Showing posts with label Mothering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mothering. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

It has Been Eleven years since my mother died!

It has been eleven years since my mother died.

Eleven years without either of my parents.

Our Wedding 2005

1986


And still, some days, it feels as though I am standing in that room again—alone beside her, watching and waiting for the end to come.

The day my mother died was filled with emotions that did not make sense together. Grief sat beside relief. Love beside anger. Sorrow beside exhaustion. There were moments of tenderness tangled together with memories that still hurt. I remember feeling guilty for the ways my heart could not settle on one emotion, as if mourning was supposed to be simple and pure. But it was never simple.

Death does not suddenly untangle a complicated relationship. It does not erase childhood wounds, unanswered questions, or years of longing for things that never fully existed. Instead, all of it arrives together in the same room. The love. The hurt. The hope. The disappointment. The ache for what was, and the ache for what never became.

I remember watching her breathe, wondering which breath would be the last. Time moved strangely in that room. Every second felt heavy. I was no longer just a daughter—I had become the witness to her leaving this world. There is something profoundly lonely about sitting beside death, especially when the relationship itself carried loneliness long before that moment.

I sat there trying to remember a time when she loved me—truly loved me—or wanted me.

And I had none.

No memory came rushing back. No warm moment appeared to soften the silence in my mind. I searched anyway, desperately, as though somewhere inside me there had to be proof that I had once been held gently, wanted fully, loved without condition.

But even with that emptiness sitting inside me, I still wanted my mother.

That is the part people do not always understand. A child does not stop longing for their mother simply because love was inconsistent, absent, painful, or never given in the way it should have been. The ache remains anyway. Deep and instinctive. Almost impossible to explain.

As I sat beside her in those final hours, I remember thinking how strange it was to grieve someone while also grieving what I never had with them. I was mourning her death, but I was also mourning the relationship I spent my whole life hoping would someday become real.

I wanted one memory to hold onto.
One moment where I felt chosen.
One moment where I knew, without question, that I was loved.

But sometimes the hardest truth is realizing that the child inside you kept surviving on hope instead of evidence.

And still, even then, I wanted my mother to reach for me.
I wanted her to say something that could heal the years between us.
I wanted, even at the end, to finally feel like someone’s daughter.

There is a particular kind of heartbreak in realizing that the longing for a mother can survive even when the memories do not.

I still ache for someone to hold me the way I hold my own children.
To wrap their arms around me without hesitation.
To listen without rushing me.
To guide me without conditions, limits, or fear that love might suddenly disappear.

Sometimes I watch the way I comfort my children—the way I pull them close when they are hurting, the way I stop what I am doing to truly hear them—and I realize that somewhere deep inside me is the child who still wonders what it would have felt like to receive that same kind of care.

Not perfection.
Just safety.
Just softness.
Just someone who stayed.

I think the hardest part is that I want to be held just as tightly. I want to feel whatever my children feel when I wrap my arms around them and tell them everything is going to be okay.

And sometimes I wonder—who does that for me?

Yes, I have Ken. My husband. My best friend. The person who has stood beside me through so much. His love is real, steady, and faithful. I am deeply grateful for him.

But the love between a husband and wife is different from the love a mother gives a child.

A spouse walks beside you.
A mother, at least the kind I longed for, is supposed to be the place you fall apart without fear.

There is something so primal about wanting to be mothered. Wanting someone to look at you and see not what you can do for them, not how strong you are, not how capable you have become—but simply see you as someone worth protecting, comforting, and carrying when life becomes too heavy.

I think that is why the ache still lives inside me.

Because I became strong before I was ever held.
Responsible before I was nurtured.
Independent before I ever felt safe enough to depend on anyone.

And even now, as an adult, there are moments when I want to crawl into someone’s arms and rest without guilt. To not be the strong one for once. To not have to explain why I am hurting. To simply be cared for with the same tenderness I try to pour into my own children every day.

My grandmother—my mother’s mother—was the closest thing I will ever know to that kind of love.

And she did love me. I know she did.

But even with her, there was always a line. A limit to how much of herself she could fully give me. Not because she was cruel. Not because she withheld love intentionally. But because before she was ever my grandmother, she was my mother’s mother first.

Her heart was tied to her daughter in a way I could never untangle.

I think one of the deepest pains was watching my grandmother love my mother with the kind of devotion I spent my whole life longing for myself. She protected her. Defended her. Carried compassion for her wounds, her struggles, her pain. And part of me understood that. A mother’s love for her child runs deep.

But I was a child too.

And sometimes it felt as though there was no place for both truths to exist at once—that my mother could be hurting and still hurt me, that my grandmother could love me deeply while never being fully able to step outside her loyalty to her daughter.

So I learned to live within the limits of that love.

I took the comfort she could give. The moments of safety. The glimpses of warmth. I treasured them because they were real. But somewhere inside me, I also understood that there were places my grief could not go with her. Certain truths that sat too close to the pain of her own child.

That kind of loneliness is hard to explain.

To be loved, but not fully held.
To be cared for, but still emotionally orphaned in some quiet way.
To know someone wanted the best for you while also knowing they could never entirely stand on your side without it feeling like a betrayal of someone else they loved first.

And yet, I still carry gratitude for her.

Because even limited love can leave light behind.
Even imperfect love can become a lifeline for a child trying desperately to survive.

But I would be lying if I said it did not ache sometimes—to realize that my grandmother loved her daughter with the kind of fierce, unquestioning love I spent my entire childhood hoping someone would someday give to me.

Sometimes I want to scream from the top of a mountain for someone to help me.

Not because I am falling apart in some dramatic, visible way. Most people would probably say I am doing well. I work. I teach. I parent. I love my family. I keep moving forward.

But underneath all of that is this ache I cannot fully explain.

An exhaustion that does not come from one bad day, but from a lifetime of carrying myself.

And the hardest part is that I am not even sure what I need.

I do not know if I want someone to save me, comfort me, guide me, or simply sit beside me and finally notice how heavy everything has been. Sometimes I think I just want permission to stop being strong for a little while.

Because when you grow up without being emotionally held, you learn how to survive by becoming your own protector, your own comfort, your own caretaker. You become the person everyone else can lean on while quietly wondering where you are supposed to go with your own pain.

So the feelings build in silence.

The grief.
The loneliness.
The longing.
The exhaustion of always being the one who manages, adapts, survives, and keeps going.

And sometimes it rises so suddenly inside me that I feel like screaming into the sky:

“Can someone please help me?”
“Can someone please see me?”
“Can someone please hold the parts of me that have been carrying too much for too long?”

But even then, I do not always know what help would look like.

Because what I ache for is not something that can be neatly fixed.

I ache for the kind of safety that is supposed to begin in childhood.
The kind of love that teaches your nervous system it is okay to rest.
The kind of care that allows a child to believe they do not have to earn tenderness.

And when you grow up without that, part of you keeps searching for it long after childhood ends.

I think that is what people misunderstand about trauma. Survival does not mean the longing disappears. Sometimes surviving only means you learned how to function while carrying an invisible hunger for comfort, protection, and unconditional love.

There are days I envy the ease with which my children collapse into my arms when they are hurt. They do not hesitate. They do not apologize for needing comfort. They trust completely that I will hold them.

I wonder what that must feel like.

To need someone and not fear becoming a burden.
To cry and know someone will come.
To rest without waiting for love to be withdrawn.

Sometimes I think the little girl inside me is still standing somewhere with her arms open, waiting for someone to finally say,

“You do not have to do this alone anymore.”

There are days when it feels like this is not just a wound, but a missing part of who I am.

Not something broken that can simply be repaired, but something that was never fully given to me in the first place.

People often speak about healing as though every pain eventually closes neatly with time, love, or understanding. But some losses are different. Some grief comes not from losing what you had, but from never truly having it at all.

And how do you fully heal from the absence of something your heart needed in order to grow safely?

I do not know if that ache will ever completely disappear.

There is still a part of me that feels unfinished. A quiet emptiness where a mother’s comfort, protection, and unconditional love were supposed to live. Sometimes I think I carry that absence everywhere I go. It follows me into motherhood, into relationships, into the way I question myself, overthink everything, and struggle to believe I am worthy of being cared for without conditions.

It is hard to explain to people who were loved gently as children.

The absence becomes part of your identity.
Part of the way you see the world.
Part of the way your body holds fear, loneliness, and longing.

And maybe the hardest truth is realizing that some wounds do not heal by disappearing. Some wounds heal by learning how to live beside them without letting them consume every part of you.

I do not think the little girl inside me will ever completely stop searching for the mother she needed.

But I also know this:

That missing piece did not stop me from becoming loving.
It did not stop me from becoming gentle.
It did not stop me from becoming the safe place I once searched for in someone else.

Sometimes I look at my children and realize they will never fully understand the depth of what they were given simply by being held, heard, comforted, and loved consistently. And part of me is grateful for that. They should never have to understand that kind of emptiness firsthand.

There are still moments when the grief feels bottomless. Moments when I wonder who I might have become if I had been loved differently from the beginning.

But even in that sorrow, there is something sacred in the fact that I chose not to pass the emptiness forward.

The ache may always live inside me.
The longing may never fully leave.

But so does grace.
So does love.
So does the quiet courage of becoming the kind of mother I once needed myself.

I hold them when they cry.
I listen when they speak.
I apologize when I am wrong.
I stay.

And sometimes, in those quiet moments when my children rest safely against me, I grieve and heal at the same time.

Because somewhere deep inside me is still the little girl who wanted someone to hold her like this too.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Parents, Abuse, Death and Forgiveness. (I have been working on this for a few days. This may be to much for some people)

I feel that I should worn you that if you know me or my parents you may not want to read this. It is my truth! Most of my friends and family know my childhood was hard but this is a little detailed. To be honest I can't believe I am even writing this!



The time around my birthday is always a little hard for me. Not because of my age or the fact that I am getting older but of my relationship to my parents. To me my birthday and my parents go together. I am here on this earth because they wanted a child supposedly. Now 35 years later here I am and they both are DEAD and I am still trying to understand why they wanted to have kids or if they even loved me or know what love is! Last Sunday night at Popcorn (family night) after everyone had gone home, Lewis and I for the first time ever talked about our childhood with grandma. The drugs, violence, and fear. We did leave a lot of stuff out like the sexual abuse and a lot of the more violet events of course. But it was the first time as adults Lewis and I talked and then agreed on events of our past. I am still trying to understand how this all happened in the first place and why after all these years Grandma would want to know these things. She was always adamant that our mom was not as bad as we thought!

 For many years before they both died I told myself that they where no longer my parents. I had done my best to erase them out of my life. Yes I knew that there was still there was this connection from them to me and me to them but I had tried to pretend that it was not there but it was still there and even today as my children grow and get older I am finding it harder and harder to ignore it. It is there pulling at me to acknowledge it. Now with my health issues that have come in to play (some of the medical issues are do to trauma from my childhood) it seems to be pulling at me even more. Then with grandma wanting to talk about stuff I feel a little very overwhelmed or maybe unsettled. 

Before my parents died I had thought that I had resolved my issues with them as best I could and tried to move on and then when I had my first child Kaylee I soon realized that was very far from true. I even started to feel for them and have sympathy and felt that I was starting to understand them and their action and that made me so angry and then scared because I had told myself that I did not love them and did not care about them. I had tried my best to erase all feeling toward them good and bad.  I wanted nothing to do with them but do family events that was never going to happen. My mom was after all my grandmothers daughter. One of the hardest things I ever did in my life was let my mother hold Kaylee. I only agreed because of how much it meant to grandma. I literally gave Kaylee to my aunt Janet and left the room and cried. I felt broken and still am. As I look back on that day I wish I had protested more. I ended up in a postpartum support group after that and worked on letting my mom and Kaylee have a relationship. It was hard on me but I did it for Kaylee and Grandma. My the time Kaylee was born she was already in a nursing home so that help a little. I took Kaylee twice a month with Grandma to see my mom. Surprisingly Kaylee remembers my mom and the nursing home. She still talks about Grandma Judy a lot. But ever since the day I let mom my hold her I have been struggle with my relationship to my parents. What if I did love them and care about them?? What would that me for me, for them and how I related to my 2 amazing children? Then they both died. My dad died 3 year ago this May 2nd and my mom 2 years this April 12th. How do you morn someone that you thought you hated and never love? I have told myself over the past 25 years at least that they hated me and wanted me only for the attention I brought them. Why do I care?

I really do believe that my mother hated me and I will never really understand why that was or when her anger and hate started and why. I don't ever remember her being nice to me unless it was because she wanted something from me or to use me for a way for her to get attention. There are a few pictures when I was really young that you see she cared but only a few.





The following picture is the last one of everyone happy.

Even before this picture was taken I already have memories of her talking to me in a mean/hateful way. I even remember on the day she came home from the hospital after having Lewis that I ended up getting stitches above my eye because she pulled or pushed me off a step stool in kitchen because I was making a mess! Come on I was 3 1/2 years old! That is when I remember all the LIES starting. "She just fell" or "she is just accident prone". I don't even think my family knows the truth about that fall that day but at this point it does even really matter. I don't think they know about a lot of stuff that went on because of my parents. And more to the point I don't think they could handle it. Things change rapidly after that day and as a small child I knew no differently. 

I don't ever remember a time when my mom was not using or drinking but she hid it well for everyone. I do remember the last time I let my mom hug me and I am not even sure why we were hugging but I was around 8 years old and we were at grandma Arlene's house and she was leaving and while she was hugging me I started to cry and I have no idea why I was crying and even if there was a reason but I know that once that hug ended it would be the last one and since that day I never hugged her not once. There were many times that she tried to hug me and most of the time I was able to avoid it and a few times that I just stood there but I never once returned it. To be honest ever time she touche me I wanted to run away or slap her but I contained myself most of the time. The hardest part was when she was dying. Watching her her lay in the bed knowing that she would only be in this world for only a short time longer I started to to feel the need to crawl into her bed and have her hold me and at the same time I could not even hold her hand! I felt torn and so confused. I guess I wanted something that I never had and her death meant that there was no chance of ever having it. A dream of having a mother. Having all the things that I am for Kaylee and more. I was the only on with her when she passed away and I wanted to take her hand in that moment but I could not move. I stood there next to her and prayed and all that came to mind was the Lords Prayer and I said it over and over again. I never did touch her before they took her body. At this point I don't even know if it matters to me or not.

My moms family put a lot of the blame on my Dad and my dads family blames my MOM. For some reason in my eyes my mom was thousand times worse than my dad. My dad was physically abusive but my mom was much worse than that. She was physically abusive but also mentally. She played with my emotions all the time. She even gave me to her drug dealer and let him do what ever he wanted for her drug habit! During any of this did she love me? How on earth was she putting my best interested at heart? Did she even care what was happening to me? All of this craziness went on until one day I was home sick from school with my mom. I think I was in 6th grade. I made her mad because I would not make her lunch!! So she called my dad home from work  "to take care of me" I am not even sure what she said to him but I knew he was going to be mad. I remember hiding in the laundry-room closet until he found me. That by far was the scariest day of my life so far! After that day I pretty much live with my moms parents during the week. So after that my dad said that he wanted a Divorce because he was tired of all the games my mom played. My mom and brother moved in with Grandma and Grandpa as well. Soon after my grandparents found out about my moms drinking and drug uses. They helped her get into rehab! To me rehab made her worse. She became so shelf centered and blamed everyone else for all her problems and actions. She never got better physically or mentally between all the drugs, drinking and health issues she was crazy. She never really was normal even though most people thought she was until they got to know her.

 The last 5 or 6 years of her life or maybe even longer she was angry at everything. Nothing could bring her happiness. The more angry and hateful she became at the world the more I told myself that she was nothing to me other than the person that gave me life. In the back of my head I kept asking myself how could a mother hate their child? What would make that happen? I knew both of moms parents had loved her and raised her well. I knew that my moms siblings where well established so what caused her to be so different. The loss of a child? Mental health? Addiction? Abuse by someone other that her parents? Or maybe all those or maybe something else all together? I still have these question and will probably never really know the answer. But in all those years of being hurt and telling myself that this woman my mother meant nothing to me was not so true. I am learning that I do have a connection to her and I guess I did love her or have some strange attachment to her in some way. I guess that once I can come to terms with the fact that is okay for me to want her or love her (this part my take me the rest of my life) I may be able to finally complete the forgiveness process.

 As a child and young adult always questioned God on why he made me and why if he loved me some much would I have these people as my parents. Lewis and I went to church every Sunday with our grandparents and sometimes our mom. It blows me away at how normal I thought was back then. When I was about 10 or 12 I was at a church youth event and the youth Pastor at the time Tim Huff would had no real idea why I was so made, gave me this verse for a game we were playing and it has stuck with me for ever.

Jeremiah 29 11-14

11 For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope. 12 Then when you call upon me and come and pray to me, I will hear you. 13 When you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart, 14 I will let you find me, says the Lord, and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you, says the Lord,

Yes I still have a lot to work on and I am not as far as along as I had thought I was but I am more happy then I ever thought possible and after talking with Lewis and hearing him validate my memories has helped me and I am not sure in what way other than me knowing someone else was there too and saw it, heard it and I agrees with me. I guess it helps me feel validated in some way. I am so lucky to have a great husband who loves me and our kids. I am blessed with 2 kids I never thought I could have and a wonderful life full of so many beautiful people and things. I have so much more than I ever thought possible when I was younger. I am truly lucky and sometimes forget that. I did not end up on drugs or worse yet dead.

Friday, December 30, 2016

My Review/Interview for 2016

This interview was hard and I did my best to answer as honest as possible. 

Your 2016
1. What one event, big or small, are you going to tell your grandchildren about?
              I think that the election was one of the most important worldwide events of the year. I think I               will also want to tell them about all the stuff Kaylee and Michael got to do with their great-                 grandmother.

2. If you had to describe your 2016 in 3 words, what would they be?
              Surprising, Challenging and Educational!

3. What new things did you discover about yourself?
              I can handle life and function on very little sleep. I was also surprised at how much my body               could take physically without braking. After my hysterectomy, I felt like I/my body was                       running on fumes for months but I could keep going. I also discovered that I am very                           negative person.

3.What single achievement are you most proud of?
              There are 2 that I am equally proud of 1. We paid off all our debt except for my surgery! 2. I               never stopped fighting to get Michael all the help I thought he needed!

4. What was the best news you received?
              That grandma was going to make a full recovery after her hospital stay this last time.  I was                sure that she had a stroke or something terminal but it was just a reaction to medication. I was              relieved because I am still not ready to lose her yet!
 
5. What was your favorite place that you visited in 2016?
              The Snow (Tahoe) and then Disneyland with the Kaylee and Michael! Seeing Kaylee enjoy                 and explore every new little thing is so amazing for me. Plus she is so grateful for it. To her                  it is almost magical and I love watching that over and over again!

6. Which of your personal qualities turned out to be the most helpful this year?
              Organization! I don’t think we would have made it through this year if I had not been so                       organized with everything. Between Money, Appointments and School I had a lot to plan out               and work through.

7. Who was your number one go-to person that you could always rely on?
              I had 2 Grandma and Michelle. They both have helped me more than I ever had expected                     and I appreciate it more than I could ever let them know.
Grandma:
              If I am having a hard day with the kids I just pack them up and we head over and then I am not alone with them. I can put Michael down for a nap at her house and go shopping or do anything until he wakes up. If we are low on money or food I can go there make dinner with any food she has no questions asked. She listens to me complain about almost anything and wont tell me how to fix it.

Michelle:
              I have known Michelle longer than any of my other friends and she has helped me stay calm with all the things I am doing for Michael. She has stayed in my corner the whole inter time. She helps me with my kids even when it makes it harder on herself.  She is amazing.

8. Which new skills did you learn?
              Computer and cell phone technology. I am learning a lot about new apps and programs. I am               getting good at using all the Google stuff and excel too. I can send group emails and I have                 saved a lot of photos on google photo. I still need to learn a lot more so I am going to take a                 few computer classes next year.

9. What, or who, are you most thankful for?
              My kids and Ken! This year has been the hardest by far and he never gave up on us and                       stuck around to help me through it.

10. If someone wrote a book about your life in 2016, what kind of genre would it be? A comedy, love story, drama, film noir or something else?
              DRAMA so much emotional stuff happened this year. Most of the major events were                           stressful and intense. 

11. What was the most important lesson you learnt in 2016?
              To hold my tongue: To keep my thoughts to myself and to encourage people rather than to                   judge them.

12. Which mental block(s) did you overcome?
1.       Expecting people to change.
2.       Thinking of myself as a frailer (I am still working on this one).
3.       My parents

13. What 5 people did you most enjoy spending time with?
              Kenneth, Kaylee, Michael, Payton and Isaac! I am so lucky to have these kids and ken in my               life. I am learning so much from all of them. I love making new memories with them.

14. What was your biggest break-through moment career-wise?
              I am the mother to 2 great kids and it is my job to help them grow and develop into                            themselves. I am the one who gets to influence them and guide them. I get to kiss the boo-boos            and wipe tears away. I get to be THERE!

15. How did your relationship to your family evolve?
              A lot has change over the past year. I have learned to set better boundaries with everyone. I                have accepted the way the relationships have been defined in my family when it comes to my              children and because of this I have learned that we have so many more people in our family.               Two of which are Jean and Sally who attend our church. They have been amazing to us and                  the kids love them to pieces!

16. What book or movie affected your life in a profound way?

BOOKS:

and 

MOVIES:
Nothing really moved that much this year.  

17. What was your favorite compliment that you received this year?
               People telling me that I am a good mother and nothing like my mom. I am always                                comparing myself to my mother and I feel like I am turning out to be just like her. I helps to                 hear that I am different than her.
             
18. What little things did you most enjoy during your day-to-day life?
              I LOVE bedtime with the kids. I love putting them into their pj’s and putting them down. I                   start with Michael. His song is Kumbaya and Amazing Grace. We sing he eats his bottle and               I rock him for about 5 minutes. Then its Kaylee’s turn. Her songs are You are my sunshine                  and Hush little baby. We read a book pray together and I sing to her. I lay down with her until              she falls asleep maybe 5 minutes. I know that this time won’t last forever so I enjoy it for as                 long as they will let me do it.

19. What cool things did you create this year?
                I really did not have time to be crafty this year. 


20. What was your most common mental state this year (e.g. excited, curious, stressed)?
              Stressed out to my limits and afraid. I still am Afraid. I have a hard time sharing/letting go of               my fears or just turning my fears to God, instead I hold them inside. I try to ignore what I am               afraid of or try and deny them.

21. Was there anything you did for the very first time in your life this year?
 #1 traveling with 2 kids. I was so worried but it went much better than I expected. We went to            the snow and Disneyland. Getting an Autism diagnoses for my son and all that went along                   with that. 

22. What was your favorite moment spent with your friends?
              There are to many to pick from but the few that stand out are Kaylee's birthday, craft day and               tea parties with Jean and Sally.

23. What major goal did you lay the foundations for?
               To try and stay positive and to go back to school and finish!
               

24. Which worries turned out to be completely unnecessary?
               Kaylee's growth. She is growing but it is just super slow.

25. What experience would you love to do all over again?
                Disneyland with the kids!              

26. What was the best gift you received?
              1. After my surgery I had to take time off work as well did Ken and church took a collection                for money and gave it to us. That money helped us get by why I  recovered. 
               2. My MOPS friends brought us meals and supported me a lot.

27. How did your overall outlook on life evolve?
                Things got pretty bad for me emotionally after me surgery and all the health problems that I                am having I could not handle it so I went back to therapy and it has been the best thing I                  could have done for myself.  I never knew how much my childhood would affect my parenting              or even how I interact with my children. Abuse affects us all differently I knew that and I                     thought I had dealt with it but with the death of both parents and having kids has changed                      things a lot for me. So I still have a lot to work on.

28. What was the biggest problem you solved?
              I think it would be getting services from Kaiser for Michael. 

29. What was the funniest moment of your year, one that still makes it hard not to burst out laughing when you think about it?

30. What purchase turned out to be the best decision ever?
              Getting a kindle for Kaylee! She loves it and has learned so much from using it.

31. What one thing would you do differently and why?
             

32. What do you deserve a pat on the back for?
              All the progress Michael has made in the past year! He is saying words and pointing! He is                doing first and then. I have stuck with him all the way.

33. What activities made you lose track of time?
              Soda crush on my phone and cleaning the house.

34. What did you think about more than anything else?
   Michael stuff and my future.

35. What topics did you most enjoy learning about?
               Positive thinking and sensory play.
             
36. What new habits did you cultivate?
              Most of the HABITS we cultivated this year was making new family traditions for the kids.                 We have popcorn (Family nights) on Sundays with the whole extended family. We have now              added a movie night once a week where we watch a movie and have a picnic on the floor in                 the Living-room. Also, we started date night with Kaylee every 2 weeks one of us takes                        Kaylee out and does something special with her.

37. What advice would you give your early-2016 self if you could?
              Relax and enjoy life a little more.

38. Did any parts of your-self or your life do a complete 180 this year?
              Yes

39. What or who had the biggest positive impact on your life this year?
              Once again it is my kids. I have learned so much from this year.

Your New Year 2017:

What do you want the overarching theme for your 2017 to be?
              Improving myself and staying positive

What do you want to see, discover, explore?
              I want to go back to school.

Who do you want to spend more time with in 2017?
              Reading! Reading for myself. Reading with my children. Reading to keep up on current                       events and learn about new things.

What skills do you want to learn, improve or master?
              I want to learn a few new recipes to make either in the crock-pot or pressure cooker. I want                 to cook healthier meals at home.

Which personal quality do you want to develop or strengthen?
              My patients with the kids. 

What do you want your everyday life to be like?
              I want to be able to turn the stress into fun times.

Which habits do you want to change, cultivate or get rid of?
              1. Cooking healthier meals for the family. 
              2. Learning how to over coming self-harm. 
              3. Using positive words all the time

What do you want to achieve career-wise?
              I am going to go back to school.

How do you want to remember the year 2017 when you look back on it 10/20/50 years from now?
              The year I was committed to staying positive and started to change my thinking.

What is your number one goal for 2017?
              To move closer to grandmas. 

Monday, December 19, 2016

Mostly Complaining

Totally negative post. This month has not been my favorite. I know most of it is stress and depression but I just can not seem to snap out of it as I had hoped. I feel like I am complain and negative all the time. So much stuff has come up this month that has left me feeling alone and confused.
First off I have had some health issues come up that I was completely unprepared for. It all started off with a stomach ache right after Thanksgiving and got a lot bigger than I ever thought possible. I feel as though my body is giving up on me just when I need to be on the top of everything most of all for my kids. Ever since my hysterectomy I have been dealing with one issue after the other. I have learned over the past 6 months that I have a very hard time talking about my health or even admitting there may be an issue. My therapist thinks that my body is trying to tell me something! I wish I knew what it was saying already.

Second right after all these health issues started I received an e-mail from my church stating the following:
Hi Sophie and Ken, 
Every year the council has the duty to review our membership roles and update them according to who has 
maintained their membership status according to our governing documents. Our bylaws state: 
C8.05.01 For purposes of membership roll maintenance, any member who during the
current calendar year and the two previous calendar years has made no contribution of record, nor has been recorded as communing or attending a worship service, shall be considered inactive. 
In our preparation for this year's review, we noted that one or more of these requirements was not met by you this year. This may not mean that your membership status is in jeopardy just yet. We wanted to be sure that you're aware of this and that we can help you fulfill your membership commitments if you wish to retain your voting member status. 
I have grown up in this church my whole family has gone to this church for almost 50 years and they sent me and e-mail. I am in church almost every Sunday and there during the week as well and no on thought it talk to me about this before sending an e-mail. First off it was a clerical error that should have been check on first and if someone had talked to me they would have found that out. I take my membership very seriously and also would never be a member of a church that requires "contribution of record". I should mention that I have never seen the church counsel enforce this  and was under the impression that it was either or not both! I have only ever seen people lose/remove membership for inactivity. I tried talking to Pastor and the council president about it and felt that I was not heard either time. I totally understand the business/money side of the whole thing I just feel that it should have been handled in person. I know it might seem stupid but I am really considering looking for a new church home and what sucks the most is it is Christmas and this hole thing is just to emotional for me to handle.

Lastly being a mom is all that I ever wanted but I am starting to think I am not going to be as good at it as I have hoped I would be. I am stuck at home Monday through Friday for Michael's ABA therapy from 8:00am until 12:30pm then Kaylee goes to school from 12:30pm to 3:30pm and Michael takes a nap from 1:00pm to about 3:00pm. So I never get out of the house anymore I never get to see other adults except on weekends. Ken is working all the time so I am alone with the kids all day every. Don't get me wrong we have fun and the kids are the best thing that ever happened to me but I need to be around other people. I feel like I don't know how to have a conversation anymore. I have nothing to talk about I have one clue about current events happening day to day. I feel detached from the world. This is not got for my depression or anxiety. I knew being a mom meant self-sacrifice but this so much harder than what I had ever imagined. I have been fighting and pushing for all this help for Michael and now we have it and I feel trapped. I keep trying to focus on the long term. In one year life will be 100% different from right now and that this will not go on forever. Now if I could just find a way to keep Michael healthy for 12 months. LOL

I am really trying to get into the Christmas spirit. Kaylee is so excited about everything. She loves all the decorations and all the lights every where. I love hearing her sing all the Christmas songs and asking so many question about the meaning of Christmas. Next year I am hoping that Michael will understand what is going on as well. Grandma has been a life saver! I would truly be lost without her. I don't know what I would do if I could not call her or go there with my crazy kids weekly and sit on her couch and cry about Michael's behavior or after a week of Michael not sleeping at night stay there during day sleep/nap while she watches the kids. I feel bad that she is the main person I rely on most of the time. She is 92 and handles it all so much better than I do.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Michael update

Being a mom is the best thing ever! It is also the hardest thing I have ever done and now with Michael way out of my comfort zone and understanding. Before I had kids I always thought I knew what it would be like and thought I prepared myself for what was to come. I was so not ready for everything that Michael has thrown at us. I still feel very blessed every day to be at home with both of my kids and be the primary person raising them. We have had to make a lot of sacrifices to make that happen but both Ken and I think that it is important for our kids and even more important now that Michael will need a lot more help in his early years than most kids. So all in all it is worth it to be with the kids all the time. 

With all this stuff happening with Michael over the past 2 years I have felt very alone during most of it because almost everyone thought I was pushing to hard to get him help. Then with all his health problems it is overwhelming to me to even think about. I have had to make some very hard decisions for the past 2 years and there are many more to come. 
1. His pediatrician wants to do biopsies of his tummy and intestines to check on a few things but his new GI doctor is blaming all his GI issues on his A.S.D diagnosis (which I have never heard of until he told me)! So I started doing research and now I am not sure who to listen too! I really don't like his GI doctor and really trust his pediatrician but she has not worked with a lot of A.S.D kids. So that is one thing I have to decide on. 
2. His new GI doctor wants me to put him back on all dairy products because he thinks Michael has out grown his protein intolerance. So we tried it Friday and Saturday and the poor kid has had a tummy ache and gas and diarrhea like crazy. Today was the first day he has had no runny poop. So now he wants us to try lactate milk products! 
3. Then a week from Friday he has his O.T. evaluation from Kaiser. It takes about 2 hours and I know that they will denial him which is fine but the San Andreas Regional Center wont provide O.T. for him until they get the denial letter from Kaiser and then after that they will do their own evaluation as well. I hate having him to though all this it wheres him out so fast. 
4. Michael has a very limited diet and I have many people telling me what to do because at 2 years old there is a very good chance they will not continue to cover his formula. I should mention that one can cost 42.00 and he goes through a can every 3 or 4 days! so that is 2 cans a week and 8 cans a month which is more than we can afford. So I am freaking out about that and trying to find stuff he will eat that will make up for the calories and nutrition in his formula. I am taking a class at Parents Helping Parents (a nonprofit for families that help kids with special needs) for S.P.D and eating issues next week on Thursday and I am hoping I will learn a few things. 
5. ABA therapy has started and it is going to take him and the family a long time to adjust to this. Right now we are starting at 15 hours a week but they want to increase it to 25 hours a week in about 2 weeks. I don't think that he will be able to handle that much so I have a meeting scheduled in  Monday the 24th so we will see.

But there have been a few good things in the past few weeks he has been calling me mommy and it is the best thing ever. He knows who I am and that I have a name! It is so good to see him make the connection finally. He now knows 6 body parts: eyes, ears, noise, tummy, feet, and fingers. He can't say them but he knows where they are! We are working on animals now and he seems to really like the noises they make. He is fixated on horses though so I may have to get a few plastic/rubber ones for him to play with. He can moo, baa, neigh, bow wow, and  kinda quack. again I never thought this was going to happen but he is finally getting it.We are slowly starting to use P.E.C. (picture exchange communication) he still does not understand it but I am hoping it will come to him soon.