12,000 words meme

This is something I found at one of the blogs I read. Here’s what you do…

1) Type your answers to each of the questions below into Flickr search
2) Using only the first page, pick an image
3) Copy and paste each of the URLs for the images into fd’s mosaic maker

The questions:

1. What is your first name? Heather
2. What is your favorite food? Fresh bread
3. What high school did you go to? Hampden Academy
4. What is your favorite color? Sunset purple
5. Who is your celebrity crush? No one
6. Favorite drink? Cold beer
7. Dream vacation? Thailand
8. Favorite dessert? Anything chocolate
9. What you want to be when you grow up? A mom
10. What do you love most in life? Peace of mind
11. One word to describe you? Solid
12. Your favorite animal? Nuthatch

Published in:  on August 29, 2008 at 9:47 pm Leave a Comment

Missing Heidi

Today I was driving home from a training in Philly.  I’d expended all my brain energy for the day so couldn’t bring myself to listen to my NPR podcasts.  I chose, instead, to listen to some music.  My 4 GB iPod doesn’t hold my whole music library; right now it houses a little Lyle Lovett, Paul Simon, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Mark Knopfler & Emmylou Harris, and the soundtrack from Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s episode “Once More with Feeling.”  (How’s that for eclectic??)  Anyway, it was a nice day and I was groovin’ my way home – boppin’ around in my car and singing along.  All of a sudden, on came some Paul Simon.  Now, my friend Heidi is the one who introduced me to Paul Simon.  It was one of the summers that we were at music camp at the University of Maine.  Lord, that summer was fun!  So there I am singing along to Paul Simon and all of a sudden I finally have a name to a little bit of sadness that’s been creeping up on me lately – I miss Heidi. 

I think it’s related to the fact that my second wedding is coming so soon.  Heidi sang at my first wedding and it was her last public performance.  The drugs that controlled her mental illness also stole her singing voice – and THAT was a huge loss for the world.  Man, that woman could SING!  Anyway, I just remember being in the back room waiting for the service to start and hearing her voice.  She was doing one of my favorite songs – Ave Maria – and, hearing her, all of a sudden my nerves settled a little.  Heidi was like that.  She went through a lot of shit in her life but somehow she managed to make you feel like, come what may, everything was going to be fine.  She remembered your stuff (what’s going on in your life, birthdays, etc.) and asked you about it.  She sent random goofy cards and emails.  I had no idea how much I could miss random goofiness until she was gone.  Anyway, as the wedding comes closer, I’ve been imagining what it would be like to hear her sing at Richland Friends Meeting.  I bet it would be amazing.  The room has super tall ceilings and is a wide open space.  I like to imagine it filled with her voice. 

Hmm, I think that “little sad” just turned into a bigger sad… she says with tears pooling in the corners of her eyes.

Published in:  on August 25, 2008 at 10:45 pm Comments (2)

On Men and Women Part 2

Let’s get this out of the way right here… I’m a woman.  I’ve never been a man, I’ve never parented a boy, I don’t have experience that gives me a first-hand view into what it’s like to be a man.  Nothing.  That being said, I have men in my life that I like, am fond of, enjoy, love, tolerate, and thoroughly don’t enjoy.  Based on my interactions with them, I’ve come to build a few thoughts about men.  So, without further ado…

On Men

All of the thinking I’ve been doing recently about the meaning of “wife” and “mother” has given rise to a corollary train of thought… what does “husband” and “father” mean.  Or, more specifically, what does it mean to be a man in our society these days and how on earth do I raise a son to be the kind of man that I’d want to know. 

The first thing that came to mind was a conversation I had with a family friend a few years ago.  She said that she’d gotten so tired of men being maligned that she went out and bought a t-shirt that said “Men are good” on the front.  She said that more often than not people asked her what was on the back; they wanted to see the punchline!  Ugh!  The second thing I thought about is one of my pet peeves – when women say (sometimes jokingly and sometimes not) that they feel like they have 3 children when what they really have is 2 kids and a husband.  Ouch!  The third thing - and this dovetails with the second point – is something I used to do until I got corrected on and then felt like a total dufus – calling men “boys.”  When we as women call the men in our lives “boys” (as in… “We had a cookout this weekend and the boys took care of the grill” or “Sure, I’d be up for going out this weekend, let me just check with the boy (aka the significant other)”) we’re being pretty dismissive of them.  Any adult male deserves to be called what he is – a man – just as adult females deserve to be called women, not girls. 

Growing up in a feminist family, I learned that men and women should be treated as equals.  Not a bad lesson to learn.  However, I think about the time that I grew up in and I wonder what happened to the men?  In the past few decades there’s been a push for men to get more in touch with their feelings, to be more empathetic.  I won’t hesitate to say that I think this came from a good place.  However, I wonder if its gone too far.  At times it seems that we have a generation of men that focuses too much on their feelings and being accommodating to women and not enough on claiming their power as men.  I’m not talking about power over someone or something – the power where you get to be the boss of everything because you have a penis.  I’m talking about the power that comes with acknowledging and taking on the responsibilities of being a man.  Men have power just as women have power and both have the responsibility to wield it wisely.

What are those responsibilities, you ask?  Well, I’m not entirely sure myself; let me see if I can write my way through it.  Men’s responsibilities include:

  • Learning how to carry the attributes of both masculinity and true empathy/genuine feelings - When we talk about men being “men” the image that springs to mind is something along the lines of fishing, hunting, beer, and cigars (with maybe just a touch of misogyny mixed in).  To me that’s hollow; that isn’t masculinity.  Masculinity, in my mind, is the strength to be a man without having to steamroll others (particularly women) to do it.  Corporate execs who are financially successful but are total jerks to their assistants and everyone around them are not masculine.  They may have the external trappings of masculinity – i.e. power and influence – but they’ve lost their capacity for empathy.  To me, men who are masculine are those that claim the power of being a man while, at the same time, keeping in touch with their feelings and the feelings of those around them.  The men that I’ve met like this – and they are a precious few – are such a joy to be around.  Often times they are not as financiallysuccessful as the corporate exec but they are far more successful in general!  We went to see the Spiderman 3 movie with a bunch of friends last year.  In it, Peter Parker/Spiderman loses the love of his life.  Feeling pretty sad about it, he cries a bit in an amongst moments of fighting the bad guys.  After we came out of the theater two of the men we were with launched immediately into ridiculing Spiderman for being, in effect, a cry baby.  As I listened it occurred to me that they were tremendously uncomfortable with the level of emotion that Spiderman showed.  Hmm, I think they’re still working on the whole masculinity thing…  (They tried to say that that level of emotion had no place in a comic book/action movie but I don’t buy it.)
  • Being a leader and learning to share that leadership with their significant other- Sometimes there are things that men are good at and, in those things, they should be the leader in their family.  Just as there are things that women are good at and, in those things, they should be the leader in their family.  Neither men nor women should lead as a dictator; both should carefully consider the thoughts, feelings, and will of the other.  I worry that in our emphasis to men on being respectful of women we have inadvertently given the men the sense that they should default to women on pretty much everything.  There is no broad brush with which we can say all women are good at XXX and all men are good at YYY, therefore, women should do XXX and men should do YYY.  No, a real man (or a real woman, for that matter) realizes that strengths are more individual than that.  Sometimes that means that he’s better at traditional “women’s jobs” so he is the leader in that area.  And here’s the kicker… it doesn’t make him any less of a man. 
  • Launching children into the world- A therapist I respect very much once told me that the mother’s job is to keep the child rooted in the family, to nurture and coddle them while the father’s job is to encourage the child to go out into the world, to learn new things, and to gain some independence.  The example he gave is of children learning to climb a ladder.  The mom would want to lift the child up so s/he doesn’t need to climb the ladder because, after all, ladders can be dangerous.  Besides, s/he can try it when s/he gets a little older.  The dad, on the other hand, would stand close to the child’s side encouraging him/her, helping him/her grasp the rungs if needed, and would reassure the child that he’ll keep him/her safe… all while the child climbs the ladder on their own.  (There’s a great Storycorps story about this here.  Search for the story from Tom Domingue.)  Dads are also responsible for teaching boys how to become men – how to navigate the minefields of dating and relationships, how to have the confidence to take control when needed, how to share leadership with their partner, how to achieve what they want in life.  Moms can teach boys a lot of wonderful things but there are some things that only dads can teach them, the biggest of which is how to be a man of honor.
  • Keeping their ability to be genuine and to have feelings even when amongst other men that may not have that skill.  It’s always hard to “swim upstream” and I think that’s what this bullet point is talking about.  Being a man that contains both masculinity and empathy/genuine feeling is particularly difficult when surrounded by other men that don’t do the same.  The same therapist that I mentioned above also said that what our society generally considers as “normal” is, in reality, a state of arrested development.  It took me a while to think that one through.  However, I DO think there is truth in that.  When young men learn that being a man is about working, having fun with the guys, and leaving most of the household responsibilities to their wife AND don’t ever move beyond that, that’s arrested development.  I’ve seen guys be given shit for carrying their baby around and playing with the kid and it’s only made me sad.  The guy playing with his kid is being a present and nurturing father and wasn’t afraid to do it in public.  I feel bad for the kids of the guy doing the mocking; clearly their dad is more worried about his image (afraid he’ll be seen as “soft”) then what his kid needs from him. 

*************************************************************************************************************

I started writing this post over a week ago and have found it pretty difficult to write.  The truth is that, until Pete and I started talking about it a couple of years ago, I hadn’t done a whole lot of thinking about the role of men and fathers, particularly in the lives of boys.  I guess my thoughts on this aren’t quite as crystallized as the whole “mother/wife” thing.  Anyway, the one thing that is VERY clear to me is the thought about men needing to reclaim their power.  The other stuff I think I’m still processing…

Published in:  on at 10:18 pm Leave a Comment

Hmm, what to do?

So it’s Saturday afternoon and here I sit – the rest of today and tomorrow ahead of me.  Pete’s at a bachelor party (not his party, it’s the brother of a friend’s) today and tomorrow, which means that I have a ton of time to myself.  It’s kind of cool – so many possibilities of things to do, so much fun to be had…  Sure, there’s a “to do” list a mile long.  Wedding things, cleaning the house, grocery shopping, meal planning.  None of those sound like fun, though.  Thinking about those things just makes me more tired than I already am.  It’s been a long stressful week and my brain is tired so, rather than being responsible and doing the “to do” list, I’m camped on the couch blogging, watching TV, and preparing to take a glorious afternoon nap.  Mmmm, nothing better than a good afternoon nap!  Then I’ll worry about the to do list…

Published in:  on August 23, 2008 at 2:10 pm Leave a Comment

Holy crap – I did it!

I’m happy to report that I ran 20 consecutive minutes this morning – holy crap!  For me this a big deal, huge even.  I haven’t done that in, um,… ever.  I’m on week 5 of the Couch to 5K podcasts.  I made an attempt at the 20 minute run earlier in the week but found I had to walk a little after 13 minutes.  My legs were kind of sore to start with that day so I wasn’t entirely surprised.  However, I was very surprised when I got through the whole 20 minutes today. And here’s the kicker – my heart rate didn’t go over 176 the whole time!!  I’m sitting here feeling very proud of myself and a little surprised too.  At the end of the 20 minutes the guy on the podcast said I could stop and I thought to myself “already?”  That was surprising, especially since somewhere around minute 4 I was SURE I was going to die and I sure as hell wasn’t going to make 20 minutes.  However, I think I found a groove and just went with it.  I’m sorry I keep posting about this running program but the whole idea that I can have success at this is causing me to rethink some of the ways I see myself and my capacities.  Kinda crazy!

P.S.  Never fear – Part 2 of the “On Men and Women” post will be coming shortly.

Published in:  on August 21, 2008 at 10:21 am Leave a Comment

On Men and Women – Part 1

I’ve been doing a lot of thinking recently about the roles of men and women in relationships, in families, in the world in general.  It’s come up in a lot of my conversations with Pete, too, as we begin to think through what we want our future children to learn about being girls/women and boys/men.  It’s too much to tackle both men and women in the same post so I’m going to start with women…

On Women…

I’m in my early 30s and I’m at that age where many of my friends are getting married and/or becoming parents.  Since I’m getting married just 2 short months from now and, at some point, plan on becoming a parent, I’ve been thinking a lot about wives and mothers in particular.  Growing up I was very much in a feminist environment.  I learned early on from both my mother and my father that being a girl doesn’t equal being less than being a boy.  I learned that I could do and be anything I wanted to.  I remember at one point hearing someone say, “If it takes a penis, he does it.  If it takes a vagina, I do it.  Otherwise, we share.”  That was kind of the gist of my family.  Well, the spoken gist anyway.  In practice, labor was divided a little more traditionally – Mom cooked, Dad fixed things.  Not always (I hear that Dad did most of the diaper changing) but some things were divided along the traditional lines.

In college and in my 20s I really chafed when someone assumed that I could or should do something because I was a woman.  Oh, that could get my ears to steamin’!  I got defensive right away and did everything I could to prove them wrong.  This created some issues for me – cognitive dissonance, I like to call it – especially in my relationship with Pete.  The reality about me is that I’m relatively “domestic.”  I like order and relative cleanliness; I’ve learned to enjoy cooking.  Early in our time living together, I discovered that Pete just didn’t see the dirt and clutter around the house the same way I did.  I was convinced for a while that he just didn’t want to clean and was assuming that I – as the woman – would take care of it.  I’ve since learned that it’s nothing more complicated than I care about dust bunnies more so I’m more likely to see them.  He’s a big picture guy; I’m a concrete, detail kind of woman.  I’m looking at keeping the dishes stacked in the cabinets just so; he’s looking at arranging the kitchen in the most efficient way possible.  That’s just how we work.  I get that.

I had a HARD time getting there though.  I was stuck in the whole penis-vagina-share thing that I mentioned above.  “Why didn’t he initiate the cleaning half the time?!” I grumbled to myself, “That’s his share!”  The problem with that equation is that it takes out of consideration our natural strengths and weaknesses.  With the help of a few arguments with Pete and some convincing by a wonderful therapist I know, I came to see that, as the detail-oriented person, it would always be on me to initiate the cleaning.  Not necessarily to DO it all, but to initiate it.  That didn’t make me less of a woman; it didn’t put me into the role of “little wife.”  That wasn’t an expectation because of my gender.  That’s the way it was because of WHO I am not WHAT I am. 

Clearing that hurdle started a string of thoughts about the traditional roles of men and women.  Speaking in sweeping generalizations here – women multi-task better, men prefer to complete one task at a time.  In the development of humankind, that makes sense.  Men, most often the strongest physically, would go out to hunt the wolly mammoth or some other prehistoric beastie.  Survival was predicated on focusing on what you were doing and not getting in the path of stampeding mammoths or charging tigers.  Women would remain closer to the cave or tent to gather plants, tend the children, tan the hides of aforementioned beastie, etc.  They multitasked.  There’s an argument to be made that such an environment and similar environments over the centuries has had an impact on the brains of men and women.

Where we got into trouble, though, was when men HAD to do things because they were men and women HAD to do things because they were women.  Prescribed behavior based on gender left a lot of folks out in the cold – the emotionally sensitive men, the women who couldn’t cook if their lives depended on it.  The women in my mother’s generation worked hard to break those molds so they could be wives of equal standing not wives expected to solely and selflessly wait on their husbands and children.  As she said at her last visit, my mother is the first of a generation of women who has worked their entire professional lives.  In some ways, that became the expectation of her generation – that they would break the glass ceilings of the world.  As kids they ran into the traditional gender expecations.  Mom tells me stories about being forced to go to cotillions as a girl and all I can think is “Thank God I grew up when I did and not when she did!”  My aunt tells me that she became a teacher because she had two choices for vocational training – secretary or teacher – and teaching sounded better.  As young and middle aged adults, though, they blazed new trails into the work world and created a whole new set of expectations.  My generation has definitely benefitted from the ways that our mothers lived their lives – their young adulthoods and their professional lives.  When we get there, I’m sure we’ll benefit from the paths they lay through their retirement years.

One of the major benefits we’ve received is that we now have a choice – as mothers we can go into the work world or we can stay home and raise children.  Either one is equally valid.  It seems to me that individuals and some communities have strong feelings about what’s best but society at large doesn’t particularly care either way. 

For me as an individual, I’ve slowly been coming to the realization that I want to be home with my children at least until they enter kindergarten.  It took some mental gymnastics for me to admit that to myself.  I felt that if I stayed home that I’d be letting down all the women who came before me that made it possible for women to have successful careers.  I actually felt pressure (from the imagined legacy not from actual people) to stay in the work world and on a solid career path.  I felt like I’d be a failure if I decided to stay home; I’d be “caving” to the expectations of women.  It sounds harsh, I know, but that’s what was happening in my head.  What changed my way of thinking, though, was all that I learned through my job about attachment, nurturing, brain development, and emotional health (that and the job I had in a past life at a daycare center).  I realized that I wanted my children to be raised by either my husband or I the vast majority of the time.  I didn’t want to use daycare or some other substitute care; I wanted it to be us.  I was grateful when Pete said that he agreed. 

Many of my friends are successful professionals, a lot of them are social workers.  Many of them are powerful, incredibly gifted and intelligent women.  I still worry a little that they’ll see my decision to be a stay-at-home mom as giving in or that they’ll judge me just a little for it.  That they won’t understand.  (Will it matter if they don’t?)  I felt a little like I had to justify to my mom why I wanted to stay home when what she modeled for me was a mom that balanced both work and home.  Those fears aren’t about my friends or my mom – they’re about me.  I know that.  It’s interesting for me to reflect on where they come from and why they’re there. 

I have some very, very strong feelings about why staying home is right for me and our future family.  I’m a little hesitant to give them full airing because I don’t want my mom to think I’m telling her that she “did it wrong” or my friends to think that I think they’re screwing up their kids because they’re working and parenting.  (Co-dependent much??)  That’s not it at all.  What’s right for me and my family, isn’t what’s right for everyone.  Each parent and each family is different; I don’t pretend to think that my way is best for everyone.   

So what’s this all about?  My own changing understanding of “wife” and “mother” and my gradual acceptance that maybe I’m a little more traditional than I thought.  And that that’s okay – good even.  Right for me.  I want to be the stay-at-home mom with the milk and cookies after school (okay, maybe carrot sticks and apple slices).  I want to change my name so that my husband, my children, and I all have the same name.  Those are the things that I think builds the kind of family that I want.  I want to claim the part of the legacy of my mother’s generation that says I have a choice about whether I work or stay home – and both are equally valid.  Most of all, I want to not judge myself for recognizing that I’m more traditional than I’d been raised to be.

I know the readership of this blog isn’t exactly huge but if you have any thoughts on this subject, I’d love to hear them!

Published in:  on August 10, 2008 at 10:25 pm Comments (1)

Vacation and random thoughts

I was almost giddy on my way home today.  The reason?  I have the next 3 days off.  Yes, ladies and gentlemen, I have a few days of vacation!  Let’s break out the happy dance!!  It’s a good thing, too.  I think my brain needs a break, my body needs a change of scenery, and my empathy needs a little rest.

Work has actually been going very well recently.  I’ve been productive and have been learning to juggle my new responsibilities.  It’s still not without challenges but I do feel – most days – like I’m getting a handle on it.  I’m also learning to work within my limits and that some things need to give a bit.  Remarkably, the addition of new responsibilities at the end of May has spurred me to do better finding balance.  First, I’ve started getting up every day at 6.  Some days I go for a run; the other days I go into work early.  That 45 minutes to an hour that I’m there before everyone else gets there tend to be my most productive.  Getting there early also allows me to leave early and – get this! – I’ve actually been doing just that!  I’m finding that I have more time at home (and more energy while I’m there) if I leave work at 4:30 rather than 5:30 or 6:00.  It’s been kind of nice.  Second, I’ve been doing better about not bringing work home with me.  Not letting it invade the twilight moments before I fall asleep at night and when I’m waking in the morning.  I’m not sure if I’m learning the skill of work/home separation or it’s a sanity preservation skill.  Either way, I’m glad for it.

My current challenge is figuring out what I do with the extra time.  Sure, wedding planning takes up some of that, as does catching up on my blog reading.  However, there are still lots of hours waiting to be filled.  Some of it gets taken up by evening walks and phone calls to friends.  Still trying to figure out what I want to do with the rest of it…

The next few days we’ll be staying at a place in the Poconos.  Pete’s aunt and uncle are loaning us their home up there.  It will be fun.  We’re taking both bikes, as well as my kayak and our hiking boots, so we’ll be doing lots of outdoors stuff.  I think, though, that there may be a fair amount of sitting around, reading, playing cards, sleeping, and stuff.  It’s taken a lot of discipline lately to keep getting up at 6 a.m.  I’m looking forward to a little self-indulgence with sleeping in and all. 

As I write about sleeping in I’m thinking about my friends that just had a beautiful baby boy.  It’s reminded me that having the luxury of sleeping in is not something that will be in my life forever.  Guess I should take full advantage now!  :-)  

Back to the running… I’ve successfully completed 2 weeks of the 4th podcast in the Couch to 5K program and am working my way through the 5th podcast.  I continue to be kind of amazed about the changes I’m feeling in my body.  On Monday I did 3 5-minute runs broken up by 2 3-minute recovery walks.  I was amazed to find that, by the end of the run, I was still feeling pretty good.  Even better, for the first time since I started exercising my heart rate did not go over 180 while I was running. 

I have been figuring out my target heart rate over the past few years and realized that it got really high really easily.  The general rule of thumb is that 100% of your heart rate is 220 – your age.  For me that would be 189 or so.  However, when I first started running my heart rate would get to 191 when I was really tired.  It regularly got into the high 180s and stayed there.

In the past, I got headaches that lasted all day if I exercised too hard.  I didn’t understand why and went to see a neurologist.  She confirmed I have a brain and there’s nothing significantly wrong with it.  (Hallelujah!) It was Pete that wondered if my heart rate might be causing the problem.  2 Christmases ago he bought me a heart monitor and that has been tremendously useful.  It’s the way that I found out that my heart rate went way too high.  I pretty quickly learned that I got the headaches if my heart rate went above 188 or so for any length of time.  I’ve been learning how to slow my heart rate without necessarily stopping the exercise I’m doing (slowing on my breathing and slowing my intensity work nicely).  Even with this, though, my heart rate has regularly been in the 180s.  So you see why keeping my heart rate in the 170s while doing 3 5-minute runs is kind of amazing for me. 

I guess the lesson I’m learning is that I do need to do more regular cardiac exercise in order to keep the ticker in shape.  Cardiac disease (specifically high blood pressure) runs in my mother’s family so I’ve been thinking about heart health more as I get older.  I don’t want to wake up at 50 and realize that I’m out of shape and have shortened my lifespan because of inactivity.  I’m not old now but 40 and 50 have appeared on the horizon; they may be teeny little specks that are way far away but they’re there!

Other than cardiac capacity, I’ve been enjoying the way that my muscles feel as they tone up with the running.  Since I’ve never been a particularly active person, I’ve never really experienced what it’s like to have decent muscle tone.  It’s kind of funny… I find myself poking my thighs on a disturbingly regular basis.  They’ve gotten so… firm.  I know, I know that’s to be expected but you have to understand that this has never happened to me so it’s kind of wild to see (and feel) it happen.  The other thing that’s surprised me is difference I’ve felt in my abs and my arms thanks to the running.  I wouldn’t have expected it – and it’s not as dramatic as the change in my legs – but it’s still there.  Maybe if I keep this up I’ll be able to morph my self image from “out of shape and kind of squishy” to “in healthy shape and only a little squishy.”  :-)

Published in:  on August 5, 2008 at 10:53 pm Leave a Comment