I didn't mean to see it. I didn't want to see it. But I saw it. And now I have to do it. I didn't name it and I'm not tagging anyone else to do it but you're welcome to if you like.
Bucket List - please play along. You would be surprised at the responses. Whether you've done this before or not, be a good sport. Do it again (and take a brain break for a minute)!!Bucket List...copy and paste to your status. Place an X by all the things you've done, remove the X from the ones you have not.
(X) Shot a gun
() Gone on a blind date
(/) Skipped school (I put half an "x" because I never had an unexcused absence, but if I'm being honest one or two of my sick days were more mental than physical)
(X) Been lost (although I more viewed it as not knowing quite where I was but certain I could find my way to where I wanted to be eventually)(and sometimes I still feel lost even when I know where I am geographically)
(/)Traveled to the opposite side of the country (Been from Maine to Florida, and almost all the way to California, so half an "x" it is.)
(X) Visited Washington, DC
(X) Swam in the Ocean (SWUM in the ocean)
(X) Cried yourself to sleep
(X) Played cops and robbers
(X) Played cowboys and Indians
(X) Recently colored with crayons/colored pencils
(X)Sang karaoke (SUNG Karaoke)
( X) Flown in a helicopter (I was quite young but I remember bits of it clearly)
(X) Paid for a meal with coins only
( ) Made prank phone calls
() Laughed until some beverage came out of your nose
(X) Caught a snowflake on your tongue
(X)Had children
(X) Had a pet
(X ) Been skinny-dipping
(X) Been fishing
(X) Been boating
(X) Been downhill skiing
(/ ) Been water skiing (Half an"x" again because my grandfather tried to teach me but the skiis kept falling off of my feet!)
(X )Been camping in a trailer/RV
(X) Been camping in a tent
()Driven a motorcycle
( ) Been bungee-jumping (ripcord jumping)
( ) Been Sky Diving
( ) Been Hang Gliding
(X) Gone to a drive-in movie
(X) Done Something that could have killed you… and continue to
(X) Done something that you will regret for the rest of your life
( ) Rode an elephant
( ) Rode a camel
(X) Eaten just cookies or cake for dinner or ice cream
() Been on TV
( ) Stolen any traffic signs
(X) Been in a car accident
(X ) Been in the Hospital past 24 hours
(X) Donated blood
(X)Gotten a piercing
( X) Gotten a Tattoo
(X) Driven a four door vehicle
() Ever owned your dream car
(X)Been Married
(X) Been divorced
(X) Fell in love
(X) Fell out of love
(X) Paid for a stranger's meal
(X) Driven over 100mph
()Been scuba diving
(X) Been snorkeling
(X) Written a published book/story (poem) (song)
( X) Eaten snails
(X) Eaten frogs
( ) Been in a state championship game/race
( )Biked over 100 miles continuously
(X)Visited at least 25 of the United States (as long as you define "visit" as having driven through on the way somewhere else)(And stopped for fuel at least once)
(X ) Been in a race car
Quote of the day...er...week...umm...hey, look, a quote!!
"...besides love, independence of thought is the greatest gift an adult can give a child." - Bryce Courtenay, The Power of One
For old quotes, look here.
For old quotes, look here.
Friday, February 26, 2016
Monday, February 22, 2016
Spending the Lottery Winnings
Wait, what do you mean I have to buy a ticket?
Well.
That explains a lot.
Ahem.
One of my little pastimes is to imagine what I might do with a lottery windfall. Not a paltry million or two, I'm talking something along the lines of the recent Gabillion Dollar Lottery Extravaganza (now with more Holy Wow power!)
First and foremost, I'd pay off the mortgage on Casa de Crazy, then fix the old girl up inside and out. Then, buy land up by my mother's place and build my dream home.
Next I'd zero out all of my mother's debts.I'd buy an RV and travel a little with my family.
Next would come creating a trust for me and my family to live off of. I'd need it, as I am not so very good with money and would hate to wind up like one of the people on that show about the lottery ruining their lives.
Then I'd set up trusts for my kids and a few other kids. These trusts would be to pay for education either in college or in trades. The idea would be to make it so these kids could go and learn without worrying about how to pay for it or carrying a huge debt load after finishing their education. If any of 'em don't want to go to school, the trust will vest in their late 20's or early 30's and they can use it to fund their lives for as long as it lasts. For the ones that do go to school, anything left when they graduate is theirs for the keeping.
Then I would set up a scholarship fund of some sort, maybe more than one - something in the sciences, something in music
Next comes what I like to call a reset, or setting back to zero - paying off the debts of friends and family so that they are essentially no longer in the negative but are back to zero debt. Houses, cars, student loans, all that sort of thing, paid off. Maybe even pay utilities for a year. Imagine what you could do with your life if you had no debt to worry about, if everything you earned was yours to do with as you wish. I would do this one time each, but hopefully that's all it would take. I know more than a few people who could soar on wings newly freed from the fetters of debt.
If it's a big enough win, I would make an official charity out of Everybody Eats, helping folks with no or low income keep their pantries full, helping people get back on their feet, working towards wiping out hunger. Maybe I would set up a funds-match for Heifer International.
I would also create and maintain The Last Chance Ranch, a place for critters and people who have been written off to get back on their feet again, a place to heal minds, hearts, and spirits.
Once my family was squared away, I wouldn't need a bunch of money sitting around, making me weird in the head - I'm already weird in the head, I don't need more of that - I'd want to give it away and would likely have a very good time carefully, quietly, helping people rebuild themselves, rebuild their lives. That would make me happy.
How about you? Do you have lottery dreams? Do tell...
Well.
That explains a lot.
Ahem.
One of my little pastimes is to imagine what I might do with a lottery windfall. Not a paltry million or two, I'm talking something along the lines of the recent Gabillion Dollar Lottery Extravaganza (now with more Holy Wow power!)
First and foremost, I'd pay off the mortgage on Casa de Crazy, then fix the old girl up inside and out. Then, buy land up by my mother's place and build my dream home.
Next I'd zero out all of my mother's debts.I'd buy an RV and travel a little with my family.
Next would come creating a trust for me and my family to live off of. I'd need it, as I am not so very good with money and would hate to wind up like one of the people on that show about the lottery ruining their lives.
Then I'd set up trusts for my kids and a few other kids. These trusts would be to pay for education either in college or in trades. The idea would be to make it so these kids could go and learn without worrying about how to pay for it or carrying a huge debt load after finishing their education. If any of 'em don't want to go to school, the trust will vest in their late 20's or early 30's and they can use it to fund their lives for as long as it lasts. For the ones that do go to school, anything left when they graduate is theirs for the keeping.
Then I would set up a scholarship fund of some sort, maybe more than one - something in the sciences, something in music
Next comes what I like to call a reset, or setting back to zero - paying off the debts of friends and family so that they are essentially no longer in the negative but are back to zero debt. Houses, cars, student loans, all that sort of thing, paid off. Maybe even pay utilities for a year. Imagine what you could do with your life if you had no debt to worry about, if everything you earned was yours to do with as you wish. I would do this one time each, but hopefully that's all it would take. I know more than a few people who could soar on wings newly freed from the fetters of debt.
If it's a big enough win, I would make an official charity out of Everybody Eats, helping folks with no or low income keep their pantries full, helping people get back on their feet, working towards wiping out hunger. Maybe I would set up a funds-match for Heifer International.
I would also create and maintain The Last Chance Ranch, a place for critters and people who have been written off to get back on their feet again, a place to heal minds, hearts, and spirits.
Once my family was squared away, I wouldn't need a bunch of money sitting around, making me weird in the head - I'm already weird in the head, I don't need more of that - I'd want to give it away and would likely have a very good time carefully, quietly, helping people rebuild themselves, rebuild their lives. That would make me happy.
How about you? Do you have lottery dreams? Do tell...
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Little Wonders
Today we had some pretty good moments, if of the small sort.
Casa de Crazy had to have a new roof. The roofers started yesterday and the kids had a blast watching the goings-on. I had a headache, but it was kind of fun to watch. The Evil Genius discovered a nano-copter he was given for Christmas and charged it up, and all three of us had a lot of laughs over his efforts to fly it. Our friend A came for dinner and to play with the kids, and that was a riot. That was yesterday.
Today the roofers came an hour earlier than they said they would, surprising me with overhead thumps and whacks. They also finished in less than an hour, cleaned up all the scraps and nails and whatnot in the yard, and removed themselves before I even finished my first cuppa tea. The new roof looks quite nice and I have hopes it will last as long as the old one and so have to be replaced long after we have vacated Casa de Crazy for friendlier climes closer to my mother.
Sprout and I goofed off outside for a few minutes and I raced her to the van. She won, but only because I got distracted by a cat. We both laughed like loonies, which makes sense because I am one.
Errands were rather hum-drum, but I teased Sprout by making animal noises every time the game she was playing on her Papa's phone made a sound. Lots of meowing, quacking, and bleating in the van, and she was giggling constantly. She said she likes it when we are silly. Poor kid, there's not enough silly in her life. I'm working on that.
This afternoon I needed a nap - up hours and hours earlier than usual and short on sleep, there was no slogging through to a second wind. I had to sleep. While I slept, the Evil Genius and Sprout played with his nano-copter. That poor thing has crashed into darned near every surface in this house. It's looking a little rough but gamely soldiering on with its flights, and the kids think it's marvelous. I even flew it a little and got it to hover in place for a few minutes!
If all of this sounds dull, inane, well...it is. But it's also something out of the ordinary for Casa de Crazy. Yes, depression is still trying to swallow me whole, and yes, it will likely do so until something else snuffs me, but these little things are huge when they've been absent for so long. I'll take the grains of sand. I know that with sand I can build some pretty impressive castles.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Let Them Eat Cake
February 15 was my birthday. I spent it at home with the kids, having a quiet day. I made some soup, because I wanted to, and I made my own birthday cake, also because I wanted to.
Some folks on Facebook liked the photos of the cake and asked for the recipe, so I asked if I could share it since it was given to me by someone else and one hates to publish a family thing without permission. Permission was enthusiastically given for my sharing, so here it is:
Some folks on Facebook liked the photos of the cake and asked for the recipe, so I asked if I could share it since it was given to me by someone else and one hates to publish a family thing without permission. Permission was enthusiastically given for my sharing, so here it is:
The players:
For the cake:
One bundt pan, regular size, and possibly another one with the miniature forms or at least a brownie type pan. I have the bundt pan that my ex’s mother (we weren’t exes at the time) gave me when she learned I don't have one, and it's maybe a little older than I am. It's metal, and heavy, and I love it. She also gave me the pan for mini-bundts, which makes up to six small cakes of a sunflower design.
One can of baker's Joy. Accept no substitutes. Seriously - I've tried other products and have been most disappointed with the results. It's okay if you like something else better and it works for you, but I'm sticking with my Baker's Joy.
One teaspoon of each of the following - coconut extract, rum extract, butter extract, lemon extract, vanilla extract, and almond extract.
2 sticks of butter. Yes, I said butter. Do it. You'll thank me. Room temperature unless it’s winter and your house is cold because gah! heat is expensive!
1/2 cup shortening (I use those handy Crisco bricks. One half brick is one half cup, easy peasy).
3 cups sugar. I know. I KNOW!
5 eggs, well beaten. I do mean well. As in fluffy, aerated, ouch my wrist hurts from whisking these bad boys.
3 cups all purpose flour.
1/2 teaspoon baking powder.
1 cup milk. I use whole because this clearly isn't health food.
For the glaze:
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
1 teaspoon of each of the flavorings
Aaaaand action!
Pre-heat the oven to 325 f.
To save some time and effort, I like to measure out the flavorings in advance, into two ramekins. Interesting fact, the mix of flavors is clear until I add the lemon, then it clouds up. Weird. I'm sure there's science involved.
This is much easier if you have a stand type mixer with a whisk attachment. I love my KitchenAid.
Cream the butter and shorteningtogether until well mixed. Add the sugar and beat until fluffy. While all this is going on, whisk the eggs in another bowl. You want them to lighten in hue, about lemon colored.
Add the eggs to the bowl and mix until well incorporated. Once they're a mostly mixed in I turn it up to medium speed.
Combine the flour and baking powder. I just mix mine in a sifter.
Add dry ingredients to the bowl, alternating with the milk, beating at low speed until well incorporated.
Add in the combined flavorings, again mixing at low speed until incorporated. Now turn the mixer to medium/medium high and walk away for a few minutes. Yes. Do it.
This is where I spray the everloving heck out of the bundt pan. I hose that baby down. Every nook and cranny is well sprayed, the whole interior is suddenly frosty white, no kidding there's not a speck of the non-stick lining to be seen. I ain't kidding around with this thing. I give the same treatment to three of the mini-bundts. If you're using a brownie pan for the extra batter (and there will be extra), hose it down, too.
Now go drink a glass of water or something.
If you walked away from the batter and let the beater do its job for a few minutes (I've let mine go for as much as 15 minutes before), you will have a pale, silken batter that smells delightful. Spoon it into your bundt pan. I usually fill my pan 1/2 to 2/3. The rest of the batter goes into the mini-bundts or the brownie pan - always 1/2 to 2/3 full. This stuff poofs.
Place both in the oven for 1 hour, 15 minutes or until done. Mine take almost the whole time. You can take out the mini/brownie pan at 45 minutes. Always check for doneness with a wooden pick or skewer…claggy cake is a bummer.
About 30 minutes before the cakes come out, make the glaze by combining the water, sugar, and flavorings in a sauce pan and heating to a boil, stirring often until the sugar is completely melted.
If it's done before the cakes, just turn off the burner and let it sit and think about what it’s done.
The mini-bundts are usually done about 15 minutes before the big one, so I pull them out first. You can leave them unglazed, or spoon some glaze on the bottoms, wait ten minutes, and carefully pull them from the pans and put 'em on a plate. Spoon a little more glaze onto the top if desired.
If you used a brownie pan, just spoon a little glaze on the top and leave it alone.
When the large cake is ready, pull it out and spoon about half the remaining glaze onto the bottom. Let it soak in, and let the cake cool for about ten minutes.
Plate the cake* and evenly distribute the remaining glaze from the pot around the top. Let it cool completely, then devour it. Or, you know, save some for company or whatever.
I will not make this cake unless I know other people will help eat it, because I WILL eat the whole danged thing.
*Seems like lots of folks have their own method for de-panning this kind of cake. Mine is to place the plate over the pan, centered, and carefully flip it. I say a little prayer and lift the pan, and if the gods are kind and the fairies feel like picking on someone else that day, it comes up without a fuss, leaving behind a beautiful cake of beautifulness.
Sunday, February 14, 2016
Love, Love, Love
Once upon a time, I would tell people that I only know one way to love - absolutely. There were no gradations, I loved my mother the same way that I love my cats the same way that I loved my friends the same way that I loved everyone.
That still holds true in many ways.
The love I feel for K2 is no less or more than the love I feel for my mother. The love I feel for my children and Someone is no different than the love I hold for A or Gypsy or the other K or even my ex-husband.
I can understand where this might cause some consternation. After all, if I love them all the same, how is anyone special? But they are special, every one of them.
The love varies in intensity and application, but always absolute - what I love best about one is not the same thing as what I love best about another - but they're all tangled up in my heart and plucking on one string makes them all vibrate.
Today's a good day to be thinking about love, what with the whole Valentine's brouhaha going on.
You are loved. You are. Yes, even you, the one who feels alone in the world. You are loved. I love you. Not in the abstract, but in a very real way. I don't have to know you to love and appreciate your place in this world, because this world is awesome and it couldn't be this awesome if you weren't adding your light, your reflection, your voice to the mix.
I hope that whoever you are, wherever you are, you feel loved - not just today, but every day.
Monday, February 8, 2016
Let's Get Physical
Oof!
Sometimes mental illness isn't just mental.
I'm taking a new (to me) medication to treat my depression. I believe I mentioned?
Anyhoo, the depression seemed to abate about a micron's worth, but that may have been a combination of therapy (I started that, too) and placebo effect, because it rallied and is back with a vengeance.
Foolish mortal, thinking that wee pill could tackle such a monstrous monster!
Depression isn't jut wandering around in a beige cloud of nothingness. It has some physical aspects, too.
I ache.
All over, but especially anywhere I've hurt myself in the past - my back, neck, toes that I broke, the foot that I broke, hand and wrists that I broke. Hey, I've broken a lot of bones. Proof I used to be active, anyway.
My psyche is screaming.
It's difficult to get out of bed, but even in bed I feel all the twinges and complaints of a frame that's been carrying too much weight - physical and mental - for far too long.
I know it'll get better, or at least tolerable, but right now, folks, I feel as beat as a bongo at a hipster hootenanny.
How are you doing?
Sometimes mental illness isn't just mental.
I'm taking a new (to me) medication to treat my depression. I believe I mentioned?
Anyhoo, the depression seemed to abate about a micron's worth, but that may have been a combination of therapy (I started that, too) and placebo effect, because it rallied and is back with a vengeance.
Foolish mortal, thinking that wee pill could tackle such a monstrous monster!
Depression isn't jut wandering around in a beige cloud of nothingness. It has some physical aspects, too.
I ache.
All over, but especially anywhere I've hurt myself in the past - my back, neck, toes that I broke, the foot that I broke, hand and wrists that I broke. Hey, I've broken a lot of bones. Proof I used to be active, anyway.
My psyche is screaming.
It's difficult to get out of bed, but even in bed I feel all the twinges and complaints of a frame that's been carrying too much weight - physical and mental - for far too long.
I know it'll get better, or at least tolerable, but right now, folks, I feel as beat as a bongo at a hipster hootenanny.
How are you doing?
Friday, February 5, 2016
Alive.
I'm alive today.
Today I am alive.
It hardly seems an accomplishment, not something to be proud of, not like climbing Everest or saving someone from a rampaging lion or performing open heart surgery. But it is.
For me, alive can sometimes be a victory.
I am alive.
Tired, yes, and worn. My eyes are puffy and my hair is a mess. My shirt is torn and my pants are stained. But. I am alive.
I made it through the dark hours, when my mind would not stop, not even slow, not for a moment relent and give me peace. I made it through the sibilant whispers, insidious voices telling me that I am a failure, that struggling, that the constant fight, all of it, is useless, pointless. I made it through the loneliness that washes over me and drags me under every. Single. Night.
I am alive today.
I am mentally ill. I don't slay dragons. I do battle with my own mind, a psyche that has been turning on me since I was a child.
I am alive today.
Alive.
So many warriors of the mind have fallen, but I am still here. I am not always well armed, but I fight tooth and nail, scratching and clawing at the ravenous beast that has consumed so many souls. I can't make it give them back, but I can keep it from swallowing me whole.
I am alive.
I am alive, and I am mentally ill, and the two aren't always compatible but I make them work. I'm not weak. I'm not stupid. I'm not being punished by god or gods. I'm just wired differently. My brain malfunctions on a cellular level and there's no fixing it. No quantum mechanic to turn a wrench and make it right.
I am alive today. Some days, today, alive is all the victory I can claim, but it is still victory.
I am alive.
Today I am alive.
It hardly seems an accomplishment, not something to be proud of, not like climbing Everest or saving someone from a rampaging lion or performing open heart surgery. But it is.
For me, alive can sometimes be a victory.
I am alive.
Tired, yes, and worn. My eyes are puffy and my hair is a mess. My shirt is torn and my pants are stained. But. I am alive.
I made it through the dark hours, when my mind would not stop, not even slow, not for a moment relent and give me peace. I made it through the sibilant whispers, insidious voices telling me that I am a failure, that struggling, that the constant fight, all of it, is useless, pointless. I made it through the loneliness that washes over me and drags me under every. Single. Night.
I am alive today.
I am mentally ill. I don't slay dragons. I do battle with my own mind, a psyche that has been turning on me since I was a child.
I am alive today.
Alive.
So many warriors of the mind have fallen, but I am still here. I am not always well armed, but I fight tooth and nail, scratching and clawing at the ravenous beast that has consumed so many souls. I can't make it give them back, but I can keep it from swallowing me whole.
I am alive.
I am alive, and I am mentally ill, and the two aren't always compatible but I make them work. I'm not weak. I'm not stupid. I'm not being punished by god or gods. I'm just wired differently. My brain malfunctions on a cellular level and there's no fixing it. No quantum mechanic to turn a wrench and make it right.
I am alive today. Some days, today, alive is all the victory I can claim, but it is still victory.
I am alive.
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Goings On
K2 and I are working on a little project. It's only taken us about a decade to get back on it. Check out our fund raiser, wouldja? And feel free to contribute and share it along.
Meanwhile, it turns out that Casa de Crazy needs a new roof. Oy. The old roof is...well...old...for a roof. 24 years, to be precise. That's, like, a Million in roof years! I was hoping it would keep another year or two, but we've pushed our luck as far as we can. The last storm that rolled through here damaged it beyond its ability to magically withstand/repair weather damage. Insurance peoples have been called and things are in motion, and it all gives me a headache because expensive! Poo Mum, shes the one who carries this burden. I was hoping I could just get it patched and be done with it, but the shingles have been pummeled and the vent pipes need new thingies and it's just time.
So two huge things going on for me, right now. I prefer to focus on the music, but I imagine the roof is going to be a constant THING in my head util it is done, especially with the wet year predicted.
What're you up to these days?
Meanwhile, it turns out that Casa de Crazy needs a new roof. Oy. The old roof is...well...old...for a roof. 24 years, to be precise. That's, like, a Million in roof years! I was hoping it would keep another year or two, but we've pushed our luck as far as we can. The last storm that rolled through here damaged it beyond its ability to magically withstand/repair weather damage. Insurance peoples have been called and things are in motion, and it all gives me a headache because expensive! Poo Mum, shes the one who carries this burden. I was hoping I could just get it patched and be done with it, but the shingles have been pummeled and the vent pipes need new thingies and it's just time.
So two huge things going on for me, right now. I prefer to focus on the music, but I imagine the roof is going to be a constant THING in my head util it is done, especially with the wet year predicted.
What're you up to these days?
Monday, January 18, 2016
A Letter
Dear Body,
I know that I have not been kind to you in our long-seeming history, and I know that over the years I have been rather neglectful of your needs. I am sorry. You have done your best to carry me through each day with vigor, and I have rewarded your steadfast service with scant sleep, stress, unhealthy (but oh-so-tasty) food and drink, insufficient exercise, and little medical attention.
You've been remarkably resilient. Until recently.
Dear body, I can understand when leg muscles ache if I've been walking or climbing mountains or stairs (which sometimes feel like mountains) or working them on those infernal weight contraptions at a gym. I can understand feet, ankles, knees, and hips that snap, crackle, pop, and zing when put into service after carrying excess pounds all these years, even when many of those excess pounds have been shed. I can understand wheezing, sneezing, itching, watering, and running when I've been dusting or playing with furry critters. These things, and more, have cause and effect.
What mystifies me, dear body, is when I go to sleep with everything in moderately working order and wake with an ache, a pain, a stiffness, that I cannot explain. Why does my foot hurt that way? It was fine before bed last night. What was I doing in my sleep? And my wrist. I went to bed with a wrist that was perfectly...er...wrist-y, and woke with what feels like an unpredictable electrical short in it when I move my hand. Was I typing or knitting or playing tennis while I dreamed?
Today, it's my shoulder. It hurts. Not a delicate ache or an occasional wince, this is a full-on, can't find a comfortable way to hold my arm, ow, ow, owie, ow hurt! Stretching doesn't help. Heat doesn't help. Holding very still is damned near impossible (have you met my children and my cats?) and doesn't help. Careful movement doesn't help.
Dear body, I have been trying to do right by you. I know it seems too little, too late, but I've made small changes and keep plugging toward a goal weight that is reasonable and within the range of healthy-for-my-body-type. I stretch semi-regularly. I don't go to the gym but I do housework and that should count as a workout (again, have you met my children and the cats? The housework never ends), and I eat plenty of fruits and vegetables. Lately I've even given you the occasional Arnold Palmer and Vodka of an evening.
Give me a chance and I am sure that I can continue to improve how I treat you, but I can't do that if you keep whomping me with these aches and pains that slow me down and make me want to (carefully) crawl into bed and give up until my parts behave themselves!
C'mon, body, you and me are a team. Work with me, here.
Sincerely,
K
I know that I have not been kind to you in our long-seeming history, and I know that over the years I have been rather neglectful of your needs. I am sorry. You have done your best to carry me through each day with vigor, and I have rewarded your steadfast service with scant sleep, stress, unhealthy (but oh-so-tasty) food and drink, insufficient exercise, and little medical attention.
You've been remarkably resilient. Until recently.
Dear body, I can understand when leg muscles ache if I've been walking or climbing mountains or stairs (which sometimes feel like mountains) or working them on those infernal weight contraptions at a gym. I can understand feet, ankles, knees, and hips that snap, crackle, pop, and zing when put into service after carrying excess pounds all these years, even when many of those excess pounds have been shed. I can understand wheezing, sneezing, itching, watering, and running when I've been dusting or playing with furry critters. These things, and more, have cause and effect.
What mystifies me, dear body, is when I go to sleep with everything in moderately working order and wake with an ache, a pain, a stiffness, that I cannot explain. Why does my foot hurt that way? It was fine before bed last night. What was I doing in my sleep? And my wrist. I went to bed with a wrist that was perfectly...er...wrist-y, and woke with what feels like an unpredictable electrical short in it when I move my hand. Was I typing or knitting or playing tennis while I dreamed?
Today, it's my shoulder. It hurts. Not a delicate ache or an occasional wince, this is a full-on, can't find a comfortable way to hold my arm, ow, ow, owie, ow hurt! Stretching doesn't help. Heat doesn't help. Holding very still is damned near impossible (have you met my children and my cats?) and doesn't help. Careful movement doesn't help.
Dear body, I have been trying to do right by you. I know it seems too little, too late, but I've made small changes and keep plugging toward a goal weight that is reasonable and within the range of healthy-for-my-body-type. I stretch semi-regularly. I don't go to the gym but I do housework and that should count as a workout (again, have you met my children and the cats? The housework never ends), and I eat plenty of fruits and vegetables. Lately I've even given you the occasional Arnold Palmer and Vodka of an evening.
Give me a chance and I am sure that I can continue to improve how I treat you, but I can't do that if you keep whomping me with these aches and pains that slow me down and make me want to (carefully) crawl into bed and give up until my parts behave themselves!
C'mon, body, you and me are a team. Work with me, here.
Sincerely,
K
Friday, January 8, 2016
Gremlins, We Has 'Em
Casa de Crazy is a wealth of electrical oddities.
Half of the electrical outlets in my kitchen don't work. Neither do half of the ones in the dining room. They all blew out when I plugged something in in the kitchen a few years ago. I checked the circuit breaker and none of them were tripped. Also, none of them are labelled so I have no idea which does what or where and electricity makes me nervous so...umm...I just adjust.
One of the outlets in the children's bathroom doesn't work. There was an incident with a nightlight, a steel wire spring, and an arc about eight years ago. Don't ask.
The light in my bedroom blew out and it was a coupe of months before I could get a bulb to change it. No problem for me, I usually don't use it anyway - I like wandering around in the dark barking my shins and stubbing my toes.
The downstairs hall light has been burned out since early last year. I have a bulb for it but the person who said they'd change it never did and I have this thing about ladders. I'll get to it...eventually.
The foyer light eats bulbs like a kid munching Doritos, and it's a really awkward light to change the bulbs on so it's been dark for maybe two years now. Every time I manage to change the bulbs, they last a few weeks, maybe a few months, then fizzle and pop and fall dark again.
One of my kitchen fixtures acts like it's in some kind of sibling competition with the foyer. I thought I'd put some of those compact fluorescent bulbs in it one time, maybe they'd do better. Nope. Lasted a couple of months at best and we were back to darkness. It blows through bulbs faster than the foyer!
My dishwasher makes a noise. Not the usual whoosh-swoosh-skoosh-shush noise, more of an a-hunga-hunga-unga-urrrrnggghhh sort of sound. When it transitions between stages, I have to turn it off and then on again or it will just sit and grind and groan without doing anything. I don't even put detergent in it, just wash dishes by hand and use the dishwasher to sanitize and dry 'em.
The light in our dining room, not to be outdone by foyer and kitchen, has decided that it won't always turn on when it's turned on. Sometimes, for fun, it will turn on when the switch is flipped, then turn off despite the switch being flipped, then when the switch is bumped a little it will turn on again. Good times.
The clothes dryer has lately decided to join in the fun. It makes a sound somewhere between a hum and a buzz, with a little rattle tossed in from time to time, which it will do until I go open the door and then close it again, then restart it.
And those are just the things I know about.
I think I need an electrician.
Or an exorcist.
Half of the electrical outlets in my kitchen don't work. Neither do half of the ones in the dining room. They all blew out when I plugged something in in the kitchen a few years ago. I checked the circuit breaker and none of them were tripped. Also, none of them are labelled so I have no idea which does what or where and electricity makes me nervous so...umm...I just adjust.
One of the outlets in the children's bathroom doesn't work. There was an incident with a nightlight, a steel wire spring, and an arc about eight years ago. Don't ask.
The light in my bedroom blew out and it was a coupe of months before I could get a bulb to change it. No problem for me, I usually don't use it anyway - I like wandering around in the dark barking my shins and stubbing my toes.
The downstairs hall light has been burned out since early last year. I have a bulb for it but the person who said they'd change it never did and I have this thing about ladders. I'll get to it...eventually.
The foyer light eats bulbs like a kid munching Doritos, and it's a really awkward light to change the bulbs on so it's been dark for maybe two years now. Every time I manage to change the bulbs, they last a few weeks, maybe a few months, then fizzle and pop and fall dark again.
One of my kitchen fixtures acts like it's in some kind of sibling competition with the foyer. I thought I'd put some of those compact fluorescent bulbs in it one time, maybe they'd do better. Nope. Lasted a couple of months at best and we were back to darkness. It blows through bulbs faster than the foyer!
My dishwasher makes a noise. Not the usual whoosh-swoosh-skoosh-shush noise, more of an a-hunga-hunga-unga-urrrrnggghhh sort of sound. When it transitions between stages, I have to turn it off and then on again or it will just sit and grind and groan without doing anything. I don't even put detergent in it, just wash dishes by hand and use the dishwasher to sanitize and dry 'em.
The light in our dining room, not to be outdone by foyer and kitchen, has decided that it won't always turn on when it's turned on. Sometimes, for fun, it will turn on when the switch is flipped, then turn off despite the switch being flipped, then when the switch is bumped a little it will turn on again. Good times.
The clothes dryer has lately decided to join in the fun. It makes a sound somewhere between a hum and a buzz, with a little rattle tossed in from time to time, which it will do until I go open the door and then close it again, then restart it.
And those are just the things I know about.
I think I need an electrician.
Or an exorcist.
Sunday, January 3, 2016
Side Effects
Sometimes the cure can feel worse than the disease!
I'm taking a new medication. It's the generic equivalent of Effexor. Like any medication, there are side effects. Oh, joy.
Long, long ago I took Prozac, and then stopped taking Prozac because the side effects were most definitely not worth the non-gain in mental health (it was largely ineffective for me,not a good return on investment).
I tried Zoloft after that. Good grief, talk about unfortunate side effects! Did you know that Zoloft (or the generic equivalent, anyway) can cause gas? Yeah, neither did I. It can. It did. Ohmuhgoodness, but it did! I could have provided an alternative fuel vehicle with fill-ups for a year! Seriously, I sounded like a motor boat putt-putt-putting along. So, yeah, done with the Zoloft.
For about 20 years I have done without psychiatric medication for one reason or another. Primarily, I wanted to know that when I have a good day, it's me having a good day and not Pfizer or Eli Lilly. Also, the worst effect from both previous medications was a loss of connection to my creativity. I didn't want to sing, or write, or paint, or photograph, or sew. I didn't want to cook. That? Not good. Psych meds aren't cheap and even with insurance I couldn't afford them - these days, without insurance, they're impossible.
Were ipossible.
Thanks to a place called Avita, I can manage. Okay, Avita and my mother. Prescriptions are $4.50 a refill. I can just about manage $4.50 a month.
While Prozac and Zoloft are SSRI medications, Effexor operates differently. Don't ask me how, I've no idea, but it's not an SSRI, and so the hope is that it will knock the severe, treatment resistant depression on its ass without killing what I most need to keep alive and well within me.
It can take 6 - 8 weeks to feel any positive effects, but the side effects are on deck from the start. Whose idea was that?
The dizziness is manageable. The...er...unfortunate innards I can live with because that will likely (I hope) go away as my body gets used to the new chemicals I'm feeding it. The headaches aren't thrilling, and feeling like I could sleep for 23 hours a day is a real nuisance, as is feeling shaky and weak. Loss of appetite is not bother - hurrah for weight loss! Not hurrah for a suddenly racing heart.
Hopefully that's the extent of the side effects. There are more, and worse ones, and with any luck they will all fade with time and I will benefit from this medication. I have friends watching me carefully, ready to let me know if I seem odd, off, stranger than usual or weird in new ways. They will tell me if I seem happier, or more depressed, or if I am suddenly speaking in tongues. If I lose touch with my creative source, or if the side effects worsen, or if I don't feel any improvement, I'll wean off this medication and keep on slogging through the swamp on my own.
I am hoping, though, that I can use this medication to get to higher ground. I won't take it forever - it's not in my nature - but I will use this tool to my advantage for as long as I feel I need to.
Side effects and all.
I'm taking a new medication. It's the generic equivalent of Effexor. Like any medication, there are side effects. Oh, joy.
Long, long ago I took Prozac, and then stopped taking Prozac because the side effects were most definitely not worth the non-gain in mental health (it was largely ineffective for me,not a good return on investment).
I tried Zoloft after that. Good grief, talk about unfortunate side effects! Did you know that Zoloft (or the generic equivalent, anyway) can cause gas? Yeah, neither did I. It can. It did. Ohmuhgoodness, but it did! I could have provided an alternative fuel vehicle with fill-ups for a year! Seriously, I sounded like a motor boat putt-putt-putting along. So, yeah, done with the Zoloft.
For about 20 years I have done without psychiatric medication for one reason or another. Primarily, I wanted to know that when I have a good day, it's me having a good day and not Pfizer or Eli Lilly. Also, the worst effect from both previous medications was a loss of connection to my creativity. I didn't want to sing, or write, or paint, or photograph, or sew. I didn't want to cook. That? Not good. Psych meds aren't cheap and even with insurance I couldn't afford them - these days, without insurance, they're impossible.
Were ipossible.
Thanks to a place called Avita, I can manage. Okay, Avita and my mother. Prescriptions are $4.50 a refill. I can just about manage $4.50 a month.
While Prozac and Zoloft are SSRI medications, Effexor operates differently. Don't ask me how, I've no idea, but it's not an SSRI, and so the hope is that it will knock the severe, treatment resistant depression on its ass without killing what I most need to keep alive and well within me.
It can take 6 - 8 weeks to feel any positive effects, but the side effects are on deck from the start. Whose idea was that?
The dizziness is manageable. The...er...unfortunate innards I can live with because that will likely (I hope) go away as my body gets used to the new chemicals I'm feeding it. The headaches aren't thrilling, and feeling like I could sleep for 23 hours a day is a real nuisance, as is feeling shaky and weak. Loss of appetite is not bother - hurrah for weight loss! Not hurrah for a suddenly racing heart.
Hopefully that's the extent of the side effects. There are more, and worse ones, and with any luck they will all fade with time and I will benefit from this medication. I have friends watching me carefully, ready to let me know if I seem odd, off, stranger than usual or weird in new ways. They will tell me if I seem happier, or more depressed, or if I am suddenly speaking in tongues. If I lose touch with my creative source, or if the side effects worsen, or if I don't feel any improvement, I'll wean off this medication and keep on slogging through the swamp on my own.
I am hoping, though, that I can use this medication to get to higher ground. I won't take it forever - it's not in my nature - but I will use this tool to my advantage for as long as I feel I need to.
Side effects and all.
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Stormy Day
Okay, I'm up.
Disappointing trip to the mailbox, but there was a lovely roll of thunder accompanying me down the driveway and the gentle patter of rain walked me back to the house.
So thick, these clouds. This darkness pervades, and makes my thoughts thick and slow, too. I am heavy. Like the wan light struggling to shed its leaden shrouds, I struggle to shed this weight of shades and shadows.
I wonder, sometimes, is it better to be aware as I am that it's not real? That this feeling isn't real? That it's the result of faulty wiring, malfunctioning messages of the mind, misfiring neurons? Or would it be easier if I didn't know, if I believed this was true and everything and all there was or would be?
Is it better to know that there may be hope? Better to cling to that hope and risk being dashed against the rocks of disappointment for the possible transcendence of its fulfillment? Or to dwell in a twilight of hopelessness without knowing the lofty heights of potential and clarity?
The lights on the tree sparkle, and Sprout is watching cartoons and laughing like a loon, and I have people who love me despite myself, and I know that is good, but right now it is foreign to me, unreachable. I can see but not touch, and the more I reach, the more slippery it gets, the farther it recedes, and like trying to hold a fistful of water, the harder I grasp the less I can keep. I feel so far away.
Today I do not want to be open. I want to be closed up, to curl around this wounded, tender, never-quite-healed place within me and protect it from the world and everything that hurts. Today I would like to be bundled in the soft warmth of my cozy bed, perhaps with an adamantine shell for extra protection. I don't want to feel anything - no hope, no despair, no love, no sorrow, no loss, no joy, no misery, no happiness, none of this wondering when I stopped being worth anything to the people who should value me the most, no wondering when I became so ephemeral in the world that is supposed to help me be solid and present and real, no wishing that I could let go of this need for approval or at least acceptance from places I will never find them.
I do not want to be open.
So I open myself a little more.
In the end, I can't let the illusion become more than what is real. I can't let it win. The smile? Is brittle and may shatter at the slightest provocation, but it is pasted on my face because it doesn't want to be there. I am open, and every aching, raw, miserable inch of me is there to be poked, prodded, judged, and left deeply scarred, because it's the only way I know for it to scab over and some day, with luck and love and perseverance, maybe heal into a puckered, cicatrix of a whole soul.
Disappointing trip to the mailbox, but there was a lovely roll of thunder accompanying me down the driveway and the gentle patter of rain walked me back to the house.
So thick, these clouds. This darkness pervades, and makes my thoughts thick and slow, too. I am heavy. Like the wan light struggling to shed its leaden shrouds, I struggle to shed this weight of shades and shadows.
I wonder, sometimes, is it better to be aware as I am that it's not real? That this feeling isn't real? That it's the result of faulty wiring, malfunctioning messages of the mind, misfiring neurons? Or would it be easier if I didn't know, if I believed this was true and everything and all there was or would be?
Is it better to know that there may be hope? Better to cling to that hope and risk being dashed against the rocks of disappointment for the possible transcendence of its fulfillment? Or to dwell in a twilight of hopelessness without knowing the lofty heights of potential and clarity?
The lights on the tree sparkle, and Sprout is watching cartoons and laughing like a loon, and I have people who love me despite myself, and I know that is good, but right now it is foreign to me, unreachable. I can see but not touch, and the more I reach, the more slippery it gets, the farther it recedes, and like trying to hold a fistful of water, the harder I grasp the less I can keep. I feel so far away.
Today I do not want to be open. I want to be closed up, to curl around this wounded, tender, never-quite-healed place within me and protect it from the world and everything that hurts. Today I would like to be bundled in the soft warmth of my cozy bed, perhaps with an adamantine shell for extra protection. I don't want to feel anything - no hope, no despair, no love, no sorrow, no loss, no joy, no misery, no happiness, none of this wondering when I stopped being worth anything to the people who should value me the most, no wondering when I became so ephemeral in the world that is supposed to help me be solid and present and real, no wishing that I could let go of this need for approval or at least acceptance from places I will never find them.
I do not want to be open.
So I open myself a little more.
In the end, I can't let the illusion become more than what is real. I can't let it win. The smile? Is brittle and may shatter at the slightest provocation, but it is pasted on my face because it doesn't want to be there. I am open, and every aching, raw, miserable inch of me is there to be poked, prodded, judged, and left deeply scarred, because it's the only way I know for it to scab over and some day, with luck and love and perseverance, maybe heal into a puckered, cicatrix of a whole soul.
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Yule
It's almost Yule - two days away and I'm almost-but-not-quite ready for it. Here's the annual repost with alterations to make it current.
~~~~~
Happy Yule, y'all!
Wait, what? Yule - you know...Yule? The holiday that some people celebrated waaayyy before that poor wee baby was supposedly born in a pile of hay? Evergreens ring a bell? Holly? Ivy? Mistletoe??
OK, go get a snack and a nice beverage (eggnog on the right, pink punch in the center, pick a bottle from the high chair to spike it with)(yes, the high chair is our bar - the Evil Genius doesn't need it any more, Sprouthas long outgrown the use of it, and it's an heirloom that I want to keep on display - so why not??) and get comfy. All set?
Yule, or Winter Solstice, is a celebration of the returning light.
Yep, it's that simple.
The God is reborn today, and the days will lengthen with his growth, into the fullness of Summer. In some villages, way back in the past, hearth fires would be extinguished (a brave thing when you didn't have Zippos or matches or even two sticks to rub together). They would be relit from brands taken from a community balefire, lit by the sun himself with a little help from some glass (or a hidden coal or two - c'mon, we weren't above a little showmanship, back then), thereby bringing the sun (and, one hoped, his blessings) into the home. It also kept the community united, because everyone shared the same fire, the same light and heat. Cool, huh? Gotta love a religion that encourages playing with fire. Ahem.
The fir tree was (and is) a symbol of life lasting even through death, the promise of life and light renewed, and a reminder that beneath the snow, the Earth-heart beats on. Holly and Ivy were green, too, but they were also symbols of the Green Man, the Forest Lord, Jack o' the Green - the God primeval. The Holly King and the Ivy King, the old and the young, the constant, changing balance. Deep stuff, yo.
Mistletoe is still used in a fairly traditional way, although it wasn't always just kissing done under the stuff. I still use the leaves and occasional berry when I make love bundles for people (Note - a love bundle isn't a love spell, it is meant to strengthen what is already there, not coerce or sublimate the free will of another. I don't DO love spells, so don't even ask.)(I mean it.), and it's a terrific symbol. It was also a fertility and aphrodisiac herb, but only symbolically - even wigged out Druids knew the stuff was toxic!
We light a yule log, in our house one that's cut from the trunk of last year's tree (the rest of which is providing habitat and nutrients in the woods out back). Old tales say if it lights on the first try and burns for twelve hours, we'll have good luck...this year, I'm soaking one end in water, first. What? We need all the good fortune we can get...don't you??
This year we are spending Yule at Mum's, lighting the burn pile, celebrating the returning light with a little spark of our own. We'll collect some of the ash and bring it home to add to the ash jar and sprinkle around the foundation for a blessing.
Sometimes a group of us will get together and just spend a quiet day nibbling snacks, enjoying each other's company, and taking a break from the holiday insanity out there among the English. If we exchange gifts, we try to make them ourselves, or give things that encourage and nurture our spiritual or creative selves. Things will be a little sparse this year, what with Someone being all in prison and whatnot (in case you didn't know, it can be expensive to have someone in prison, but that's a tale for a later time). I want the kids to have a nice holiday so I have gone a bit overboard, but Sprout is just beginning to understand the concept of The Holly King (our version of Santa) and what presents are and she's really excited about them, and this is the last year before the Evil Genius is a teen (holy carp!!!) and things will change between us in the coming years.
But mostly, it's a celebration of the returning sun, the waxing light, the cycle renewed.
Happy Yule - When the days be cold, may your hearth be warm. When the nights be long, may your fire burn bright. When the wind blows, may you find snug shelter. When tree and field are bare, may your larder be full. May you never know Winter's chill a moment longer than you care to, nor hunger nor want, and should you find you have all that you need and a bit more besides, may you find someone who will gladly take what you offer and live better for the receiving. Blessed be.
~~~~~
Happy Yule, y'all!
Wait, what? Yule - you know...Yule? The holiday that some people celebrated waaayyy before that poor wee baby was supposedly born in a pile of hay? Evergreens ring a bell? Holly? Ivy? Mistletoe??
OK, go get a snack and a nice beverage (eggnog on the right, pink punch in the center, pick a bottle from the high chair to spike it with)(yes, the high chair is our bar - the Evil Genius doesn't need it any more, Sprouthas long outgrown the use of it, and it's an heirloom that I want to keep on display - so why not??) and get comfy. All set?
Yule, or Winter Solstice, is a celebration of the returning light.
Yep, it's that simple.
The God is reborn today, and the days will lengthen with his growth, into the fullness of Summer. In some villages, way back in the past, hearth fires would be extinguished (a brave thing when you didn't have Zippos or matches or even two sticks to rub together). They would be relit from brands taken from a community balefire, lit by the sun himself with a little help from some glass (or a hidden coal or two - c'mon, we weren't above a little showmanship, back then), thereby bringing the sun (and, one hoped, his blessings) into the home. It also kept the community united, because everyone shared the same fire, the same light and heat. Cool, huh? Gotta love a religion that encourages playing with fire. Ahem.
The fir tree was (and is) a symbol of life lasting even through death, the promise of life and light renewed, and a reminder that beneath the snow, the Earth-heart beats on. Holly and Ivy were green, too, but they were also symbols of the Green Man, the Forest Lord, Jack o' the Green - the God primeval. The Holly King and the Ivy King, the old and the young, the constant, changing balance. Deep stuff, yo.
Mistletoe is still used in a fairly traditional way, although it wasn't always just kissing done under the stuff. I still use the leaves and occasional berry when I make love bundles for people (Note - a love bundle isn't a love spell, it is meant to strengthen what is already there, not coerce or sublimate the free will of another. I don't DO love spells, so don't even ask.)(I mean it.), and it's a terrific symbol. It was also a fertility and aphrodisiac herb, but only symbolically - even wigged out Druids knew the stuff was toxic!
We light a yule log, in our house one that's cut from the trunk of last year's tree (the rest of which is providing habitat and nutrients in the woods out back). Old tales say if it lights on the first try and burns for twelve hours, we'll have good luck...this year, I'm soaking one end in water, first. What? We need all the good fortune we can get...don't you??
This year we are spending Yule at Mum's, lighting the burn pile, celebrating the returning light with a little spark of our own. We'll collect some of the ash and bring it home to add to the ash jar and sprinkle around the foundation for a blessing.
Sometimes a group of us will get together and just spend a quiet day nibbling snacks, enjoying each other's company, and taking a break from the holiday insanity out there among the English. If we exchange gifts, we try to make them ourselves, or give things that encourage and nurture our spiritual or creative selves. Things will be a little sparse this year, what with Someone being all in prison and whatnot (in case you didn't know, it can be expensive to have someone in prison, but that's a tale for a later time). I want the kids to have a nice holiday so I have gone a bit overboard, but Sprout is just beginning to understand the concept of The Holly King (our version of Santa) and what presents are and she's really excited about them, and this is the last year before the Evil Genius is a teen (holy carp!!!) and things will change between us in the coming years.
But mostly, it's a celebration of the returning sun, the waxing light, the cycle renewed.
Happy Yule - When the days be cold, may your hearth be warm. When the nights be long, may your fire burn bright. When the wind blows, may you find snug shelter. When tree and field are bare, may your larder be full. May you never know Winter's chill a moment longer than you care to, nor hunger nor want, and should you find you have all that you need and a bit more besides, may you find someone who will gladly take what you offer and live better for the receiving. Blessed be.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
A Glimpse
I have a doctor's appointment today. Nothing untoward, just a simple check-up.
I will make it a multi-purpose trip - the doc is up near mom's place so I'll go wash my shirts in her laundry machine (mine eats my shirts, hers is far kinder to them) while I'm at it.
My brain is screaming at me, telling me to cancel, not to go.
This is nothing unusual. It is why sometimes I don't listen to my instinct, because my instinct is often irrational. My instinct is in league with my Variety Plate and cannot always (or even often) be trusted.
Don't get me wrong, when it comes to confrontation or real, imminent danger,my instinct doesn't mess around. It does a good job and, when I don't ignore it, saves me a good deal of grief. But I am not currently in imminent danger. What is wrong is, I have to leave the house.
Going to the doctor for a simple check-up begins with an internal fight the moment the appointment is made. A small voice tells me "That's a bad day to go, you should cancel" as soon as I walk out of the office. Then, as the day approaches (and it's every six months I go, so there's lots of approach), my mind tells me all kinds of things that mean I'm too busy to go. When I refuse to cancel, things escalate. I start to think about my horrible diet and how I am not at all practicing self care and he's going to yell at me. By the time it's the day of the appointment ohmygosh I have to leave the house help help help I am, internally a mess. The xenophobia and agoraphobia kick in and I don't even want to go into the garage, let alone all the way out into the world.This appointment is going to suck. I have not taken my meds as I should. I have eaten and drunk many things that I shouldn't. This is part of a self-destructive cycle, and it will mean I shall be chastised by the doctor (who is really a terribly nice fellow and very good at his avocation and I did warn him that I am a difficult patient at best). The cycle has to stop. The way I am eating, the way I am living, will kill me.
So today I am fighting with myself. No kidding, my heart is pounding! I wasn't always like this. Depression, yes, and then OCD and paranoia, but this...this...anxiety...is only a couple of decades old. It's probably the youngest of the things on the plate. It is mighty big sometimes, and vigorous, and just going to the grocery store can feel like a trial. Leaving the house to be confronted by my own actions? Too much.
My new shrink says I have anxiety and depression with a psychotic element (but I'm harmless, really!!!) (it's the paranoia, my old and faithful bugaboo, that is the element, in case you wondered) and my counselor is helping me sort it all out, but I have to leave the house to make things better.
My brain doesn't seem to grasp that logic and is screaming at me as I type that I have other things I need to do and can't I just this once reschedule and look, the sky may fall at any moment and people are horrid and there is gun violence and religious hatred and politicians run rampant in the streets and...and...pant...pant...pant...
My mind goes around and around and gnaws on itself, and this is constant, constant, every damned day, exhausting and occasionally overwhelming, and it's all internal so nobody sees it and it's easy to dismiss as not-real, irrelevant, because the cracks and leakage and rubble from past tussles are all in my head but if you could see in there, just catch a glimpse, it would rival any photograph of war-torn landscape you've ever seen!
I know it's not real. It feels real enough, but I know it isn't. It is my imagination on steroids. It is the voice of the child I was who had no control over what others did to her, said to her, made her do. It is the voice of fear trying to shatter the seemingly fearless shell I wear and I cannot let it win, not today. Other days I can choose to change plans and stay in bed or curled up on the lounge with my kids watching movies, but today I can't. Today I have to gird up my loins (which sounds much nicer than "suck it up, buttercup") and adult.
I don't want to adult.
I don't want to do anything.
Up and at 'em.
I will make it a multi-purpose trip - the doc is up near mom's place so I'll go wash my shirts in her laundry machine (mine eats my shirts, hers is far kinder to them) while I'm at it.
My brain is screaming at me, telling me to cancel, not to go.
This is nothing unusual. It is why sometimes I don't listen to my instinct, because my instinct is often irrational. My instinct is in league with my Variety Plate and cannot always (or even often) be trusted.
Don't get me wrong, when it comes to confrontation or real, imminent danger,my instinct doesn't mess around. It does a good job and, when I don't ignore it, saves me a good deal of grief. But I am not currently in imminent danger. What is wrong is, I have to leave the house.
Going to the doctor for a simple check-up begins with an internal fight the moment the appointment is made. A small voice tells me "That's a bad day to go, you should cancel" as soon as I walk out of the office. Then, as the day approaches (and it's every six months I go, so there's lots of approach), my mind tells me all kinds of things that mean I'm too busy to go. When I refuse to cancel, things escalate. I start to think about my horrible diet and how I am not at all practicing self care and he's going to yell at me. By the time it's the day of the appointment ohmygosh I have to leave the house help help help I am, internally a mess. The xenophobia and agoraphobia kick in and I don't even want to go into the garage, let alone all the way out into the world.This appointment is going to suck. I have not taken my meds as I should. I have eaten and drunk many things that I shouldn't. This is part of a self-destructive cycle, and it will mean I shall be chastised by the doctor (who is really a terribly nice fellow and very good at his avocation and I did warn him that I am a difficult patient at best). The cycle has to stop. The way I am eating, the way I am living, will kill me.
So today I am fighting with myself. No kidding, my heart is pounding! I wasn't always like this. Depression, yes, and then OCD and paranoia, but this...this...anxiety...is only a couple of decades old. It's probably the youngest of the things on the plate. It is mighty big sometimes, and vigorous, and just going to the grocery store can feel like a trial. Leaving the house to be confronted by my own actions? Too much.
My new shrink says I have anxiety and depression with a psychotic element (but I'm harmless, really!!!) (it's the paranoia, my old and faithful bugaboo, that is the element, in case you wondered) and my counselor is helping me sort it all out, but I have to leave the house to make things better.
My brain doesn't seem to grasp that logic and is screaming at me as I type that I have other things I need to do and can't I just this once reschedule and look, the sky may fall at any moment and people are horrid and there is gun violence and religious hatred and politicians run rampant in the streets and...and...pant...pant...pant...
My mind goes around and around and gnaws on itself, and this is constant, constant, every damned day, exhausting and occasionally overwhelming, and it's all internal so nobody sees it and it's easy to dismiss as not-real, irrelevant, because the cracks and leakage and rubble from past tussles are all in my head but if you could see in there, just catch a glimpse, it would rival any photograph of war-torn landscape you've ever seen!
I know it's not real. It feels real enough, but I know it isn't. It is my imagination on steroids. It is the voice of the child I was who had no control over what others did to her, said to her, made her do. It is the voice of fear trying to shatter the seemingly fearless shell I wear and I cannot let it win, not today. Other days I can choose to change plans and stay in bed or curled up on the lounge with my kids watching movies, but today I can't. Today I have to gird up my loins (which sounds much nicer than "suck it up, buttercup") and adult.
I don't want to adult.
I don't want to do anything.
Up and at 'em.
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Uncaged
Hatred is a cage. Fear is a cage. I will not be caged. I will not hate. I will not fear. I will fly free.
Who will fly with me?
Sunday, December 6, 2015
An Inch At A Time
I am working at reclaiming myself.
This means personal work,but also working to reclaim the space around me, namely Casa de Crazy. If one's environment is a reflection of one's inner state, it is painfully clear that I'm a complete wreck.
It all needs cleaning, purging, sorting through, and more cleaning.
Taken as a whole, it's too much.
So a little at a time I am taking it back.
The kitchen counters are cleaner and less cluttered. I can see the couch. Laundry is always behind, but less so today than yesterday.
This morning I cleaned my bathroom counter and swept the floor. Washed the sink and faucet. Cleared some boxes from the garage (race things that will be given out at a holiday event rather than sitting and moldering in my garage).
Most days I am tired, whipped, even when I've only just gotten up. Mental weariness takes a different kind of rest to ameliorate, and I don't have what I need to deal with it so it grinds on me. I ache physically, too, for no other reason than I have no idea why.
It's going to take a lot of small actions to clean up this big house, take back my home, get myself back, but I'm taking them.
An inch t a time.
This means personal work,but also working to reclaim the space around me, namely Casa de Crazy. If one's environment is a reflection of one's inner state, it is painfully clear that I'm a complete wreck.
It all needs cleaning, purging, sorting through, and more cleaning.
Taken as a whole, it's too much.
So a little at a time I am taking it back.
The kitchen counters are cleaner and less cluttered. I can see the couch. Laundry is always behind, but less so today than yesterday.
This morning I cleaned my bathroom counter and swept the floor. Washed the sink and faucet. Cleared some boxes from the garage (race things that will be given out at a holiday event rather than sitting and moldering in my garage).
Most days I am tired, whipped, even when I've only just gotten up. Mental weariness takes a different kind of rest to ameliorate, and I don't have what I need to deal with it so it grinds on me. I ache physically, too, for no other reason than I have no idea why.
It's going to take a lot of small actions to clean up this big house, take back my home, get myself back, but I'm taking them.
An inch t a time.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Memorial
This is John Watson and his Mother.
John was an addict. He struggled for more than half his life with his demons. His mother knew those demons. She says that an addict has as much difficulty with the good times and the bad, and I believe her.
I believe her because sometimes there's overlap when it comes to weird wiring, and I know how it is to be as afraid of, as unsure of, the happy as it is to be of the sad. How many times have I said or written that I don't know how to be happy? Depressed, miserable, stressed, angry, hurt, and confused I can do. Happy? Can be terrifying.
An addict will deal with their stress in predictable ways. Sobriety requires learning new ways to cope. Sometimes those new ways are not as effective as the addiction. Sometimes all the happy is too much.
John was nine months sober this time. I am told that's a dangerous time in sobriety. He had a young woman he loved, who loved him. He adored her daughter. He was working and reaching out to help others.
His memorial is on Tuesday. My friend A and I are going. Won't be blogging until I'm home again.
I am mourning this young man who I loved like a brother, a son, a friend. I ache for his mother, his sister, his lover. I ache for his friends. I ache for the little girl who thought he hung the moon and sun and stars.
I will miss my smiling, vividly blue-eyed friend. There is a John shaped hole in the world, and nothing will ever fill it. I hate heroin. I hate the chemical monsters that eat up people, eat up hope and love and family, eat up lives.
John was an addict. He struggled for more than half his life with his demons. His mother knew those demons. She says that an addict has as much difficulty with the good times and the bad, and I believe her.
I believe her because sometimes there's overlap when it comes to weird wiring, and I know how it is to be as afraid of, as unsure of, the happy as it is to be of the sad. How many times have I said or written that I don't know how to be happy? Depressed, miserable, stressed, angry, hurt, and confused I can do. Happy? Can be terrifying.
An addict will deal with their stress in predictable ways. Sobriety requires learning new ways to cope. Sometimes those new ways are not as effective as the addiction. Sometimes all the happy is too much.
John was nine months sober this time. I am told that's a dangerous time in sobriety. He had a young woman he loved, who loved him. He adored her daughter. He was working and reaching out to help others.
His memorial is on Tuesday. My friend A and I are going. Won't be blogging until I'm home again.
I am mourning this young man who I loved like a brother, a son, a friend. I ache for his mother, his sister, his lover. I ache for his friends. I ache for the little girl who thought he hung the moon and sun and stars.
I will miss my smiling, vividly blue-eyed friend. There is a John shaped hole in the world, and nothing will ever fill it. I hate heroin. I hate the chemical monsters that eat up people, eat up hope and love and family, eat up lives.
Friday, November 27, 2015
John Watson
On Wednesday a young man I have long loved and hailed as "friend" stepped through the veil.
He has always had a sweet smile for us, always had gentle hands and kind words for my children, freely offered support to me, offered guidance from his own experience as an addict when I felt ill equipped to help Someone navigate that dark and dangerous path.
Nine months clean, gone in an instant.
If ever I believed in demons, I would name them Heroin, Meth, Alcohol, and any of the other countless substances that sink their teeth and claws into people and gnaw at their bones. If ever I believed in evil, it would be these things that destroy, that steal the light from us, that leave holes where people we love, loved, once radiated light and warmth.
The world is a little dimmer, a little colder.
Inside the utility trailer where we sleep, on the wall near the back end, by the door, there are crayon marks. John brought a HUGE bag of crayons and some coloring books over to our camp one day and sat with Sprout for a bit, coloring with her. He left them with us for the duration of the event, and she colored. Some pages, yes, but also on the plywood that lines the trailer. It will remain there, that crayon rendering of happy enthusiasm., and remind me of him.
Sprout wept when I told her he'd died. She said she will miss him. Me too, kid. Me, too.
All of the denizens of Casa de Crazy will mourn our friend.
I once told him, teasing, that if he wasn't young enough to be my son (or much younger brother, at least) and if I had more confidence, I would be more than happy to be inappropriate with him. He grinned and replied that he'd have gone there. Very good for my ego.
I will miss his hugs - he had strong arms and gave good hug.
I will miss his teasing.
I will miss seeing him light up when his eyes fell on the people he loved.
I have offered, and continue to offer, boundless love to his family. We are here. If we can help, we will.
And to John...may your journey through the veil and into the next place be gentle and without pain or sorrow. May you leave behind all that hurt, all that angered, all that darkened your days. May you carry with you all that brought you joy. May the love you gave and the love you received never fade. May you be met with love and fellowship by those who made the journey before you.
By all the gods who ever were, who are now, and who ever will be, may you make yourself known to we who loved you in this life when you return to our circle again.
Shake the rafters and make the foundation tremble, John Watson, and for the too little we had of you, I thank you.
He has always had a sweet smile for us, always had gentle hands and kind words for my children, freely offered support to me, offered guidance from his own experience as an addict when I felt ill equipped to help Someone navigate that dark and dangerous path.
Nine months clean, gone in an instant.
If ever I believed in demons, I would name them Heroin, Meth, Alcohol, and any of the other countless substances that sink their teeth and claws into people and gnaw at their bones. If ever I believed in evil, it would be these things that destroy, that steal the light from us, that leave holes where people we love, loved, once radiated light and warmth.
The world is a little dimmer, a little colder.
Inside the utility trailer where we sleep, on the wall near the back end, by the door, there are crayon marks. John brought a HUGE bag of crayons and some coloring books over to our camp one day and sat with Sprout for a bit, coloring with her. He left them with us for the duration of the event, and she colored. Some pages, yes, but also on the plywood that lines the trailer. It will remain there, that crayon rendering of happy enthusiasm., and remind me of him.
Sprout wept when I told her he'd died. She said she will miss him. Me too, kid. Me, too.
All of the denizens of Casa de Crazy will mourn our friend.
I once told him, teasing, that if he wasn't young enough to be my son (or much younger brother, at least) and if I had more confidence, I would be more than happy to be inappropriate with him. He grinned and replied that he'd have gone there. Very good for my ego.
I will miss his hugs - he had strong arms and gave good hug.
I will miss his teasing.
I will miss seeing him light up when his eyes fell on the people he loved.
I have offered, and continue to offer, boundless love to his family. We are here. If we can help, we will.
And to John...may your journey through the veil and into the next place be gentle and without pain or sorrow. May you leave behind all that hurt, all that angered, all that darkened your days. May you carry with you all that brought you joy. May the love you gave and the love you received never fade. May you be met with love and fellowship by those who made the journey before you.
By all the gods who ever were, who are now, and who ever will be, may you make yourself known to we who loved you in this life when you return to our circle again.
Shake the rafters and make the foundation tremble, John Watson, and for the too little we had of you, I thank you.
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Happy Thanksgiving
Here followeth a Casa de Crazy Thanksgiving Day Tradicion:
We hope you have a pleasant, tasty,mellow, comfortable, not-at-all-contentious Thanksgiving day if you are in the USA and an all around good one if not in the USA.
We hope you have a pleasant, tasty,mellow, comfortable, not-at-all-contentious Thanksgiving day if you are in the USA and an all around good one if not in the USA.
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Thankful
I have a few traditions on Thanksgiving. Not many - the menu, recording the Macy's parade so I can watch it and fast-forward through all the crappy pop music, commercials, and talking heads to see the twenty minutes of balloons, floats and high school bands I'm interested in hidden among all that junk (although I will have to forgo that pleasure, this year, alas), and my list of some things for which I am thankful, in no particular order and in no way complete:
The house in which I live
The Evil Genius
The house in which I live
The Evil Genius
Mum
Someone
Sprout
Gypsy, K2, Mizz A, Kit, Sam-I-Am, PJ, Mizz Beth, Martha 'n' Milo, Avalon, and all of my friends who put up with me when I am most myself and therefor least likable. They are the net beneath me when I fly and fall
Bread
The scent of leaf loam and woodsmoke in the crisp autumn air
Books, music, and art
Clean, plentiful water
Clean air
Clean clothes
Freedom
Nature and the way she finds to show me something new of herself every day
Words
Song
Dance
Adversity, that joy is all the sweeter (Okay, okay, the joy is sweet enough, so basta with the adversity for a minute, please)
Every creature and plant that I consume to sustain myself, because without the life I take, I would have no life to live
Love - that it exists at all is a wonder, and I feel blessed to know it in many forms
Chocolate, gift from the Gods (yes, even the perversion called "candy bar") (Mmm...candy bar...)
Honeycrisp Apples
Strong hands
Strong spirit
Strong will
Laughter
Cussed determination not to curl up and die just because life can sometimes be a succession of truly awful, bleak, and desolate days...but sometimes it isn't.
The Internet
You
I hope you have a blessed day, and that you the things you're thankful for outweighing the things for which you're not.
Happy Thanksgiving, y'all, from us at Casa de Crazy to you out in the Blue Nowhere and beyond.
Someone
Sprout
Gypsy, K2, Mizz A, Kit, Sam-I-Am, PJ, Mizz Beth, Martha 'n' Milo, Avalon, and all of my friends who put up with me when I am most myself and therefor least likable. They are the net beneath me when I fly and fall
Bread
The scent of leaf loam and woodsmoke in the crisp autumn air
Books, music, and art
Clean, plentiful water
Clean air
Clean clothes
Freedom
Nature and the way she finds to show me something new of herself every day
Words
Song
Dance
Adversity, that joy is all the sweeter (Okay, okay, the joy is sweet enough, so basta with the adversity for a minute, please)
Every creature and plant that I consume to sustain myself, because without the life I take, I would have no life to live
Love - that it exists at all is a wonder, and I feel blessed to know it in many forms
Chocolate, gift from the Gods (yes, even the perversion called "candy bar") (Mmm...candy bar...)
Honeycrisp Apples
Strong hands
Strong spirit
Strong will
Laughter
Cussed determination not to curl up and die just because life can sometimes be a succession of truly awful, bleak, and desolate days...but sometimes it isn't.
The Internet
You
I hope you have a blessed day, and that you the things you're thankful for outweighing the things for which you're not.
Happy Thanksgiving, y'all, from us at Casa de Crazy to you out in the Blue Nowhere and beyond.
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