• profile"The peace we seek to win is not victory over any other people, but the peace that comes with healing in its wings; with compassion for those who have suffered; with understanding for those who have opposed us; with the opportunity for all the peoples." -Richard Nixon

    If you take the time to read through these pages of my healing journey, you will see the hills and valleys. Those highs and lows continue to take me toward my ultimate goal: one of peace within, one of compassion for others who have been through their own hills and valleys and one of opportunity for all (also known as reform). I strive, at this time, to find that inner peace. Join me as I fail miserably each day but find faith and hope enough to wake the next morning and try again.



Paper and Pen

I’ve been writing a lot with paper and pen. It’s been cathartic, really. I have arthritis (yes, at my age) in my right arm from my softball days so writing for more than the length of a note card often causes my hand to cramp and my wrist to ache. Is it weird to say that the physical pain is healing right now? Giving “voice” to the emotional turmoil inside?

I find it so hard to write in a paper journal. Not just physically, but mentally. It is hard to write for “just me.” As a teen, my Mom found one of my (umpteen) journals and used stuff that I had written against me. From that point on, I began censoring what I wrote in my journals. And what’s the point in that? If you can’t be honest in your most personal of spaces, what is the ultimate point? It won’t be a true reflection of what you felt or what you went through so why bother?

And for years, I didn’t bother.

I’ve been writing online for years and years. And years. And some more years. Once truly open with my words, I’ve been censoring more and more. In part because of the unethical actions of my agency, in part because I don’t want the world to see me struggle and in part out of respect for other parties. But censoring gets old. It’s hard to write, even in generalities, when you have to debate every other word, whether it will be used against you in a negative fashion or if you will hurt someone’s feelings. Quite honestly, not many people extend me the same sort of respect for my feelings and it feels cumbersome to always to the same for the world at large and just not those whom are important in my day-to-day life.

But writing in a paper journal again has been a challenge. My voice on the internet, though chronicling my/our journey/journeys, is an outward voice. I often talk to my readers. (HI READERS!) As I said, I do censor myself to some degree online, more and more these days. So when I opened that journal and stared at the blank page, I didn’t know what to write. How honest did I want to be? How deep into the details did I want to get? What if someone read it? Of course, the only persons with actual access to such a thing are my Husband who a) respects my privacy and b ) already knows everything I’ve written (thus far). I mean, my kids could find it but their reading comprehension at this point is rather low unless it’s The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Beyond that, depending on future contents, thus far I would have no problem sharing my struggles with my children. They need to learn what Mommy has been through in order to learn their own stories.

But it’s so hard to be raw sometimes. The words I use are words I don’t want to think about or admit to the general public. No, not foul words. Big words. Like depression. And anger. And hopelessness. Yeah, didn’t know that, now did you? I should be free to write since it’s just me, my own eyes, reading the pages. But what if I don’t want to know for certain how I feel? As long as it isn’t in black and white on a page, it isn’t real, right? As long as I can’t see the words, the problem doesn’t exist, right?

But it was cathartic all the same. I needed to get a lot of stuff out before my therapy appointment this afternoon or I wasn’t going to be able to say any of it out loud. In fact, I’m not quite sure I can say it all out loud even now and so the journal is taking a trip with me to the therapist’s office this afternoon. She can read it while I nurse the little one and gear up for her myriad of questions. So much has changed since my last appointment. My world is crumbling and I’m trying to claw my way out of the rubble.

I see some spots of light but just can’t reach…




My Wish

I received a phone call on Friday afternoon. I was sitting in the backyard, reading a book in a sunbeam while one boy napped and the other played in his playroom. My Husband was allowing me some quiet “Me Time” on my birthday and I couldn’t have been more grateful. I smiled as I saw the Munchkin’s smiling face on my caller ID, letting me know that the phone call would be worth interrupting the second page of the book that was already making me laugh.

I briefly talked with her Dad before he handed Miss Munchkin the phone. My heart is always so full and so fearful when we talk. Why fearful? It just is; I don’t necessarily have an explanation. I’ll try. It basically feels like you’re in middle school and you desperately want for the person on the other end to like you even though you’re dorky (I am), boring (like me) and generally less cool than the person on the phone (you know, like me). Thankfully, she likes me and my heart is relieved.

As usual, she offered a gem of beauty during our conversation.

Munchkin: The yard is full of wishing flowers so you can come over and make a wish if you want!
Munchkin’sFirstMom: I’d like that.

Yes, I would like that, my dear. I have so many wishes. But, of course, my biggest wish is that you will be happy in this life. Happiness means so many things to even one singular person, let alone the outside world looking in, so I just hope she is able to find her own happiness.

Wishing flowers. She’s so beautiful.