Showing posts with label acceptance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acceptance. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Masterpiece


Hello wonderful people,
Most important news is that we have found a tincture that is helping Libby stay more calm and rooted.  For the most part she’s made it through the last few days with limited wailing. This is the best news. 


I have a super power.  It’s not even a secret.   It’s not anything that will help others.   It’s really not healthy. 

I have a Bruce Banner level need to second guess almost every conversation  I have.  I play the conversations over in my head and know I was too open. Too honest.  Too awkward. I have done it for as long as I can remember.  Once I am comfortable with someone I relax and my replay super power gets much weaker, but it’s still there.  

That’s just one of the flaws I have. One of many.  And that’s okay.  It’s something I recognize as human and keep moving forward. 
We have some flaws. Even the greatest paintings have flaws. Check out this cool article I found: https://brightside.me/wonder-curiosities/8-art-masterpieces-with-hidden-imperfections-352960/amp/
We all have flaws and differences, but that’s okay. They make us more beautiful.  

One area that is NOT a flaw is the spectacular sexual spectrum in humans: LGBTQIA and others not identifying yet. 

We are all loved. Loved and accepted for the perfectly imperfect people we are.  You are a masterpiece as you are.  You are loved as you are.  Flaws and second guessing aside. You are loved.  

Please do not ever allow yourself to consider your sexual identity as a flaw.  Do not allow other people or society to tell you it is a flaw.  I think our sexual identity is part of our own super powers.  

The God of my understanding loves us and wants us to love and be loved.  The God of my understanding knows each of us, knows you, and considers EACH one of us to be a masterpiece.   We may have flaws, but this isn’t one of them. 

And if you find yourself not being accepted for who you are, I will accept you. And I know many others that will as well. 
For so many people, sexual identity has stigma and shame.  There shouldn’t be stigma or shame where love should exist. 

You are a David level  masterpiece and you are loved.  

Please listen to this if you are even in doubt: https://music.apple.com/us/album/masterpiece/1174317441?i=1174318362.


Happy end of Pride Month 2021.  




Friday, September 18, 2020

My Dear, You are Not That Powerful

 


When I was seven, my mom and I moved to Bakersfield, California to be with her best friend.  I remember the weather, the ocean, and seemingly endless fruit trees. I enjoyed hanging out with my friends and the new adventures that California offered, but I missed my Grandmother, my Aunt Gina, and Uncle Toots. We had already moved to Ft. Worth and Brownsville, Texas as well as moving from house to house an back to Grandma's in Amarillo. California was very different from the other places we had lived as it offered such treasures such as a neighbors orange tree. But still, I missed the comfort of stability in Grandma's house. 


This one of Mom and me is in California, I think. 

Top left is Verna, then Gina in the right  

Bottom left is Twigg

My wonderful cousin Tammy in on the right. 


That’s my Uncle Toots on the left in this one with Aunt Verna beside him. Gina must have taken this picture. We were in South Fork, Colorado. Still love that area. Geez, maybe I couldn’t pay attention to anything.  


(Lots of exposition in this one.   Hope it is worthy of your time my beloved friends.)

I've shared about Grandma and the important role she played in my life before.  My attachment to my Grandmother must have hurt my mom deeply.  I know that I woke up many times crying for my Grandma when we were wherever we were.  Sometimes I didn't remember where we were and was so lost. Fear would consume me until I would remember which apartment, hotel, or whatever we were currently sleeping in.  To this day, I cannot stand to use a pillow without a pillowcase, laundry piled high, and I hate to eat in hotel rooms.  These things remind me of homes that aren't home.  I was coded as a Migrant student in elementary which was so weird to me; I had two homes: Grandma's and Gina's. 

Aunt Gina and Uncle Toots, his name provided during WWII, also helped to shape who I am.  Gina, Verna, and my maternal Grandfather were siblings.  They were tall, strong pillars filled with stubborn grit and hard work.  After my grandfather passed when I was not yet two, Toots and Gina stepped into my life with the assurance that they would always be there to help Mom and Grandma raised me. I never noticed whether or not Gina and Verna loved my Grandma, or even liked her.  Grandma was after all their brother's widow.  Years later I learned of some drama about how best to raise me, but I would have never known and don't want to know.    To me, these people were a solid wall of love.   They provided the equilibrity I needed.   

Gina's sister, my Aunt Verna, was also a pinnacle in those early years. I spent alternating weekends with these church ladies throughout my early years.  Went with them to their Sunday school class in my shined up shoes and "church dresses" Gina kept for me. This is where I was enrolled in the "pinch and twist" method of "sit up straight", "be quiet", and "Twig why can't you sit still" classes within the beautiful old ladies Sunday School class.  Later, there were girdles involved, but that is another story.  Aunt Gina saw yard sales as "why pay so much for new?" was a mantra. She was painting, canning, gardening, helping, organizing, and churching. She said she liked to stay busy, so do I.  The only time I seemed to miss weekends and holidays was when we were living in another city or state. 

There weren't many men in my young life on a constant basis. Toots was the most important man around for those early years. I matched his steps around the house, the Service Station they owned on 6th street, and when fishing and hunting.  My favorite was watching him with "old guy" friends who come to the station to hang out.  I loved the community he had and how much these men laughed together.  These old guys would holler for me to come and sit with them while they told funny fishing and hunting stories.  "Come over here Twig, listen to this one...".  I still can't smell Old Spice without missing him.  Toots let me test my boundaries and be myself.  He didn't have all the requirements Gina did.  I was allowed to wild, even though I was a girl. Little me was safe with this man. We would sit and talk in the back yard.  Toots and I could be still together, which was rare for my little ADD body.  

  We had been in California, hanging out with the massive roaches, for over six months when we got the call that the Grandpa figure in my life had passed away suddenly.  I was devastated.  I remember not being able to be consoled. I remember actually crying, and I have never been good at crying.  Part of the safety net that I was pining to return to was gone.  

It's not like this was the first death in my little world; I had been reared in the funeral and grieving process every Sunday I was with them. In the summers, Gina would take me with her while she was "sitting in" with a friend from church or a neighbor who had lost a loved one.  We would go, take food, straighten up what needed it, and as I got older I would help with the children younger than myself.  I knew how to sit in grief with others.  But this loss was too great.  He had left us while I was away.  I could not sit in anything.  Grief was everything. I remember writing him letters and making everyone listen to me read them.  I know I made Gina cry for months.  Writing those sappy songs and letters to Toots was my way of sitting in my grief- of voicing my loss.  

He had been getting slower and less active over the years, but he still did everything while I was with them. Apparently, Toots became sick, diabetic complications, I think after we moved so far away.  In little Ileana brain that translated is death to the belief that he would not have gotten so sick if I had stayed in Amarillo with Grandma, Toots, and Gina.  I would be staying with him every weekend and he would have been pushing himself to hang out with me.  I wasn't there = it was my fault that he had died.  I had left him to go off with my mom.  I had abandoned him for our California adventure. This was simple math for me. My mom as also devastated as she had to give up her California dream to get me back home.  You can't imagine how ugly that looong bus ride back to Texas was.   

After that, I did not allow any other male role models in my heart. 

Fast forward a bit and between lots of traveling with my mom during the summers, when I was ten I saw 13 states.  Shortly after one of our summer traveling, my mom was bedridden.  We learned later that she had Diabetes and Lupus.  She wanted to travel and work and I just wanted to be in Amarillo in school and with Grandma and Gina.  In my little girl's brain, I caused her to be sick, as she seemed to be fine when we were on the road. She was happy on the road.  She had to come home to be with me which took her away from traveling, but that made her sicker. In my mind, if I hadn't wanted to go to school, she would be okay.  even though traveling was fun it was a community unto itself, but I missed my people.  Traveling with her taught me an encyclopedia of knowledge just about people. Mom continued to struggle with her health and yet managed to do some great things. I continued to blame myself for being so hard to raise and such a "handful".

After that, I did not want to want to be mothered or be a burden to my mom any more than I already had.  I know that my mom, like so many others, did the very best she could.  

Skip forward several years of my leaving every summer to travel, work, and live in tents and trailers for the summer. Following my final summer traveling, I worried that if I left again, Grandma would get sick. I went through middle and high school with normal tortures and triumphs.   Several years later, Aunt Gina passed away, in her sleep.  I was trying to go through college as a single mom to Mariah.  I had not done a good job going to see her as often as I should have.  Life was hectic and I was trying desperately to be the statistic I was: a single mom at 20.  I could blame it on many things, but I was caught up in trying to become who these beautiful people who poured so much love into me believed I was.  I was trying, so I didn't see Gina or Verna as often as I should have.  My wanna be grownup brain blamed myself.  Gina's sister, Verna, followed a few years later. These losses added weight to the blame I had become so good at carrying.  Now it was my banner.  A medal of honor of how to fail people who loved me.  I could continue to list the beautiful people who I have loved that have passed away too soon, but that is common for many of us.  

Fast forward to having Libby and finally finishing school.  Diving into the marathon of teaching was everything I could have dreamed of.  We rocked and rolled through many great years, then in 2008 Libby's body began rebelling.  Continuing to love Liberty through the battle her body wages awakened the same fears with the addition of blame.  Libby got sick on my watch. My little girl brain explained it all so perfectly; people get sick around me.  This thinking was almost debilitating in the early years of her disease. There were days when I did not think Libby was going to make it or if I could survive her illness. Doctors have told us that we may never know exactly when Liberty became infected with encephalitis (although we do know a tick was involved).  There are still so many what if's leaving gaping holes for my self-blame and guilt to filter in to. 

Because of her illness, I have allowed myself to wallow in the blame and guilt.  

Quarantine hit and we learned to all be at home together.  We adjusted and rolled through the end of the school year.  Then Rachael got sick.  At first, we thought, and the clinic conquered, that she had a UTI.  Two weeks and two rounds of antibiotics later, she was driving to the hospital with diverticulitis.  She was in hospital for ten days and had two surgeries. In the second surgery, the doctor took out a large amount of her colon due to infection.  This became a very dark time for me.  I knew that once again something I had done, or not done had been the catalyst to her illness. Or maybe this was some penance I needed to pay for a past misdeed.  I knew it was my fault.  

Because of this, I began to spiral into ugly habits. 

She was all alone in the hospital and Libby and I were all alone at home.  That was the worst Mother's Day ever.  I prayed and cleaned.  I meditated and reorganized.  I shouted at everyone's God. I have begged and bargained with God to heal and save Libby. How in the hell could I be as healthy while so many people I loved got sick?  Please take my health and my abilities and save/protect _____________ .Why couldn't God make me the one with the illness instead of the people I love?  It was five days into her hospital stay during her six-hour surgery when I finally got some clarity.  

I was just off the phone with the surgeon trying to attend to this very important update.  I kept thinking "just get to the point!" and tell me whether or not she is okay.  In what felt like 12.3 years later, he finally stated that "She was going to be okay, but it was going to be a long, slow recovery."  After I got off the phone, grateful for all of the info the doc shared with me, I sobbed.   

Again I began bargaining to take this struggle from Rachael and give it to me while begging forgiveness for whatever it was I had done to cause this,  After what felt like forever, this feeling of peace washed over me and the words came to me, "My Dear, you are not that powerful.  This is all out of your control."  Then the knowing came that these things are going to happen around me but not necessarily because of me. That maybe I was given my blessed health to be the one who caretakes. I began to understand that bargaining with God doesn't work.  

That doesn't seem to be how most faith-based systems work. We learn through our mistakes and are blessed with continued love and support. As we learn to do better, we become better. Life isn't an ongoing version of the Scarlett Letter where we wear our sins in an act of deprecating self-flagellation. Bargaining doesn't work. Where  I could then see my world, where I stop punishing myself and my body for being healthy.  I would be able to finally put the blame and guilt behind me and do what needed to be done for the loves in my world.

After this, I allowed myself to lighten the guilt load. 

This new understanding that self-blame is like wearing a straight jacket every day while trying to play Twister was revolutionary.  Little Ileana didn't think she was powerful at all, she just knew that she was the common denominator, so it must be her fault. rooted in ego, help.  I had to let it go and focus on what I had control over.  

I had to rejoice in my strength, instead of sabotaging myself with binging and drink, I could continue to help the loves around me. So, I stopped.  When the weight of what you're carrying seems overwhelming, remember you just aren't that powerful because we aren't meant to carry these things alone.  That's why our physical and spiritual community is vital.  Let's learn to be less powerful together. 


Libby is a rock star and has rolled pretty well into the school schedule.  I am ever so awed by her resilience.  Be safe and know that you are loved.  

ileana

This has been my perspective and my own growth; none was meant to hurt. 

Friday, October 25, 2013

Be-little and Be-Better

This is not the kind of story I want to share, but sometimes it's good to expose the ugly in order to see the beautiful.

Wednesday night we needed to pick up meds at Wal-Mart and I didn't have a meeting after school, so we met to eat at the sandwich shop, which is attached to the Wal-Mart, grab Libby's meds and supplies for the Happy Halloween carnival.  

We eat at national sandwich shop generally because of convenience and actual veggies for the kid.  (If food can be connected to another stop then I'm usually in since I never know how many ins and outs Libby has in her.)

We ordered as usual and when we went to ask for Libby's veggies on a separate plate, we were told that we would have to pay for the plate.  We asked why since  we've never paid for a small plate or bowl and have done this at these places all over the state.  (It's harder for Libby to chew and swallow the meat, bread and veggies- so we separate them.  Then we cut them up into her bite size pieces.)  

We were told we'd have to pay or we could use a napkin to put her veggies on and cut them on there.  I reminded them of the need to try to be accommodating. I am sure there are accessibility laws in which such establishments should provide some accommodations. We didn't want extra veggies, just didn't want to cut up her veggies on a napkin.  (There was no offer to cut up her veggies to solve the problem.)  We took our food- sans bowl or plate- and used large soda lids to cut up her veggies and feed her from.  Never had this kind of issue before.

A gentleman came up and while leaning over Libby to talk to us handed us a salad bowl and said, "Here, I got this for you because I wanted you to know that you both behaved deplorably.  You should be ashamed of yourselves.  Ashamed of yourselves as parents.  You should be ashamed at your offensive behavior of other people.  Now one should treat other people in the way that you did."  Now, this is a younger man who I am thinking works for this restaurant and is upset because I asked repeatedly why I would need to pay extra to feed my child there.   I'm still feeding Libby and he's still talking.  Our response was along the lines places of "what?"  Giving Libby a bite, "I'm sorry you feel that way, we didn't mean anything bad and weren't trying to be rude- we simply wanted something to cut up the kids veggies on." After our little berating, I asked him to leave us alone and allow us to eat the meal we had paid for.  After he walked off, I burst into tears. I DON'T CRY: well, often, easily or enough. 

Couldn't stop crying. I was so hurt and embarrassed.  Libby is now upset because she doesn't see me cry and is very susceptible to my emotions (poor kid).
Rachael went over to talk to the young man and he reminded her that we are deplorable people who need to be ashamed and that he didn't need to speak to her any longer. She even asked him if knew that he had made us cry and he replied that it's "a lesson learned".  (We are still very calm and quiet and yet I felt like I had to shuffle Rachael away since we didn't have bail money.)  I did say with all of the symbolism I could muster that "it's okay, he's the one sitting at the handicapped table here."  Which he was sitting at a table marked Handicapped.

I do reserve the North-Sider in me for much more important issues; I promise we were not being ugly.  And I do know that I have some crazy to release, my Crazy She was not let loose this time.

We didn't finish eating, couldn't, but made sure Libby was done and went to pick up our meds.   Guess who works in the pharmacy?  Yep... mister "Corrector of all that is deplorable" works in the same pharmacy which dispenses the medicines that keep my kid alive.  
Oh irony, thou are quite vicious. 

We had to pick up the remaining supplies for the upcoming Halloween carnival, which is Saturday.  I did a Sam's run on Tuesday for the requisite nacho cheese and concession stand chips and wouldn't have another chance until Friday night for the supplies. We had to complete the walmart list today. 

I finally quit crying, got Libby's meds, called Grandma Linda and Momma the Hun April from the store to whine about our treatment and to make sure that we had a reason for our intermittent tears. 

Two days later and I still can't believe what happened.

We've had our last sandwich from that place and I'll be switching our meds to another pharmacy which makes me sick to my stomach.   I cried from sheer embarrassment yesterday telling the story and no, it's not a hormonal time for me- I really am that hurt.  Just shows how little we are treated with malice or meanness. 

I internalize everything and I realize that this may have been a huge mirror to myself and to keep me in check.  Not everyone can understand that there are some small needs that can be filled.  A simple gesture goes a long way to help others.   I hate it that Rachael caught the brunt of this young man's words, because  she would never deserve to be spoken to that way.  She is the best human being I know.  And I am really hurt by the fact that Libby witnessed someone saying things like this about us in front of her. No child should have to hear that.  

And when we, myself included, are being self righteous, no one prospers and no one's spirit is elevated. The high and mighty are running over others to make themselves feel better and the lower folks are simply getting more tracks on their backs.  

As for me, I apologized to the workers at the sandwich place and left the bowl with them and a little note.  A simple, heartfelt prayer.     ( I am sure this napkin was already in my purse and not from the sandwich place.) 
 
Maybe I needed to be Be-Littled in order to try to Be-Bettered. Not above, just stronger.   And continue to pray that no one else ever has the need to ask for a plate to feed their child on.