Only Good Things To Come

Hello everyone! First, let me wish you all a happy and healthy New Year. God knows we need as many of these blessings and well wishes as the heavens can provide.

I realize it’s been quite a long time since my last post, and apologies aside, I have to admit I’ve missed connecting with you all. Sometimes the best lifelines are the most unexpected ones. But it was necessary for me to pull back. The truth was up to that point I had been lagging behind and terribly (~sigh~) in the editing process of my next book, and I figured this snail lady better get her ass in gear.

Unfortunately, for me, things did not quite pan out as I’d planned. Long story short, I got two months in with the book before FEMA came calling. And calling. First working all the COVID vaccination sites scattered across the US, then during the last week of August, I got deployed to New York to help those in need get back on their feet after Hurricane Ida. Which is where I still am, four months later and freezing my ass off under sweaters I’ll probably never wear again.

The bright spot in all this when I deploy is FaceTime. It allows my associate Meghan, now 7, and me to go through the motions of a shared life with things we’d usually do together: read, sing songs, and carry on a conversation about how her day went at school. If I’m lucky, I get a snippet of dialogue out of her because she’s already onto the next thing like a nectar forager bee flitting from flower to flower. And that’s despite all the WD40 I’ve pulled out as ammo.

From an observation standpoint, Meghan is indicative of who we are, collectively. People with short attention spans and very much human. When tragedy and disaster strikes (and as of late, there’s plenty of that shit to go around), we’re glued to our screens. Our empathy copiously flows out to those who’ve perished in floods, tornadoes, fires, their families, looking on in horrified disbelief at the homes ripped from their roots, flattened like match sticks by Mother Nature doing her worst.

But then the river of empathy slows. It diverts itself to some place else as those still picking up the pieces of their lives slip quietly to the back page of yesterday’s news.

It’s a sad reality. A reality of humanity all the same. Does that mean we’re heartless creatures? No, absolutely not. We’re just people trying to figure out how to get through the day in one piece.

Needless to say, the past two years have affected us all in the most unimaginable ways. Financially, spiritually, mentally, depleting us to the soul level. And if these two years have taught us anything at all, it’s how fragile life is; to cherish those moments we have and don’t take anyone or anything for granted.

Today is what I have. That much I know. And I hope whatever days are yours, you do something incredible. I hope you find the love and joy within and without. I hope you stir the passion pot, build the most amazing things, step courageously into the dark, and live the dream that is yours alone.

Peace. Hugs. Thanks.

American Red Cross
(800) 733-2767
 ❤❤❤
Samaritan’s Purse
(828-262-1980

 

 

 

 

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Birthday Wishes to a Sister Lost but Never Forgotten

And a few side thoughts as well . . .

Thirty-three years. Gone in a blink. Today you would have turned 70. (The same age our grandparents were in their anniversary photo). Some people might think reaching that milestone is an achievement. From the time you and I first noticed the subtle curves and soft flow of our bodies and Mrs. Rosenberg walking out of the beauty parlor with her stiff new do the shade of blue, we swore we’d never get old. We cringed at the prospect of withering like grapes on a vine. Yes, you would have hated the idea of trying to put all those candles on a cake (another fat reminder). But considering you stopped aging long before you’d even get there . . . maybe not.

Maybe you’d insist upon throwing yourself a big bash. You certainly had plenty of friends who’d kill for an invite. Maybe you’d go for something more low-key where we’d meet in Chinatown or Little Italy after work, share a glass of wine, laugh at our wrinkles, talk about missing Mom, about how well my children turned out after all that shitty grief, before diving into a giddy gabfest about your namesake, Meghan, and that she was the best thing that ever happened to us.

I look at these photos of you and beyond the gut-wrenching missing part that never seems to go away; I wish we had more time to know each other as friends, not just sisters. I realize we show different sides of ourselves to different people; that’s just the way it is. It must have been difficult for you always playing the role of big sister. Being the one who took me by the hand, guiding me across patchy terrain, my protector, when you were just as scared.

I might not have told you enough how much that meant to me or gave you the credit you deserved, but I know you knew it. Just as you knew every day was a precious gift, and you weren’t wasting one second of it.

If anyone had figured out what self-love was all about, it was you, Marilyn. Maybe because you never got married or found a partner to share that tiny little bed with, or you were just smarter than most of us. You showered yourself with life. You understood that if something brought you joy; you were going to buy it (and in every color), and no one could tell you otherwise.

I’ve learned many hard lessons since you left. Have I come out the better for them? Would something else equally traumatizing have shaped me into who I am at this moment? All good questions, I suppose, with no real answers other than I imagine the load would have been a whole heck of a lot lighter and less lonely.

When we come into this world, we come in alone. We come in not knowing anything, a clean slate. Everyone and everything that happens to us has a purpose. And as for family, well, while it’s true we don’t get to choose those blood relationships and that we are free to create a family from scratch with people who truly have our backs, I’m so glad I didn’t have to look far to find you.

So with that, I raise my glass of wine to the heavens above. Happy birthday, big sister! Love you to infinity and beyond.

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Don’t Hang Your Heart on “Forever” If You’re Walking That Road Alone

We can’t demand from the universe what isn’t there, no matter how much it hurts.

For a whole amalgamation of reasons, people leave — whether we want them to or not. They just go. Passing through that revolving door and sometimes with more frequency than we would like.

When we bring people into our world — platonically or romantically — it always starts out with such hope. A dance, a song, a discovery. Like new shoes, we prudently try them on for size. We let them settle in for a while. See how they fit, see if there’s any give and take, make sure the framework for compatibility and happiness exists somewhere in the nitty-gritty.

In this department, I’ve become more finicky than Seymour the Cat because I know how quickly things change. The shoes get tight. Everything’s a constant struggle, an ordeal, a mental minefield. And whatever once brought you together is now rudderless, as if its purpose has run its course.

I’m not proud to say when it comes to relationships, I’ve failed more than I’ve succeeded. Like Julia Roberts in Runaway Bride, my sneakers were always parked at the door ready for that last-minute sprint. After suffering years of personal setbacks where my self-esteem took up permanent residence on the floor, I got so tired of saying yes when I really wanted to say no. Somehow it just felt easier. Safer. And maybe even a little less lonely.

It’s difficult diving into the wreckage where deep anxiety and uncertainty prevent us from being the best version of ourselves. When our relationships fail, we question everything. We pull apart; we break down that very core we’ve spent a lifetime building.

And it’s not pretty.

There’s no shortage of wrong people. The same people we invite in time and time again. The narcissistic, the judgmental, the uncompromising individuals who leave us wondering what the hell were we thinking? Why didn’t we see how toxic they were right from the beginning?

Perhaps we’re not supposed to.

Nothing happens to us by accident. Everything has a reason. The people that cross our path, the experiences we have, are all meant to be.

Whether positive or negative, consciously or unconsciously, from the most seemingly insignificant meeting to the greatest tragedy, these are the things that color our world and shape us into who we become.

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During my last year of college, I fell in love with an American medical student living in Guadalajara, Mexico. After my graduation, I moved to Mexico without a second thought. In the beginning, everything was magical. Playing house, cooking together, getting stoned, the beaches, the margaritas, the lazy idyllic flow of a world running on a different clock.

As the months passed and his studies took up more and more of his time — rightfully so — I began to feel lonely. Although I had a small network of friends and a part-time baking business that otherwise kept me busy, it didn’t stem the growing gap between us; which he did nothing to correct.

From there, things went south. We fought 50% of the time over stupid things and the other 50% interminable silences forced me deeper into this cocoon of loneliness I’d created for myself. The writing on the wall couldn’t have been clearer. And yet, there I was like a block of wood unable or unwilling to admit defeat, not then, not when I was so far from shore and some remote part of me still honestly, stupidly believed he was “the one.” That took a little while longer.

My dream became a prison of my own making. Misplaced desires blinded me from seeing what was real and making me forget what I was worth.

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I’ve often wondered what road my life would have gone down if tenacity wasn’t front and center of almost every decision I’ve made. Would I be the background in someone else’s life? Would I have eventually been able to stand on my own? Although I had spent much of my life trying to steer clear of these huge pitfalls that come with the territory, every now and again, I fell in them anyway.

I believe the searching and the maintaining of these human connections can often come with a hefty price tag as we navigate through life, figuring shit out, learning who we are and what we’re made of. The mistakes, the wrong turns, the bumbling around eventually highlight for us the simple truth that not everyone will fit inside our circle. Not everyone will share our sense of right and wrong, what love is, or isn’t.

And you know what? That’s okay.

“Tell me with whom you associate, and I will tell you who you are.” — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Life’s a messy business. That’s okay too as long as we remember we alone get the deciding vote on who we invite in and if we want to surround ourselves with those willing to show up for us and keep showing up for us, we must be brave enough to do the same.

So, yes, people leave all the time. But the ones who truly love you … stay.


Photo: Author artwork

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