My Photo

Recommended Reading

  • J.R.R. Tolkien: The Lord of the Rings

    J.R.R. Tolkien: The Lord of the Rings
    It feels silly to recommend the book from which my parents got my name - I'm sort of bound to like it, right? - but if you haven't read this, you have absolutely missed out. Tolkien is simply inimitable, and Middle Earth is his masterpiece. Even disregarding the name thing, I'd be a different person without this book. (*****)

  • C.S. Lewis: The Space Trilogy

    C.S. Lewis: The Space Trilogy
    I don't generally enjoy science fiction or fantasy, but I've read this trilogy (consisting of Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength) several times, and I get more out of it every time. Lewis is a master writer and a master thinker, and he does great work here. This is the kind of literature that changes you. (*****)

  • Diane Mott Davidson: Catering to Nobody

    Diane Mott Davidson: Catering to Nobody
    The first of Davidson's eleven-book series of mysteries featuring caterer/detective Goldy Schulz. Not great literature, but thoroughly enjoyable - and filled with mouth-watering descriptions of delectable foodstuffs. Worth reading if you're a mystery buff, VERY worth reading if you also like to eat. (****)

  • Dave Barry: Dave Barry's Greatest Hits

    Dave Barry: Dave Barry's Greatest Hits
    Dave Barry can always, always make me laugh. Which is probably why I own so many of his books, and reread them more often than I'd like to admit. Plus, you know, he really can write. (****)

  • Dorothy L. Sayers: Murder Must Advertise

    Dorothy L. Sayers: Murder Must Advertise
    I recently reread all of the Peter Wimseys (out of order, as is the prerogative of someone to whom they are old friends) and finished up with this one. Sayers' plotting is pure genius and her writing is impeccable. If you like mysteries and you haven't read these, do it pronto! (*****)

Listening to:

  • Come Lift Up Your Sorrows
    Michael Card: The Hidden Face of God
    "There in your wilderness, He's waiting for you. Come worship him with your wounds, 'cause He's wounded too."

Just Because

Designed

  • Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
Blog powered by TypePad

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Popping Back up Like One of Those Ridiculous Arcade Groundhogs (Please Don't Hit Me with a Mallet)

My last post of Nablop was going to be a long reflection on how happy I was that I'd done it, and how it turned out to be a blessing because I discovered that I can write it every day without burning out, and how in fact the more I wrote during November the more energized I felt to write, and yada yada yada big kick in the pants for my blog and come back! there will be more here regularly and all that.

I'm glad I didn't do it, because it is now six days later, natch, and this is the first thing you're getting out of me since I posted that last Nablop post.

(Can I say how glad I am that y'all agree that Milla looks like me?  After I posted I was momentarily terrified that no one would see the resemblance and I would feel like a first-class idiot.  But instead I am validated, so hooray!)

The obligation to post every day in November was a grace to me in many ways because it removed a factor that has always paralyzed me when it comes to writing about my life on the Internet.  I don't write for a while, and then I really want to write but I feel like it would be abrupt to just pick up where I left off without narrating the in-between stuff, but the prospect of that is tedious, so I delay some more, and... well, you all know where that got me in the months before November.

However, for lack of anything else to say and because the past six days have been packed, here's a rundown of them.

Saturday we got our Christmas tree, a big beautiful Frasier fir, and put it up and decorated it.  Last year we did this during naps while our time-bomb baby slept her cradle swing a few feet away.  This year, she helped.  If there is anything more adorable than a 13.5-month-old toting around a box of shatterproof tree ornaments and delightfully exclaiming "ball!" over every shiny one she saw, I don't know what it is.

43_41_2

Sunday we took a day trip to Frankenmuth, the oh-so-tourist-trappy but cheesily-delightful "Michigan's Little Bavaria."  I have fond memories of the place from my childhood, and the day trip has become a yearly tradition for us and my sister's family.  We eschew the "famous" mediocre local chicken and traipse around to local shops to gather sausage and aged cheese and bread and German pickles, and  then we have a picnic in our car.  On the way out of town we hit the world's most humongous Christmas store (this year we got ourselves a new tree topper) and we head home feeling like we've had a great time, even though we've been in town for only about three hours.

We finished off Sunday by having friends over for dinner.  The chicken was undercooked and the mashed potatoes were lukewarm and there was not enough broccoli but the company was lovely and the conversation was lively and it was a wonderful ending to a wonderful weekend.

My Monday started with a criminally-early physical therapy appointment.  (I have a shoulder impingement which is causing tendinitis and bursitis, but the PT is helping immensely.)  I spent the rest of the day toiling away at laundry.  I also made bread to go with the chili for dinner that turned out unfortunately dense and yucky.  I think it was a reflection of my mood because I knew what was coming...

...on Tuesday morning, when Bryan got on a plane to go out west on a business trip.  The situation was  marginally improved by the fact that I came back to stay with my parents for the three days and two nights he was gone.  It wasn't too bad this time, and I stayed busy hanging out with my family and taking naps while Milla's kind relatives watched her.  But still, I missed my husband and Milla missed her dad.

And about fifteen minutes ago, he walked in the door.  This is how I feel about that:

Daniel_and_camilla

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Giving Thanks #1: My Job

In honor of Thanksgiving, I decided it would be neat to do a series of posts on things for which I'm thankful.  I'm not sure how many I'll do.  You'll just have to be in suspense.  We could use a little more suspense around here.

I don't talk about it much, but one of the things for which I'm thankful every day is that I get to be a stay-at-home-mom for Camilla. 

There are a lot of different ways that couples deal with the dual challenges of providing household income and caring for their children.  Both parents work out of the home, or one or both work at home, or one works and the other cares full-time for the kids.  (I guess there are probably also families with two stay-at-home parents, but those are the independently wealthy families and we don't need to worry about them.)

One thing I've noticed is that many people, and especially women, seem at least somewhat unhappy with their family's solution.  They work outside the home but they've had to sacrifice time with their children, or they stay home with their children and love it but they've had to sacrifice extra income and pinch to make ends meet, or they stay home with their children because they think it's a good thing but they've had to sacrifice a job which they really liked.

I won't go into much detail about how we got here - except to say that we always assumed I'd stay home with our child(ren), and planned ahead accordingly - but I will say that I feel incredibly blessed that our current solution to the income/childcare challenge is meeting our needs nearly perfectly.  (I say "nearly" because our perfect ideal would be the independently-wealthy two-stay-at-home-parents solution, but that's not happening any time soon.)  Bryan likes to go to work and I like to stay home with our daughter, and each of us feels that we've got the better end of the deal. 

He says he'd go crazy doing what I do.  The best full-time job I've ever had was nothing more than a paycheck to me, so I don't feel like I'm missing anything.  And there's never been anything that I did day-in and day-out that I was as good at, and that made me as happy, as this full-time motherhood thing. 

I love that every morning I get to wake up to meet my daughter's little blue eyes, and that every day I get to be with her, and that every night I get to go to bed secure in the knowledge that we'll be together the next day, too.  I know that if our circumstances were different this might not be possible.  I'm grateful that it is.

Friday, October 13, 2006

Until due date: 11 days!

This afternoon we're making the ninety-mile drive back to our hometown for the weekend.  Under normal circumstances we wouldn't have planned a trip, even one this short, so close to my due date.  But these are not normal circumstances: my best friend from high school is getting married tomorrow.  (She's actually my best friend from high school, and junior high school, and fifth grade, which is when we became inseparable at the age of ten.)

She and her fiance live in North Carolina now, but they are obligingly holding their wedding back here in Michigan, so that we can attend.  (Okay, the choice of location might have something to do with the fact that they both grew up here, and their families live here, and all that - but it's nice to think that they also care about us being able to attend.  Which, actually, I think they do.)  (Awwwwww.)

As you might have guessed, the bambino has not yet made her appearance.  At my OB appointment on Tuesday I was just over 1cm dilated and 80% effaced.  The doc said we're on track for my due date; I know from other women that 1cm and 80% can last for weeks, so I'm hoping the doctor is right.  He has delivered over 4000 babies, so he should know something.

Now that I haven't gone into labor and we're heading out for the weekend, I'm telling Pahoehoe I'd prefer it if she'd hold off until we're safely back home on Sunday.  If I don't post before then, you can assume all is quiet on the birth front. 

Meanwhile, go congratulate Emily!  And enjoy the pictures of her beautiful brand-new son.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Four Years

Four years ago today, I got married.  I was nineteen at the time - only six days away from twenty, but still a teenager on a technicality - and saying those vows was the first truly irrevocable thing I had ever done.  I was a little nervous, but confident in the person whose hands I was holding, and even more confident in the One who had led us to take that step.
Vows_1

Every day, I am thankful that we took it.

As young as we were, we were very much in love then.  I thought I could not be happier.
Honeymoon
But what we had then pales in comparison to what we have now.

Today is our anniversary, a day for love letters and flowers and dinners out and romantic things like that.  But a picture of love that includes only those things is like a picture of an iceberg that only shows the part above the surface of the water.  The reality of our marriage, the way we live in each other's lives and love each other in the ordinary moments as well as the extraordinary ones, is so much bigger than can be expressed by mere romantic gestures.

Come to think of it, words on a blog can't really do it either.
On_the_water
I love this man with everything I have.  That's all there is to it.  And I always, always will.

Happy four years, babe!

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Too Tired to Edit

I’m ten weeks today, and it suddenly struck me that I have written little about where I am emotionally with this pregnancy.

Of course, I have one basic emotion; I hope it comes through in my updates. I’m grateful. Unbelievably, overwhelmingly, every-moment grateful. Grateful in a way I can’t imagine I would have been if this had happened when we first started trying two-and-a-half years ago.

But there’s other stuff going on, too.

I didn’t talk about this before I got pregnant, but I’ve always been aware that, in the realm of infertility blogs, this one doesn’t exactly fit in. That’s putting it mildly, actually: I’m waaaay below the average age (far enough that I imagine more than one person read my profile and thought me ridiculous for complaining about infertility at age twenty-three); we weren’t actively pursuing adoption or treatment or even fertility testing; and I’ve written as much about theology and other random topics as I have about our quest for a family. 

I always thought it appropriate that my blog didn’t fit in, because I’ve also felt from the beginning that infertility was, for me, a different sort of struggle than the one most of the women around me in blogworld were undergoing. (I don’t mean this in a look-at-me-my-pain-is-so-unique way; bear with me here.) With my background, it was bound to be.

It has to do with being Catholic, the particular brand of Catholic that we are. (I am on friendly terms with more people who don’t use birth control than most of you will meet in your entire lives, I imagine.) When Bryan and I got married at twenty-one and nineteen, lots of people, mostly friends of his parents, told us that we should make sure to wait a few years before having children. And I think that most people who get married at the age we did (assuming they’re not getting married because they already have children) plan to wait, to enjoy life together for a few years before they take on the responsibility of parenthood. But Bryan and I never planned to do that, because we believed we couldn’t, in good conscience. We did use NFP to avoid conception during our first year of marriage, when we had no income, but as soon as Bryan landed a job in the summer of 2003, we started trying. The rest, as they say, is history. 

It seems to me that most people start trying to have a baby because they want a baby. It’s part of what makes infertility so hard – seeing babies all around, and not having one of your own. I can definitely relate to that, as my desire for a little one to care for and kiss and love definitely increased as the months of our wait went on. At the beginning, though, the decision to start trying wasn’t about that. I was barely twenty-one at the time. I was concerned about midterms and research papers, excited about having my first legal margarita. The decision to start trying was one of obedience more than anything else; Bryan and I both felt strongly that now that we had the means to provide for a child, we had the responsibility as Catholics to be generous with our fertility, and to let the children come if that was what God willed.

In the meantime, I was busy. Ever since I had started kindergarten in the fall of 1987, I’d been a student. My parents impressed on us from the time we were little our responsibility to be good stewards of the talents God had given us, and in the academic realm, I found, I could use my talents well. I loved math, science, history, politics, literature, philosophy, theology - and, especially after I transferred to my little liberal arts college, got a lot of fulfillment out of learning and out of communicating what I had learned. I may have dreaded writing those papers and procrastinated on them until the last minute, but I discovered, again and again, that the writing itself was actually enjoyable for me. Heated class discussions felt like my natural habitat. “Student” was a good identity for me.

During my last year of college I watched my classmates face, as college seniors everywhere must, the question: what comes next? Some made plans to go to grad school or seminary – they would continue to be students, at least for a while. Others found jobs – they would be teachers, or construction workers, or cubicle-dwellers for faceless corporate entities. A few girls had plans to get married right after graduation – they would be wives, and soon after (they expected) mothers.

I identified the most with those who struggled with the challenge, who had found no plan to fit them, for I considered that I was among them. I’d had my identity planned out for as long as I could remember – as a student until I graduated from college, and then as a wife and stay-at-home-mom. I’d jumped the gun a bit on the “wife” part, but the “student” part still sufficed as identity for me. Now I was losing it, and the “mother” part didn’t seem to be coming along, and the questions loomed. What would I do? Who would I be? 

A job dropped into my lap moments after I graduated, and I seized upon it as the answer to my dilemma. Now I was no longer a student, but I was a paralegal. As an identity I imagined it would work just as well. Unfortunately, as I discovered in the following months, “paralegal” was not an identity that fit my personality and talents the way “student” had. In fact, it made me miserable. I hit rock-bottom before I gave my perfectionist self permission to bail on that one, and was surprised at how relieved I felt.

But still I was faced with the question: who am I? It was the part that always hurt me the most about infertility, not being able to take on the role I’d always expected to take on, a role for which I believe I am well-suited.

My parents got married when my dad was still doing his undergrad work, and they had me and Rosie before he graduated. They were very poor for a few years, but they felt confident that God was calling them to have children, and so they did. Along the same line, I know many young Catholic couples who struggle with their finances in order that they make continue to be open to the children God sends them. (No joke, I know a couple who got married four months after we did who are already expecting their third.) Young, poor, but fulfilled and happy – it’s the story of these years for them; it was the story of my parents’ early years; I always imagined it would be the story of mine.

Instead, we’ve got a house and two cars and we travel and go out to dinner and have a Netflix subscription and never worry about where that next meal is coming from. We’re not rich by any standards, but we’re comfortable, and I know people who can’t even imagine what “comfortable” feels like. I am not complaining about the fact that I don’t have to pinch pennies, but when I got married at nineteen I imagined that penny-pinching would necessarily be in my future because children (early and often) would also be. I am grateful for the fact that we’re comfortable financially, but it is not worth it; I would much rather have had those children than the extra cash.

After I found myself in the middle of a depression and got up the courage to drop the impossible identity of “paralegal,” I started thinking about my identity crisis. I had imagined I would be a mother by now, poor but happy, and instead I found myself in an empty house, with a third bedroom that sits unused almost all the time, not needing to work but with little to occupy my time otherwise. I pondered for a while (weeks, not just hours) and, as always seems to be the case when I pray and ponder hard enough, found myself with a solution of sorts, with an identity that fit me, at least fit me far better than “paralegal” had.

I started applying myself to housework, meal planning, etc., and found that, when I took care to do it well, it occupied a lot more of my time than I’d expected. But in addition (and this is the key part, I think), I embraced the fact that “waiting to be a mother” can be identity, too. I’d prayed and begged and wrestled with God for long enough to realize that the answer of “Sure, go ahead and [adopt, do fertility treatments, etc] right away” was not forthcoming. I had the choice: reject what I was hearing and go ahead with my own plan, or accept that “one who waits and hopes” was meant to be my title for now.

The first was never really an option. So I accepted that hated identity. I didn’t necessarily accept it gracefully, but I accepted it, and found a lot more peace than I had expected to find. It surprised me that the new identity seemed to fit me so well, although it shouldn’t have. Like any true vocation, it was bound to fit.

But then, before I knew it, I was pregnant. And it completely floored me. I was not prepared for the abject fear that rolled over me moments after I saw that second pink line. I wrote this post the day after I found out I was pregnant, and the fear I was talking about had been brought on almost completely by my pregnancy. 

The pain of “sorry, not this time” that I faced each cycle was something I knew I could handle, having been through it so many times before. The pain of losing a child, even an embryonic one, was something I couldn’t face.

As I told my husband, tearfully, “I know how to wait. I don’t know how to do this.”

I think that the pain of missing identity was the hardest part of infertility for me. Now that I’m facing the possibility, more real with each passing week, of giving birth and dedicating myself to taking care of that little one, the missing identity of “mother” is within my grasp. It’s an adjustment, and it (already!) involves sacrifices, and I am much, much more vulnerable here than I ever expected to be. 

It’s true. I don’t know how to do this. But fortunately we humans are an adaptable race, and this is a happy adjustment. I’m unbelievably grateful to be making it. And I have thirty more weeks to do it, so all will be well. 

Pregnant! Me!  Still surreal, but you won’t find me complaining.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Four Years Ago

For someone who is the oldest of six children and spent hardly any of her first two decades alone, I think I am remarkably good at handling solitude now. Or perhaps it’s because of those first two decades that I can handle solitude. When I was younger it was very hard for me to get a quiet moment alone, so now I’m making up for that. Often, I relish my time alone.

Which is good, because I’m alone tonight.

I can hear you gasping. Alone on Valentine’s Day? Her husband always sounds so sweet when she talks about him! How could he do this to her?

Rest assured, Bryan is still wonderful and I am still loved by him. He’s in DC tonight because he had to do mandatory training for work, and he could either do it today or the 28th, and on the 28th we’re going to be on a trip that he’s planning as a surprise for me. So you see he’s still eligible for his World’s Greatest Husband title.

(A surprise trip! Isn’t that great? Bryan has been trying to plan surprises for me for as long as we’ve been together, and it rarely works because I am such a good guesser. I mean, I don’t try to guess surprises, but if he drops a hint my mind just starts whirring, and before I know it I’ve figured it out. So he’s taken a tip from my dad, who knows that if he wants to keep something secret from my mom he can’t give her a single clue about it, and the only thing I know about this trip is its length. Eight days, for those who wonder.)

I’m thinking tonight about Valentine’s Day four years ago. In case you’re really bad at the math, that was early 2002. We were both at the same college; I was a sophomore and Bryan was a junior. We had a date to go out that night (just for dessert, not dinner, as it was a Thursday and he had a meeting that lasted until nine). And I knew he was going to propose.

If you’re thinking that proposals should be surprises in order to be romantic, let me assure you that this proposal was meant to be a surprise. (Not an out-of-the-blue oh-my-gosh-he-wants-to-marry-me-I-never-suspected kind of surprise, just an oh-goodness-I-wasn’t-expecting-this-tonight kind of surprise. We’d talked about it, obviously; it’s a big decision to get married as young as we did, and we were both active participants in that decision well before any diamonds were involved. Although of course it goes without saying that getting married was his idea.)

Where were we? Oh, yes, it was meant to be a surprise but wasn’t, because I don’t happen to be an idiot. Bryan’s hands were sweaty and he was jittery and he kept patting the pocket of his jacket. It took me about .2 seconds to figure out what was going on, or would have taken me .2 seconds if I hadn’t already known what was going on, as a result of the fact that Bryan’s father (incidentally, a jeweler) had driven into town (a three-hour round-trip) the following evening just to meet his son for dinner. Clearly it was a ring drop-off, and I knew Bryan wouldn’t be able to hold on to it for long.

So we sat there, eating carrot cake, and he knew what was coming and I knew what was coming, and the minutes feel long and dry and shaky. In principle I like romance to be dramatic but in practice I’ve found that I don’t really enjoy the drama, that the most romantic moments are the simple ones that I don’t anticipate at all. I wanted the proposal to be over so that we could enjoy being engaged.

Fortunately, before I knew it we were walking again, and despite the cold, an evening walk on campus is not an unpleasant thing. Then we were under this tree, beside this bench (it’s Michigan in February, what do you expect, waterfalls?) and he gave my Valentine’s Day card. Actually, he gave me another Valentine’s Day card; if I recall correctly he had already given me at least two that day.

So this is the cute part: the first Christmas we were dating, back in 1998, I had no idea what to get him (the story of every Christmas, actually; he is very hard to buy for and I am easy so he always completely outshines me in the gift-giving arena; fortunately neither of us minds) and so I got him a variety of small things, one of which was a collection of coupons, for batches of brownies and other things like that. I left one of the coupons blank, to be filled out by him for whatever he wanted. And he… kept it. For three-and-a-half years, and he filled it out and taped it into my Valentine’s Day card, and that was how I first, officially, knew he was proposing. (I tried to find the coupon because I can’t remember exactly what it said, but it must be in a box somewhere. I remember it was something like “for a lifetime together” but it was better than that.)

Then he got down on one knee and asked me to marry him, with real, out-loud words. I’d dreamed about that moment for as long as I could remember, and I was a little surprised at how silly it felt. I mean, of course I was thrilled that the love of my life was asking me to marry him. But I think what I didn’t understand at eight, or even at sixteen, was that a proposal is not a goal in itself. It’s a way of getting to a goal, of getting to marriage, which is vital and permanent.

(I soon found out that engagement, which I’d always imagined to be a very romantic time, is actually pretty uncomfortable – I talked about that a bit when I told our love story. Illusions were shattering all over the place for me, that year. But of course it was the year we got married, so it was still wonderful. If engagement was less than I expected it to be, marriage is ever so much more.)

Bryan had thought I would cry when he proposed, as I cry very easily, carrying on the proud tradition of my mother and her mother before her. (I plan, in this tradition, to embarrass my children by tearing up at only the slightest provocation, such as at stories in magazines. It’s only fair that they should have to endure it, since I endured my mother’s crying when I was a child.) I anticipated crying, myself. But instead, I laughed. Happiness fairly bubbled out of me. He spoke those words, his knee on the freezing pavement, and almost before he had finished them I pulled him to his feet and started jumping up and down. If the actual proposal had felt odd, that moment felt exactly as it should. Standing there, holding each other, jumping and laughing for joy, was perfect. (That moment got its fulfillment six months later, when we stood in the vestibule after our wedding ceremony and laughed for the sheer joy of finally being married to one another.)

A few minutes later he remembered to give me my ring, and that was a beautiful moment too. I’ve seen plenty of engagement rings but I have never, before or since, seen one that dazzled me the way mine dazzled me then. It looks like this (or like this , if you prefer a more focused picture) although those pictures include the wedding band, which he obviously didn’t give me that night. (I can’t take a picture of the engagement ring alone because the two are soldered together, at the insistence of my father-in-law the jeweler. I am nothing if not an obedient jewelry owner. And actually they look much better soldered anyway.)

(Digression: this past Christmas I was thrilled to receive this.   I may have hinted a little bit. (Sorry for the horrid photo; it is abysmally hard to take good pictures of your own hand.) I know, some of you probably think a plain wedding band is a boring gift, but the truth is that I really wanted it. A wedding set like mine is not conducive to those everyday activities which I love so much, like laundry. And sleeping. (At first when we were engaged I slept with the ring on, until the morning that I woke up with a long, prong-induced scrape on my thigh. Since then the ring and the sleeping have not gone together.) Generally when I come home I just pop my ring on my handy ring-holder, which means that before I got the plain wedding band, I was spending most of my time with a bare left hand. Now I have the beautiful band, and I feel married all the time, which is great.)

Wow. If there is anything we have learned from this entry, it is that apparently my husband’s absence makes me inclined to blather even more than usual. I absolutely must go to bed. In conclusion: we got engaged! It was fun and had good results, and I would absolutely recommend it. Happy Valentine’s Day!

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Crystals

Today is Cycle Day 1.  I got the first signs last night, which means I've known for more than twelve hours and yet I haven't cried once, not one single tear.  Last month I only made it back from the edge because of the words of Sirach (sent to me at exactly the perfect time by a friend - no coincidence, that).  Last month I actually allowed myself to lie on the floor and cry, and I'd long since given that up.

But this month: nothing.

I know how to make it when I'm depressed.  I get up, get dressed, make plans for the day, get out of the house.  It works.  But this feels different.  I don't know what will work on this, this numbness that pushes itself into the corners of me until I'm afraid to move them for fear that they'll snap.

Or, ha.  Maybe I do know how to get myself out of this, because the tears are here now.  Two paragraphs, that's all it takes.  Writing always works.

Someday I want to be able to give the world words that aren't salt-encrusted.  I store my contact lenses in a case with sterile saline and if I don't rinse the case, the saline dries into little white crystals all over it.  That's how I think my words would look if you could see them - frosted with the remains of the tears I cried while writing them.

In Harry Potter, Professor Dumbledore pulls his memories out of his temple with a wand.  Would that I could get my words that way, but no, they must come stubbornly through my eyes, chapping my face in the process.  Sometimes they come so quickly that I can't capture them until they've stopped, and somehow that capturing is never as apt as it should be.

I've cried so much over the past months that I should have gone through thousands of tissues... when I cry with other people they always hand me tissues, but I've abandoned their use when I'm alone.  Tears dry as well as anything.  I barely notice them anymore.

Except, of course, when they don't come around.  Then I'm looking for them, wondering why they're not here.  It seems neurotic to miss the tears, but ever since I can remember they have been my way of dealing with heartache and stress.  Writing is secondary; I learned to do it to deal with the tears.  I guess it's fitting that now I can do it to get the tears to come.

The numbness stymies me, but I know how to deal with the tears.  I'll go to a bookstore and treat myself to a big hot chocolate and a novel.  I'll make the menu plan and the grocery list and go buy some food to fill our cupboards.  I'll play loud, happy music and dance while I cook dinner.  And tomorrow, if I find myself staring out the window again, I'll come back to my keyboard (or my prayer journal if that's what I need) and find my tears again.  Salt-encrusted words must surely be better than no words at all.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

At long last...

If you've been reading for a while (actually, a year, which is very few of you I think) then you remember that I told Bryan's and my love story.  I told it at some length, which is not unusual for me, but I didn't talk much about my wedding.  But now I've borrowed my parents' scanner and am scanning my little heart out, and I've got wedding pictures to share, so I think it's time to talk wedding.

I flirted briefly with the idea of a photo entry, but then I would have to choose only a few photos in order to have mercy on those with slower connections.  So instead, I've posted a photo album.  If you page through it, you should get an idea of what our wedding was like.  Think of the photo album as an entry! or something like that.

Then you can come back here and yell at me because the photo quality is so awful (not my fault!) or ask me all kinds of questions like What did we have to eat at the reception? or Wasn't my wedding day the best day of my life? in response to which I will stare at you blankly because I barely remember a second of that whole crazy day.  And I definitely don't remember eating during it.

Enjoy!

Saturday, October 29, 2005

In the morning

Last night we were on the other side of the state to celebrate the wedding of my aunt, my dad’s younger sister. She’s two years younger than my dad, which makes her forty-five, I think, but this was not her first wedding. As we danced and laughed and celebrated, I couldn’t help thinking of the last time we were in town, nearly three years ago.

My uncle died of melanoma a mere three months after the doctors found the first tumors in his brain. I’d known people who were victims of cancer before, but in my experience it was always a longer process, giving loved ones time to say goodbye. We learned that it is not always so – with my uncle, we hardly knew he was sick before he was gone. We all went for the funeral, which was the saddest funeral I have ever attended.

But last night as I watched my aunt dance with her new husband, who lost his first wife to cancer within the past few years, I was reminded that joy really does come in the morning. (The metaphorical morning, that is, since it was evening at the time.) They danced to “Take Heart, My Friend,” one of my favorite Fernando Ortega songs and a song that has meant a lot to me over the past year. (Click here to see the album, scroll down and read the lyrics, and click on the song title – track 11 – to hear an excerpt.)

I had to refrain myself from bawling. It was exactly what I needed to see. I’m sure that losing my uncle was infinitely harder for my aunt than infertility is/has been for me, and yet she has found joy again. “Take Heart, My Friend” has a line that goes, “Our faithful God has always gone before us, and he will lead the way once again,” and as I watched my aunt and new uncle enjoy the fulfillment of that hope – at least as much as it can be fulfilled on earth – I was strengthened in my own hope, a hope which traitorously wavers much more often than I want.

The thing is, I can’t know. I can’t know that I myself will live through next week, or through next year. I can’t know that we will ever bring children home from a hospital or an orphanage. I just can’t know. But I used to think I could, and somehow as I learn more about the precariousness of life, hoping is easier rather than harder. I guess that’s because learning how little I control means learning how much God does. And since he is ever faithful, I need not be afraid of anything. Do you know how freeing that thought is?

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

A Liz by any other name...

In my Moral Theology course my junior year, the professor asked one day in class if any of the students was a Lord of the Rings fan.  He was one of those highly intelligent, obscure people - everything he said had a point, but we couldn't always figure out what it was.

The Lord of the Rings thing must have been going somewhere, but we all sat dumbly, none of us apparently enough of a fan to leap out of his chair and declare it.  There was a long silence that was probably only about four seconds.  Then Mark, who was the most likely to help the teacher because he's the kind of person who helps everyone, raised his hand.  "I'm a fan."

Luke, who's the kind of person who mocks everyone, jumped on him immediately.  (I'm making this sound like an uncomfortable scene, but it really wasn't - about a dozen of us in a seminar form, and we all got along fine.)  (I also want to note that Mark and Luke are their real names, and there was also a John in the class, and the prof's first name was Matthew.  Catholic parents are not necessarily creative in naming their children.)

Anyway, Luke looks at Mark and says mockingly, "Oh, you just loooove Lord of the Rings, don't you?  What are you going to do, name your kids after characters from the book?"

The protest came out louder than I expected, before I could stop it.  "Hey!"

And everyone looked at me, and at Luke, and laughed, because there was nothing else to do.  Later I teased him, "You know what I think is really stupid?  Those parents who name their children after the writers of the Gospels."

______________________________________________

After your responses to my anniversary post, which made me smile, blush, laugh, and cry, I wanted to give something back to you.  You were all so generous, and I hadn't even realized how much I needed it, but I did. 

I'm not stingy with myself here; I share a whole lot of my fears and joys.  But there is one thing I've kept from you, and I although I can remember why I decided to keep it from you in the first place, I can no longer think of a good reason to keep doing so.

Some of you already know, or have guessed.  The rest of you, if you read the above story carefully, have hopefully guessed just now. 

So hey, glad to meet you.  Feel free to ask me why my parents gave me such a weird name.  Feel free to try to come up with a nickname for what I have come to realize is an eminently un-nickable name.  Feel free, even, to call me "Earwig" as one boy did years ago in an attempt to nickname me.  Just don't keep it up for too long, or I might have to revert to making you all call me by my middle name.  And I don't want to do that - my name is a big part of who I am, and I've missed using it here.

_____________________________________________

This post has brought up a few questions which I want to answer, quick-like:
1)  Arwen is my real first name.  Elizabeth is my middle name; my full name is Arwen Elizabeth LastName.  That makes my blog's name look not so creative after all, doesn't it?
2)  In real life, I always go by Arwen.  Always have.  And actually, I've always loved having a unique name.
3)  My siblings are not really named Rosie, Maggie, etc.  In fact, my husband is not even named Michael.  The names I use for family members on the blog are variations on their middle names or confirmation names.  With my siblings, I do this because their names are all very unique and Google-able; with my husband I do it just for kicks.  I generally use the real names of everyone else I write about here.  Including, from now on, my own.