Archive for October, 2007

The truth

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

If the truth, the reality of what a thing is, is something so awful that we fear to see it in the morning light, perhaps what the problem is is not that we spoke of it, but rather that it happened in the first place.

If we find the truth to be so untasteful, to be such a thing that we demand no other speak, perhaps we should find a way within ourselves to make it so that no other -has- to speak of it.

If we constantly find ourselves in a postion where we are forced to spin a truth so that it reflects less harmfully upon our own being, perhaps it is time to take a good look within ourselves to see what is causing that truth needing to be spun in the first place.

If we find ourselves in a position so often of having to defend another’s truth that is not our own, perhaps it is time to look deeply within for the inner steel that resides in us all and remember that one should never allow oneself to be moved from the truth.

Life is too short.

As the wheel of the year turns, and we all find our own ways to celebrate this sacred new year, may we all also find peace.

Blessed Samhain, may this thinning of the worlds give you peace and a pathway to the truth.

Three things from which to never be removed: Ones Gods, Ones Oaths, and The Truth.

Pain Overload

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

So I’m sitting here waiting for 9:00 am to roll around so I can call my doctor and beg her to see me today.  And if she can’t, Mistress Sabre shall be carting herself to the ER and begging them to see her.

Still trying to figure out how I’m going to drive myself.  This should be fun.

Owies :(

Owies!

Monday, October 29th, 2007

I can’t move! My back is all out of whack and every muscle in my body aches.

I want to go back to bed with my teddy bear and just lay there for the next 48 hours. But noooo, I have to sit here at my desk and work.

Oh well, least I get to work from home!

Send chocolate!

I’m thankful for bad traffic?

Saturday, October 27th, 2007

The amount of energy I’ve put into wearing the mask I found shoved into a dusty corner apparently takes much more from me than I’ve realized. The mask is simply an attempt to retain sanity and dignity, when what I really want to do right now is scream and cry and try to hold on to things that need to be let go. So the mask stays, but maybe I should start eating a little more again and smoking a little less.

I’ve had an ongoing issue with weight, pretty much all of my life. When under extreme stress, I generally drop weight very quickly, to unhealthy levels (current BMI? underweight), with the exception of the couple of years that I packed on more pounds than I’m comfortable admitting. In the last week, I’ve eaten very little. The box of granola bars that I bought a couple of weeks ago is still sitting in my desk, begging me to partake of the crunchy goodness. But it’s not very appealing to me right now. Weird how women are with the whole weight/food thing.

At any rate, what does this have to do with traffic, right? Well, you know I have a rather interesting commute on a good day. I’ve got that one strip of ten miles or so that can sometimes take 30 minutes. Today? Over an hour from the start of 193 to the beltway.

And believe me, that was a good thing.

I’m guessing the lack of real eating, the stress I’m coping with, the weight of the mask of normalcy, the chain smoking… well, it’s certainly taking its toll. If traffic had actually been moving at more than 3 miles an hour, I would have caused a rather nasty head-on collision.

So I’m watching the clock because I know I’m going to be late, listening to nonsense on Elliot’s show about orgies (gross, totally gross), thinking about the task list for the day at work and what I’m going to be doing tonight, planning out those first couple of weeks in November where I’m going to lose my little mind, you know, basic morning drive time thoughts. And then horns blaring at me, I’m well over the double yellow, and the clock has skipped forward.

So you see, I’m thankful for the craptactular traffic. Everyone was moving far too slowly for my drifting to mean anything. Maybe somebunny is looking out for me after all.

It certainly has given me something to think about. A different perspective, if you will, about what is important to me right now and what is not. Survival? Important. Dignity? Yeah, that’s important too. Pretending to be something/someone I am not? Really, not so important. Realizing that my friends really are going to be there for me, and are here for me now? Very, very important.

Here’s to a crappy beginning of a better day. It only goes up from here.

Bullets

Friday, October 26th, 2007

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, words are like bullets. You can’t put that damn thing back in the chamber no matter how hard you try. Sometimes, those little bullets are exactly what you need, though.

Case in point, in a strangely surreal conversation late last night, something was said that completely threw me for a loop. It certainly wasn’t anything I wanted to hear, but in that one shining moment, I felt the whole world pause. And as I dug within myself for an appropriate response, I realized there was none. There was simply nothing to say to it. But that one expression, that small stringing together of words, released me from the bonds of fear and uncertainty.

From the very bottom of my heart, thank you so very much.

Peace and love, always.

Sabre Goes to Church

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

Earlier this year when my daughter returned home from spending time with her father and his family, she informed me that she wanted to become Christian. This was not a completely unexpected surprise, as my ex-husband’s family are very much evangelical Christians. In fact, this generally happens every time she comes home from time there, but usually fades within a few weeks. This time, not so much.

Being a person of an open mind, and a belief that one’s path to one’s understanding of God is personal, I found myself in quite a predicament. On the one hand, dictating another’s personal path is not within me; on the other hand, through my own personal experience, I have found many Christian denominations to be the absolute epitome of the evil they claim to be saving the world from. In short, I was very conflicted with how to handle the situation.

In the end, logic and reason, with a dash of sanity and compassion, won out. I spent a lot of time talking with my daughter about the positive aspects of religion, as well as the negative aspects. I worked a deal with her, in which she could follow the path that her heart and soul called her to, provided she let me continue to follow mine without badgering or belittling. I also explained to her very clearly that according to the church she wished to become a part of, I, her mother, was surely destined for hell as I do not, and will not, accept any outside of myself as my personal savior. And that I’m perfectly at peace with that, so let’s just leave it be.

A friend of hers invited her to youth group one night, and it all fell into place after that. She began putting a lot of time into her church activities. Youth group, Sunday services, Sunday school, extra activities, the works. I must admit that I am impressed with her desire to truly experience her new found faith and be as involved as possible. And, I’ll also admit that Episcopalian is not a bad choice. Had it been Baptist or Pentecostal, well, I can imagine the conversations would have flowed a lot differently.

And then time, as time does, flowed forward. She began asking about being baptized. I admit, I twitched. I struggled. But in the end, I followed my conscious and supported her decision.

On Sunday morning, I woke up at 7:30 and climbed in the shower. I stood there with the water flowing over me and prayed for guidance and strength. See, you must understand, my distaste for Christianity is based on my own upbringing, and the fact that as a child the Catholic church, and the Christian god, failed me. Badly. As a child, I begged and pleaded, prayed and submitted, did everything they told me to do, and still there was no escape. I asked the church for help, and was told that those sort of things should never be discussed. I begged God, I begged Jesus, I begged Mary. And still, no escape. My life was a living hell, and that was where God appeared to want me to be. At 14, the church asked me to leave. And while I have not been officially ex-communicated, I am not allowed communion. No matter how many confessions, I am never allowed communion again. So, you know, fuck you. I don’t want to eat the flesh of your false idol anyway. I simply wish to be left alone.

And so, I prayed to the god of my own understanding, to the ancient mother, for serenity and strength because Episcopalian is basically Catholic-lite. Less Mary, more jeans. Please, let there be no triggers that will send me back into time, into a place where even Sabres fear to tread. Let nothing happen that will remind me of that hell, and if it does, please let me be able to face it with my head high and remember that I am not that child anymore and no one can ever hurt me that way again. Please and thank you and let’s get through this, shall we?

We arrived at the church and I spent some time talking with the parents of her friend and was then introduced to Father Rob. A very interesting and dynamic man, but the internal jury is still out on him. He explained what they would be doing, and what role he would like me to take. As I walked into the church, I fully expected a little bit of thunder or lightning, the Christian god showing his distaste for the Devil’s Daughter coming into his sanctuary. It would have been funny at the very least, but nothing.

The service was as expected, a lot of rote ritualization that I still have memorized from my childhood. And then came the moment, where I placed the spiritual growth of my youngest child into the hands of others. I doubt they had any true realization of what my tears actually meant. Afterwards, my daughter participated in communion for the first time in her life. She asked me to join her, but I quietly told her that while I support her choice and path, I do not share her faith. And so I merely watched her, this beautiful young girl raised with the concept of female divinity, of the beauty inherent in women, consume the spiritual flesh of a god who failed me.

I cannot describe that moment for you, words fail me.

After the service, I had a quick cup of coffee, socialized briefly with a couple of folks I know from around the community, and silently made my escape. I was, of course, invited to come back. But I think we all know the answer to that.

I will admit that there is certainly a void in my life at present. There is within me a deep aching that I cannot articulate very well. But that emptiness cannot be filled by a religion that I find alien. There is no room for me in Christianity, and there is no room for it within me. But I pray that it serves my daughter and does not fail her. If it does, there will be hell to pay.

We now return you to your currently scheduled reality

Friday, October 19th, 2007

I would like to thank the universe for feeling the urge to play chess with me again. Every time I think it’s finally done kicking me around the board and ready to retire me, it picks me up and plunks me right smack in the middle of the game again.

Of course, the unspoken accomplice in this little game is only yours truly, who seems to have a very nasty habit of jumping up and down and screaming, “Pick me! Pick me!”

Next time the ‘verse sets me down for a spell, I do believe I’m running into the nearest rabbit hole as fast as I can to escape.

Or is it the rabbit hole I keep stumbling down?

Ah well, at least I will never be able to say that life has been boring! It’s always a fascinating ride, and what’s a little bit of white knuckles compared to that? People -pay- for this sort of heart racing, mind bending, thrill a minute ride. I get mine on the cheap.

Just another piece of my soul, which I won’t miss any way.

On being a growed up

Monday, October 15th, 2007

I got a late start in things. I didn’t have a career until roughly ‘99 because I was busy taking care of the kids. As detailed in other blogs, I ran my credit into the ground while trying to make ends meet. It’s been a long and interesting road to get to where I am now.

I live in a decent enough place. I have a car that I love and adore (and pay through the nose for) and another car that gets me from point A to point B without too many issues. But one thing I don’t have is a place of my own. One where I can remodel without calling for approval, one where I can adopt a furry feline baby or two and bring home, one that counts as “stability” in an ownership based society.

The housing market got a little out of control a couple of years back, and prices are astronomical. But the recent trend is that they are coming down. Within the next year, most of the sub-prime and ARMs are going to foreclose. The foreclosure rate is insane in some areas. Housings prices are dropping, steadily, and are expected to stabilize within the next year.

I’ve had a very strong urge to purchase a home for about two years now. But the time has never been “just so” due to either my own financial set-up or the market. I’ve worked on getting my credit back to respectable numbers, have been steadily pushing my career forward, and am now seriously looking at what I can afford.

Of course, it should be noted that I cannot move out of the area that I’m in for at least seven years. Cricket is settled into school here, and I cannot, in good conscious, pull her out and move her to a new district. So now it’s a waiting game. Prices are still outrageous here, with the least expensive townhouse in the area being one in my community that was bank owned and listed at $265,000. And it seemed a bit run down at that. Most of the others in my neighborhood are listed at $350,000 and up. The nicer townhouses? $450,000 and up. Single family homes? Let’s not talk about it, okay?

I make a decent salary, but not quite that decent. However, I did a little calculating and found something very interesting out. If I get rid of my beloved Z, the amount of mortgage I qualify for changes significantly. And if I drop all remaining credit balances to zero, it changes even more.

So here’s the dilemma though: if Cricket graduates on time in 2013 and I’m free to move, would I remain here? Neither Tetris nor I work in the area, we both work on the other side of the river in Maryland. If I am no longer held here due to her needs, why would I remain in a place where the commute is nuts?

And getting rid of my Z… the thought is enough to literally bring tears to my eyes. It’s a stupid thing, I know, but I love that car. When I’m driving her, I feel free, at peace, and ready to take on anything. It’s hard to put a price on that type of unfettered pleasure.

Here are my options to date:

Get rid of the Z, pay off credit card balances, and buy a house early next spring… that I may or not be able to sell in 7 or 8 years, depending upon how the market bounces.

Get rid of the Z, put that money to work for me, and wait until after Cricket graduates before looking into ownership in a place I plan on staying in.

Keep the Z, and the subsequent joy of driving her, and wait until after Cricket graduates and find the place I want to spend the rest of my life before even contemplating buying.

Find a long term rental in the same area for slightly more than I’m paying now with enough room to move and entertain.

Two other things can come into play here. If I were to magically find a new job with a considerable annual increase or if the market were to completely bottom out. Or if something else happens… Or if, or if, or if…

Being a growed up is hard!

Very peculiar

Monday, October 15th, 2007

Okay, check this out: The Right Brain vs Left Brain.

When I initially look at the image, I’m apparently right-brained.  But if I glance away and then look back, I would appear to be left-brained.  Glance away and back again and I’m once again right-brained.

It’s really neat.  Try it!  See if you can make the dancer change direction.

Regarding that there iPod thingy

Friday, October 5th, 2007

I told you I got a new iPod touch, yes?  I can’t tell you where I got it from, which is weird, because I rather like profusely thanking edited dammit friends in public who get me things when I do something right for a frickin’ change.

*cough*

Anyhoo…

So, now I’m rummaging through my cds and ripping them so I can have them with me at all times.  And it’s weird, because I haven’t actually bought music since discovering XM.  My kids, iPod junkies.  Me, not so much.  I don’t have time to fiddle around with playlists and all that.  I am an avid XM fan and love surfing channels to find new music.  But buying cds?  Yeah, not too often.

So here I am, going through my little collection.  And half of them?  Missing.  Empty case, no cd.  GDI.  The pisser?  I know exactly where they are.  And I am too classy to ask for them back, or to publicly bitch about it.  *ahem*

But, uh, yeah.  Dammit.  Somewhere, on the other side of the river in an alternate universe, someone is getting poked in the eye with fuckin’ biscotti.


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