and we had a few email conversations. Small talk and chit chat initially. In December I ran into him. It was the first time I had ever seen him in real life. I was taking photos of children in my school district singing at his bank and I HOPED I would run into him. Yes, I voluntarily offered to go and take pictures of these adorable children singing to see him. Anyway, I liked what I saw. He actually saw me from across the room, recognized me and came over to me. We talked for a few minutes while in a group of people. He was very nice, polite, handsome and I was thrilled to have met him.

As it so happened my next door neighbor and dear friend was the music director of the school whose students were singing and she had been in a play with him recently. I went over to her house after work that day and thought I would very subtly ask her about him. She spoke very highly of him and how nice he was and professional and then she said something that quite frankly, made me sit up and pay attention. She very casually mentioned that oh, yes and I think he just started dating … and said her name. My friend then said, why do you ask???? I very casually said, oh I met him at the bank today and was just wondering who he was. Slick huh?

I was heartsick. I mean I was perfect for him. I read his marketing plan. The girl he was looking for WAS ME! How dare some other girl get in the way of that. Then I thought, well it figures. Finally find someone who appears to be amazing and someone else has snatched him up. I was devastated. I later emailed him and he confirmed that yes he had just started seeing someone but that he had enjoyed talking to me. I wished him luck and I closed that chapter of hope in my life.

Fast forward to the end of February 2004. It was a Monday night and I’m bowling league with my girlfriends. I had no man in my life and I had worked in hose and heels all day so I had on my sweat pants and my long comfy slouchy shirt. I went into the snack bar and got my one beer for the evening (a light beer). Sitting in the snack bar was Keith and his 5 year old grandson. I did a double take and he did a double take. We spoke cordially, told him it was good to see him and I headed back to bowl. Well crap, I could not have looked worse. Sweat pants! Really!

His little grandson was in town and he wanted to go bowling. How sweet was that? I love to bowl you know, it’s in my blood. Well when it wasn’t his turn to bowl, he would come down and talk, you know just chit chat. He really did have a great personality and we didn’t have any trouble talking. It was effortless. After they finished bowling a couple of games he came down and told me bye and they left. When I got home that night I emailed him, told him it was good to see him, that his grandson was a cutie and I hoped everything was going well for him… There, I put on my big girl panties and again, accepted defeat to another woman.

Two weeks later, I get an email from guess who???? I was shocked. He had responded to my email telling me he enjoyed visiting with me too, that yes he was still seeing someone BUT he did enjoy talking to me and maybe we could continue emailing as “friends”. I’LL TAKE IT. Well I am no dumb blonde and I knew that if things were perfect or even good with … he would not be talking to me. There is a crack in the plaster and if I can just be patient, the crack might split open and there I would be standing on the other side.

We emailed each other almost every day talking about how our day went, family members, stuff going on a work, just general things. It was really great. We got to know one another very well before we ever had our first date.   About 12 weeks later, the stars aligned and the crack in the wall split wide open. When it did, I was standing on the other side and I’ve been standing there by his side every day ever since.

Maybe I’m Too Emotional

Italian WindowsThe older I get the more I seem to cry very easily. Commercials, animal videos, sad stories, happy stories, quiet times, hectic times, geez. I’m such a girl. Sometimes I can’t even watch a commercial for the emotional toll it would take. For instance, the commercials from the ASPCA showing the dogs in cages that need homes. The minute I hear the music on the TV for that commercial, I change the channel. Who wants to see that? I even have my husband trained to change the channel the minute the music starts to play. Hallmark greeting card commercials tear me up. The new Budweiser puppy commercial is the latest commercial to “get me choked up”.

My favorite movies are romantic comedies. Those are always tear jerkers for me. In You Got Mail, when Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan meet in that park and she realizes he is the guy she has been talking to via email, my heart swells and I get teary. In the movie, He’s just not that into you”, when Ben Affleck gets down on one knee to ask Jennifer Anniston to marry him, again heart swells and I get teary. Basically any time I watch something and a girl is getting proposed to, it gets me right in the tear ducts. Why is that?

Now I have always been very sensitive to all things dog and mom/child oriented, but lately I have come to the realization that I am a bit more emotional than I used to be. Things touch me more than they used to. Is it my lack of hormones? Maybe. Does it bother me that I am more emotional? Not really but it is something that I seem to be more aware of. I have actually given it quite a bit of thought lately and earlier this week as my husband and I were driving down the road, it hit me. I am more emotional now because I can be. I don’t have to hold my emotions in. I don’t have to be strong all the time. I can let go and feel what I feel. It is wonderful.

For most of my adult life I have been the one to do everything. During both of my failed marriages I had to hold it together or lose my sanity. I had to take care of everything. Stay tough, stay strong or fall apart. I couldn’t fall apart. I had these two wonderful children that I had to be a rock for. I was it. I was the person they counted on every day for every thing. I was not going to let them down as I had to be “super mom”.

It is wonderful knowing that I no longer need to walk through my life alone and handle everything all by myself. I can share my thoughts and feelings. I can ask for help with something. I can refuse to do something if I don’t want to. I thank God every day for my partner in life, my husband, who allows me to be the real me every day, emotions and all.

Valentine’s Day – Coming Full Circle

VolcanoRemember when you were just a kid and it was Valentine’s Day at school?  I do.  I remember getting little white sacks and then drawing something cute on the front with my name on it.  Maybe in art class we would create little heart cutouts and paste them onto the sacks.  It was important to get that little sack just right.  Then we would all hang our sacks on the tray of the chalkboard so we would be ready when it was time to hand out our cards.  Going to TG&Y with my mom was always fun too.  I would very carefully pick out the cards that had just the right sentiment.  Of course they all came in one package, but the words had to be just right.

There were always a couple of little boys in my class that I thought were cute, and I had to give them the right card didn’t I?  Then the pressure and excitement of waiting to see what cards those little boys put into my sack.  Would it say, “be mine”, “love you”, “your great” or “your friend”.  I would hold my breath every year to see what card the boy of the moment was going to put in my sack.  Some years I was happy and some years, well you know how little boys are.  Some years there were little boys who put “be mine” in my sack and I thought, “no way” buddy.  It felt so literal.  Just one little card and I thought it meant something much more than it probably did.  At least that’s how it felt to this elementary little girl.

Then we grow up and Valentine’s day is not quite what it used to be.  Some of us marry men who don’t care what day it is and certainly are not going to acknowlege that it’s Valentine’s Day.  They don’t acknowledge their love for you at any other time of the year either.  Heck, communication of any kind is a foreign concept.  Then you have children and they make you Valentine’s cards and you get them cards.  Your love for your children can cover that hole in your heart for a very long time.  It certainly worked that way for me.

Then you find yourself as a single mom with two small children.  While it is a very hard job, my love for them and their love for me kept me going.  Again, they made me cards and I had fun helping them pick out just the right cards for their school Valentine’s parties.  At work you would see co-workers who would get flowers, candy or boast of big plans for Valentine’s day with their sweeties.  I wondered, what would that be like?  I mean the only time a man had ever given me roses, I had to give birth and I think his mom made him get them for me.  Year after year I wondered.

In 2004 I met a man, we started dating and in 2008 he married me and made me Queen of my Kingdom.  He buys me flowers for no reason, he buys me flowers for anniversaries, he buys me flowers for Valentine’s Day.  Wow, what is this?  Now I’m the girl at work getting flowers.    But what I have learned over the past nine years and ten months that we have been together is that every day is Valentine’s Day for us.  We hold hands when we walk together, we profess our love verbally to each other many times a day (and mean it each time).  Our actions with one another clearly show our love, respect and admiration for one another.  We are each other’s best friend and the one we most want to spend our time with.  So while getting those flowers has been awesome, the real gift is the man behind it.  Thank you Keith for being my valentine every day.  It is my honor to be your wife.