Life changing news. I wrote about it because that's one of the best (maybe the only) ways I can get a grip on my emotions.
When I was younger, all this emotion and writing and pouring myself into an outlet was secret. There were notebooks and random stashes of folded up paper that lived in my back jeans' pockets that I would pull out and fill with angry, bitter poetry. A lot of anger. A lot of bitter.
This is where I come now. I try to make sure my thoughts are fairly well put together before I hit "publish." This is a space where I feel I can get out all my feelings - whether they're about stupid shit my kids are doing, the random places I find sippy cups, my love of cloth diapers, or my incessant need to finish writing the novel that should have been done months ago as soon as possible (because ASAP just makes more sense than an actual deadline when I have two small children) - but I also like to consider it a safe place for others to join some of these conversations.
Usually everyone just comments on the link I post on my Facebook page. That's fine.
Tonight, while I reflect on our loss - a child who won't get to spend Christmas with us next year - I also reflect on our gains throughout the year.
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Saturday, December 21, 2013
It's OK to cry in front of them
I had an emotional breakdown today in front of my 3-year-old and it's OK.
Mommy cries sometimes. And the holidays are hard. Being a big kid, an adult, is hard, I told her.
And I wept while hanging onto her youthfulness, shrouded in the shadows of our upstairs hallway.
"It's OK, Mommy."
It is hard, and despite how much I adore the season, every year for the last seven Christmases (this would be the eighth) I've found myself feeling sad. And three years ago that sadness turned to an emptiness.
First, when my grandma, Nana, passed away in 2006 it was difficult to get through the holidays, but making her Rum Cake recipe in her kitchen with my then boyfriend helped me through it. It made it bearable to mix and bake and taste and drink and love because I was doing it in her home. And the years after that just got ... easier.
Mommy cries sometimes. And the holidays are hard. Being a big kid, an adult, is hard, I told her.
And I wept while hanging onto her youthfulness, shrouded in the shadows of our upstairs hallway.
"It's OK, Mommy."
It is hard, and despite how much I adore the season, every year for the last seven Christmases (this would be the eighth) I've found myself feeling sad. And three years ago that sadness turned to an emptiness.
First, when my grandma, Nana, passed away in 2006 it was difficult to get through the holidays, but making her Rum Cake recipe in her kitchen with my then boyfriend helped me through it. It made it bearable to mix and bake and taste and drink and love because I was doing it in her home. And the years after that just got ... easier.
Labels:
blessings,
Boy Wonder,
Christmas,
death,
discipline,
life,
parenting,
supermom,
wine
Thursday, November 21, 2013
The magic of Christmas
It's right around the corner. I know it's coming and I'm just not ready for it yet. Not one bit. No ounce of me is prepared, with the exception of having picked up on some clearance sales.
It's Christmas.
No, I don't want to think about it yet. We haven't even gotten through Thanksgiving yet. I refuse - REFUSE, I tell you - to get the tree up or pull my Dickens village houses out before Nov. 29. I did break down and hang some jingle bells on the front door. I probably have broken my own rules just with that one smooth move.
It's hard. So, so hard.
It's Christmas.
No, I don't want to think about it yet. We haven't even gotten through Thanksgiving yet. I refuse - REFUSE, I tell you - to get the tree up or pull my Dickens village houses out before Nov. 29. I did break down and hang some jingle bells on the front door. I probably have broken my own rules just with that one smooth move.
It's hard. So, so hard.
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