Rooted

When my life became unmanageable, I knew the answer would ultimately lie within myself. It’s hard to see because it feels much like a garbage truck just backed the fuck up and dumped a lifetimes worth of discarded waste on you. It’s a disorienting experience to no longer feel an attachment to any one reality. Being a doer, my first instinct was to start cleaning up; sorting the trash, compartmentalizing, deciding what – if anything – was salvageable. And then you start to realize that not all the trash is yours and that picking up after someone else who is still making a mess is futile in the same way picking up after a toddler is. And so you turn back to your side of the street, cleaning what you can. And the answers lie somewhere in there, in your own cleanup.

I’m still casting out nets in search of my own answers. Pulling up bits and pieces of bigger truths tangled together, interwoven in garbage that doesn’t matter. Like panning for gold and looking for the few golden specs buried beneath piles and piles of sand. Finding the nuggets worth polishing and then returning to look for more.

Truth finding. Reality shaping. Buried in tangled webs of delusion and lies.

In questioning where I went wrong, here is what I’ve learned: I didn’t trust my own reality. I allowed others to wash my windows only to realize that they weren’t being washed at all but rather smeared with shaving cream and the promise that they were sparkling clean. I’ve learned that nothing is as clear as when you do the cleaning yourself and trust in what you see, what you experience and own all of that, as your reality, not theirs.

Today I stand rooted in my own reality. It’s an empowering place to be. It’s good to be here. Side stepping as I go, sure, but moving. Always moving. Forever searching, taking inventory, and learning.

Nine

A warm November day, beachside, with friends from school, friends from baseball, family, family friends, and friends that have been there all along. All showering my boy with love. So grateful for this kid and all who love him. And the weather. Today was perfect.

Happy Birthday, Hooper

Dear Hooper,

The days, they say, can be so long – filled with chaos and shuffling and rushed lunch packing – and yet the years, they warn, go so fast. It’s how everyone said it would be only our story is ours and ours alone. I remind you often that I dreamed of you before I had you. It was always you I longed for. And today, you turn nine. NINE.

You wore your overalls to school backwards this week because you thought it was cool. You’re confident and self-aware. Loving your time alone, you’re often the first to rise. You do your homework independently and get annoyed when I forget to sign it, irritated that I need a reminder. You love to make people laugh and aspire to be the class clown.

You have great social awareness and ask all the hard questions; questions about your Papa and I’s divorce, questions about politics, questions about why things are the way they are. I don’t have all the answers and I’m honest with you about that. I hope you never stop asking and never stop searching.

Stay courageous. Stay inquisitive. Stay confident. And stay rooted in yourself.

There is no honor so great as being your mom. Happy Birthday, my love. My light. My constant reminder to stay centered and continue my own growth. You are my inspiration. My reason. I love you.

Mom