Wednesday, December 23, 2009

mini update

I have a whole new blog post written up to catch up on what has been going on in my life. I wrote it in word and then tried to cut and paste to here. For some reason my computer at work won't let me do that. So.....a nice lengthy post is coming....hopefully sometime in the next couple of days. I have this problem where I don't tend to log onto my computer at home much. This has greatly hindered my ability to blog. Things are good, I am happy, the family is well.

Watch for more news soon.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Mondays

The meaning of Mondays is changing for me. For the last year and some months Monday has been a day off, a day where I can make appointments, go shopping, and relax a bit. Starting next week that is no longer the case and I will be back to working the "traditional" Monday to Friday job. Not that I am unhappy about this, but it will be strange. For that time when I would hear someone say something about Mondays and how much they suck I just couldn't really relate. My Monday's didn't suck, my Monday's were usually pretty good. But now when Sunday night rolls around instead of thinking about what I will do with my day off the next day I will be thinking about getting ready for work, about what I will wear, what I will take for lunch. Wondering what the day will be like. I get a wonderful exchange for giving up my Monday's though, I get a real Friday night and I get Saturdays with my family. That is amazing.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Peace

My dreams last night were very random and scattered. I remember bits and pieces. One bit that sticks out in my memory:

I was at my Grammie's church in Helena with my Mom and my Grammie. It was the part of the service where the priest says "peace be with you" and the parishioners all say, "and also with you" and then tell each other "peace be with you" and either shake hands or hug the people around you that you share the peace with. I have no clue what that part is called not being catholic, but it was always a nice part where I felt that the people really were sharing love and peace with each other. In the dream my Grammie gave me a big hug and said, "Peace be with you Molly-O" and then I turned to share with others. When I turned back Grammie was gone and a lady said to me, "I don't know you. Are you new?" I told her we were visiting, that I was Dee King's grandaughter. She said something along the lines of how lucky I was and how much everyone misses her.

Waking up I see this as a nice message from Grammie. She is at peace and would like us to be as well. I am lucky to have had her in my life and I cherish every minute of time I had with her.

Monday, May 25, 2009

wish it were 2pm

It's Memorial Day and everyone on the continent has the day off. Except for me. My work feels that even though full time staff is of no use to help with registers etc. that on "busy" holidays we must be here. Add to that I worked all night Thursday night and have no had a day off since last Monday. I should be able to take some time for having to work this weekend but because of school groups I really can't. I need to be here to give tours.

I am supposed the be able to leave today at 2pm. I am so ready for it to be that time. Please Universe, make the day go quickly.....

Sunday, May 24, 2009

comfort clothes

I want to know why flannel pants and a ratty old t-shirt can't be sexy. Shouldn't a person be more attractive when they are comfortable and at ease? The silky little nothings can be fun for a romp but I am not relaxed when I wear them, or at least not as relaxed as I am in "comfort" clothes.

The same for your everyday clothes too. Sexy is the skirt with heels. Heels that kill your feet, and a skirt that requires care in every movement you make so you don't flash someone unintentionally (intentional flashing is an entirely different matter). I would much rather wear flat sandals and a loose flowy skirt or pants with a loose top and no bra. But that is not considered as "sexy" as the other.

I would like to propose a change in the social construct of reality and make it so that comfort dictates sexy. Anyone with me?

Friday, May 22, 2009

Job Opening

All in all I have been doing fairly well with the loss of my father. That may be an exaggeration. But anyway, what I mean is I haven’t had too many moments where I have thought of or needed him and then had to remind myself that he is gone. It has happened a couple of times, but not much. Last week however I was driving home from work and my car tried to overheat on me. I started to cycle through the Molly Memory Bank on what to do when the car has a problem. This is what I found:

Step 1: Stay Calm – Okay, did that.
Step 2: Call Dad – oh wait, can’t do that – oops, there goes step one.

There was no step 3. What was I supposed to do now? My brain started to scroll through the rolodex of people. My brother crossed my mind, he is a lot like my Dad, he would know what to do. But he would also give me crap about it. Then again so would my Dad. My boss, he would probably know what to do, he is a nice guy, he would understand that I needed help and had no-one else to call. (oh, in case you are wondering I didn’t call my husband simply because he was on a movie shoot and I didn’t want to disturb him, or make him worry). In the end I didn’t call anyone. I went to Sears Automotive, they were no help at all. They directed me to the place across the street. In the end I got some assistance and some advice and the next morning the car didn’t overheat on my way to work. My underlying problem in all of this was: What am I supposed to do when the person I need is my Dad and he is not there?

In the last several years it has not been often that I would call my Dad for advice or help. But when I needed him, he was more or less there. Even if he didn’t really know the answer I could still throw those questions at him that Dad’s are supposed to know. He would harass me gently for not knowing what to do and then give some advice that although was often not the perfectly correct answer it would help me get to the place to find the right one. Now I have blank spot on my list of people to call for certain kinds of problems. Should I post an ad on craigslist for someone new to fill that position? Should I randomly pick a friend or other family member? There are plenty of people in my life that are happy to help me when I need it, I am certainly not at a loss for good friends and awesome family.

I think the basic issue is: I don’t need someone to help me solve problems, I need my Dad.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

I am alive

I am sure by now anyone who has cared to read my blog in the past has given up. But, if you are still with me, I thank you. My life has been crazy the last several months and I am starting to feel with it again. At least with it enough to consider vomiting my thoughts and feelings out into the interwebs for all to see. So, with that said I am going to bed and will try to start keeping this thing updated. The need for sleep overrides the need to blog.....sorry.

Love you all!!

Friday, February 27, 2009

bleh

My house is a mess. I am sitting here looking at the pile of stuff on the table and thinking how it would be good for me to clean it off. It might be a good idea now that February is coming to a close to put the Christmas decorations away. I know I would be more relaxed in my home if it were tidier. I know I would have more energy to work on fun house projects if I didn't have a list of not fun ones staring me in the face. But alas (love that word), I just don't wanna. I think I will go take a shower instead.

Monday, February 23, 2009

My Dad

My earliest memories of my Dad are from pre-school. I was either three or four and he would visit the school in his police car teaching all of us about how candy and medicine can look a lot like each other and we should never ever eat anything without knowing for sure its okay. I was always so proud of him in his uniform. With his busy police schedule he was often gone at night til after I was in bed and I loved getting to see him at school. One time he wasn't able to make it because of police stuff, he was able to come for the afternoon group though. I was babysat in the afternoons in the house just up the drive from the church where the pre-school was. When he drove in Jerem Feltman (boy who I was babysat with) and I peeked around the corner of the house. Of course my dad saw me as as all the afternoon pre-school kids were around the police car he got on the radio loudspeaker. "Molly M------, get down here!" I was thrilled of course and ran down to see him. Most of my early memories are like this, quick snips. He was busy, I was young. I also remember when I broke my arm while my mom was in Hawaii and he took me to get the cast put on. He and my brother and sister teased me that I had this funny new purse and why would I keep my arm in it. I thought my dad was a hero and the smartest guy in the planet. He was fun too. He drove for a field trip to the airport when I was in first grade and I remember him singing with us in the car. When I was in third grade he started working on the North Slope, being away for two weeks and then home for two weeks. Even though I missed him he was always there for concerts, plays, dance recitals and important holidays. I made him a card one year that said, "I love you little, I love you big, I love you like a big fat pig" My sister and I still joke about that card. I loved my dad, and I know he loved me. As I got older it was harder. He wasn't there all the time. We had two sets of rules at home, one set when dad was home, one set when he was at work. It was also like I had two dad's. My sober "good" dad when he was at work and all conversations happened on the phone. And the alcoholic frustrating dad who spent all his time at the Moose Lodge.

That’s something I could never understand. How could he not drink on the slope for 2 weeks at a time, sometimes longer. Yet when he was home he couldn’t stop drinking.

I always knew. It was right there in front of me, but I never acknowledged it. One time in high school my dad was picking me up after I had stayed late to work in the photography lab. I was excited about the work I had done and wanted to show him. The moment he got out of the car I could see how much he had been drinking and I knew my classmates would see it too. I was embarrassed, and it forced me to admit that my dad was indeed an alcoholic.

Since graduating from high school and moving out of state I have been largely out of touch with him. He came for my wedding, walked me down the aisle. But we didn’t talk much. Calling him on the phone was difficult, if the timing wasn’t right he would be too intoxicated for the conversation to make any sense.

I called him to tell him he was going to have another grandchild and he cried. He was so happy. He loved his grandson long before he was even born. And once Miles was born my dad would call, and sometimes was sober when he did, and ask about him and called him Inches, “because he wasn’t big enough to be Miles yet”.

When Miles was 8 months old I took him to Alaska to meet his grandfather. It was also a good bye in a sense. My dad had been drinking way too much and eating way too little. He was in the hospital, under nourished and very sick. By the time I got up there I didn’t know what to expect, but I wasn’t sure if I would ever see him again so I made sure to take Miles with me. He was home by then, skinny but doing ok. He wasn’t drinking much, but he was still drinking and of course smoking like a chimney. I basically told him that I really wanted him to get to see Miles grow up and that in order to do so he would have to stop smoking and drinking. I wanted him to be able to teach Miles how to hunt, and to take him fishing. I also knew that would never happen. But I hoped.

That was June of 2006.

Since then my dad and I have talked perhaps 5 times. He remembered my birthday. He would call very rarely and see how Miles was doing. It was like talking to a stranger every time. Since I had seen him he was diagnosed with Addison’s Disease which was very controllable if he would remember his medication. If he didn’t remember he would pass out. Hitting his head, knocking out his teeth, bleeding everywhere. He was still drinking, occasionally making an attempt to go to rehab, but never did.

He called me in early January, left a message. He wanted to make sure we weren’t floating away in the heavy rains we had been having down here. He sounded drunk in the message and I never called him back.

On January 21st I had gone shopping with a couple of my coworkers. On the way back to the museum my phone rang and it was my brother. I had just seen him, he and his wife had visited, so even though he never calls me I didn’t think it was too strange.

“Dad’s gone” is all he said. He was crying.

“gone?” – me

“He’s dead” my brother says, sounding nearly hysterical

I don’t know really what was said after that. I came back to work, organized a couple of things and went home. Headed to Alaska the next day. That’s another story.

Since then I have cried, been angry, kinda bitchy really. I have run the whole gamut of emotions. I don’t regret the last 2 ½ years where my dad and I really didn’t talk much. I had to have it that way. There were too many times I was disappointed by him not being there. If I accepted the fact that he wasn’t then I couldn’t be hurt. What I didn’t really realize was how much I hoped deep down inside that he could change and I would have a dad again. I see it now with how often I see or hear things and think how he would have enjoyed them. Mitch and I visited Depoe Bay over on the coast the other weekend and I realized how every time I visited I would think about how much my Dad would have loved it there, with the harbor and all. I always thought that someday he might come back to Oregon and I could take him there. But he never did.

I loved my dad, I always will. I imagine some day I might figure out how to deal with these emotions I have been having. How do you ever accept the death of a parent, especially when they were only 66 and shouldn’t have died yet?

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Wish I had a picture

While at a friends house tonight Miles was playing on the floor in the kitchen. I grabbed him between my two feet in an attempt to slide him across the floor. He says to me,

"hey, I'm not an egg!!"

(like penguins, get it?)

So funny and cute (and intelligent I must say)

Friday, January 2, 2009

Resolutions

I resolved many years ago not to make New Year’s Resolutions. I always felt that people would make all these promises to themselves and others and that by the time the first month was over most were forgotten. What a waste. Because I am unhappy about some things in my life and want to change them I feel compelled to make resolutions this year. A list of those things I want to improve. I will not beat myself up over it…that is important. These are things I would like to have happen in my life in 2009 (and beyond).

1) Eat healthier. (& drink more water) I have been doing fairly well during the day, resisting the temptation of multiple sodas and passing on vegetables with meals. I love veggies actually…not sure how people don’t like them. But at night after Miles has gone to bed and I am sitting and reading or watching TV the sweet tooth comes out to play and all I want to do is eat chocolate and candy. Right after the holidays is terrible, we are always given at least one box of chocolates and then there is Ellen’s fudge. Terrible. I cracked a box of candy last night. I ate more than I should have (more than one) but I did stop. I think the secret will be to have no sweets in the house, or very little and to have more fruit around. I have also been drinking a lot more tea and that seems to help with the cravings a little. I don’t want to list this as a “lose weight” desire. I do want to lose some of the pounds that never left after Miles was born, but, I am not technically overweight (on the upper edge of “healthy”, but not overweight). My main concern is the tendency of the women in my family to type II diabetes. Belly fat is a big indicator of risk and I do have excess belly fat.
2) Exercise. I really don’t, ever. I do walk a lot with my job, especially on Saturdays, but I need to be more active in the evenings. Go for more walks with the family, play outside, something. I am tempted to get a Wii Fit….not sure how good I would be at using it, but it is supposed to be really fun and effective if used correctly. The basics is, I am in my thirties and need to be healthy now if I want to be healthy in my 60’s, 70’s and 80’s.
3) Be more Creative. I always talk about it, I have tons of ideas. I need to do them. In the evenings after Miles goes to bed, on Mondays when I am off work. Bottom line is: I am happier when I am creating and I have way too many unfinished projects. I have no excuse except for laziness (and sometimes a really good book). I also want to take more classes and workshops as part of this.
4) See my Friends. The majority of my close friends live in Portland. I need to make more effort to see them and hang out. We talked on New Years about going dancing once a month. I am all for it. My working Saturdays has really impacted my social life. Partly because I feel guilty if I take time for myself after Mitch has had Miles all by himself all day every Saturday, partly because I am just plain tired after a Saturday at work. But I need to do it, much like the other things above, this is for my mental health. The first date has been set, I can’t make it because of an overnight at work, but, I will be there for February. I have to be.
5) Either learn to love my job, or find a new one. I think that explains itself. Things are better, will get even more so once the evil boss leaves for Peru and I only have the one good boss. The fundamental things about the company that I don’t like will never change. I have to decide if I can live with that. I also have to decide if I can live with working every Saturday.
6) Blog More. I am happy when I am writing. It allows my mind to work through things and think about them and share them. Doesn’t matter whether anyone reads it, at least its out there.

That’s about it for now. Those are the basics, or at least the ones I am willing share on the internet. We’ll see how I do.