Back and all.

September 8, 2009

This weekend was wonderful.
Absolutely wonderful.
Nothing big, nothing fancy.
Lots of walking and talking and just sitting around each other.
No major plan, no major anything.
Just. Having each other around.
Some moments we were bored. Some we were way too entertained. Some we were having ‘discussions’ but in all of it, we were comfortable with one another.

And the smell.
I love the way the man smells – like soap and man and happiness. I can’t explain it any other way than to say he smells like home. I sleep better in his arms for three days than I do in a month on my own.

And even when he wakes up at the BUTT CRACK OF DAWN I still love him – I just love him more when he gets up without trying to talk me into getting up too.

And he amuses me. He’s so focused – such a driven person when compared to my moseying.
We kept walking – miles we walked this weekend, sometimes talking, sometimes not – but he lacks the ability to mosey if the objective in question is to walk.
If he plans to walk he’s going to walk. Very focused on walking. No looking, just walking.
I teased him about this. About smelling the roses and enjoying life.
He laughed.
Said that the day was for walking, not smelling the roses, but when he was assigned the task of taking time to smell the roses, he’s the best damned rose smeller there is.

I like that he can laugh at himself.
There’s something comforting in that – as he couldn’t always.
But he can now.

And when I ask him why he says something pointed, something that doesn’t help, something that just stings a bit but has no useful purpose, he tells me he messed up, that I’m right, that he’s sorry, that it’s one of his least favorite flaws.
He says sometimes he says it because he wants to point out that he was right – but that he’s starting to realize that sometimes it doesn’t matter whether or not he’s right, especially not after the fact.
I like that he can see my side without being defensive.

I love that a little walk to him is 10 miles.
And that I drive him as nuts as he drives me but we’re still happy together.
I love that his body is gorgeous, his mind is sharp, and his character is iron man strong.

And that he doesn’t stare at other chicks in a rude way, but will totally joke with me if I say something first – like about the cycling chick with the massively mountainous boobs that were impossible to NOT stare at.

He complimented me, he wanted me, he touched me, he loved me, he hugged me.
We argued, we irritated, we disagreed, we snapped a little here and there.
And it was just wonderful.

How awesome is it to realize that you have a healthy normal relationship, despite the 3 years of distance… or as healthy and normal as possible with the 3 years of distance?

This is going to be hard – I’m not going to lie. We have a few hills to climb before anything in our lives together levels out.
But if I have to move mountains – I’m definitely going to have the right man beside me helping me push.

A diagnosis case in point.

September 4, 2009

It’s hard to explain what comes along the path of learning to like yourself.
Sure, liking yourself is a few steps away from loving yourself, but if we don’t count the outside attributes, I’m well on my way to thinking I’m a swell sort of person.

One of the hardest things to live with has been my Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Mainly because I didn’t know I had it.
Sure, you guys have heard years of me joking that I was OCD, but when the diagnosis finally came, I really felt relieved – if not slightly overwhelmed.
The diagnosis meant that all of the things that drive me crazy, that make me anxious, that make ABSOLUTELY NO SENSE to the outside world had a validation they hadn’t previously.
It didn’t mean I didn’t need to work to overcome them, but it meant that the fear or anxiety I get when things aren’t ‘right’ is something that my body was physically affecting.
My brain acts against me, so to speak.

With that diagnosis, with the medication came a serenity that I hadn’t felt in a long time.
My ability to open myself to therapy and treatment has saved my life.

For those of you that are like I was – that don’t understand what this means on a day to day life, let me tell you a little bit about the things that affect me on a daily basis.

My schedule has become increasingly important to me. If changes are made to it, they need to be MY changes. Luckily I had Abbey when I was young, so I really think her presence has helped me keep this problem to a molehill rather than the mountain it could have become.
And when I say schedule I mean schedule. I get up, I…um… bathroom, I shower. I don’t deviate from this whatsoever because if I do, it ruins my entire morning.
I take my ring off before I shower, brush my teeth, and only put the ring back on after I’ve gotten out, brushed my teeth (again) and have brushed my hair and put it up.
To suggest that I go without a shower – just to run out for an errand – is likely to get you an ‘I can’t!’ which will make no sense to you… but understand I physically CANNOT make myself okay with going out until my routine is completed.
I get dressed in the same order, check for my purse and belongings in the same order, walk the dogs in the same order, and do a run down of the check list (lights, locks, dog’s water) in that order before I make my way out of the house.
Changing that means a day full of uneasy feelings and upset.
I don’t feel right and will worry until I get home and am able to check everything again.

I’m constantly worried about someone breaking into my house. I routinely check the back seat when I’m driving to make sure no one is there waiting to kill me. If one blind is out of place, leaving a small hole, I CANNOT leave it that way – convinced that someone is staring at me. Because of this I have elaborate escape plans for every place I visit in case someone were to start shooting, a fire were to break out, or if someone were to break in. I cross myself when passing accidents, convinced that that’s going to help. I don’t like my food to touch, I don’t like to eat foods mixed together – it’s taken me years to try such awesome dishes as pasta salads and jambalaya.
I can tell if someone has moved something of mine the minute I walk into the house and if they have I feel exposed and betrayed.
I’ve been known to break into hysterics at someone else doing my laundry – they don’t do it ‘right’ and I cannot fathom the idea of living in a place where Nick has moved in first and placed stuff in the WRONG places.

All of these things sound slightly nuts.
I sound picky and princessy.
And if it were simply a control issue, if I simply HAD to have it my way, that would be one thing.
But the differences between my world and your world is that changes in these things make me fearful, nervous, unable to sleep and sometimes eat, and altogether miserable.

Now. Imagine what that was like before I knew that this was real.
For a long time I didn’t understand that these feelings are the exception rather than the rule.
I thought I was half insane.
And while that may be true, it’s not because of these things.

So when I say I suffer from OCD, understand that some days, that’s exactly what it is – suffering. Something I’m wholly uncomfortable with but am trying to compromise and learn to live with, especially since it gets worse as you get older.
Understand that if I hadn’t become a mother when I did, if God hadn’t blessed me in that way, my life would be MUCH different than it is now, as kids teach you that you really CAN’T control everything and everyone around you. Sometimes the routine HAS to be broken and you have to live with it.
Otherwise I’d be much more of a hermit than I am now.
And every day is a learning process.
Every day is making a conscious decision to work on this – to keep with the routine that doesn’t negatively affect other people’s lives and to work on things that might hurt my marriage, such as stuffing Nick’s body into a trunk if he moves things after I set them down.

And I’m telling you all of this, letting you see exactly how nuts I am, so that you can understand that sometimes you DO need help and it’s okay to get that help.
That sometimes it’s NECESSARY to get that help.
That sometimes it saves your life, saves your relationships, saves your peace of mind to know that while this isn’t normal for everyone, it is normal for some.
It’s okay and workable. You can find the peace of mind that you think has disappeared.
And all of the depression out in the world isn’t just people that are having a hard time or people that just need to get over it.
It’s an illness that needs to be treated and monitored and doesn’t mean you’re weak or making too big a deal about something.

If something in your head, your heart, your instincts are affecting your life on a day to day basis, GET HELP.
Do not tell yourself it will go away – it won’t.
Do not tell yourself you can’t afford it – there are free help options everywhere.
Do NOT think that this makes you weak – it’s been my experience that the people that actively seek help are some of the strongest, most honest, and DEFINITELY most self aware people I’ve ever met, all traits that should be admired.

Sometimes in life you’re thrown curve balls. Open your eyes and decide how you’re going to handle them.

Yay for me.

September 2, 2009

These minute updates seem to come with longer spans of distance in between them lately.
It’s not that I don’t want to update, but I simply lack interesting stories to tell.
Or I’m too caught up in a life that is becoming increasingly complicated as October 10th surges closer and closer.

I’m THRILLED about marrying Nick… in a way that has only lately been catching up with me. I can’t believe he got so lucky, that he gets to keep me, and I can’t believe that I’m getting a guy that really does want to help make my life better, even if we don’t always agree on what it takes to do so.

I’m NOT thrilled about the wedding, as this thing has expanded into a mountain – something that does not reflect what this day means to me at ALL, but at the same time, I feel so much love from the people that are finding ways to expand this day… they all think they’re doing it in a way that would make me happy and that they’re trying makes me feel loved.

But telling everyone I wanted a small wedding wasn’t a joke. I just underestimated just how important this was to people who are important to me.
And so to the rest of the world I’ll keep my mouth shut.
At the end of the day we’ll all be happy.
I’ll have my silly photos in a wedding dress with a rubber chicken, they’ll have the big day that they want me to have, and I’ll be married to the most honorable man that I’ve ever met… that I’m not related to.

You see, the past weekend I went to two showers thrown by people that I’m beginning to know better. I met women I’ve only heard of – met them in quite a large group – and the sheer amount of detail and love that went into these events is absolutely amazing. It’s a talent and a blessing… and how lucky am I that they cared enough to share that with me?

I’d love to write to you about the gifts, but they weren’t what stuck out to me. I’m not going to lie, the little girl in me that has dreamed of her own china pattern for years LOVED that I finally got a set of the fine china I registered for. But the gifts that struck me were the little things. Like Nick’s old next door neighbor who gave me a recipe for homemade dog treats for my dogs – and made sure to make some for them before I left Louisiana. She also gave me the Dance Dance Revolution for the Wii – only technically she bought it because she felt like Abbey would be overlooked in all the gifts and she felt like I’d registered for that to bond with my daughter. And she was right.
Nick’s aunt made an afghan for us – and cried when she told me how she’d prayed for our relationship and our marriage as she was crocheting it – a bit cheesy, but touching because she was so sincere about it.
The women did crafts and made food and thought of every little detail to make my day happy and for me to feel special.
How blessed am I?

Leslie knitted me a shawl – one of the most gorgeous things I’ve ever seen in my life… something that almost begs to be framed instead of worn, though I’m not quite sure how I’d manage it. It’s beautiful and I’m TERRIFIED I’m going to do something to it, but it’s easily one of the most special presents I’ve ever received in my life.

And that my girls all came down, from out of town, and spent their hard earned money just to celebrate and hang out with me meant the world.

So life is going well.
Nothing is moving forward on the custody front – apparently they need more paperwork from me. That’s not frustrating at all. nope. Not at all. (yes, I’m gritting my teeth as I type this, what of it?)
I’m nervous about being the center of attention. Nervous about making a mistake.
Nervous about the fact that I still look like I swallowed a small midget and his horse and self conscious that those pictures are going to be the ones I have forever – instead of how young and beautiful I look I’ll never see past the weight.
I don’t like not knowing what’s next in my life and I am tired of living the life of a hermit.
I keep telling myself I have just another month to make it through before I can start saving money again, and move out of the apartment and back into the parents house – not an ideal, but definitely better than the other option, which is wasting my money on rent, over and over again.
I’m ready to get past this stage, to be able to stop living paycheck to paycheck.
I’m ready to contribute and find my sense of self worth that comes along with not overextending oneself.

I’m happy that’s coming up, if not happy that I’ll once again be giving up my privacy until the future makes itself slightly less murky.
It just doesn’t make sense to throw away $1000 on rent when that money could be used to save up for a house.

And so it’s back to adulthood.
Back to cleaning up the credit report that apparently is murky from lenders not realizing they no longer hold my student loans and therefore I can’t be late on payments to them…
Back to making sure that the car note is paid BEFORE it’s due rather than the day of.
Oh, and back to little luxuries. Like air filters for my car and, dare I say it, pants that go all the way to my shoes instead of my ankles.
How will I contain myself?!!?

I hope you all are great.
And I hope that your future, no matter how complicated, is as exciting and hopeful as mine is.

My wedding shawl from Leslie

My wedding shawl from Leslie

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