A writer, divorcee, and mother living outside a small town and her views and day-to-day life events and challenges as she starts over emotionally and financially after 22 years of marriage. She owns Ascensional Writing Solutions.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Alzheimer's: Wins again
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Windows
We always went there first. With everything open and waiting for us, tradition trumped. We’d run and run to get there, racing across the concrete, and rarely did we have to wait in line. Hearts pounding, we’d laugh. For joy. Familiar whoosh and metal bangs as the giant tube’s doors opened, the narrow aisle pushing us closer than comfortable to the floor to ceiling windows. Stuffy, stale air they tried to keep cool, swarmed over us, even that early in the day.
Interminable waiting. Palms wet, rubbing them on our polyester shorts, smiles a little tense. Pretending calm, I leaned back and put my tennis-shoed feet on the guide bar in front of us. Mom and I always joked that God made us short—the better to keep close to the ground. Still, we yearned to go high, to go up. High above the world, the Great Lake, into the sky.
A bump, a closing whoosh and then the announcements. The murmurings from the other people settled, and we listened to the recordings. Mom and I could nearly recite them, at least the beginning. We listened to the history, the statistics as that giant tube turned slowly, spiraling into the humid sun-soaked air. Soaring high over another new roller coaster calling our names. “Can’t wait to ride that!” Forget that Mom shouldn’t ride because of her many back problems; life was too brief to let it stop her.
Bouncing in the seat, looking through the tall windows, inches from nothing, we pointed, planned. Wished already for a longer day. We could see nothing but amusement and delight in the glare off the waves. We couldn’t see the anger, the hasty words, feel the burning tears. The helplessness, the ache that never goes away. The organ's funereal tones hadn't yet drowned any clear thoughts, and my throat didn’t ache from saying, “Thank you. Yes, it was quick. Thank you for coming.” The future beyond our day at the park lay hushed and murky through the windows.
The descent sped by, then the bump. One final whoosh. Our journey to the sky ended, but the laughter, the smell of the coal from the train, the tang from warm blacktop erupted as we fled the giant tube as fast as we'd entered.
One more day together.
“Have a great day here at Ceeddaaarr Point!”
Monday, January 16, 2012
Land of the Free
You see, I believe in "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Since fifth grade and Mr. Klopfenstein made us memorize the beginning of the Declaration of Independence, my mind and my beliefs have been ingrained with these thoughts.
I don't fuss over the language. "Men" means all men and women the same. All men. Regardless of age, sex, sexual orientation, class, etc. None of it matters. All are equal.
It is truly that simple.
We, as those "men", have the *unalienable right* to believe as we want, to live the life that we want, to worship as we want, to be with the one we love as long ***as it harms no one else.***
And, yet, in the United States, many people believe that THEY have the right to choose what "men" can believe, what life men can live, how men can worship and whether men can be with the one they love.
If I choose to be a lesbian, Wiccan, living in the mountains with my lover and my cat, I should be allowed to. I am not hurting anyone else. (No, I'm not a lesbian or Wiccan, and Doug won't go with me to live in the mountains, so I am not doing that either, but I should have the right.)
What I want in a Presidential candidate is someone who won't tell me I can't have an abortion, that I can be with/have a civil union with my lover and that I can worship as I please. I want a Presidential candidate who won't take my money away to give to people who won't work and expect me to give them my money because I may or may not make more than they do. I want a Presidential candidate who, when he/she goes overseas, we, as citizens of the U.S., can be proud to stand behind him/her and say, "He/She is our President!'
I want a Presidential candidate who won't divide our country for political gain. I want a President who remember what this country was founded upon--The Bill of Rights.
http://www.ratical.org/co-globalize/BillOfRights.html
For me, the most important is, by far, the First Amendment. These, Speech, Press, Religion and Petition, have been slowly eroded...I'm scared they will be gone. People being arrested because they want to hear a candidate speak; articles not printed because they may offend someone, not being able to worship because someone, somewhere thinks the belief system it is evil or wrong because it isn't what society says is moral; making it illegal for people to demonstrate or petition the government.
Take these away, and this is no longer the Land of the Free. It is the Land of the Oppressed, the downtrodden, not what the Revolutionary War was fought for. Not what our Founding Fathers wanted. They fought to be free from high, unfair taxes, to be free from ridicule and persecution for their beliefs. Many of the Founding Fathers were Unitarian and/or Universalists. They believe in the right to be free to worship the god or gods of their choice--not to be told by the monarch or the government who/what they could worship. They had suffered under the hands of despots and deranged monarchs for centuries--first Catholics and then Protestants, never knowing when their freedoms would be taken from them.
They came to this country to be Free. They called it the Land of the Free.
And now, in 2012, I want a Presidential candidate who will guarantee that we won't lose the freedoms we have fought so hard for. I don't care if he is a Democrat, a Republican. I don't care if he's Mormon, Catholic or a Pagan. I don't care his sexual orientation. None of those things matter to me. What matters to me is that he upholds the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
I want the Freedom to Choose, and my choices are limited. If only someone would stand up for our Freedoms, that is the person I would vote for. I am not ready to give up what the Declaration spoke of--"life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." And part of that pursuit is to have the freedoms our ancestors fought for.
A detailed discussion of my rant above. Ironically, I started this 1/15. This was posted in The Washington Post on 1/16.
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Before It's Too Late
But, you see, Mom and I fought bitterly as well. Hateful, nasty things flew out of our mouths. Unforgivable things that, somehow, with the mother/daughter love would be forgiven anyway. The fights started because she disliked my fiance, and I didn't want to see that she was right about him. He was--and is--a good person. He could be kind, generous and loving, but he wasn't for me. He was too quiet, too self-absorbed and too different from me. In a phrase, he was too much like my father, and Mom didn't want me to marry a man like that. She was miserable, and she didn't want me to be. (But that's a story for another day.)
My head and my heart burned with confusion and a desire to be an adult. I longed to be independent, but I couldn't live on my own; I didn't have the money. Mom wanted me to listen to her, but she'd taught me to be a strong, independent thinker. I struggled to figure out when to make my own decisions and when to listen to someone who knew more than I.
Unfortunately, I didn't listen to the one person I should have.
I fought against her advice. I ignored her because I felt I needed to do what my fiance told me to do. I wanted to be the future-wife he and his parents wanted me to be--even if that was not who/what would give me contentment. I constantly struggled to appease them. To change my thoughts, my actions to try to make them accept me.
Mom, I knew, would love me unconditionally forever. She was, after all, my *mom*. My biggest cheerleader, my guide and the wise woman in my life.
It was all for naught.
Mom had been in the hospital already, and the doctors said she could go home the next day. Instead she died on that bitterly cold, early December morning. The Catholic sister who was the chaplain and I were talking about how God wouldn't take a mother from her child when my grandfather came up the interminably long hallway and said, "Your mother is dead." I lost the ability to feel. My mind, my heart, my body were numb. I couldn't breathe. I wanted to throw up. Everything had a white cast to it; color didn't exist in my life.
My mom was dead, with no warning, at age 42. I would turn 21 in just a couple of months.
God had answered my grandmother's long ago prayer, but given no leeway at all. When I was born, Mom almost died because her kidneys failed, and she went into a coma. She had the worst case scenario of toxemia and uremic poisoning. Gram prayed, pleading that He would let her live to see me grown.
He granted that wish. But He took Gram at her exact words.
Ignoring that the need for a mother doesn't end when a child is grown.
After the funeral, a couple of weeks later, for Christmas, I went to his parents' house for dinner. My grandparents had fled to Florida, my dad was somewhere with his friends, and I was in limbo. Living alone in my grandparents' house filled with memories, and numb to it all.
It was late when I left my fiance's parents' house. His parents and sisters were kind to me, and, yet, I knew, through no fault of anyone's, I would never fit in their family. I drove home on autopilot. The clock turned midnight, and I turned into the cemetery where Mom was buried. She and Dad had picked a place far away from everyone else, near a row of mature oaks, quiet and peaceful. I got out of my car, bundled against the slight wind, and followed the path of the moonlight. The snow crackling, crispy under my feet, broke the silence.
The weather had been too cold to put up her tombstone, but the pungent smell of fresh dirt told the story. Mom was gone. It didn't matter to me whether it was Heaven or nowhere. She was gone. And I had so much left to say. So much we'd planned on doing. My wedding--to someone--my children, graduating from college, picking out curtains for my first home. Calls to her in the middle of the night because my newborn baby wouldn't stop crying. Laughing in the kitchen making Easter eggs and Christmas cookies. Seeing her enfold my children in her arms just as she had tenderly held me.
I stood there, numbed to and by the cold. The only ghosts in that cemetery were the ones pummeling my mind. I don't know how long I stood there. In the 21 years since then, I've only been back 5 or 6 times. She wasn't there. Then I didn't know where she was.
A few weeks after Christmas, my fiance and I broke up for the last time. We continued to go out when we needed some company, but the calls dwindled off, and eight months later, I met Doug.
One day, in June, I was driving on an on-ramp and I thought, "I need to call Mom about..." and the numbness, the shield around my heart dissolved. I doubled over and sobbed until the tears dried. They were the first, but they wouldn't be the last.
Slowly, after the anger faded away, I eased into the ache, and I allowed my mind to think about what had happened. What I never had the chance to say. Mom had asked to borrow a copy of our favorite novel. I told her I would take it to the hospital for her. I never did. I never had the opportunity. Later, I considered taking it to the cemetery and leaving it on her grave. But, somehow, that seemed so futile...
Today, when I hear people saying ridiculing or decrying their mothers, I fight down the red I see. I struggle against the words in my throat, "Don't you realize how lucky you are to have her? Do you know what I would do to have mine here to fight with?" Sometimes I can't stop myself, and the words come out. I also know they don't understand.
I didn't.
As my daughters and I fight now, and we do sometimes, I see the fights from my mom's point of view. They hurt, they keep me awake at night, wondering what to say to make my daughters understand. As proud of them as I am for being strong, I can't help wishing they would understand me. But just as my mom never stopped loving me, I won't stop loving them.
You see, Doug and I have raised our daughters to be independent, questioning women just as Mom raised me.
I just hope they listen to the two people they can always count on--their dad and their mom.
Before it's too late.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Battles
Time: Arbitrary but Undeniable
A day in the life of a writing student and housewife
Between classes and feeding the dogs
I wonder how I will write.
The baby cries because I don't hold her
While she drinks her bottle--
it's about time to break that habit,
but who has the time?
The telephone rings--it's one of those pesty
Telemarketers again trying to sell me window shades.
The doorbell rings--
I forgot the carpet guy is coming to measure!
A sad sigh and a shake of my head,
I pray for a twenty-fifth hour.
All I want is a poem, not a short story
and only in dreams do I work on a novel.
As the baby sleeps the dishes glare at me to be done
But class work beckons when I sit at the computer
so I don't look like some lazy freshman tomorrow
who hasn't figured out you have to do your homework
to make the grade.
My guilt too overwhelming to caress the keys
with words from my heart.
As I carry the laundry basket up the stairs,
the sunlight outside draws me to write,
but too much needs done.
The baby needs a bath; the bills need paid;
the bank needs called about the check they said
never arrived to pay the mortgage.
Lunch needs made--Dinner needs made.
Always something keeping me from the keyboard--
And the release of the storylines I have floating
In my housewifey brain. Just to answer the questions
the characters drill me to ask.
The clock ticks on and finally
The husband comes home.
When I look for him for comfort,
I could almost kill him when he says,
"Honey, did you get any writing done today?"
--Tori L. Wilfred (c)
Taking the Time
Nothing
—have a staring contest
with my favorite cat,
Wish upon the closest star
at
Blow kisses to the evening
moon and
the beginning of one more
satin night,
Set free butterflies
shaped like words
from my mind
to sing to the wind,
Whisper God’s speed to a
young brown toad and
Bellow at bullfrogs
who want company.
I want to share
Nothing
With my daughter
Before she doesn’t have
time to do
Nothing
with me.
© 1997 Tori L. Wilfred
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Alzheimer's: The Scourge of Old Age
I sometimes worry that I'm going to get Alzheimer's. It's not a distant, "Oh, what if" kind of worry. It's alive and knocking on the door, reminding me that I'm not getting any younger, and I can do very little to stop it from stepping into my life. You see, I'm 41, and it's already here.