It’s Your Birthday and I’ll Cry If I Want To

On what would have been his 40th birthday today, I’ve been thinking that I need to honor it somehow. I’ve been struggling to find the words and get them out, but then I realized… maybe I don’t need to.

Tonight our daughter will be attending the Wonders & Worries 2012 Wonder Ball, a magical evening for little girls who have lost a parent — complete with dancing, fairy miniature horses, a royal court, entertainment, face painting, crafts, ice cream, a balloon lagoon, and grand tiara crowning ceremony.

The event just happened to fall on his birthday. So I hope he’ll be watching her tonight as she dances around in her princess dress and tiara, and catches the balloons that she’s so excited to send up to him.

Semper in corde meo.


Walls Made of Words

Words as daggers.
Shrewdly cruel.
Twist my trust.
Play the Fool.
Tarnish memories.
Make things harder.
Sour grapes.
A brilliant Martyr.


Wonder Woman (aka Slightly Damaged Supermom) Seeks a True Partner

While cleaning out some old files today, I came across the submission for my match.com profile. At the time I wrote it, I had lost my husband two years prior and I was finally ready to start testing the waters and put myself back out there. What I wrote was my best attempt at defining who I was, where I was in my life, what I was looking for in a person, and more importantly what I was looking for in a relationship.

“But an accurate definition of the self is impossible. You are more than you realize, more than you can define. And the more time you spend trying to nail down the definition, the less time you spend living right now… Your past is not your identity… You, living now, is your identity.” — George Lawrence-Eli, The Invisible Clock

It’s always interesting to look back at something like this and compare it to who we think we are now. It’s almost like opening up our baby books or pouring over old photo albums and asking ourselves why the hell did I ever wear those pants? This is an affirmation that yes, I still am NOW who I was THEN — same sense of self, same ridiculous sense of humor (that I’m sure only I find amusing), and of course, the same desire to love and be loved. But George was right, these words do not nearly define me. So I’m deleting that file. I’m moving forward because I’m done looking back.

I’m posting it here for my own posterity, and to remind myself to spend more time living in the now and less time trying to define who I am or who I was. I will say that it makes me pretty darn happy to see that I talked about dreams of doing roller derby, and here I am – kicking ass and taking names. Enjoy!

One_Wonder_Woman

I’m a mix of so many things: educated, professional, a modern thinker (read: you don’t always get to drive), and a natural leader. I’m creative, passionate, and a tattooed rebel. I’m a motorcycle rider and proud mommy of a little girl that loves anything pink and sparkly. I’m a widow that’s ready to embrace change and find out what amazing things this life has in store for me. I love adventure and I crave excitement. I LOVE to laugh. Big, silly, oh-that-hurts-my-abs kinda laughs. I’m outspoken and direct, but honest and respectful. I try to keep things in balance: work hard, play hard. I’m competitive and try to rock at everything I do.You are a renaissance man yourself (maybe leaning a bit to the Alpha Male type). You’re educated, genuine, and sincere. People may not realize there’s so much more to you than meets the eye. You know yourself and what you want out of life. You see the world as a place full of opportunity and have passion about whatever it is that you love. You can handle a power tool as well as a computer. You’re not only physically healthy, but financially and emotionally as well. You know how to make lemonade out of lemons (or at least a lemonade stand!) You are happy, but know there’s something missing from your life: the person you want to put your energy into, and have it returned in ways that make a real man smile.

Okay…that’s all the stuff from my “man list” (Power of Intention). Honestly, I think if you’re like me, you can’t really believe that you’re even doing this online match thing. I mean — I think I’m worthy of a quality partner, do I really have to resort to this? Isn’t meeting your partner supposed to be some defining moment in your life where you cross each others paths in the grocery store and voila! you just know… right there in the cereal aisle? It’s all floaty pixie dust and shimmery swirling hearts? Errrr. Thank you for playing.

I’m not a stupid girl — but I am mortal. I’m harder on myself than I probably should be. But I do know a little bit about a lot of things. I can hold my own, and I enjoy knowing I can do it by myself. I’d like to think I don’t need anyone other than my daughter, but that’s simply not true and the girl side of me knows it. The tomboy in me hates to admit there’s something I can’t handle. I’ve learned the power of being a woman, and I’d like to think I can comfortably hang in just about any situation or conversation.

Where do I fall short? Not a topic I’m big on focusing on, but I can’t cook. Rather, it’s never been my area of expertise. I love to eat good food, and I’m a hell of a sous chef, just no Iron Chef. On the flip side, I have managed to keep myself and my kid alive. I guess we manage. I’m not needy, but I want to feel WANTED by you. I want the passion, but not the drama. I want to feel like we’re a team… able to conquer anything.

Let’s go back to the good stuff. I’ve got a great sense of humor, but can’t tell a joke to save my life. I’m tough as nails when I need to be, but the right commercial or TV show will make me cry. I pee with the door open and I love to wear high heels and jeans. I’m (very) silly, kinda nerdy, and have a tendency to occasionally speak without thinking. I’m self-directed, a risk taker, and I love to steal other people’s funny phrases. (I always tell them first.) I love to be inspired by ANYTHING (recently it was a Roller Derby championship I attended. I want to do that!).

And you? You do realize communication is key. Honesty is a given. Intimacy is a must. Drama is a negative, Ghostrider. Games are for family night, not a relationship. Laughing is required regularly. I think I like a “tough guy,” a man’s man so to speak. (Only because I don’t want to be able to shoot a paintball gun better than you.) Laugh at me when I deserve it, but be prepared to be challenged on your grammar. (Blame mom.) If you ride a motorcycle, you automatically get a bonus point.

Wonder twin power… activate.


XI x MMIII

November 10, 2003 was our wedding day. We celebrated it in Runaway Bay, Jamaica, in the company of twenty or so of our closest family and friends. It was an amazing day and an amazing adventure to be there in the land of carefree where everything was answered with a smiling, “No problem, Mon!” We soaked up the sun, laughed with friends — fruity drinks were always in hand, and any hunger pain was quickly taken away with the best jerk chicken on the planet.

Today is not a day for me to be sad, and it’s certainly not a day to cry (although honestly, that part’s already shot.)

I have wonderful memories of this day, eight years ago, and today I just want to focus on being grateful for that unforgettable experience and the time I had with an unforgettable man.


Wearing My Art on My Sleeve

My tattoos are the story of my life.

I remember watching the movie The Illustrated Man when I was a kid.

I remember how in the movie, each tattoo marked a moment in the man’s life — and how I was so profoundly inspired by the way he chose to decorate his body with his life’s experiences. My tattoos are my own armor of truth — they give me strength, they speak my story. They express my passions, and empower me with a sense of pride. They make me feel sexy. They remind me of my flaws and inspire me to grow. Because as long as I’m here, I know my story is not over.


Look Mom — no nipples!


I’m Not Sorry — And That’s How I’m Gonna Roll

“If you fall or get knocked down, just get up quickly and start skating as fast as you can.” —Annie Oops, Assistant Coach for the Cen-Tex Sirens Roller Derby League

Fall or get knocked down? Yeah, I know all about that.
Get up quickly and skate as fast you can? I can do that, I thought, I’ve had some experience with this technique.

Weeks ago, I found out about a local Roller Derby League that was having open recruitment, something I’ve always wanted to do. So I went. And needless to say, I’ve fallen in love. I feel like a teenager that’s all atwitter with the endorphins of a new crush, hardly able to sleep, eat, or simply go about my day without it taking over my thoughts. Aside from some hard earned bruises, sore muscles, and a new collection of really cool fishnets, I’ve also gained a new perspective on things.

For the last few years, I’ve been struggling to “get up” after being knocked down by the death of my husband in December of  2007. I went to therapy, I got out of the unhealthy rebound relationship that I jumped into in an effort to dull the pain, I moved closer to my family, and I tried to focus on making the best life I could for our daughter and myself. I did this the only way I knew how — stumbling along the way, trying to figure out who I was and who I wanted to be. My whole life I had been a leader, full of focus, direction and drive. And then, like being hit by a Mack truck, I was on the ground — dazed, confused, and with my confidence shattered into a million pieces. All I could think about was what if something happened to my daughter? What if I got into another relationship and he leaves me, too? How would I manage? How would I survive? I was no longer focused on anything other than my insecurity, my loss, and the lack of passion that now defined my life.

Not only had I lost my husband, but I lost my toughness. My swagger turned to a slump, and I struggled to keep my shoulders pulled back. My type-A overachiever attitude turned to a go-through-the-motions, get-through-the-day routine. I found myself being much more apologetic… about everything. I worried more about what people thought of me and went out of my way to let them know I was a nice person — so that hopefully they would see, and I just might believe — that maybe I didn’t really deserve what happened to me after all.

Three and a half years may not seem like “getting up quickly” — but I know for certain I’m ready to roll now. By no means am I saying I’ve got my toughness or swagger back entirely, but I feel like I’m faking it pretty good. I have faith that eventually it will just be who I am — defined entirely by me and not what happened TO me. I have an incredibly loving and supportive man by my side. My daughter is healthy, happy, and as well adjusted as a mother could hope for. I have absolutely nothing to complain about and everything to be grateful for.

So I’m ready to play again.
I’m ready to compete again.
I’m ready to be a part of a team and have people depend on me for support.

I’m up, and I’m ready to skate as fast as I can, knock somebody else down and not have to say I’m sorry.


Life and Death in a Bathroom

Hello.
I said it out loud.

I sensed his presence the second I walked into the bathroom. I still walked around to make certain the moment wasn’t just a fleeting manifestation of my mind. Then I leaned back on the counter top and spoke. When I heard my voice break the silence as it echoed off the tile, I instantly became self-conscious and felt absolutely silly for attempting to talk to “no one,” or to myself for that matter.

I knew he would be coming. A close friend of ours had just come home from the hospital, and he had called to tell me they had been visited the night before. Apparently their cat noticed him first. Even days before, I seemed to notice a few other “signs” as well. Little things. I attributed it to him just making his rounds, exercising his “visitation rights” to quote another friend. She used that phrase to described those moments when they (or the memory of them) come and take everything you have.

I’ve been through many of those moments. They usually happen in the same place and I usually react the same way. Those moments are different from just a quick flash or the pause I’d give to passing memory… it’s when the air changes, becomes thick and gives me an undeniable sensation that I am not alone. I didn’t ask for this, it’s just what happens. I’m not even sure what I truly believe in this spiritual regard, but I don’t try to understand it, either. So when I walked into the bathroom on this occasion, I was sure he was there. I was certain. Absolutely positive. I just felt it all the way through me. Of course, it very well could have just been all my internal emotions coming to a head, and I had only been noticing these “signs” because I needed to work through some pent up emotions. And typically I would get emotional, upset even, sit down on the floor and cry. This time was different for me, though. This time it felt like putting on an old t-shirt, casual and comfortable. I’ve been here, I thought, we’ve been here. Many times actually. No matter where I’ve moved since his death, most of my “visits” have been here. The bathroom? Yeah, I know… the bathroom.

It actually makes a lot of sense. And trust me, I so wish I were kidding about this. But nonetheless, it was a simple fact of our relationship: the bathroom was kind of “our place.” He and I had spent many, many hours sitting on the floor of various bathrooms — in apartments, rent houses, in hotels, his parents house, and mostly in the house we eventually owned as our own — the house where we brought home our little girl. We would spend HOURS hashing through whatever issue was at hand — from money to moving and career choices to kid stuff. We would just keep talking until we’d finally convince ourselves that we had solved whatever problem we were having and could venture back out into the furnished world.

I remember (how could I forget?) that on a momentous trip to see a band he managed play a big show in London, and despite covert operations to buy a ring and a multi-person coordination of an on-stage mid-performance proposal — he blew it the night before. Where? You guessed it… the bathroom. I’m not sure if the ring was burning a hole in his pocket, if he was too nervous to follow through with the public proposal, or if it was that post-coital, brains-to-penis moment that inspired him to follow me into the bathroom of our hotel room, and with no hesitation whatsoever — ask me to marry him while I was sitting on a beautiful European toilet. I’m not kidding. He got down on one knee and everything. On the tile. Of the bathroom.

I don’t even know if he was even dressed, but I do remember laughing and saying, “Really? You’re asking me to marry you right now?” Trust me I loved him with all my heart, but this was not really how a girl envisions getting proposed to. I had no doubt he would be my husband, but at the time, I was in no hurry — so I had always said I wanted him to ask me whenever he was ready. I just couldn’t believe that he would wait six years and finally be ready at that moment. When I have toilet paper in my hands. So after accepting — and wiping — I immediately made him aware of the fact that I was going to have to explain to our grandchildren that their “grandpa asked me to marry him while I was sitting on the pot.” Not really romantic. Ah well… he was still mine. And that’s how we rolled.

The day he died was a week before Christmas. He and our daughter had gone to stay at my mom’s house, waiting for me to arrive later that week. After one unsuccessful night of a snoring man trying to share the guest room with a toddler, he accepted the offer to sleep at the next door neighbor’s house. The neighbors were out of of town. The house was beautiful and had recently been put on the market. He’d have more freedom than being at my mother’s house…. so sure, he accepted. But when they tried to call him the next morning, when they tried knocking at the door and got nothing… the Realtor eventually unlocked the door, and my stepdad went in and found him. Lying down, on his back, in his pajamas…. in the bathroom.

As much as I had wanted to write some poetic verses about all of this — you know, to keep somewhat in line with my previous posts — the subject matter just didn’t seem to lend itself well. (It was tough finding more words to rhyme with commode.) So I figured I would just tell it as it happened for me. Which brings me back to the other night and walking into an episode of The Ghost Whisperer. It was a unique visit in that it felt so much stronger than ever before. I was so overwhelmed by the energy that it caught my breath and made me take a seat on the side of the bathtub. It was intense, but not sad. It was overwhelming, but not uncomfortable. For the first time, I absorbed the moment without breaking down into tears. For the first time, I just sat there in the moment with him… and I enjoyed the company. It only lasted a few minutes, but it felt like I had sat with an old friend for hours. And I knew he was here — in the bathroom — just checking in on me, making sure I was okay.

I knew I didn’t really have to say anything at all. I knew he could feel it: I’m doing just fine.



Momentary Clarity

There are the teeniest tiniest twinklings of time
Just occasionally
When I feel whole
When I feel happy
When I feel hope.

I wallow in the wonders of that fleeting flash
Marinate in the moment
Feel the safety
Feel the security
Feel the second chance.

And in that breath is the beat of my heart
Believing that these blinks
Will become minutes
Will become hours
Will become days.

So I soak up the second and savor my smile
For in this single sliver of space
I feel fierce
I feel fortunate
I feel forgiven.


Buried Guilt

Your body lies buried in that box
A false hope-sealed case
A suffocatingly tight space
Under shovels of dirt and rocks

Your bones are not alone at rest
Paired with soil and silt
Is my wretchedly faithful guilt
Scratching at the edges of our chest

This was not where you wanted to be
My weak soul strained
I relinquished your remains
And self-serving decisions flew free

The case lay open for you to be eyed
Your freshly cold flesh
Hardly displayed at it’s best
With trinkets and toys packed inside

I know what I’d wish if I had only one
To set us both free
For it is so hard to breath
Suffocating on what can’t be undone

My spirit lies captive in that box
My contrition, your friend
A tortured soul with no end
Under shovels of remorse and rocks


I’m Waiting.

“I’m waiting,” he said, seemingly out of nowhere.

“Waiting for what?” I asked.

“For you to tell me I’m everything to you.”


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