Tuesday, January 15, 2008

On Becoming Someone Else

As I have already mentioned, it has become obvious that who I am is not who I need to be. I don't think the right things or behave in the right ways. My reactions and instincts point me in the wrong direction and I am generally not who everyone wants me to be. But this process of change is proving to be more difficult than I had hoped. I can change my behaviors to match the me I should be. And with time, I can make those behaviors into habits so that I do them instead of my current actions. It is the thoughts I am struggling with and the emotions. I can teach myself to speak optimistically. I can learn to smile instead of frown. I can go to scrapbooking sessions and family gatherings and smile and participate in them. I can find out the right things to say and memorize them.

But how do I make myself *like* doing these things? How do I make myself feel hopeful when I am speaking optimistically? How do I make myself feel happy when I smile? How do I convince myself to believe the things I say? I can change how I act but how do I change who I *AM*?

Saturday, January 12, 2008

And Not So Good Days

If some days are good for no apparent reason, others aren't so good for the same lack of reason. Today was a day that was just fine on the surface. But the undercurrents that ran through it weren't so fine at all.

I slept in this morning, as is my custom on Saturday mornings. But this morning I was woken not by Hubby or by finishing sleeping, but by the boys screaming at each other. Hubby had gone to the In-laws' house to take down the Merry Christmas sign.

I had been invited to go scrapbooking today but didn't really want to go. It takes so much energy to be around those people. They can be catty and backstabbing behind smiles and anecdotes. I've heard them talk about people who aren't there. I have too much fodder for their gossip. And I just didn't have the energy today to feed myself to the wolves. So I bailed. Actually, I just didn't go and then talked to my friend later this evening and apologized. Turns out it wasn't a problem as she didn't go either.

I did, however, keep my plans with Hubby's sister to go see the movie "PS - I Love You" and I am intensely glad I did. Before I tell you about the movie, let me just insert this brief word from our sponsor, The Big Guy. It takes 20 - 25 minutes to get to the theater. I had 20 minutes from when I left the house and I was bone dry on gas. I had to stop or I wouldn't make it at all. I was panicking. Being late is embarrassing and rude. And, I thought I was being clever and didn't bring a coat. I got out of the car to pump the gas and I decided, quite contrary to my habit, to only put a few gallons in. So I'm pumping gas and shivering and it occurs to me that I should just RELAX. So I did. I settled into the cold and pushed it away ever so slightly. I finished up quickly and was back on the road. I was freaking out for being so late and then it washed over me to just relax. I was on God's time now. Worrying about being late was not going to make me get there quicker. So I relaxed and paid attention to traffic without worrying. Here's the commercial part: despite my stop and heavy traffic and not being able to find a parking space... I made it there on time. God's Time was with me today...

But the movie: OMG! It was sooo awesome! I swear that Hilary Swank looks like she must have an eating disorder in it though. She was so thin as to pass beyond the realm of jealousy and into the realm of concern. And who would ever have thought that Harry Connick Jr. would play a DORK?! But Gerard Butler, despite dying almost first thing, turned out a wonderful performance and FOR ONCE Jeffery Dean Morgan LIVED. The whole movie was one massive sigh of romantic contentment. Everyone I was with, excepting Hubby's sister but including his mother and my other SIL, was crying like babies but I found the whole thing just perfect. I found myself sighing over dialog and having to remind myself not to clap in theater over plot points. My heart got broken and mended and swelled and deflated and generally wrung through the wringer in the best possible way. I have to confess that the Hero's Journey would NOT stay out of my head, but that's to be expected right now, trying to plot two different novels at once. At any rate, this movie was worth every hint of trouble it was worth to go to it. AND... I managed to keep my foot out of my mouth the whole time and not humiliate myself in front of the in-laws and their friends.

Seriously, anyone who has ever been in love should see this movie. "PS - I Love You" with Hilary Swank, Gerard Butler, Harry Connick Jr., Jeffery Dean Morgan, Kathy Bates, the guy who played Spike in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel, and the dumb blonde from friends. This is the best romantic comedy I've ever seen. It is right up there with Pretty Woman and Ghost, blows past Sleepless in Seattle and The Lake House like they weren't made, and even made the MIL declare it "the best movie since Love Letters" which is saying something! Once more, altogether now: "PS -I LOVE YOU" This concludes my theater advertisement for the decade.

One would think, given how great that experience was, that I would label today a "good day" and I would have to agree to that logic. So why do I feel so crummy? Good movie, good football game, no major disasters... Ah, to heck with it. I'm going to bed!

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Good Days

Some days are good days for no attributable reason. Today was one of them. (For which I am deeply grateful!) I woke up late, which was a bad thing, and couldn't get Kid-2 out of bed. Kid-1 didn't want to get up but did under duress and Kid-3 and Kid-4 were already bouncing off the walls. The rest of the school routine morning went smoothly. Then I went back to bed, for the second day in a row, just to spite Hubby. (What a wicked thing to do! But it made me feel better - for no apparent reason. Not sure what that makes me but there it is.) When the MIL called at 1130 I was sound asleep and dreaming a VERY bizarre and now unremembered dream. (It had Danny Glover in it as an unintentional bad guy. What's THAT all about?!) She asked me if I was sleeping and, as I had taken a few very deep breaths to wake up before answering the phone, I told her, "No but I wish..." She found that amusing and went on to ramble about something I also can't remember. Whatever it was, it the first conversation with her in weeks that hasn't led to an immense guilt trip so for that I was very grateful as well. Since I wasn't really tired when I laid back down in the first place, I got up.

At this point I had no real emotional attachment to the day. It was a day and it had gone up and down like everything in my life. (Is that how everyone's life is? It's either all the way up or all the way down and they balance each other out but rarely does something feel "kinda good" or "a little bad" --- or am I just being melodramatic again?)

So I prop myself up in my hole. (This is the place on the couch beside the bookshelf where I like to hide out and handle anything that can be tackled without getting up. Yes, I'm lazy. That's why I'm fat. Get over it. *wink*) With everything properly spread out around me, I dig into my massive pile of backlogged writer's group work. And I did pretty darned good actually. I got caught up and no one yelled at me today! YAY for no yelling! I moved into another project on the computer (kids' chore charts - ICK) and gradually picked up children seemingly at random over the course of an hour and a half.

Well, once everyone was home, they found it necessary to assume their kid-roles. Kid-1 bossed everyone around while getting furious at Kid-4 for ratting him out on not doing his share. Kid-2 got sulky and sarcastic when she didn't get to do what she wanted. Kid-3 found cause to either escalate the fights or pretend to be invisible. And Kid-4 was all wrapped up in being the snitch, even when he started getting the same punishment (or worse) as whoever he ratted out. And the fights got louder and louder and eventually turned into name-calling then degenerated into a fist fight, several times.

By the time Hubby got home, I was snippy and cranky and wondering if the ground was too wet for digging shallow graves. Things got worse as he found fault with everything we had done and bit people's head's off for things we didn't get done. There's no point in calling him on this behavior, even gently, even away from the kids, even after he's no longer in that mood/mode. It just makes it worse PLUS he gets royally pissed at me for it. So I just dodged him and kept the kids out of his way. He was much better after he ate so I went out for my usual Tuesday night Starbucks.

Now, I have been given a list of things that I have to talk to the shrink about. Because, obviously, the shrink knows what I can and can't handle and I am completely incapable of judging such things. (Yes that was sarcasm dripping off my words like September honey...) But, being the dutiful wife/daughter-in-law/friend/daughter that I am, I made my list. I have a massive list of things on it now because I added the things that *I* want to talk about. (Imagine that, putting MY things on the list for MY therapy sessions! The nerve of me!!)

One thing that has become more and more obvious lately: I am not okay. Who I am is wrong and I need to change. Now, I've done this before so I know the drill. It took me 3 years last time but I was doing it on my own so I am hoping to speed up the process this time. I will become who they want me to be, which, paradoxically, is NOT who they want me to be.

Your head spinning yet? Mine is. So off to bed I go, feeling both confident and hopeless at the massive changes that need to take place and rather confused at how this day feels like a good day when very few "good" things happened.

Friday, January 4, 2008

On Anger and Ancient History

People get angry. They get angry over many things, me or something I have done often being one of those things. Most times the anger confuses me. I have to stop and think and put myself in the other person's place long enough to understand where they are coming from. I can then usually comprehend the situation enough to form an action plan. But I rarely feel anger towards someone else on my own behalf. And it would appear that this is not a good thing. I don't understand the concept of wanting to be angry. Being angry is uncomfortable. I would even go so far as to say it hurts. But I am trying to see the value of the results that getting angry can yield.

The Komets played well on Wednesday night. They were up 4-1 when Kevin Hanson took a cross-check from behind and bounced head-first off the wall by the bench. He went down and never got back up again. They took him straight from the ice to the hospital and we had very little information on him. He remained conscious and had movement in his arms and feeling throughout his body. The rest was left to the imagination. At that point, there were just over 12 minutes left in the last period and the Komets could have gotten angry at the other team, channeled that anger and wiped the ice with them. They didn't. They held their lead but skated like their minds were at the hospital with Hanson. Anger would have served them well that night.

I got grilled by the in-laws last night. We had dinner and then an hour and a half of interrogation as to my plan to keep from doing anything so stupid again. It was 2 parts lecture, 7 parts guilt trip and 1 part concern. Frankly, I wanted NO part of it at all. But I screwed up and there are consequences to be paid. Lack of trust, being treated like a child, lengthy repetitive lectures, and demands to "never do that to us again" are all to be expected. That doesn't mean I have to like it. By the time we got home, I felt deflated. Tired, hurt and feeling guilty as hell, I wanted to curl up and hide. Apparently, I should have been annoyed and/or indignant.

The shrink caught me totally off-guard this morning. I expected yet another lecture, possibly veiled or at least a bit gentler in its delivery, but another lecture nonetheless. I expected him to be angry with me. Instead, my slightly out-of-sorts shrink informed me that he was angry at the biggest of the demons behind my Wall. In fact, he said he couldn't think of any polite names for Him. He blames Him for the OD. And he is angry at Him. And I said "HUH?!" (Well, no I didn't, but I thought it very loudly. *wink*) The shrink is ill today, recovering from a very nasty cold and in a strange mood. But I still didn't expect that. He... is angry at... Him, not me. I don't fully comprehend this as I despise myself for that situation.

It is his opinion, based on my description of what happened and how I was feeling at the time and based on my past behaviors, that when I pulled the covers over my head Saturday afternoon, I dissociated completely and gave over control to whomever happened to be willing to take it at any given moment. And at some point on Sunday, whoever took that control decided that death was the more favorable option. Even though most of me disagreed, no one put up a fight. I shut down and the results were disastrous, almost fatal. What he says makes sense, probably the most sense of any explanations I've heard to date, including my own. (I don't know why no one will own up to having done it though and even my regulars seem to have no knowledge of it...)

At any rate, the shrink says if not for Him, I never would have learned to dissociate like I do and therefore would not have been in the position I was in and therefore not have had the OD. And he's angry. He said if I had been coherent and cognitive ("like you are now" is how he phrased it) then he would be mad at *me* but as things stand, he is mad at Him. I asked him if I should be angry too and he said it would probably help. Not that I would want to stay angry but getting angry might help me work through it.

Getting angry, it seems, can be helpful. As with all emotions, it is what is done with it that determines its benefit or harm. One thing that I am quite capable of doing (though sometimes I stubbornly refuse to do so) is finding a way to interpret a negative as a positive. It's not really a half-empty/half-full thing, it's more of a "that glass is half-empty? This is good because I don't like to drink water and that's all the less I have to drink!" So I am more likely to identify how something *is* and then work with what is there to make things go a better way than to try to change how they are into something different. This leads me to wonder how I can make what I *have* work instead of trying to change who I am. I'm not mad at Him for what happened. I blame myself for it.

On the other hand, if anyone even THOUGHT about messing with my kids, I would truly, genuinely and easily become angry. So... maybe I can use that. Rather than try to squish all my different points of view into one lonely voice, maybe I can make better use of the segregation. I haven't managed to get mad for ME, but maybe I can get mad for Ginny, get mad for Mary, get mad for the Others who exist because no one got mad for them when they needed it. Maybe I can find a way to get mad at the right person, for the first time. This isn't going to be easy. I am fully aware that they are me and I am them and we are the same. But it may be easier to get mad for them then to try to generate the anger for myself.

I read a news snippet tonight that has added fuel to my fiery thoughts. The death penalty... wow. People get really angry about this. And I get angry at the thought of anyone hurting a child like that. So why is it so different when it comes to looking at my own situation? The shrink explained it to me this morning. Young children don't have the ability to reason through things. And they don't develop their own sense of "right" and "wrong" until after age 8. But I was only 6 when shit hit the fan. And He took the way that a 6 year old thinks and corrupted it to His purpose, twisting the natural thought patterns into a total distortion of reality. This was not just manipulation, it was premeditated and carefully thought out manipulation.

The thing is - and really this is what trips me up and truly messes with my head - WHY?!?! Why would someone do something so deliberate and cruel without a reason? He used everything I had been taught about life and rules and "good" and "bad" to teach me that I was the embodiment of everything that could be bad in a child. And He was a very effective teacher; I learned the lesson with all my heart. BUT... if it were one person in my life who had done an awful thing in an awful way, I could chalk it up to one evil person. I don't understand Evil but I know it exists. Except, it wasn't one incident or even one person. Everything He said meshed with the things I was regularly told by everyone, even those who didn't know each other. And once He was long gone, other people gave me the same message in similar ways, people who didn't know each other and didn't know my past. One person I can chalk up to a moral anomaly... but it wasn't one person. The only thing I can think of that would explain that is if..... He was right.

And it all comes back to that. How can I explain it any other way? How can I get mad at *Him* for what *I* did?

The shrink doesn't understand because he doesn't have all the pieces to the puzzle and I've never been able to make myself give them to him. There are words I can't say or write or type or even think of as words. When other people say them, I can't hold their eyes and I look away. I still tell myself over and over that most of the things never happened. I think they could not have really happened. I created the memories in my mind to manufacture reasons for my behaviors around the time. Right? Right?

Ah, but that is all ancient history, water under the bridge, as they say... No need to go there.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Top Ten Favorite Movie Lines

My favorites, not necessary because of their context, though. Some of the movies I haven't even seen...

10. I was a better man with you as a woman than I ever was with a woman as a man. (Tootise)
9. I'm not Wonder Woman, you know. (Sky High)
8. Goonies never say die! (The Goonies)
7. Say your right words, the goblins said. (Labyrinth)
6. It's not my fault! They told me they fixed it! (The Empire Strikes Back)
5. As you wish... (The Princess Bride)
4. Truth?! You can't handle the truth! (A Few Good Men)
3. If you can't say nufin nice don't say nufin at all. (Bambi)
2. This is true love. Do you think this happens every day? (The Princess Bride)
1. You have no power over me. (Labyrinth)

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Top Ten Favorite Songs

Here are my at-this-exact-minute Top Ten Favorite Songs with LINKS to my favorite YouTube clips of them. I'd put in the clips but I've already put in most of them and they take up lots of space and load time and annoy people so follow the URL instead, okay?

TOP TEN FAVORITE SONGS:

10. Dear Mister Jesus by Sharon Batts
9. Falls Apart by Hurt
8. Scared by Three Days Grace
7. Cry Little Sister (Theme from Lost Boys) by Gerald McMann
6. Let You Down by Three Days Grace
5. Citizen Soldier by 3 Doors Down
4. Keep Breathing by Ingrid Michaelson
3. Animal I Have Become by Three Days Grace
2. Breathe In Breathe Out by Mat Kearney
1. You Are Loved (Don't Give Up) by Josh Groban

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

New Year's Resolutions

Okay, None of us could agree on which FIVE New Year's Resolutions to make so I wrote most of them down. I tried to limit myself to five per category but I went over a couple times anyway. So here they are, all 30 (yes, thirty) New Year's Resolutions for Calendar Year 2008. The categories are in no particular order and the line items in no particular order within their respective categories. For once, there's no need to read more into what I've written than what I've actually written! LOL

Writing Goals:
- complete first draft of a novel
- complete 4 short stories
- submit something for publication 6 times or ntil it gets published, whichever comes first
- keep prompts, discussions, submissions and critiques current and active from my end
- maintain healthy writing relationships with my peers
- write 15 minutes or more every single day
- HAVE FUN!!

Mental Health Goals:
- NO HOSPITAL. period. the end.
- learn to talk to shrink
- set an EARNEST long-term goal:
---> make a plan
---> tell someome about the plan
---> take at least one step on the plan
- practice behaviors to avoid getting overwhelmed beyond breaking point
- learn to list and believe 6 good things about myself

Personal Goals:
- drop weight to around 145 lbs
- exercise 3 days per week
- read 3 classic novels
- read 3 modern novels
- reduce caffeine intake to <1 per day

Family Goals:
- family time every week
- cleaning day every week
- reading time every weekday
- less yelling (from/at everyone)
- more respect (from/at everyone)

Home Goals:
- run laundry every day
- kids and I do chores every week day
- pay bills on schedule
- keep dining room table clean
- clean/organize/USE scrapbook desk