My friends, my enemies.

I have these two really stupid friends. No matter what I do, I just can’t seem to shake them. I avoid them, sneer at them, treat them rudely, yet still, they hang around. They’re sucking the life out of me like a couple of starving leeches. I know! Why would these two hang around when I show them no love?

My two so-called friends are Self-Doubt and Jealousy. I looked around today and realized that they are still here, whispering in my ear, reminding me that I am nothing special, that I am a giant empty cup with a chipped rim.

Self-Doubt is the worst because she’s quiet, muttering under her breath all the time, giving me ideas, bad ideas, dim ideas about myself. I can’t help but overhear, can’t help but wonder if she’s not right, even though she doesn’t look me in the eye and pretends that she wants what is best for me. She acts like a protector of sorts, like she’s providing me some great service by standing between me and the world.

Jealousy is a loud mouth, the kind of girl that just won’t shut up. She smacks her gum and rolls her eyes and shines a high-wattage spotlight at my neighbors and at my friends, highlighting their stuff, their accomplishments, their emerald green lawns without the blemish of a single dandelion. I try to ignore Jealousy and walk into the other room, but she follows me, taunting me, asking me if I’d like a Coach purse, one of those soft leather ones . . . and I don’t even care about purses, but this purse, this unobtainable purse, the purse other women with defined lips carry, somehow, after she talks about it, I want that purse. I wonder why I don’t have that purse. What mistake did I make that I ended up here, in this family room where the carpet needs to be shampooed, without a Coach purse?

I DON’T EVEN LIKE PURSES!

She moves on to things I want, things I dream about, things I think might be nice. A vacation in a warm place. A smaller pair of jeans than I can zip up now. A book contract. Children who instantly obey and never complain about putting their stinky shoes in their own room. Whatever I have, whatever I’ve accomplished, whatever I love pales in comparison to the shiny baubles she swings in front of my eyes. Instead of being pleased for other people, Jealousy suggests that I am diminished by their joy, which is a lie straight from the pit of hell, yet a lie that I roll around in my head like a silver marble.

With friends like these, who needs Satan?

At least I see beyond their straight teeth and glossy hair and recognize these two for what they are. Jealousy and Self-Doubt are poison, the kind of poison that looks pretty and tastes sweet, but which will burn my tongue like hot sauce and sear my soul like a toxic acid.

I am a blessed woman, a thankful woman, a woman who will push open an unlocked door and walk through it without fear. (God, please open some doors!) I am grateful.

Perhaps I ought to change the locks to keep out the lowlifes.

You Couldn’t Pay Me Enough

Sometimes, while in the midst of wiping someone’s bottom or while using my thumbnail to scrape crusted food off a place, I contemplate careers. For a few months back in 1990 (or was it 1991?), I worked in an office supply store and I loved it. Sorting pens into their proper bins gave me great satisfaction. I spent almost all my paychecks on merchandise in the store that I bought with my employee discount. And back then, I treated myself to a cookie-cupcake with thick frosting on it during every break, which was a big bonus. Mmmm, the mall food-court!

I loved that job. Not because I earned any money, but because I had fun interacting with the public and organizing stuff in the store.

I worked for two years in customer service for an insurance company. I wrote letters to customers, explaining how I had solved their problems or why I couldn’t solve their problems. I liked the independent nature of the work and I liked writing the letters. But I worked in a windowless cubicle and I was so bored and unchallenged (after the first couple of months). I grew to hate that job. I hated having to go to an office every day. I felt like my creative soul was dying. At that time in my twenties, all I wanted was to become a mother and so, I hated going to work. (Those were the infertile days for me.)

When I was a new bride, I was a legal secretary, not that I had any training whatsoever. My boss had just opened her private practice and I did whatever she told me to do. I typed, I transcribed, I answered phones, I wrote long letters to my friends in other states while I tried to stay awake. I didn’t have enough work to do, plus the law she practiced was mostly real estate and it was boring. But the office was in the center of New Haven, right on the green and it was a lovely location. I felt very cosmopolitan and grown-up working in a city, spending lunch hours at museums or swerving on the sidewalks to avoid crazy homeless people.

All that to say that I’ve been thinking of a few jobs you couldn’t pay me enough to do. I’d rather starve and end up living in a cardboard box on the sidewalk that participate in the following activities:

1) Pedicurist, podiatrist or any job involving adult toes other than my own.

2) Dentist or any job which involves touching other people’s teeth.

3) Any medical profession involving the digestive system.

4) Massage therapist. I’m just not interested in touching people I don’t know.

5) Plumber. Unclogging people’s drains? No, thanks.

Huh. I thought I had a bigger list. What job would you decline under any circumstances? What job would you like to have, if salary or training were not an issue? (I, for one, think working in a bookstore would be delightful. And I’ve always wished I were a midwife, ever since I met a midwife in 1993.)

Well, now it’s time to work with the boys on composition, which is about the most aggravating experience possible. I used to think writing could be taught. Now, I’m convinced that it cannot be taught, anymore than you can teach someone without rhythm or talent how to dance. (I cannot dance.)

Conundrums

1) Will I ever settle on a hairstyle I like or will I continue to hack off my hair, regret it and grow it back into a long puffy mess before hacking it off again? What about bangs?

2) Will I find a lipstick I love or am I forever doomed to lips coated with unsatisfactory pink or muted mauve or unkind wine?

3) Do we really have the power to warm up the planet? If so, do we also have the power to cool it off? And do we want it any cooler? My toes are chilly as we speak.

4) Is “conversate” a word? Why do people insist on using it?

5) Why did I think I was fat when I was just a normal-sized child?

6) How can some people abandon friendships when they no longer live in the same town?

Do you have any questions without answers? Do you obsess over your hair? Do you have a lipstick that you love? Al Gore: love or hate? How much “work” do you think Nancy Pelosi had and why do I even care? Will I ever travel to Tahiti again or was that one trip when I was sixteen the only one I’ll take? And why, oh why, was Tahiti wasted on a sixteen year old when I am so much more able to appreciate it now that I’m 41? Will the Seahawks stumble their way into the Superbowl this year? Why do teenage boys insist on belting their pants below their bottoms, leaving their boxer shorts on display?

Go ahead. Unburden yourself. Ask a question. You know you want to.

It’s Making Me Wait

100_0100.jpg The most exquisite moment of my life happened the day I discovered with great certainty that I was pregnant for the first time. Sure, I was already a mother, having traversed the long and dusty trail of infertility and adoption . . . I still remember the afternoon we pulled into the driveway, me sitting between two car-seats holding 7-month old twins. Absolute dread and terror filled me. What had I done? What had we done when we paid money to adopt twin babies? The dream of velvet-cheeked babies that had sustained me for so many months had morphed into the reality of two babies who were kind of cranky from a long ride in the car.

Motherhood was reality. But pregnancy? Pregnancy was pure possibility, absolute anticipation, wide-open dreams. I loved the first days, when my body hid the secret my brain could hardly contain. I was pregnant, with child, no longer barren! I loved the later days when my belly was swollen with unborn dreams.

* * *

The best day of my life was the day my husband asked me to marry him. We sat by a pond in the balmy air of a Missouri September, making promises and dreaming of what the future would hold. During the long drive between our cities, we’d talk and talk about our family, the one we’d have some day. Our conversation held promise, dreams, anticipation. Those were the days before reality, before overdrawn checking accounts, vomiting children and dreary, rain-filled winters.

* * *

The best day ever was the day I held my dreams in my hand, climbed the steep stairs of the Greyhound bus and began my journey to the Midwest. I went to meet my destiny, to find my path, to open the doors with keys I’d find along the way. My life was a blank book, without lines, without words, without color. Anything could happen. The countryside sped by as I gazed out the window, waiting to see my future appear like the sun on the horizon.

* * *

Perhaps the best parts of life are the moments before it happens–the seconds before your first kiss, the blink before you say “I do,” the moment before the line turns blue, the minute before the shoulders clear, the day before kindergarten starts, the weeks before graduation, the day before Christmas, that time just before the clock strikes twelve.

When you stand on the mountain top, ready to swish your way down the hill, everything is right in the world. You hold the moment of pure exhilaration and triumph in the palm of your hand. You haven’t fallen, you haven’t reached the end. Everything is potential.

But the brief seconds of anticipation flicker rather than shine. No one can just stand on the peak of the mountain forever. You have to descend. You can’t grasp those flickering moments or hoard them . . . they slip through your fingers and rush by your head in a blur, leaving you with what’s left: reality.

Reality doesn’t offer the thrills and chills of those moments when anything can happen–your bingo numbers could be called! You could get a perfect score on the SATs! You could spot your soul mate across the room and live happily ever after. Reality is aching shoulders from holding that fussy baby all night. Reality is tripping over size 9 sneakers that your twin babies grew up to stink up. Reality is sharing a bathroom and wiping hair out of the drain.

And so, as the new year begins, I am poised on the pinnacle of anticipation. Anything could happen this year, absolutely anything. The days, weeks and months are unsullied by failure and sickness and tragedy. My calendar is blank, waiting to be filled. I hold possibility in my hands, the chance of success, of satisfaction, of joy.

The trick is learning to savor the anticipation of what’s next while embracing the reality of what’s now. That’s what I’ll be working on this year.

That and reading a book a week.

Do you have resolutions?

Seriously, I’m fine. No, really.

My dad bought me a bus ticket from Everett, Washington, to Springfield, Missouri. While other high school graduates enjoyed a personal, loving, familial send-off, complete with an on-site trip to Wal-Mart to furnish their college digs, my parents put me on a bus, alone, to journey three days and three nights. And so I went to college.

I learned early on to expect to nothing from life, so this seemed simply the step I had to take to get away from home and to college. It never occurred to me that other parents in other families might escort their children across the country to college. But as I think of it today, more than twenty years later, I do find myself a little bitter. I wonder what my dad was thinking as he watched me climb up the stairs of the bus. I know he cried as I disappeared from sight, but why the bus? Why not a plane? Why did he send me off alone?

Did you know that Greyhound buses stop frequently in the darkest hours of the night in the most obscure towns along the way and demand their passengers disembark for mysterious reasons? (Purportedly to clean the bus, but I have my lingering doubts.) I spent three days and three nights worrying about strange people who might talk to me and who might cause me serious physical harm and who might scare the living daylights out of me. Or kill me.

When I arrived, I had what amounted to a bedsore from sitting so long in one position.

I thought of that sojourn today while fishing around inside the pond that is my brain for an adequate description for how I feel at the moment. My life at the moment feels like a cross-country bus trip with an unknown destination and nothing to do but listen to the noisy hum of my fellow passengers and wonder at people who actually use toilets on buses and stare out the windows at porchlights outside homes I’ll never step inside. I wonder if I’ll arrive at my destination. I wonder what my destination is. I wonder if I got on the wrong bus.

I have absolutely no cause for dismay or alarm or ungratefulness. I wonder if I’m having your traditional mid-life crisis where you look around and say, “Hey, where am I? I think I’m going the wrong way!” and “STOP THE BUS! I MISSED MY STOP!” I have a fearsome and irrational terror that I am a horrible mother, that I am ruining the children God gave me. I especially fret over the adopted children I have because it seems the stakes are higher. After all, their birthmother chose us because she thought we’d do a better job than she could do in her circumstances. Am I? Am I doing all right? (Did my dad worry about my future the way I worry about my children’s futures? And yes, I know . . . worry is not from God . . . God will provide . . . trust Him . . . I know.)

I think I need a progress report or some customer feedback. If all you are is a mother and your children don’t turn out, does that make you a miserable failure? Am I more than a mother? If so, where is the proof? What do I have to show for my life, other than a basketful of clean socks with no mates?

Why can’t I stop crying?

I ought not encourage myself when I’m in this dark mood, but I’m the kind of person who can’t stop pressing on a bruise. I think it’s interesting to examine all my thoughts, even the crazed ones, the ones that I would deny if you asked me about them later. As I mentioned on my other blog, emotions come and go, floating in and out like the tide. And while I am up to my neck in the cold waters of despair and wasteful sadness, I know the waters will recede and I’ll find myself fine and dandy, thought damp and covered with seaweed.

And this concludes today’s pointless pity party. Honestly, I’m fine and I have no idea why I’m swallowed whole by gloom this week. Don’t worry about me. I’m fine. (Well, did I mention my computer’s motherboard is dead and that I really do have to spend money on a new computer? That’s not fine, but that’s not life-threatening, right?)

I am fine. Do not be alarmed. Fine, I tell you!

This is your life.

I’m having a hard time grabbing onto my life.  It circles the baggage carousel and I can spot it coming, but I can’t get a good grip and haul it off the circling stainless steel.  My fingertips brush against the handle, but it’s just too heavy and I can’t lift it before it slips past.

When I was young, I thought my life would take an entirely different direction.  As a young girl, I wanted to be a veterinarian.  I was inspired by James Herriot’s “All Creatures Great and Small” series of books.  My dad and stepmom thought a stint working at a goat farm would be further inspiration, but the proprietor of the farm dimmed my youthful passion.  She was a gray-haired hippie who thought nothing of leaving me in a pen of baby goats with a sharp implement and directions to trim their hooves.  She sheared the goats in her kitchen, wearing only her big white granny-underpants and a t-shirt.  Plus, I had to ride my twelve-speed bike through hilly undeveloped land to reach her farm.  The ride alone took over an hour, as I recall. 

My parents didn’t ever let me take the easy way.  I had to bum a ride when I worked as a hospital volunteer.  No one would pick me up or deliver me to this altruistic job.  When I wanted clothes, I had to buy them myself.  I remember riding my bicycle to school on a day when the roads were coated with ice.  (I fell.)  I grew up in the most isolated family you can imagine.  When we returned home from school to an empty house, my brother and sister and I retreated to our separate rooms for the rest of the afternoon.  It’s no wonder that I filled my spare time with volunteer jobs and activities. 

I was searching for someplace where I mattered.  I wanted to help and I wanted my presence to make a difference.

That’s why I decided I’d be a doctor.  I had the grades and the brain-power to accomplish that goal, but I lacked the familial support and the sensible direction from school officials.  No one advised me where I ought to attend college.  No one encouraged me to pursue any particular academic path.  My dad, at that point, was still trying to figure out what he wanted to be when he grew up.  I felt like I was very much on my own.  I’ve always felt that way.

I went to Bible college because I thought God would love me more if I gave up something.  So I gave up my dream of being a doctor and plunged into the isolated world of an Assemblies of God Christian college.  I found the classes to be full of subjectivity–I couldn’t earn perfect grades anymore because the linear style of academics had turned into a whirl of opening prayers and rambling lectures and material that didn’t seem to have a beginning or an end.  The longer I attended, the less I saw the world as it really was.  My view of the world blinked open only occasionally.  Mostly, it shrank to the size of our campus, where I was isolated without a car.  The longer I was there, the less I felt like I could ever leave.  I loved it.  I hated it.  I loved it more.

I trusted less in myself–I trusted in myself not at all, really–and more in the institution and the denomination and God as I understood Him to be. 

And so I graduated with a degree worth nothing and an engagement ring on my finger.

The only smart choice I’ve made was to marry my husband.  He’s a remarkable man, a fine companion for this journey on earth.  But still, my life doesn’t resemble anything I pictured.

For one thing, I never imagined a world in which my father did not exist.  Yet, he died when I was 24.  I never considered that planning my family would be a challenge.  And yet, motherhood didn’t unfold as I expected.  Infertility, adoption of twins, two unexpected pregnancies . . . nothing as I planned. 

I’m not the mother I expected to be.  That mother was perky and cute and patient under all circumstances.  That mother had children who listened quietly and obeyed promptly.  That mother taught her children to play the piano and read long stories before bed to children who smelled of Ivory soap and homemade sugar cookies.  That mother had a circle of friends who stopped by with fragrant pumpkin bread and telephoned for no reason at all and got together to make crafts and drink coffee.  That mother drank coffee.

I don’t even drink coffee.  I’m nothing that I thought I would be.

Which is disappointing in so many ways.  I thought my life would be like a poem, words sewed together with precision and care.  Instead, it’s like a Scrabble board, words awkwardly shoved together just because I found a “U” to go with the “Q.”  And I have too many vowels and no “R” and my next move depends on the other player. 

So, my life circles around, a haphazard jumble of letters, two metaphors mixed up in an airport full of Scrabble players, I guess.  I’m not what I thought I would be and I’m not yet sure I’ll be what I think.  I’m poised at the starting line at that hopeful place before beginning when failure is not yet possible.  (You can’t fail if you don’t start.)

That’s the view from the kitchen table on a Friday night as I watch my life circle back around, just waiting for me to grab it this time around.   

Chatty

So, today is our fourth day of school.  I already had my first cold of the academic year.  And now, I’ve cleaned up the first vomit of the school season.

Grace, my four year old, complained, “My stomach hurts” all evening and lolled around on my bed looking rather pitiful.  She’d returned to her room, watch television for a while, then drag back into my room where I was riding my exercise bike, clutching her tummy.  Then, she said the fateful words:  “I’m going to throw up.”

She spoke so with such calmness, that I didn’t stop pedaling but merely answered, “Well, go throw up in the sink.”  (The sink?  I simultaneously thought, ewww, how dirty is the toilet? and she’s not really going to puke.) 

So I was wrong.  Poor baby.  At least her tummy felt better afterwards.  She fell asleep watching television and has been sleeping ever since.  I keep telling myself that she’ll be fine, this was a one-time deal, it’s a mild virus (or whatever it is).  I just hope that we don’t have a puke-fest involving our entire household plus all the other people who come and go.

Meanwhile, I did the dinner dishes tonight.

I have been trying to see Katie Couric on the news and Rosie O’Donnell on The View, but have failed on both counts.  I feel like I ought to take note of each event, but my real life keeps interfering with television!  Of all the nerve!

(Today, we had two landscaping guys working in the backyard–they trimmed ivy and hedges and spread playground mulch on what used to be our pathetic lawn. Now our backyard truly is a child’s playground.  Anyway, suddenly, the doorbell rings and it’s another guy, the guy who’s supposed to arrive after 2 p.m. to pick up the dead car.  We’re donating it to some charity because it’s blown head gasket is too costly to repair.  Stupid car.  Anyway . . . as the car guy is loading the car, the landscape guy says, “Repo?” to me as he walks by with his wheelbarrow.  As if!  What a bizarre conclusion . . . as if someone, somewhere would repossess a 1993 Mercury Sable!)

I realized something about myself.  (This is a new thought . . . I’m rambly tonight.)  I realized that I hate to pay anyone to do anything I am capable of doing myself.  I hate that I am paying the guys to do the landscape work.  I could totally do it myself!  If I had time!  And a giant chainsaw!  And a huge truck! 

I hate that I paid a guy to deliver two twin bed mattresses and box springs today.  I could totally do that myself!  If I had a truck!  And time, more time! 

I keep talking about hiring someone to help me with housework, but I probably never will because I hate paying anyone to do anything I feel able to do myself. 

I hate that I’m going to have to pay a guy to come and fix the seal on my refrigerator because I am certain it’s an easy job that I could totally do myself!  If I had the right tools!  And a manual! 

Oh!  And the guy that we’re going to pay to paint the boys’ room?  I HATE THAT!  I could totally do that myself!  I have painted almost every room in this house!  I could paint that, too, if I had time!  And more time!  And a little extra time after that! 

Oh!  And the guy we paid to paint the deck?  I could have done that!  I could have power-washed the house!  I could have replaced the rotted rails on the deck, if only I had the correct saw and a large truck in which to haul a 15 foot two-by-four.

I either have some control issues or my dad taught me too well.  (He did everything himself from fixing the car to building a computer from a kit to making homemade ice cream.  If you can read, you can do it, was the message he gave me.)

(If only I could pay someone to take care of the vomit that is sure to come.)

Grime You Can See and Grime You Cannot

I can’t begin to describe the disgustingness of the laundry which waits for the installation of the new washing machine and dryer tomorrow. Nor can I make you fully comprehend the sticky, grimy patch on the floor which was under the old washing machine. At times like these, I realize that I am a sorry excuse for a homemaker because my house harbors that kind of filth. Out of sight, sure, but still. Have you looked under your washing machine lately?

So, tomorrow morning, I will be scrubbing my laundry room walls and floor in anticipation of the installation of the new machines. Tomorrow afternoon, I will be washing laundry.

I am one fascinating woman, that’s for sure. Can you believe you just wasted your time reading about the dirt on my laundry room floor?

(You know what really bothers me? When I inadvertently and unintentionally offend someone who doesn’t bother to let me know . . . until much later, which causes me to feel all defensive and depressed and adolescent. Then, after a bleak night, I begin to feel overwhelming gratitude that I am no longer in junior high, at the mercy of the opinions of other girls, and remind myself that I cannot possibly be responsible for ensuring the happiness and good-will of every single human on this planet. And some people just won’t like me for reasons that make no sense to me and some people will misunderstand me–sometimes deliberately–and what can you do, really? Go eat worms? So, I offer this paragraph as an apology in advance to those of you who can barely stand the sight of my words on your computer monitor but who cannot look away and who will eventually be offended by what I have to say and also to those of you who feel my pain so you can say, “Oh, I feel her pain.”)

On Writing and the Silent Treatment

A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, I wrote my first story, a ten-page epic in neat printing about a romance between Tom Thumb and Thumbelina. I received a Certificate of Achievement from Miss Brittingham, my third-grade teacher, for Writing Stories and I won first place.

Fast-forward a bit to my college years. While I was a fierce and loyal correspondent (the kind who writes letters, not the kind who reports from the Middle East), I didn’t consider myself a Writer. But I wrote, mostly in a daily journal. And then somehow, (I can’t remember how now brown cow), I joined the staff of the campus newspaper.

I was supposed to write a column about the music department, but I never actually did. Instead, I wrote essays about whatever happened to flutter through my brain. And the newspaper published them.

I wasn’t very impressed with myself, though, because the newspaper was a rinky-dink operation at a rinky-dink school and big-whoop-de-doo. Then someone from the publishing department of the Assemblies of God (my denomination at the time) contacted me and asked permission to reprint one of my articles, a piece called, “Life Without Elbows.” And they paid me.

I was a published writer, much to my shock.

Fast-forward a few more years. Having viewed my byline and tasted the satisfaction of publication, I longed to Be A Writer. I bought a Writer’s Market. While we waited for a birth-mother to choose us, to make us parents, I puttered around at the computer and sent off queries. I went to a writer’s conference in Oregon. I submitted stuff. I received rejections. I sent out more queries. And got more rejections.

Birth-mothers? Rejecting me.
Publishers? Rejecting me.
I took it personally.

I chronicled all of this in my journals, painstakingly recording in ballpoint ink my anguish and the failures and angst, the wholehearted brand of angst requiring extra time and devotion. I picked up a couple of assignments for very small publications, received checks for minuscule amounts, accumulated more rejections, both professionally and personally, kicked myself for being a failure, sobbed on the bathroom floor, and then became a mother to twin baby boys.

I still wrote, but only in letters and journals. It turned out that as a mother, I had no time to nourish my angst about writing, no idle moments to worry about whether I’d ever Be A Writer. Once or twice a year, I’d receive an assignment, send back my work and get a check for $90. Sometimes, I’d read a terrible novel and think, I could do better than that. And then I’d read something fantastic and I’d think, I could never write like that. I was equal parts optimism and despair.

Eventually, I gave away my Writer’s Market. I stopped querying magazines. I set aside the whole writing thing. I had no time, no clear thoughts beyond, “Will they ever stop waking up at 5:45 a.m.?”

The years rushed by in fits and starts and then, lo and behold, my last baby stopped being a baby. I began to ask myself, Self, what should I be when I grow up? I settled on earning money, imagined having a Real Career, an identity beyond being someone’s wife and someone’s mother. And I hatched a plan to become a nurse.

I made my list and checked it twice. I realized it would be wise to wait another year before beginning this venture. And as weeks slipped by, I realized I didn’t really want to go to school. I didn’t really want to go to work. I didn’t really want a boss, a schedule . . . but I wanted a handy answer to the question, “So, what do you do?” I wanted health benefits and dental insurance and a decent paycheck with my name on it.

But at what price? What would I have to give up to become Nurse Mel? Time with my young daughter and growing sons? Schooling my kids at home? Being available to help my husband during times when his schedule is erratic and demanding? The flexibility to play on sunny afternoons and to spend weekends with my family?

Just as my youngest child grows more independent, would I close the door on those long-coveted hours of solitude and blocks of time in which to write? Would I exchange my chance to write (with no guaranteed of success) for employment as a nurse with its steady paycheck?

I’m pragmatic and the silly idea of turning away from a sure thing to pursue what will most likely turn out to be an unsure thing pinches at my brain. I am sensible, low-maintenance, with an abundance of common sense. And it doesn’t make any sense to pursue a far-fetched dream.

(Especially when you are me and you respond to arguments and adversity with the silent treatment. Try it. Make me mad and I’ll stop speaking to you. Maybe forever. I know! It’s a terrible character flaw and, being aware, I fight against it. But now I realize that when the universe argued with me through all those rejection slips, I decided to give it–the universe, writing, dreaming,the whole kit and caboodle–the silent treatment. Fine! Reject me? I’ll reject you!)

I should become a nurse. Clearly. But when would I write? And could I abandon the idea of focusing on writing entirely? Should I cut loose the dream of writing like child releases a party balloon into the far blue sky?

One night, my husband and I chatted. I told him I worried about schooling and scheduling and working. He listened to me fret. And then he said, “You know, I’m a pastor. Sometimes, I think about going to school and becoming something else, but the truth is, I’m a pastor. You are a writer. You could go to school and become a nurse–and I would support you in that–but you are a writer. Even if it means we never have a new car, you should not make a decision based on the money.”

He gave me permission to be what I am. And then I gave myself permission, too. I set aside the thought of going to nursing school and let myself think of pursuing writing professionally. I never mentioned it here because, really, how embarrassing is it to say, “I changed my mind. I’m abandoning my plans. I’m insane,” when you were all so nice and encouraging and supportive?

And what if I fail? I suffer periods of self-doubt and eye-rolling. I comfort myself in those moments of massive anxiety with the assurance that I could still go to school–the door is ajar–starting next year, and work out the details and weave together a life that wouldn’t leave too many strings dangling. Maybe. I could.

Meanwhile, I write here. Blogging has been a directional sign for me, a way to keep on the road towards writing professionally. The daily discipline of writing, the practice of choosing words, the craft of stringing them together brings me great satisfaction. I’ve been surprised by the joy of this medium.

Not long ago, I had a tiff with a good friend. I responded with my typical, “Fine! You are dead to me!” maturity, which was working for me, sort of. Then she emailed me and said, “Hey, what’s up?” and I said nothing. The words were too big to fit into my mouth and I couldn’t speak them.

She asked again. I spit out a tiny word. I might have never responded and missed out on the pleasure of a repaired friendship. The silent treatment could have been the demise of that pocket of my heart. (I am indebted to her.)

Meanwhile, an opportunity arose to blog for money. Knowing that twenty-eight million blogs exist, I snorted into my Diet Coke with Lime and closed that email. As if! Me! I’ve been stamped “REJECT,” remember? I gave it the old silent treatment. But the suggestion spoke again. And a snippet of a voice inside my head said, “Why not you? Remember, you are a writer. You admitted it.”

So I gathered my wits, wrote some samples, sent my application and waited for a response with the expectation one has playing the Lotto. One week passed. Another week. An email arrived: “We received a particularly strong batch of applications for this position and our choice was a difficult one . . . ” That’s right. It was not me.

(Boo, hiss, climb under the desk and weep.)

But it went on, “Your application stood out as one of the very best and we think your voice would be a great addition . . .”

SAY WHAT? From a Snoopy Certification of Achievement to this . . . and maybe more. I’m stunned. I am now a professional blogger. (The universe and I are on speaking terms again.)

Details to follow.

(This blog will remain the same. Have no fear. I’m guessing it’ll be a few more weeks before I have more information.)

Change: Not Just Under the Couch Cushions

So much has happened since I’ve been silent. For instance, winter ended and spring sprang. And I cooked two decent meals and one half-decent meal. The sun shone and the rain returned. Change, change, change–it’s not just floating in the recesses of your purse.

Rest assured, though. Some things remain the same. My desk still features a wide array of clutter: the yarn weavings the boys did for Art, my teacher’s guide (Spelling), five envelopes full of developed pictures, a small pile of used tissues, and a 24-pack of Crayola colored pencils. The problem with being healthy after a week (or more) of being sick is that the to-do list backs up and stacks up. And I’m still weary and my (spring) fever will not respond to treatment (la-la-la-la, I can’t hear you!).

I have to admit that I’m kind of bogged down in Jane Smiley’s 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel. Reading it makes me feel like I’m back in college, minus the broad back of the cute boy sitting in the front row. What’s hilarious to me now is that I thought I was so busy then, so stressed out, so living-the-life-of-drama.

Ha. Someone else cooked all the meals (thanks, Cafeteria Ladies!), I only did laundry for one (and I used the same towel for a week), and I could sleep all day on Saturday if the mood struck. Real stressful. However did I manage?