Misadventures of a Girl
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Pulled
When I moved 'home' to Virginia I knew I was making a decision to deviate from the very quiet path I had been on. It was a very conscious decision that I made, one that involved a list of pros and cons. I felt that it wouldn't be a forever deviation. Mostly it was for financial reasons and it was just purely that I needed to be a grown up and embarking upon what could have been a very tentative career path in Massage Therapy was not the most logical step at that time. I didn't know and was very unprepared for how much this career choice would affect me. I have been stretched, pulled, pushed and bent to capacities I did not know I had within me. I've learned much that I didn't know I was even capable of knowing. It's a pretty big difference between doing yoga and massage and being the beck and call sales girl for various lawyers. I felt more spiritually apt and more right in myself doing what I was doing. I felt more 'ME' and way more in balance. I had gone in that direction because it brought peace and was fairly stress free. Now I try to meditate in the morning and I can't stop thinking about what I might get yelled at for during the coming work day.
This has not been a 'job' at all, it is most definitely a career path. Is it one I want to stay on though? With almost any other job I've had in the past, they have been exactly that: a job. Cutoff time is at 5, folks. Work stays at work and I go live my life. This has been entirely different and it never ends at 5 no matter how hard I try. And believe me, I've tried. In the beginning it was tough because of, shall we say, communication differences between myself and others in my office. I'm very polite and try to practice loving kindness in whatever I may do; I don't believe in emailing people and telling them they're stupid. And then there were things such as being constantly emailed during my best friend's wedding weekend and my uncle's funeral and berated if I did not answer in a timely fashion. Now, I'm not a crier but I spent about the first 10 months of this job crying. There are no such things as mistakes here which is really tough when you have no idea what you're doing. It was obvious from the beginning that I was perhaps ill suited to this job. So leaving here has been in the back of my mind since I began. All the previous mentions of panic inducing misery are not all that this has been about though. Not that any of the aforementioned should be seen as pure complaint; they've merely been stepping stones. I am grateful to be employed when so many are not. I consider myself fortunate to have come into this. I believe everything and everyone enters your life for a reason and this is certainly one of those things. As I've said before, I've learned a lot. While my boss may be tough and expect 150% even when you can't give it, I deeply admire her. I admire everything that she gives up for this company and the fight that she has put up to get to where she is. She makes me want to know more and always improve, never settle for mediocrity from myself or anyone around me. But can you imagine what all those lessons would be like combined with doing something I love?
When I first found out I was pregnant, my first thought was that I was never going to get to finish my degree in Interior Design. My first thought other than 'Shit. Shit. Shit. I was about to leave this asshat.' Mrs. P and I talk often of what a catalyst Douche Nozzle has been in my life (and hers). I feel like I've had a year of catalysts and if I try to jump more hurtle, I'm going to get hung on it and face plant on the pavement, people. Between this job and that relationship and the loss that came during it, I'm pretty baked. It's been an incredible year though, and I feel like for the first time in my life I'm actually internalizing and processing all of life's little lesson. I feel like I finally know what I want and it's time to stop wasting time. I made it out to the other side of all of these obstacles and promised myself that I was not going to have anymore 'what-if's' or potential regrets. There would be no more moments of, 'holy crap, I'm never going to get to...' Interior Design has been my first love - other than cheese - since I was little. I would rearrange furniture in the house when I was 4. I always hear that you should follow your passion and for the longest time I swore that I could not figure out what I was passionate about. All the while I would be talking someone's ear off about design and architecture. I felt I always had to do something that was of benefit to the world; to make it a better place. My first major in college was Forensic Psychology. I have a strange fascination with deranged people and the why of what they do. After I was raped, staying in that major seemed a like a fate that would be filled with daily trauma and reminders. I'm still not always certain how design will make the world a better place, but I know that no one has ever complained about things being beautiful.
All of that to say I'm going back to school and I have no idea how I'm going to do that and keep this job.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Rainy Day Notes
A) I would love days like these so much more if I could just stay in bed and read. Granted, that's true for almost any day for me.
B) I finally realized I should give up fixing my hair on rainy days. No matter how much straightening occurs, it's just going to get wet and curl right back up. How have I lived for 33 years and not realized that before now? Also, do you know how much time being lazy saves me in the morning? A lot. This realization will bring much dismay to my family of Southern beauty queens.
C) I may love rainy days, but my dogs don't. Koda does her business quick and dirty and runs for cover. Sarah is ... different. She does not seem to understand the concept of rain and tries to run from it. And is very perplexed when she does not succeed. I might be cruel, but it makes me howl with laughter. She also runs from the umbrella that I try to hold over her when I take her out, so I'm not that mean. My dog is just silly.
D) About that being in bed with a book concept - is today over with yet?
Sunday, October 31, 2010
No Weddings and A Funeral
Basically you're saying marriage is just a way of getting out of an embarrassing pause in conversation? - Four Weddings and a Funeral
I was supposed to get married today.
That's what has been on my mind this entire morning. I was getting my morning coffee and kept thinking to myself, 'What would I be doing right now if I was still getting married?' In all honesty, I'd probably be having a panic attack. I can absolutely see my father trying to talk sense into to me through a bathroom door and explaining how he spent a LOT of money on beer, could I come out please and thank you? But from the moment I called off the wedding and the relationship, I've done nothing but breathe a sigh of relief. And contemplate that I may have serious commitment issues, but that's another blog all together. I've also spent a lot of that time wondering what on Earth was I thinking and how can I avoid repeating that mistake. Also? What actually constitutes love and a healthy romantic relationship? There are so many levels of this tale and it's impact on my life, that I think it fries my brain to really ponder it for any length of time.
We had a whirlwind romance. In fact, whirlwind may be downplaying it. I am actually really embarrassed by that fact. I threw ration out the window when I met him and I cannot figure out why. I didn't agree to marry the love of my life - a man I spent over 4 years with and who knew me like the back of his hand- but I accepted a proposal that came after (gulp,cringe) a month of dating? That is nothing but insanity. His name is Chris, but I don't actually call him that. It seems a disservice to LOL, whose name is also Chris. My friends and I now refer to him as Evil Chris or Douche Nozzle. This wasn't someone I was wildly physically attracted to – he was ok looking and shorter than me. My height rule may be a shallow one, but I'm never breaking it again. Was he charming? Oh but yes. Perhaps too charming and that should have sent off warning bells. But is charm and charisma enough to have momentarily turned my brain to mush? Possibly. He purported to be a Buddhist and was someone who seemed to have genuinely overcome much adversity in life. There is nothing that I admire more than a person who kicks back when the chips are down. He was incredibly kind and gentle and reminded me very much of my brother. Considering that my brother is my rock of Gibraltar, a guy like him seemed a good idea. He also took being romantic to a whole new low. I'm fairly certain the environment suffered serious damage from the amount of flowers I received and my friends repeatedly begged that he stop being so mushy on my Facebook page. I'm not actually a girl who swoons over sweet sentiment and romantic gestures. I used to not allow 'I love you' to even be said. I'm not certain why I'm wired that way, but I really need to see a person back their talk up. Talk is cheap and easy. Action isn't so much. And perhaps that is where the first inclination to pull back the curtain and find out who the wizard really was came from. Of course, by the time my brain turned back on and I thought to do such a thing, I was already engaged.
I can't say specifically when a warning bell first sounded in my head. If I'm as honest with the rest of the world as I have been with my mother, I'll tell you that it was in the first week of dating. I thought that he was just too much. Too into me and it scared me. Or something scared me. But then I thought that I must obviously have a fear of nice guys and that was what all the chattering in my head was. So, I didn't call anything off and I turned off my inner cynic and just went with it. My inner cynic is obviously there for a reason and I don't think I will ever doubt that voice again. Within a month I was engaged and within two we moved in together. I knew I had lost my mind the first week we were living together. However, I don't think I would have learned any of things about him that I did had we not moved in together. That's the thing about pathologically lying con artists. You have to get really, really close so that you can find a string to pull and watch everything unravel. One the bits that galls me the most however, is that he knew my father was a grifter and a con artist. Not only did he continue to do the same thing as my father, it really pisses me off that I didn't catch on sooner. Once we moved in together though, he couldn't manage to keep up with his lies. I was straightening out paperwork in our office when I came across items that directly conflicted what he had told me of his military career and college education. Things unraveled quickly from there. I would begin to challenge his stories and ask too many questions. Questions he never answered well. Money… oh, there were issues. I've been sucked dry of the savings I had. I couldn't bear to confront him. I smiled politely and proceeded with wedding planning. I felt so foolish about the relationship and the wedding that I just kept putting up a brave front. I didn't tell anyone what I was finding out about him. My mother noticed that I seemed miserable and that I didn't have any of my previous enthusiasm about the wedding planning. I'm a broad who loves to plan and I intend to leave this world a really pretty and well matched place when I leave it. I was suddenly planning my wedding as though I had resigned myself to a fate in front of a firing squad. Then what I thought was the worst thing that could happen to me, did. I found out I was pregnant. For various reasons, we (my family and those very close to me) have never even been certain that I would be able to conceive or have kids. I was terrified. Here was the one thing I had secretly always wanted and it was happening in the middle of an emotional shit storm. That was not the happy day I had always envisioned. You know the scene in 'Knocked Up' where Katherine Heigl's character pees on about 2,000 pregnancy tests? That was me. I just kept crying and peeing on sticks. I was completely unable to process what would have been completely happy news in any other circumstance. When I told my mother, I broke down crying. She was so incredibly happy and for a moment thought I was crying out of happiness. Oh but no. I still could not tell her my misgivings about my relationship, impending nuptials and the fledgling life inside of me. It did not take long though. After a lot of thought, I came to the conclusion that I simply could not continue to put up with a facet of my life being built totally upon lies. And that I would not -could not- bring a child into this world and raise it anywhere near what I had had to grow up with. It wasn't fair to anyone, but that child deserved it less than anything. I began to let my mother and close friends in on what I had been discovering about Chris, but I still had no idea of what to do. I had tossed aside all wedding plans under the guise that I did not want to have wedding while simultaneously looking as though I could play the role of Moby Dick to perfection. I put him off about having a simple civil ceremony. I spent far less time at home and essentially refused to even let him touch me. My mother has this innate and strange sixth sense about me. It's not even a sense. It's like she is IN my head. IN IT. She doesn't just finish my sentences; she gauges from one look everything that is going on in my brain and then can give you a synopsis. Good mothering or an eerie amount of co-dependency? We've never been able to decide. So at this point in the shitstorm I called a relationship, my mother knows that everything is wrong and says the magical sentence that ended everything –
"Just because you're pregnant, doesn't mean you have to marry him."
I cried from relief and 5 minutes after she said those words, I sent Douche Nozzle a text message telling him to move out of our apartment.
Barely 2 weeks later, I had a miscarriage. I have few words that I can muster for that. Terrible. Soul crushing. Those are the words that come to mind. If I think about it for more than 2 minutes at a time, I do the heaving sobbing girl thing and I'm not good at that. I know that things happen for a reason and that it was not meant to be. On the surface I've been very logical and perhaps too detached when it ever mentioned. I couldn't fathom having any semblance of a connection to that asshat, but I've always wanted to be a Mom. Obviously, after this I let this natural disaster of a man whip through my life, I feel very little inclination to ever have a romantic relationship again. When I say very little, I mean none. Partially it's fear, but a lot of me wonders if all of this happened because some sick co-dependent need kicked into gear or something. With all of that I have come to the conclusion that motherhood may not be in my cards.
After all of this, I just try to evaluate the layers that make up this tale of woe. I do generally feel a little battered. Like someone put my heart in a blender on high and forgot to be nice enough to add some tequila to it. One of my closest, dearest and best friends still works with Douche Nozzle. I hear regularly how is pining for me, seems despondent enough and ruing the loss of our 'love'. It makes me angry to a degree that I try to having nothing to do with. Here is the thing about love – it involves a very healthy amount of respect. When a person engages in any version of deception against you, that's not love. The things we do that serve as symbolism of love- i.e. love notes, flowers, gifts -are not love. They're trinkets. They're the physical manifestations of affection that you hope if you give enough of, this person won't trash your heart. They may induce the warm fuzzies, but they're not love. I consider that I have had two relationships that were actual really real hard core down in my bones love. They both were based on abiding friendships with healthy amounts of trust and respect. Once any level of trust and respect were broken, it was downhill from there. Each one simultaneously broke me and made me stronger than I could have imagined. I don't consider what I had with Douche Nozzle to be love, more like temporary insanity. An insanity I'm going to be working through for a bit, but that I try to see more as a catalyst than anything. As for ever again even contemplating marriage… you know the scene at the end of Four Weddings and a Funeral where Charles asks Carrie if she thinks that she might be amenable to not marrying him and if it is something she might consider doing for the rest of their lives? I think I might be that type of girl. What's in a piece of paper anyway? Considering the American divorce rate, apparently not much of anything. But I digress – again – and that's very obviously food for a later thought.
Friday, April 16, 2010
On the Town
Thank GOD I'm not 23 anymore.
While waiting to order drinks, we watched two -for lack of a better word - ladies bitch about the men they had just dumped and simultaneously hit on the cute bartender. I listened to them lament their woes and ask for more vodka. And I took a moment to look around. Just really look. And then I giggled silently to myself. I don't want to be sexist, especially against my own sex, but it was just ridiculous. These women preening and strutting and being bitchy. Scantily clad and looking like an army of overzealous cosmetics counter girl had feverishly attacked them. And I know that when people put on such a show it stems from insecurity and not really liking what you have to offer. Not having any real confidence in the goods being offered for sale. I know that's what it was because once upon a time I was 23 and I did the exact same thing. Mrs. P and I exchanged one of our looks, the one that says, 'No, you're not crazy. I see it too and I'm right there with you.' We settled in with our drinks and another round of laughter, neither of us paying much heed to anyone else. Each of us knowing that we both had something no one else there seemed to possess. Confidence in ourselves; a feeling of self worth that nothing but time can give you. Neither of us may be in our 20's any longer, but I don't actually think either of would really go back if we could. I'm not as skinny as I used to be and I have these persistent little lines around my eyes because when I smile I SMILE. I also know that whenever it feels like the world is going to end, it's actually not and I just need to sit and wait out the storm. I would not trade in that knowledge to be 23 and skinny again.
We eventually get up to leave. When I ask the cute bartender for our bill I tell him that we have to leave because I can't possibly dance slutty enough to be here and I need to go home now. And that's exactly what I did. I went home, took off my make up, put on pj's and flossed my teeth. That never would have happened when I was 23.
Thank God I'm not 23. If nothing else, I have really great teeth for all the flossing I do now...
Friday, September 11, 2009
Love...Not Actually
I once told you to never tell me that you loved me; that I didn’t believe in saying it. It was simple enough to say, but actions always spoke louder than words. So you only told me twice. Once, while I was in the hospital and you prefaced it with an apology. “I’m sorry. I love you.” Another time, almost 2 years later. Curled into one another on a lazy Saturday morning, my head on your chest and you thought I was still asleep, you whispered it. I whispered it back. Now I wish I had shouted it from mountain tops and that you were here to whisper it to me every day.
I was your first. I wish I had been your last. I wish I had understood that not every man feels a primal urge to bed everything within 50 miles. Just the douchebags. Had I known that you wouldn’t have regretted me being the one and only, I wouldn’t have pressed so hard on you for me to not be. I wish I hadn’t laughed when you told me about finally sleeping with someone else. Mainly I laughed because you slept with my doppelganger. It was kind of a sign that you still loved me. I wish I had cried because apparently that was your sign that I cared. It was years later I would realize that I honestly didn’t care, as long as you came home to me. My ego laid down and died wherever you were concerned. You used to let me kiss you just to see how long I could. I once kissed you for two and half hours straight, and had chapped lips for a week after. The reality is that I could have kissed you until my dying breath and not missed a beat.
I moved 900 miles from you to try and forget you. But they had Fall in New England, too. Turns out they’re known for it and it made me miss you more. You used to call and tell me that no matter how far I ran I could never get away from myself. You weren’t wrong and I moved back a year later and promptly set up house with someone who was so reminiscent of you that my nephew kept calling him by your name. But he wasn’t you, so it didn’t last.
You congratulated me on the house I bought to renovate and restore, knowing it was exactly what I always wanted. But you would never mention the man I bought it with, to spend the rest of my life with. That’s ok, I try to not mention him too much either. I told you we were thinking of having our wedding in the backyard. You only said, ‘that’s very you.’ We obviously never did have that backyard wedding, mainly because he was never you. I don’t think anyone ever can be. I found out later you had bought an empty lot the next street over and right across from my house. Why?
I date ridiculously silly men now. There is never a chance that they will do something that reminds me of you. It also helps if they are totally inept in the kitchen because you really loved to be there. There is also never a chance that they will wake me in the middle of the night to feverishly discuss architecture into the wee hours. I gave that up after you, you should know that. A slide rule makes me want to sob, but I tell everyone it was because I didn’t want to finish my college career making models out of sticks.
For awhile I questioned if ‘The One’ would ever come along. Then I made excuses that there is no such thing. There are several in the world who could be right for you and other comforting nonsensical notions. Now I’ve decided that I should just go with someone to spend the rest of my days with because I obviously already had ‘The One’. I don’t know if I was that to you as well, but I think maybe I was. Every woman you’ve dated after me is eerily like me. Just perhaps, not as crazy. And really? Where is the fun in that.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Dear Purina..
...thanks for the guilt trip.
This lovely and wonderful picture was on one of the bags of cat food I brought home tonight. Notice I said one - as in I bought multiple bags. Because I did. Why? Because I have 4 cats. And 2 dogs. I am already 'hero' to 6 furry kids. But if Purina has their guilty way, there will be more. Jewish mothers everywhere see this ad and think to themselves, "Now that is how you do it! Nice!" ( I have a Jewish mother, I can make that joke...)
Eh. Go ahead with your guilt inducing advertisements. I'm already one bad relationship away from having 30 cats anyway...
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
UTI: A Tale of TMI
I haven't had one of these puppies in ages, but back in the first years of my undergrad experience, like 12 years ago, I was Queen of the UTI. Seriously. It was every other week. Completely miserable. And there are stories. Everyone loves the one where I dragged a large black thug twice my size out of the mens' bathroom in the ER because I needed to go that badly. Or thought I did. And I did not know that the wonderful pills that take away the burning sensation but make your pee vibrantly orange were OTC. Never knew. Not until about 7 years ago when I was at the doctor's office and found myself crying & begging him to write me a prescription for - and I quote - 'the pills that my pee fluorescent. PLEEEEEAAAAAASEEEEE.'He snickered as he wrote it, all the while telling me they were available OTC. I hated him/wanted to have his babies right then. But way back when, for the life of me - I could never figure out what was wrong. I'm known for my OCD personal hygiene. Being a grown ass woman, I also knew the correct direction to wipe in. But I had these things incessantly. And my college boyfriend, otherwise known as possibly my favoritest boyfriend ever who I did not appreciate nearly enough at the time, was made to suffer these with me. And normally I would eschew his boundaries on privacy and totally link you to his Facebook page so that you could see what a freakishly handsome and brilliant man he is, but today I think I'll play nice in honor of all the back rubbing that sweet boy once did for me. So - I say made, but really it was more like I left him with no other option. He could take me to the doctor's office and the pharmacy and rub my back, etc. or he could let me lay on the bathroom floor crying and making sounds like a dying walrus. Correction - a dying walrus in heat. And we lived that crazy cycle for ages thinking ... I don't know what. At one point I was convinced it was completely psychosomatic behavior on the part of my vagina. Like my vagina was an entirely separate entity and she was somehow out to make my life miserable and sexless. That is until one day my doctor was really backed up and I had to see his Nurse Practitioner. I don't remember her name, but there is a shrine in her honor. Upon hearing that I suffered UTI's on a seemingly constant and continuous basis she asked me if they happened whenever my boyfriend was in town. And I was like, 'Lady, my boyfriend's always in town. He goes to college down the street.' She then tells me about the early days of her career when she volunteered at the student's medical center of whatever college she worked at and how after the weekends when everyone's boyfriends had been to visit all of the girls would be pretty much lined up around the corner with UTI's. And I ask her, 'This means what to me? Can you please just give me the pills that cause my pee to fluoresce?' What it meant to me was, did I ever get out of bed after sex to pee? I answered something to the effect of,'Eventually, but I'm kind of a guy. I generally roll over and go to sleep.' That it turned out was my problem. I was in awe. And bewilderment. And kind of pissed. I exited to the waiting room and gave my poor boyfriend a scowl that implied this was all the fault of him and his stupid penis. And I tell him what the apparent cause was. Sex became the most decidedly unromantic act after that. Well, after sex was. It was pretty much, "Done. Go pee! Pee now!!!" Screw cuddling, I had a man who was a Fixer and he was never hearing dying walrus in heat sounds again. Sometimes, I still want to send him a card that says, "Thanks for the years of always making me pee RIGHT AFTER sex. I haven't had anyone as thoughtful since."