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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The Great Weight Debate

I spent the day with a group of intelligent, articulate, educated women who work hard as teachers and spent their summers doing lots of interesting things.  And do you know what they talked about?  Diets and exercise.  So, here's my rant of the day: 

I don't care what you eat.  I don't care if you ate a whole sleeve of Oreos for breakfast this morning, or if you baked a gluten, dairy-free, organic muffin.  I don't care if you're vegetarian, or vegan, or if you're trying to break a world record for eating the most bacon.  I don't care if you're going Paleo, or if you've been on Weight Watchers for 5 years.  I don't want to know how many points are in the sandwich you brought for lunch, or if you made a beet and spinach smoothie instead.  If you like what you're eating, if it works for you, keep on eating it.   

I also don't care about your exercise plan.  I don't care if you walked 5 miles, did Zumba 10 times last week, or achieved a new CrossFit goal.  I don't care if you've run 12 marathons this year, or if you sat on the couch all weekend watching chick flicks.  Really, I don't.  If it makes you happy, if you're loving it, great - keep on doing it and have fun. 

I don't care how much you weigh.  I don't care if you lost 4 pounds last week, or if you weigh 50 pounds more than you did before giving birth.  If you're happy with your weight, great - I don't need to know what it is, because if I like you as a person, I don't give a damn what the package looks like.  If you're unhappy with your weight, talk to a doctor, or a nutritionist, and let them help you.  Because if I like you, I want you to get good advice from people who know what they're talking about to help you be the healthiest you want to be.

Here's why I don't care:  Because you're more interesting than that.  You probably have a hobby that I'd love to hear about.  Maybe you raise miniature horses, or go cave-diving, or knit sweaters for shelter dogs.  Or maybe you read a really great book lately, or saw an interesting play.  Maybe you connected with an old friend, or had a long talk with your grandfather.  I can practically guarantee that you did something far, far more interesting than having a nervous breakdown about eating ice cream with your family. 

The men I know don't do this.  They don't bemoan the fact that they ate a bag of chips while sitting on the couch watching 6 football games on Sunday.  They don't sit around in groups talking about how much they weigh, or the latest diet craze.  I know, for the most part, they care about their bodies and about taking care of them - but they aren't obsessed with it.  Maybe they're obsessed with cars, or movies, or sports or micro-brewed beer…and those are the things they talk about.  On Facebook, men don't post a whole lot of self-loathing things like, "I can't believe I went to Starbucks.  Gonna have to spend 2 days at the gym!"  Women do.  All the time.

My women friends have fascinating lives with lots of amazing stories to tell.  So tell them.  Share them.  Let's do lunch, and talk about everything except the food on our plates.  Let's have coffee (or green tea or hot chocolate or ice water) and watch our kids play tag on the playground.  Let's tell those stories about the that one time when we (insert embarrassing adventure) and laugh ourselves silly.  Let's do those things, instead.



Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Brain GPS

My job is equal parts teaching and driving.  Of course, I'm completely directionally-challenged, and so to have any chance at all of getting to a school or home to see my students, I invested in a GPS.  Nothing fancy, just something with pictures and a voice (I like mine to speak in a British accent) to get me from "I don't remember a barn on this street" to "Oh, look!  A school!"  When I am lost, GPS helps me find my way.  Simple.

So why doesn't my brain come equipped with one of these handy gadgets?  Oh, sure, there's that whole spatial awareness thing, landmark-recognition and all that.  But what I really need is an "I'm lost and I don't know what to do next" kind of system in my brain.  Something that will tell me how to get from Point A in the City of Overwhelmed to Point B in the Land of Calm.  If it had one of those handy "avoid routes" buttons, I could save myself a lot of time bypassing the I'm-Having-a-Breakdown lane.  

In the last few weeks, I've had dozens of decisions to make.  Not the familiar kinds of decisions that all moms make every day, but new, scary decisions with consequences I can't imagine.  College-payment decisions, job decisions, health care decisions...basically, my mind is on decision-making overload.  When that happens, I have a tendency to overthink everything - especially those things completely unrelated to the real decisions.  Suddenly, choosing between bagels or cereal for breakfast is monumental, mind-numbing, and completely impossible.  I'm stuck.  Lost.

This is where that GPS system would be really great to have around.  Type in the destination ("College Finances") and get specific directions, in a cheery foreign voice, on how to get from here to there.  I could get un-stuck, and I'd know exactly what I needed to do next.  I could go to sleep before 3am, because I wouldn't have to attempt to plan every possible route, figure out how to avoid every potential pothole and roadblock and cliff.  

And if my brain GPS had a "Points of Interest" button, maybe I'd even be able to find out the location of the nearest Margaritaville.


Friday, May 24, 2013

Spiritual Growth

I read a book today.  And it pissed me off.

I love reading, and for me books are as essential as air and water for my survival. I love bookstores, and libraries.  I love the cozy chairs, the little cafĂ© with overpriced coffee, and the sounds of turning pages.  I love all kinds of books, and have a pretty eclectic collection.  I love using books for research and to learn the ways in which other people live.  I love reading books that connect me with other people living with the same challenges and joys. 

Which is how I found myself in a little wooden chair, feet propped up on a windowsill, in the quiet of the bookstore, reading about a mom and her experiences with her baby girl with special needs.  And it's where I found myself getting really, really angry. 

It should have been a good book.  One of those inspirational books that remind me that I can do this, too.  And I guess it sort of was.  Except for the whole, "my baby is my path to spiritual growth, I was chosen, and I'm totally cool with it" parts.  Which, unfortunately, was pretty much the entire book.  Glossy pictures of mom and adorable newborn baby in the knitted-by-grandma cap.  Lyrical prose about the girlfriends who sit up all night by mom's side, bringing lasagna and beer to the hospital, and saying just how perfect this baby is, and how it's all going to be just fine.  A stoic, but of course perfectly sensitive, dad who doesn't want to learn anything about the baby's condition, but tells mom, "I'll just love her.  When there's things you think I should know, you tell me."  And the mom is perfectly happy with that arrangement. The very worst part, though, is the message:  acceptance takes a year.  That's it, that's enough time.  After a year, you should be doing fundraisers and flying across the country to conferences and advocating at support groups.

Uh, no.  Maybe it's just me, and I hate to think I'm bitter, because I absolutely, positively love J. with every molecule in my body.  But I don't for one single second think she was sent to me for my own "personal growth".  How can that possibly even make sense?  That somewhere in the universe, God took a look at me and said, "You know, I think it's time to shake you up a bit.  I've got a great idea - I'll create this baby with all sorts of complicated medical issues who will have to suffer lots of physical and emotional pain - and I'll send her on down so you can learn some valuable spiritual lessons."  Nope, I don't think so.  Have I learned some of those valuable lessons?  Sure, of course.  But to think that my child's sole purpose on this earth is to make me a better person feels like a major insult to her.  If I don't learn the lessons, does that make *her* a failure?  If she isn't sweet as chocolate cake every second of every day, does that mean she isn't quite living up to her spiritual job?  What if she hates being sick, and doesn't want to struggle in ways other children don't have to?  What if one of the lessons I learn is that this totally sucks?  And if I was "chosen" to have J….does that mean that people without kids with disabilities weren't special enough?  That those moms don't have enough love, or kindness, or strength?  Or does it mean they don't have any spiritual growing to do?  Sure, I can buy that (insert dripping sarcasm and intense eye-rolling).

I believe with all that I am that you can deeply, truly love your child - disabilities, illnesses and all -- and still feel like she got cheated.  I love her, always.  But if you gave me a magic wand and the chance to make her well, I'd grab it out of your hands faster than you could blink.  It isn't her job to help me grow up to be a better person.  It's my job to do every single thing I can to make sure she knows she is loved. 


Thursday, March 21, 2013

Anxiety: Applications, Admissions, and Aid

I usually use this blog to write about J. and the medical journey we've been on.  But since September, our household (okay, mostly me) has been consumed with one thing:  COLLEGE.  

My oldest daughter graduates this June, a fact which makes me feel about 1000 years old, with the gray hairs to prove it.  Last year, the reality of this upcoming graduation also ushered in the Era of College Search.  For those unfamiliar with this period of time, there are zillions of books, articles, websites, blogs, and discussion boards that will happily enlighten you.  I'll summarize for you:  unless you are independently wealthy, the Era of College Search is a time-sucking, insanity-provoking, sleep-losing year...give or take a few months, depending on your kid.   

The College Search Basics:
Disclaimer:  Some of the college search is fun.  Most of it sucks.  I'm tired, and cranky, and it's the middle of the night, so I'm focusing on the suckish parts.
Anxiety:  Get used to this feeling.  It will haunt you for the entire process.  You will lose more sleep than the parent of a colicky infant.  You will begin to loathe the word "college" and feel dizzy and nauseated at the mere mention of it.  You will use more swear words than you imagined possible.  You will probably cry at least once (or a dozen times...just saying), and you'll find yourself believing with all your heart that this is your very own circle of hell.  Which, depending on your circumstances, it probably is.  
College Visits: If I could give just one small piece of advice to parents entering the Era of College Search, it would be this:  don't visit schools your kid won't get into or you can't afford.  Because those will be the schools they love.  They will be the schools you love.  And they will break your heart.  When you do visit schools (and you should!), pretend you're not interested in a relationship, that you're just "playing the field".  That way, you can look around, find the "cute" schools, drool over the ones with the fabulous sports field/lab/dorm rooms, all while recognizing that there are, in fact, other schools.  There isn't a perfect school, and anyone who says otherwise is either the copywriter for the school's glossy brochure or a member of College Confidential, the world's cruelest college search website.
Applications: I was one of those parents who swore up and down that I would never, ever, not in a million years, write my child's college applications.  By the 2nd one, I was ready to sneak into the account and finish them all myself.  I didn't...but I wanted to. Even if your child is the brightest, most motivated student you've ever seen, they will likely turn into a procrastinating sloth when applications come due.  Consider the fact that the introduction of the Common App (if you don't know what this is, you clearly haven't entered the Era yet...Google it) means your child gets ONE essay that goes to every single college on their list.  ONE essay.  Which is supposed to demonstrate their amazing writing skills, showcase some heretofore undiscovered unique talent, and impress admissions officers across the country.  No pressure, though.  
Admissions:  Otherwise known as: "They love me..they love me not".  Some schools will accept your child. And some will deny.  (Somehow "deny" is supposed to sound better than "reject".  I'm pretty sure it doesn't.) It used to be that an envelope would arrive in the mailbox, and if it was fat, you could rip it open with some assurance that it contained positive news. If it was thin...well, the only decision was whether to open it now and get it over with, or postpone the inevitable.  Now, many schools are using Portals for admissions announcements.  So your kid -- who probably hasn't had a whole lot of experience coping with rejection -- gets to open an email or a link to a webpage.  There's no warning of what might lie within the mysterious Portal, which makes the opening of it that much worse -- even, believe it or not, if it's good news.  A word of warning about admissions:  if you visit any Barnes&Noble, you will find hundreds of books that tell you how to get into college.  You'll learn about "reach" and "safety" schools, and you can spend entire nights scouring the internet for your child's chances of acceptance at a particular school.  But an acceptance letter is just a piece of paper, and unless your family can pay a hefty amount, or your child has miraculously received a full-ride scholarship, that paper may very well end up in a recycle bin after discovering that "accepted" does not equal "attend".  Which brings me to...
Aid: Imagine yourself in the hotel in The Shining.  You know, that scary movie with Jack Nicholson and the creepy kids in the hallway?  And imagine that somewhere down the hallway -- past the crazy guy with the ax and the "Redrum" girls -- is the money for college.  Basically, financial aid is your worst nightmare.  First, there are dozens of forms to fill out, and they all have acronyms.  Make friends with FAFSA and court the CSS Profile if you have any chance of getting funding.  Also, make sure you have an accountant, a secretary and the numbers of all your off-shore bank accounts before you get started.  (You think I'm kidding, right?  Yeah...I'm not.)  Second, there's a fun thing called a "package" that you'll get from every school.  This isn't like an all-inclusive vacation package (which you will probably want very badly after this process -- preferably a package that includes free alcoholic beverages).  It's more like the gift that keeps on giving...to the college, that is.  Colleges can, and will, mail you thick, watermarked letters telling you how very happy they are that your child has been accepted and how much they want to see your child on campus.  And then they will give you a number -- one that may be enough to buy a nice used car, or even a new one -- and expect you to pay that in the next 10 months.  My only advice here:  Be realistic about what you can afford.  And buy Kleenex.

The moment you enter the Era of College Search, every single person you know will ask, "So, where's (insert child's name) going to school?"  If you are smart, you will never, ever answer this question until your child is safely tucked into their extra-long twin size bed in the dorm room of the college they liked and you can afford.  After that, feel free to post pictures to your Facebook page, buy a t-shirt at the college store, and add those plastic stickers to your car.