I passed some Komatsu equipment this evening.
It wasn’t moving at the late hour, of course – it just sat there waiting for Monday to come back around.
But it made me want my Daddy bad.
I’m 31 years old and I want my Daddy.
I think I’ll always call him Daddy.
That he’ll always be Daddy.
He can still calm me down by telling me that everything is going to be okay. Even if my brain says otherwise, my heart believes him and because it calms me down, things ARE always okay. He can still put me to sleep by rubbing my head. He can still make me laugh and light up and feel silly and young and lightweight…
He’s my hero – my knight in shining armor – my first contact in a time of need.
I don’t think I’ll ever be okay with not being able to see Mama and Daddy on a regular basis – whenever I want.
I love Nicholas.
I love Molly.
But I can’t help but feel that being this far from your support system is detrimental to a marriage and to your children.
I realize that I am supposed to be okay with Nicholas becoming my support system.
But that’s not how I was raised, nor how the people who raised me were raised.
My family lives within a hundred miles of where they’ve lived for 400 years.
My family is such a rich and wonderful part of the lives that they touch that not having that for Molly or for my family is weighing down my heart.
I have trouble understanding how other people compartmentalize this sort of thing better.
I just want to sit in a hot tub of water, read a book and eat a tub of buttercream icing.
Whoa. What a month.
The Lord saw fit to grant me another birthday on this Earth, which is wonderful.
31 years.
That sounds like a lot longer than it actually has been.
Just yesterday I was riding my bike with the neighborhood kids and drinking root beer with my grandfather.
You hear that life is short, but that phrase doesn’t cover the sheer bitness of it.
Abbey surprised me with a visit to Minneapolis.
Mols and I were lazing about and I hear the door open.
I thought Nick was sick – something HAD to have been wrong for him to come home in the middle of the day. Instead of his face, the smiling face of my eldest came running through the door.
Best. Surprise. Ever.
Life is just better with both of them around.
Things are hard on that front, but adulthood tends to be hard. Hard and rewarding.
It would be nice if someone would tell you at the beginning of an uphill battle if the effort was going to be worth it.
for instance, homemade chicken and dumplings from total scratch? Good, but not worth it.
Homemade chicken dumplings made with rotisserie chicken from the grocery store that I don’t have to bake myself? Totally worth it.
You just need a guide – a scale.
Dang it. Now I want some dumplings.
Waking up in a new world
January 4, 2011
Life goes on up here in the frozen tundra.
Tundra does imply that there exists more outside of my window other than grey and cold.
Most of Minnesota is grey it seems – and half of the time I find it pretty in a barren way, the other half I’m hiding under the covers in my bed, trying to avoid the wind chills.
This is quite the winter for this Mississippi girl, with record snow levels so far and plenty to watch and learn.
I’ve learned that I love soups and stews and dumplings and am expanding my repertoire to include them.
I’ve learned that I love to knit, really love it, but… Sort of stink at it.
I’ve learned that living without my child on a regular basis empties my life – I love being with my husband full time in a way I could never have imagined – but that happiness does not detract from the fact that I miss my daughter every second.
I’ve also learned that I’m quite the pregnant wimp – I lack the ability to suck it up and being unable to breathe and clean my house makes me WHINE!
This morning I woke up at 5:30 to take my husband to the bus stop for racquetball practice – not all that exciting for me, but for a man that hasn’t played in 2 months, well… Let’s just say I earned enough wife points to let me out of cooking tonight.
Have I mentioned how much standing up and moving around sucks right now?
Whine?
Molly, the baby, is baking right along – I’m excited to meet her but in this, my last week of pregnancy, I’ve reached panic mode.
What, in the world, am I going to do with a baby? Love her, sure – but it’s been 14 years since I last took care of a young one. I’m a little out of practice. Okay.
A lot.
But, I can’t wait to see her little face.
I can’t wait to have all my family together.
That’s when life will enter the officially perfect phase.
I can’t feel my toes.
December 7, 2010
The cold weighs on me.
I suppose it does on any southern transplant that finds their way into a frozen Siberia.
It’s a good thing Minneapolis is a civilized city or I would die without food – the nearest grocery is less than a mile from me and that has literally saved our lives.
I probably wouldn’t venture much further in cold like this.
I know, I know.
I’m being overdramatic.
I think it’s my right, being 9 months pregnant, a big baby, and freezing to boot!
There are fun things about the weather.
I love watching the snow fall.
I like waking up to the white everywhere and seeing the kids play in it.
I like the idea that my daughters will know what real snowfall is and will be able to make a snowman more than once in their lives.
I also find it odd that the apartment complexes all have their own little machines for ice/snow removal on the pavement. The complex next to us owns their own bulldozer! or backhoe. Technically I think it’s a backhoe, but my brain is really too frozen to think about it much.
My daughter comes to visit in less than 2 weeks and I’ve never been so excited in all my life. There really aren’t words to explain how much you can miss someone until you’re missing one of your children.
Missing Nick was bad – but livable. I found a new normal with our separation that I’m struggling with in this separation from Abigail.
I have not had an adult day where I have not been her parent and very few kid days – I’ve been her mom for half of my life at least and that makes an impact.
So we’re learning something new – hopefully not something forever. I think we’d both go to pieces a little bit at that. I worry about her.
BUT! That’s neither here nor there – we’re not walking down that path today.
Today we’re cold.
Looking forward to her visit.
Putting off Christmas shopping and unpacking.
And enduring Braxton Hicks contractions.
Those painless little contractions that are currently stoving up my uterus and making me want to punch the small schoolchildren outside of my window.
I’m so glad they’re painless.
(Don’t worry, the kids are safe from me, because, as I may have mentioned – it’s COLD out there.)
Pregnancy is progressing. 35 1/2 weeks now means that the time is rushing up on us.
I wish I had her nursery ready or her clothes washed or even enough boxes unpacked to get to half of those things.
But moving has been slow – I’ve been lazy and sore and lazy and tired and lazy.
Nick woke me up panicked that I was going to go into labor without having a hospital bag packed. I have now promised to see to that this week so he can sleep at night.
I wouldn’t want to make it up there without my neck pillow, after all. What a goose.
The hospital is only 2.5 miles away, so this wasn’t a factor I really worried about – I worry more about him having to leave mid-labor because the dogs need to be walked and fed.
This living away from the massive support system I’m used to is not for the faint of heart.
Maybe he should make friends for situations like this?
It’s a thought.
All in all, I’m not quite ready for Ms. Molly’s arrival.
I’m scared that it’s been so many years since I’ve done this and I’m a bit emotional with missing my Abigail…
And I have no idea what to do with the umbilical cord or changing diapers quickly or how to go without sleep when I actually want sleep…
So I’m doing the new mother chickening out thing.
Which isn’t very useful at this point, considering.
So the point being that things are good. I’m cold.
Good and cold.
And… a routine.
November 29, 2010
I’m getting into the swing of things here at Chez Labello.
Things are quieter with only the two of us – I miss Abbey’s constant running dialogue that so many parents are blessed with.
And I say blessed because there is no quieter quiet than when that dialogue no longer surrounds you.
But I’m fairly happy – it’s neat getting to know my husband again, in a way that I haven’t gotten to know him in years.
He has changed in many ways that I didn’t expect, some good and some bad, but watching him navigate around his now 8 months pregnant wife is like watching a subtle ballet that’s fairly efficient in.
That’s not to say that there haven’t been a few battles, but our battles tend to be more like tiny blips when compared to most couples – a dish left in the sink instead of put in the dishwasher (blame the OCD for my overreactions on this one!) or stares at the purchase price of our new LED TV that we simply HAD to have. They’re no biggie, and rarely register after the first moment or two as anything but a mild case of irritation. That part is nice.
Sleeping with someone is nice – when I can sleep. I’ve forgotten how comforting it is to have someone there who is responsible for paying attention to all of the little noises that I hear at night and deciding when to flee or fight.
The Minneapolis weather is hard to get used to. I think Abbey would enjoy it much more than I do – she’s a warm weathered child and all of this cold and the many activities you can do in it would suit her immensely – once I could persuade her from behind the computer or IPod or phone.
I’m learning a lot about the cultural atmosphere here – not for any one culture, just that midwestern people are different. They aren’t as nice, for one thing – and not that they aren’t nice, but they don’t talk to each other and embrace each other in the way that Southern culture holds so dear. I think Nick likes that – I… don’t. They’re perfectly lovely for the most part, but part of me craves that cuddly closeness you get down south.
The foods are weird. Asian cuisine everywhere, which is good when I’m not pregnant and want to eat it. Mexican here and there, though I have yet to have a meal at a Mexican restaurant in Minneapolis that is a genuine dish… disappointing. Coffee abounds – Seattle can’t have anything on this area – and I’ve decided I may have to start to like it if I’m going to make it through the winters. It seems a key ingredient to survival of the locals.
The streets are insane – the city’s streets were put together by a blind toddler – but they’re clean for the most part and the shopping is amazing. I just don’t like to shop! The locations of the nearest grocery and Target are a win – less than half a mile!
All in all, life is pretty darned good.
Now, if someone could magically make the custody battle over with and me the winner, I’d be much obliged.
Just 40 cents a cup!
November 7, 2010
Wow.
Apparently when you’re packing up your life into one small large PODS unit and planning to move across country, things get neglected.
Like the Inner Me that I coddle with this blog.
Though I will say that no one wants to know the Inner Me that is currently inhabiting my third trimester pregnant body.
The newly off Zoloft third trimester pregnant body.
Yeah.
My doctor is a GENIUS. Because THAT was a great idea.
I know, I know.
We don’t want the baby to go through withdrawal symptoms after she’s born from Zoloft – the lows from that are misery-inducing.
We also don’t want the hormonal pregnant woman to set up shop on a roof somewhere and throw rocks at people.
So it’s a trade-off.
My motherly instinct won. Especially the motherly instinct that seems to be living in my husband’s body.
Never did I think that I would see the day where I’d lose my gung ho husband to overprotective fatherhood.
I’m convinced that if we’d received socket covers in the baby shower he’d already be using them to keep me from sticking things in the sockets by proxy – because it might hurt the baby.
No amount of persuasive arguments will convince him that poking the stomach right now won’t hurt the baby. He doesn’t care if it’s to make the baby move, to play with it, or because I just seem like one of those women that would like randomly poking things – I need to stop and I need to stop NOW.
I have dreams about throwing her up in the air – when she gets to that fun stage, not when she’s still a floppy doughgirl – that cause me to wake up giggling at the idea of his face.
Parenting may be the straw that broke that particular Italian camel’s back. Because things can HAPPEN to the kid.
But then again, it may be him going crazy after dealing with me.
Because right now I’m batshit nuts.
And, I don’t mean incapable or homicidal or unstable or any of those things that might cause a custody judge to read this and think I’m a half step away from the crazy farm.
I mean I’m hormonal, fat, uncomfortable and UNABLE TO EAT PROCESSED SUGAR! DO YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT THAT DOES TO A PERSON?!!!?
Apparently what that does to a person is causes them to procrastinate on packing and cry a lot.
And eat buckets of Sonic ice and stare longingly at the Eggnog lattes at Starbucks.
And eat 3 boxes of Corn Flakes in a week.
My life revolves around food a lot lately.
Ah well.
In another week I shall be well and truly nuts – on my way to Minneapolis, with my husband and two beagles, leaving my daughter to finish out the school year with my parents – because that is the only option I have with all of the custody mess being put off, thankyousomuchlawyerofmyex’sthatseemstothinkdraggingthisoutovertimehelpsAbbey
This period in my life is the hardest I’ve ever been through in the 30 years I’ve been alive and I can’t even comfort myself with a Snickers.
For those of you that will see me in the hospital after this placenta is gone and I can once again have sugar, don’t judge me. I can freebase refined sugar if I want to.
Times be changing, yo.
October 22, 2010
At 4:00 CST this afternoon, I will be retired.
Maybe not forever, but for the forseeable future.
And that’s an exciting DAUNTING truth.
I will be a mom and a wife.
And not much else.
No longer a… whatever I have been these past few years.
Expectations that I’ve had for myself throughout the years are changing daily.
I’m nervous. I’m scared.
I’ve been hired for a ‘job’ that I can’t fail at.
And oddly enough, in this case, I’m the only one qualified for it.
So.
Goodbye, steady paychecks, timecards and filing.
Hello… whatever comes next.
Leather pants probably wouldn’t help me either.
October 6, 2010
Songs MEAN something.
You can ask everyone around you and you’ll find that there are certain songs that they hear that immediately transport them into a mood, a memory, or even an alternate reality.
Some songs do all of those things.
For instance, I can listen to “Dreams” by the Cranberries and immediately be filled with a cheerful, purposeful feeling.
Edwin Starr’s “War” puts me in a head-bobbing, ridiculously silly mood.
And, “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” by the Stones brings to mind many things – frustrating my child when she was younger and begging for new toys, my basic theory on why my custody battle will never stop going or stop hurting, and Mick Jagger in leather pants. Creepy.
I found myself yesterday singing this particular song aloud at my desk. Complete with Jagger facial expressions and vocal stylings.
And by found myself, try realized I was doing so only after getting strange stares and pointed questions.
Le sigh.
You really can’t always get what you want.
When times are hard I try to remind myself of how blessed I am.
A great family, great friends, great job, great life.
But it’s hard.
Hard right now to think of positive things when this never-ending custody battle is draining the life out of me. Dramatic, I know, but as a parent you’re designed – to the core – to protect your children at all costs. Right now I can’t do that.
It’s not even a topic that she would have faced in the Life’s-Not-Fair adulthood school – it’s one of my own making and this total limbo of not having a decision is eating her up.
I seem to be the only one aware of this. Aware that it’s bigger than his rights/my rights. What gives parents the right to screw up their kid in their own selfishness?
Why is the fact that she’s hurting not THE most important thing?
I get tense even typing this.
I’m scared to death for all of us.
I can’t get what I want. She can’t get what she needs.
Art Appreciation. Or, Thoughts in spurts.
October 1, 2010
Lawyers of the world,
You suck big, huge, donkey toes.
Light yourself on fire.
My sweet baby girl,
I love you more every day.
Always stay the same.
Baby Gigantor,
I’m really tired of peeing.
Move off my bladder.
Ms. Lady Lawyer,
You’re appointed to my daughter.
So HELP already!
My dear husband,
Five bicycles is too much
For any household.
Dear knitting project,
I wish you could knit yourself
My elbow is tired.
To my beagle girls,
Stop barking at 2 a.m.
Or prepare to starve.
Dear Memphis traffic,
Turn signals will not kill you,
Texting will. Stop it.
Co-workers of mine,
No more candy temptation!
Damned diabetes.
Mooning the world! In my own little way.
September 21, 2010
So it’s been a few days.
One of the things that you’ll learn about me and/or my varying levels of mental illness/anxiety/OCD/depression is that everything waxes and wanes in my life.
On the days when the meds are working great, I’m motivated to interact with the world.
On the days when the meds are lacking, I accomplish only that which I have to during the day until I can surround myself entirely with my house and family.
During this pregnancy, because I’ve lowered my meds enough to help me “get by” and not really thrive in the hopes of lessening their effects on the baby girl, well… there aren’t really DOWNS, per say, so much as there are days where I find myself staring blankly ahead of me, out of the window, at my feet – wherever my attention caught and failed. These days are almost a pleasure because I can reach the introspective side of me that so rarely emerges on the full doses of medicine. I’m more creative, more emotional, more dramatic – and such a pain in the ass. But I recognize this side of me much more easily than I do the energetic, more motivated side that appears once dosed up. You see, it’s this side of me that takes blame for everything, that carries around a load of guilt that couldn’t possibly be attributed to only her and that finds an unrealistic negativity in everything that she does.
She’s masochistic and though sometimes it IS a pleasure to sink into that dark abyss, I’ll be so glad when she’s gone again.
She’s been whispering her seductive tales of failure and circumstance today, after we were both diagnosed with gestational diabetes this morning. She tells me that it’s my fault, that I’m overweight, that I’m eating wrong, that I’m a genetic hopeless case. The doctor disagrees but she’s the conceited one, knowing more than the doctor, more than anyone else could possibly know – after all, it’s her body too!
::sigh::
I’m scared.
I know it’s a common diagnosis.
I know that diet and exercise can help make this a non-issue in the long run, but still there’s that little whisper in my head telling me that MY case is worse than the others – apparently the masochistic side of me is a little egocentric as well.
I guess only backbone will tell.
Backbone and green vegetables, that is.
