Wednesday, May 11, 2016

What Defines A Woman?

As I sit here and listen to her cry, I wonder if the decision I made was the right one. Is everything I gave up worth this? Am I strong enough to handle, not only the ridicule that comes from choosing family over career, but the overwhelming guilt of having to abandon my students that has infected my soul like the plague?
I try to take into perspective the old cliché that everything happens for a reason. I try to believe Kevin when he jokes that the grass fires that nearly engulfed my previous home in New Mexico, and the RSV that seemed to have found a permanent home in this child for whom I am now responsible, were all signs from God that I was ignoring. God was telling me that I had finally become weak. Yes me, the woman who raised three children while working two jobs and simultaneously completing seven years of college had finally crashed. I actually needed a support system. For me, however, this child’s crying—blood-curdling screams, rather—negate God’s said motives.
 Before Karleigh, I had never been a stay-at-home mom, and, in fact, I had always had this notion that one’s self-worth came from one’s ability to provide for one’s family in every realm: nursemaid, financial guru, therapist, housecleaner, etc. In order to be a “real” woman, one must have the capability to perform juggling acts that not even the Ringling Brothers could ever fathom. A month ago I fit that mold, and, therefore, in my mind I epitomized the successful woman of today. But, after one week of staying home with this extremely needy infant, this being that was thrust into my life without warning, I quickly learned that the mom who stays home to raise her children has a job that compares to, what I imagine, equals a sweat-shop in a third world country.
As parents we hope that our children make better choices than we did. We hope that they are spared from the idiocy that tends to encapsulate us as teens, rendering us into a somewhat subhuman form until we realize that yes our parents knew exactly what they were talking about. We hope that by some small miracle the product of our procreation has been blessed with an intellectual gene that eradicates all forms of stupidity. Unfortunately, parents are inevitably delusional. Alas, it is my delusion that has placed me here, with a child that is not my own, but instead my daughter’s.
Mackenzie was one of those kids that teachers just cannot mentally penetrate having ever been bad. She was one of those soft-spoken, shy children who, in my mind, simply had self-esteem issues. I had a low self-esteem and I turned out okay, so I was not overly concerned. She was also, for many reasons unbeknownst to me at the time, extremely high-risk for behavioral issues, and, therefore, eventually succumbed to that destiny. As a parent, I thought we had surpassed the teen pregnancy worry when she turned twenty. Reality would teach me, though, that even into our twenties, our parenting skills do not always excel even those of young teens. Sometimes, females are just not equipped—whether it is emotionally or psychologically—with the maternal love needed to make rational decisions for her child. The animal kingdom deals with this issue as well. Fortunately for animals (or perhaps unfortunately for those who have never been in my current position), they do not have the complex human emotions that lead to feelings of guilt or a sense of obligation.
And so it was those innate human maternal instincts that I bear, but apparently did not pass on to my daughter, that forced me to do exactly what I swore I would never do: raise my grandchild. And so it was that decision that has left me wondering if the choice I made is one that I can handle. Is temporarily giving up my career, my passion for teaching, going to cause me to become resentful? Has this decision to take a leave of absence ruined my reputation as a teacher? After all, who would hire a teacher who sacrificed her career and perhaps even her students’ capability to learn because they are now being taught by a substitute so that this teacher could be closer to that support system God was hinting that she needed? Am I being selfish for even worrying about this?  
I sit here cradling this innocent child in my arms, and even moral obligation cannot dismiss my need to feel alive again. I feel like a part of who I am is slowly meandering into a new place, far away from the core of my soul. When Karleigh cries, which she does more than any child I have ever known, I often cringe and find myself wanting to disregard the fact that I even have a twenty year old daughter. I want so badly to take back my decision to raise another baby, and instead walk into my classroom and lecture; I want to read the writings of my students’, but not from four-hundred miles away. I want to tell them how proud I am of them for maintaining their grades even with the inconsistency that has enveloped the instruction in their current writing class.
While my career is at jeopardy due to this change in my life, my marriage has maintained its stability. And although my husband and I no longer have the freedoms we once had to spend time alone, we have found in each other a certain sense of eternal devotion; one that cannot be understood through marital vows or even conception of a biological child. This allegiance is one that is slowly changing my previous outlook on human loyalty.
While Karleigh naps, I think about what I hope to gain from this current detour my life has now taken; it is not the bitterness that attempts to envelop my psyche each day, but instead a new respect for that stay-at-home mom whose personal struggles not even my typed words could allow you to visualize. I hope to someday accept that it is not a career that defines a woman, but the woman who defines the concept of a career.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Marriage and Monarchs

Today marks a week since marrying the love of my life. Yes, we were impatient, and, on a whim, decided to get married during spring break. There are certain aspects of one’s life that are just built around certainty. And when that certainty is fluttering in front of you like a Monarch on a warm summer day, it seems absurd to toy with the notion that encapsulates its beauty.
From the birth of our relationship, I have not once doubted my love for Kevin. In fact, I have felt an innate connection with him that I can only compare to the bond twins share. I suppose that is the feeling of connecting with one’s soulmate, but, being the synonym seeker that I tend to be at times, I try to stray from words and phrases that are cliché.
I have never been happier in my life, and I can speak for my children as well. They have embraced this transition in our lives as if they, too, have sought and found that missing portion that creates a familial bond. Never once have they questioned my decision, and the metamorphosis that has occurred in their emotional well-being alone took the time it takes a butterfly to cycle from a chrysalis to a lovely adult.
It is an amazing feeling to awaken each morning knowing that God believes you are deserving of something as special as the gift with which my family has been blessed. For many years, the struggles that ensued with each step forward I would make, forced me to settle for mediocrity. I am grateful that my modus operandi way of thinking was eventually disrupted, and is consistently being cultivated by the love of a man whose heart I can only imagine possesses the colors of the wings of that Monarch.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Immeasurable Peace

Up until now, I’ve not felt any insecurities in regards to my relationship with Kevin. I suppose technically my insecurities are not related to the relationship, per se, but instead to the emotional toll the inevitable separation is having on me. Perhaps even us? I cannot speak for anyone else involved, but I am not one to place focus strictly on myself, and therefore believe that the emotional roller coaster to which I have succumb is not only impacting my personal life but also the lives of my family members.
I am notorious for pushing people away when I feel I am losing control of my independence. I think that is what worries me most. That independence to which I am accustomed does not particularly have anything to do with physical autonomy, but rather a well-balanced mental state of which no one should be able to repress, at least in my previous opinion of the matter.
A few days ago, I got upset over something that was really quite trivial in the grand scheme of things; however, because I was having to fly back to New Mexico—leaving my family behind once more—my reaction was rather exaggerated.  Unfortunately, I told Kevin more than once to take me to the airport. Looking back, I’m not sure if that was part of my infamous barrier trying to regain its structural balance on my psyche, or if I couldn’t bear the thought of Kevin seeing me at a weak point in my life. The latter seems sufficient.
Whatever it is, I know this relationship is unlike any I’ve ever had. I know that, for the first time in my life, the idea of trying to hide or run away from someone doesn’t seem so appealing. Whereas before I was under the impression that detaching myself was not only to protect my own heart but the heart of others as well, I have unexpectedly come to the conclusion that that is not what I want for this partnership.
Before Kevin, I felt no guilt or apprehension about being alone. I felt it was my destiny; I was content with that and in fact could have wanted nothing more. Now, however, I cannot imagine a life without this man with whom I have felt an affinity since the first day we reunited. My life with Kevin was predetermined long before I had a say so. I realize now that one cannot avoid God’s plan, and that is the true concept of immeasurable peace.

Friday, January 28, 2011

The Faith That Built Me

I went to the cemetery yesterday. I hadn’t planned on going until a song came on the radio. The artist sang of the home that built her and how touching that place might heal her. Lately I’ve been missing my grandparents. I’m sure some of that melancholy stems from the dreariness of the season, but for the most part, I wish so much that they could witness me at the happiest point in my life. As a child, I was often sad, and although I thought I hid it well, my grandfather would often slip into my room and throw out small hints of encouragement. As a teenager, that sadness turned me into a recluse and ultimately into a person who was cynical in regards to human nature. That cynicism grew and forced barriers as strong and biased as the Berlin wall to rise, thus distorting any previous chance I might have had at trusting mankind.  My grandparents always shared words of wisdom in an attempt to reassure me that, although life was full of trials and tribulations, the reward of simply living was enough to overpower all suffering.
It’s funny that it took me so long to understand the message they were trying to convey. In fact, it seems that many messages in regards to faith seemed to have gotten lost in translation along the road I travelled. I suppose that happens to most people, but after having felt the dichotomy of the before and after, it all seems so obvious, and, therefore, I find it almost comical that I was so blind to what was evident all along.
Yesterday, the cemetery was no longer a realm of sorrow and seeing the names of my grandparent’s and Kevin’s dad etched in stone didn’t render me into depression or regret, but instead, I felt an overwhelming sense of peace.  Five months ago I would have wept, but as I stood there, I thanked all three of them. I simply let the west Texas wind carry a long overdue message of gratitude to the two souls who built me, and the one who helped guide my soul mate to me. Unlike the artist strumming her guitar, I have learned that inanimate objects such as that grave where the shell of our loved ones once lay are not what give us strength, but instead it is through the faith by which those loved ones lived that we have been given the gift of love here on earth. 

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

"A parent's love is whole no matter how many times divided." ~Robert Brault

As I sit here today watching my students take their final exam, I am simultaneously pondering my own so-called expertise as a parent. Is it the fact that I just read a student’s note that would make George Carlin blush? Is it the fact that, although my failure rate has dropped significantly from the beginning of the semester, I still have students who are failing? Or is it the fact that I have five children of my own whose intellectual growth, I feel, is my responsibility?
I fear all of the above.
Realistically speaking, all of those issues factor into my fears of parenting. I wonder now what sort of sentiments my children are writing in the classroom while they think their teacher isn’t looking. Do their teachers post all of their scores on that awesome website that the majority of schools have developed that allows me to grade-stalk them throughout the semester, or am I still in the dark about something with which they still may be struggling? Is my past guilt for having one child who struggled academically and, therefore, made bad choices in regards to many aspects of her life going to have an impact on me as a parent to the two newest additions in my maternal realm?
I fear all of the above.
My internal parent fear factor has taken a substantial leap since Kevin and the babies became my own. I suppose subconsciously, as a mother, I’ve always had the ability to accept my flaws. After all, we do not have the option of choosing our mothers; biologically speaking anyway.  So for my eldest daughters, I only had to prove to myself that I was satisfactory at raising offspring.  That is one of the joys of single parenting. However, with Kevin’s babies (our babies), I now fear inadequacy.  I am no longer the only judge of maternal character.
I do not fear an inability to love the babies; in fact, I love them equally to the three beautiful daughters who came from my womb. I do not fear an inability to connect with the babies; in fact, the first time I saw them, their blonde hair and fair skin reminded me a lot of myself before adulthood turned me into a brunette. I do not fear an inability to think about them when they are not with us; in fact, the silence that follows their absence is often more than I can bear. What is it that I fear, then?
I suppose I fear everything a normal parent fears. I fear society’s influence on them on a grand scale, and my inability to protect them at all times. I fear the day the babies get upset with me for the first time and not being the mommy they want when something brings sadness to their lives.  I fear being the stereotypical step-parent. And, although I don’t see myself as such, I fear that one day, they will.
So now I ask myself, with all of these fears written on paper for the world to see, will I succeed as a parent? Unfortunately, that question cannot be answered right now; not by me, nor anyone else. Success can only be measured in the heart, and our hearts have the capability to judge certain actions our whole lives. What might seem like perfect parenting to a person as a child is subject to change into their adolescence and adult lives. Therefore, when my children are grown and their hearts are settled, and they have all become parents themselves, I will sit down with them, my love stronger than ever, and ask them if my fears were in vain. Knowing my children, I am almost positive they will say ‘no.’ Not because those fears have become reality, but because it was those fears that forced me to protect their hearts and minds, and because parenting is often mimicked, it is those fears that will force my children to protect the hearts and minds of my grandchildren.
This is the cycle of parenting; the cycle of life.  

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Nothing In This World Worth Having Comes Easy

Kevin and I decided to get married. Well, we had actually decided that our first weekend together, but neither of told the other for fear that we might seem a bit too eager. He, being the true gentleman that he is, knelt before me and spoke poetic words as I sat on a bench in a flannel shirt and hat. In my life, I had never felt more beautiful. In my life, I have never felt more at peace.
Unfortunately, the visits are becoming more and more difficult since we have progressed in our relationship. Well, I should rephrase and say that the ends of the visits are becoming more and more difficult. Several times in the last few weeks I have had to remind myself that I cannot dwell on the fact that Kevin and I live hundreds of miles apart, and that that aspect of our lives is somewhat cruel. I have had to remind myself on Sundays, when Southwest is summoning me, that I am not some lovesick teenager; although I will admit, standing in the security line at the airport with roped walkways and overbearing TSA employees often reminds me of the barriers placed upon me as a teenager.
Kevin is amazing. He is addictive. He is like that first taste of flavored coffee after having only ever tasted your grandparents’ Nescafe on family vacations. How any human in this world could have ever overlooked his kind-spirited demeanor is beyond me.  Selfishly, I am glad some have. I am glad my heart’s vision wasn’t completely skewed the day Kevin and the babies entered my life.
Because everything is so right when we’re together, Kevin and I have developed this game. I have compared it to the intensity of Russian Roulette, in that, we come up with these perfect scenarios, and then, after we’ve created a much easier realm than the one that is our reality, we dredge up the reasons why those scenarios are irresponsible—those reasons hit us every time like a surprise bullet in the chamber of the gun called life. Yet, after every visit, we play the game again, perhaps trying to convince ourselves that a flawless relationship is simple and without suffering.
That is when God has to intervene and remind us that nothing in this world worth having comes easy. Some wealthy philanthropist once said that, and it’s been verbally plagiarized many times, but I’m pretty sure the Lord planted that quote in the heads of us all in order for its true meaning to sprout at just that perfect moment in our lives. For me, this is that time. However, being terribly cursed with analytical views of just about everything that grows in my head, I am having a hard time keeping that notion alive. I blame distance.
With that said, we are counting down the months, days, and hours until our family is all under one roof. Until then, I am sure we will shed many more tears and question the miles that separate us. We will torture ourselves and then accept reality all in the same sentence. We will pray for miracles from God and realize that we’ve already received the greatest one. We will live in each other’s hearts because unlike our temporary homes, those are permanent and constant. We will love each other unconditionally and be grateful for that opportunity.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Mockingbird Lane

Down   
         Mockingbird
                                Lane
Laughing with the breeze
Of yesterday’s memory;
Emptiness was still unknown.
Down   
          Mockingbird
                               Lane
Lillies dance in the field
Of today’s existence;
New emotions awaken in her soul.
Down
          Mockingbird
                               Lane
Languages spoken through the eyes
Of tomorrow’s lovers;
Lost in a labyrinth of words.
Down
          Mockingbird
                               Lane
Laying his hand on the heart
Of his eternal lover;
He vows to never again drive her
Down
          Mockingbird
                                Lane