Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Back to My Future

    

    I guess I am doing things a bit backwards. When many people my age are contemplating retirement, I am trying to get into the paid workforce. I am seeing it as a new chapter, not a tapering off. Our vaccinations are complete, the nest is empty once again, both daughters settled into their own places. At age 63 going on 64, I am busy scanning various job boards. I have lost count of how many applications I have filled out online. I have had several conversations and some interviews, but no offers yet. It's a little like going the wrong direction on a one-way street, not going in the direction I am expected to go. But I see myself as retiring from full-time parenting, and ready to move on to the next thing.

    I could go back to the volunteer work I was doing before. It was fulfilling and purposeful, and I enjoyed the people and the work itself. But now we have a financial need. His work is not paying much, so I need to step in to help in some way. I wish years ago I had known this was coming, when we had money for re-training. Now I am feeling lost, with not quite enough skills to get the kind of job for pay that I was doing in my volunteer work. Not yet, anyway. 

    To get skills training at this point would have to require certainty that it would pay off to justify the investment. I oscillate between dreaming of possibilities and overwhelming hopelessness and panic. He is job searching too, also with no offers yet. What are we going to do? This question haunts me. 

    Yesterday, our daughter got accidentally left behind at her group home. She called me, scared. I called the office and left a message. My call was returned later by a very upset and apologetic director who promised to look into why this happened and get back to me. I dropped what I was doing and drove over there to get her. I took her to dayhab. What happened should never have happened, but it did. Thank goodness she knows how to use a phone. Now we are in a quandary as to what to do about this. Sincere apologies have been made, and it turned out to be a complicated mix-up, but the idea that it could happen at all is needless to say, very concerning. In general, this company has been very safety-conscious. There are some problems to work out though, and we are working out in our minds the best way to get those changes made reliably. The idea of pulling her out and bringing her back home with us was of course my initial thought, but the idea of depriving her of a life around her peers seems regressive. Things have to be so bad that even she wants out before I can feel okay about uprooting her again.

    Of course, this has to be balanced against our need to both be working. Sigh...

    


    


 

Friday, November 13, 2020

Everything Changes





 





    Today I listened to a song on Spotify sung by Sara Bareilles called "Everything Changes". Today, November 13th, in 1982 was Regina's original due date. I know that due dates are a kind of average and two weeks either side is pretty normal. Regina was born 12 weeks before her due date though. I was single, with no family nearby. She and I had a rough road ahead of us. We are still on that road. It wasn't long before she had an adopted father, and later, a sister. The road is a lot less lonely now. Today I say a prayer for all the single mothers giving birth, especially in traumatic circumstances, full of love and worry, joy and fears. May they know some comfort.

    Listening to this song brought up wells of emotion all these 38 years later. Here are the lyrics:

Today's a day like any other
But I am changed
I am a mother
Oh in an instant
And who I was has disappeared
It doesn't matter, now you're here
So innocent
I was lost for you to find
And now I'm yours and you are mine

Two tiny hands, a pair of eyes
An unsung melody is mine for safekeeping
And I will guard it with my life
I'd hang the moon for it to shine on her sleeping
Starting here and starting now
I can feel the heart of how

Everything changes
My heart's at the wheel now
And all my mistakes
They make sense when I turn them around
Everything changes
What I thought was so permanent fades
And I swear I'll remember to say we were both born today
Oh, and it's true
What did I do to deserve you

I didn't know, but now I see
Sometimes what is, is meant to be
You saved me
My blurry lines, my messy life
Come into focus in time, maybe
I can heal and I can breathe
'Cause I can feel myself believe

That everything changes
My heart's at the wheel now
And all my mistakes
They make sense when I turn them around
Everything changes
What I thought was so permanent fades
And I swear I'll remember to say we were both born today
Oh, and it's true
What did I do to deserve you
Thank God for you






Friday, November 6, 2020

Pandemic Ups and Downs

     Health and Human Services has said that all group home residents who have been staying away from their group homes during the pandemic must now decide what their status will be going forward by November 1st. They must either return to their group homes or change status. We have decided, as guardians, that we are not ready to send R back. The dayhab that she used to go to five days a week is not going to be opening back up anytime soon, and the house staff will not be taking her out for walks or drives, which we can do, so there is no sense putting her right back in the situation she was in last March, feeling bored and trapped. Our status is now as a "host home". She will still receive all her benefits and HCS funding will pay us to take care of her at our home. We are having to provide some documentation to the provider company and they will send us paperwork that we will need to use to keep records. Then we will turn those records in monthly. The down side is that they cannot guarantee that her room will still be available when she is ready to go back. That fact is very upsetting to her because she very much likes her situation. The economics of the whole thing is understandable though, and the provider has been very accommodating to us. They have done the best they can for her, and we appreciate that.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Way Back Wednesday

Just for fun - going back to 1982...


Favorite music - Soft Rock, Smooth Jazz, Folk

Favorite Tropical Getaway- Hawaii

Favorite Mountain Getaway - Telluride, CO

Favorite cocktail - Brandy Alexander

Favorite appetizer - fried cheese

Favorite hangout - Up's in Kemah

Favorite Place to go dancing - Tingles in Sharpstown

Favorite restaurant - Bennigans

Favorite cookbook - More-with-Less

Favorite flower - red rose

Favorite outdoor activities - taking walks, swimming, going to Galveston Beach or Clear Lake

Favorite fashion - dresses with puff sleeves and ruffled hem, pastels, midi length; or Hawaiian sundress

Favorite shoes - huaraches, bass sandals, Cherokee wedges

Favorite hobbies - guitar, knitting, crochet, scrapbooking

Favorite people - lovers, babies, friends

Work - Computer Programmer












Saturday, September 5, 2020

Remembering the '60's and '70's

 

    There is a lot of time for introspection right now, looking at old photos and wondering about things like - Am I still the same person I was 50 years ago? That was 1970 and I had turned 13. I had learned to play the guitar, as several of my classmates did, and it became an important thing in my life to do. It has become much less so now, sadly, but I do take my current guitar out occasionally. No callouses; I should play more often. The folk and folk rock songs of the time were my staple. I still love them.

    What other threads of my youth can I bring up through the years? I became craftsy in the '60's and  '70's, crocheting and knitting especially. I still do those. I just finished a blanket composed of different colored knitted squares, crocheted together and with a crocheted border. I plan to line one side with cotton flannel, hand-sewn on. So, yeah that thread continues.

    My family went on road trips almost every summer, to either a beach or the mountains, the less touristy the better. I got a lot of exposure to nature and archaeology. I remember Ranger talks fondly. That primed me for the ecology movement of the '70's, and yes, that is still me. The road trip vacations have continued in my own family and are some of my favorite memorable times.

    I had a little camera from about age 6 or 7, and I took a lot of pictures, and liked making scrapbooks. I have not outgrown that. I just got caught up putting all our pre-digital photos in albums. Our checking account should experience some relief now. 

    I got into "natural" foods in the '70's, a trend that continued well into my adult years and continues to be improved upon as I learn more about the story behind how food is grown and produced. Sustainability is an ideal I strive for, though not always consistently. So there's another thread.

    Books, books, books. My mother and father both loved books and there were always good story books in our house and regular trips to the public library especially in the summer. I went crazy for children's books for my own children, and we spent many happy hours at our local library and book stores. I haven't skipped a beat there.

    During this time opportunities were opening up to women like never before. In my family, I was encouraged in my education as much as my brothers were. There was no chauvinism there. I tried out many different careers, adventures, ambitions in my own mind, but nothing stood out strongly. I had many interests, hobbies, loved learning, but career? I wanted romance and family. I felt down on myself often because I did not know where I would fit in occupationally. Thankfully, my parents nudged me towards taking some computer science courses. Otherwise, I might have majored in Philosophy, which I loved, and lived with them indefinitely. I don't think any of us wanted that.

    Much of my volunteer work has also been office-related, and I have come to realize that I like that environment. It was where I once worked, and I hope to get back to it post-pandemic, at least on a volunteer basis.   

    Music, crafts, nature, photography, books, gardening, dogs, walks, swimming, camping, movies, bread baking, whole foods cooking, journaling, computer technology, babies, and daydreaming. All threads of me. I suspect many people my age can relate. This is not a second childhood. It is a forced opportunity to remember and influence the future.

    How will I remember this particular time, I wonder?













Thursday, September 3, 2020

Remembering the '80's and '90's


    We met and became friends, and then more, in the early 1980's, both working for IBM on the Space Shuttle program with NASA. Among many others our age, we were starting our adult lives together. It was a busy time for NASA contractors, and they were hiring in large numbers there down near Clear Lake and the "Rocket Park".

    It was an exciting time for young single people, but also a lonely time for me at first. I knew no one at first, my parents had moved to Hawaii, and though I did not know enough to admit it at the time, I had a tendency to fall into depressed moods easily. I fell into relationships easily too, and without much thought. I soon found myself about to become a mother, from a relationship with a still-legally-married man. He could not be involved as a parent. I understood, and I did not want him to try to be.

    And yet, in spite of everything, my soon-to-be-husband and I had a wonderful friendship and then, romance, though with ups and downs, all through my pregnancy. He was my greatest support throughout. I tried pushing him away at times, thinking it was not a good time for me to be nurturing a serious romantic relationship, wondering why he was sticking around a pregnant woman by some other man, but we always came back together, as if it was meant to be and we just couldn't fight it. 

    We married in 1983, and in 1984 he adopted my daughter. Later in that year I resigned from my job at IBM in Houston, where we both worked, and became a full-time homemaker, in conjunction with our transfer to North Carolina. This was not for any moral or ethical reasons, but because I was tired and over-stressed, and we were able financially to make that choice. We made the choice together. He did not have a strong preference one way or the other. He would have supported whichever choice I preferred as long as we could afford it financially. 

   So, we transferred to North Carolina from Texas in '84. I should say, he transferred with IBM. I resigned. My manager gently told me that he could not recommend me for a transfer. I understood. My maternal responsibilities conflicted with my professional ones. R had medical needs and I took a lot of time off from work because of that. Her premature birth and consequent follow up doctor appointments and unique child care needs had not been expected of course, but life happens that way sometimes, and I had no family nearby. In our close circle of friends, we were the first couple to become parents. Our friends were as supportive as they could be, but they had not had the experience yet. They were in a different place in their lives. My manager seemed relieved that I was not planning to try to transfer.

    Durham, North Carolina was a new chapter. We were there from Summer, 1984-Summer, 1992. We bought our first house, a small cedar-sided house in a cozy neighborhood. The area was growing because of the Research Triangle Park. He worked at the IBM location there. I started my life as a full-time homemaker, hanging out with the other young moms in our neighborhood. I spent most of my time with one neighbor who became a dear friend. She and I spent hours visiting while her son and my daughter played together. Her daughter, and our second daughter were born while we were there. We came back to Texas in 1992, this time to the Austin area. I recently got back in touch with her after years of only being in touch at Christmas. She is not on social media. I have missed her so very much.

    It turned out to be a good thing, my choice of occupation. His work required a lot of traveling. I still did not have family nearby, and R seemed to get a new diagnosis almost every year. Things could be very tense at times. The odds were not in our favor as a couple with a special needs child. Somehow, we survived.

    Now that Pinterest exists, I have fun sometimes looking up things I am nostalgic about from the 1980's. I wasn't that trendy during that time. My wedding dress was not modern for the time; it was my mother's, and had been new in the mid-1950's. I did have some feminine-looking dresses that I had bought at our local mall, ruffled, puff sleeves, pastel colors. I had a couple of those blouses with the bows at the collar and shoulder pads. My hair was layered for awhile until I let it grow out. Those Cherokee brand type shoes? Yes I had some of those, but as pregnancy progressed, I wore fewer heeled shoes of any kind.

    Now that Spotify exists, I have playlists of smooth rock and jazz tunes that were popular at the time. They remind me of the beginning of our intense romance back then. They are sometimes called "yacht rock" now. He is more into classic rock, but we have a lot of overlapping taste in music.

    I have recently finished a long project of organizing our pre-digital photos into albums. Seeing all those  pictures of our girls when they were children brings back all those memories, and I want to look at them again and again. I collected children's books and music over all those years, and loved sharing them with the girls. I made some dolls for them and loved taking them to the library, toy stores and book stores. I cannot drive past the playgrounds here that I often took them to without becoming sentimental. I dare not mention all this to them now, because the present is what matters most to them, as it should. They are not ready to be nostalgic about their childhood yet. I am barely there myself concerning my own childhood.


    I used to get the Chinaberry Book Catalog. Recently I found this book and bought it, thinking I might give it to some new parents in the family. I might do that, but I really just wanted it for myself.




    I haven't let this subscription lapse yet. I love the stories and illustrations. They have been suitable for R developmentally. Sometimes I donate the older issues. I can't seem to bear to toss them into the recycle bin.




    Why this nostalgia on my part so much lately? Could it be because I see R declining in some abilities now when she used to be able to play on a playground, walk on her own, swim and climb and even run a little? She was never as agile as other children, but still, she could do a lot more. She is 38 now, and I don't expect the same agility as when she was 8 of course, but the aging process in her case is happening faster than one would expect at her age. To go anywhere without a walker is unthinkable now. We have a wheelchair stored away in case we ever need it. She is my daughter, not my parent. To see my mother recovering from her injury at age 83, knowing that she should be able to wean herself off her walker and on to a cane, while my daughter has been going the other direction, feels as backwards as their ages are to each other.

    Could it also be that L is about to start teaching in person next week instead of virtually, and I will be worried every day for her safety? Once that starts, she will not be visiting us for a while. We will not be visiting her. Not until we have all been vaccinated. What are the holidays going to be like? Zoom celebrations? If so, we will have to make the best of it, knowing we are all in the same boat, and comfort each other that way. It will be a memory some day, when things are better.

    I suppose my babies will always be my babies in my heart.





    

Monday, August 24, 2020

Stress!

    There is this pandemic. Then there are fires near where some family members live. Then there are these two hurricanes in the Gulf. Then my mother is recovering from a broken hip and surgery for it, and my siblings and I are taking turns being with her so she is not alone. She would like to not need the help, but it cannot be avoided right now. The Virus complicates all decisions regarding having people come in to her home. Nurses and therapy are essential, but if we can avoid bringing in any more outside help, we will. 

    I am balancing decisions to visit Mom with the caregiving I am doing in my own home, trying not  to ask too much of my husband, who has been super supportive, but is working from home full-time too. At least I do not have young children to help with online school. But I have a daughter who may be teaching in person in two weeks and I will be worried for her every day. And we won't be able to see her in person until post-vaccination, whenever that will be. And I have a daughter who requires looking after here at home.