Sunday, October 11, 2020

Coronavirus (aka Covid-19) and social distancing

March 15, 2020

We're trying to figure out what this next week will look like.  Frankly, it feels like the whole world has gone crazy.  Schools are closed across the country.  Every teacher and professor in the country is scrambling to adapt to an online format.  Except the homeschoolers...this is old hat for them/us...well, except for the world-ending, dystopian feel of everything. 

We enjoyed a day at home today...and by "WE", I mean *I* have enjoyed the day at home.  Jason went to work, and the kids have suffered through no church or youth activities or work or school.  I'm pretty sure they're going to be having mental breakdowns soon.  Until then, we've done laundry, and there was a Guitar Hero competition...and now there's some kind of card game happening.  I also made and canned bone broth, and also have enjoyed church online, and a virtual acoustic concert with an artist friend from Boston. 

There are all kinds of looming changes for all of us...things that are too big and nebulous to specify, but that will definitely affect us. 

Meanwhile, I am following so many friends in so many different areas

October 11, 2020

So much water under the bridge.  

Today I went back to church for the first time since March.  It was strange.  And SO good.  
In July I was fired from one job after filing for partial unemployment.  
My other job picked up the slack, promoted me, and made me full-time. 

Jason had surgery to reconstruct his foot, damaged by years of running, to the point where it was collapsing on itself.  He is now almost two weeks into recovery, and 4 weeks out from going on terminal leave from the Navy.  He has his first follow-up appointment on Tuesday and has been working on his resume and trying to find a job.  

Justin and Leah are isolating at home, awaiting test results for COVID exposures from work.  Both are at Millikin as students and have emailed their professors to let them know that they won't be in tomorrow.  

Heather is sick...she's in Carbondale, and she is also awaiting results of COVID testing.  

I am struggling to know where to go from here.  So much of my life is up in the air, and I feel like I am living in some strange suspended animation, looking around, trying to figure out where we will land.  While the whole world is trying to navigate life in the middle of a pandemic, we have the added level of trying to figure out jobs, moves, and life after the military.  It feels overwhelming to me, and I don't know where to start.  

I have tried processing with my counselor, and her advice is to just focus on what is here and now.  Which feels like a cop-out.  Like, I know there are things that I need to get done prior to any potential move, no matter when it happens.  I have to shred mail/trash.  I have to sort things that have been moving with us, and get rid of a LOT of things.  Right now, I have no time.  I need to take two children to do their driving tests and get their licenses.  Work still rolls on, no matter what else is going on.  The dog needs a haircut.  I need to study for my licensure exam.  I need to finish registering for that.  Laundry and dishes and toilets and vacuuming and sweeping and driving and sleep....all need to happen.  And cooking and shopping and cleaning up.  

I wish I had been able to enjoy the extended time at home that so many seem to have had.  I have worked regularly all the way through.  I am tired.  And overwhelmed.  And sad.  And frankly, probably healthier than I have been in years.  I am tired of being socially distanced so far that no one checks up on ME.  No one has called me to see how I am.  I get that everyone is busy.  These are some crazy times.  I guess I am just tired of feeling responsible for all of the communication that happens with other people in my life, and rarely do others extend that same level of communication/concern to me, and that makes me feel sad and alone.  

Heading back to my suspended animation, where the husband is busy playing the same football game he has been playing on repeat for the last few years since they haven't made a new season.... At least football is back on TV now!!  

Monday, July 20, 2020

Dumping Ground

Right now my brain feels like a dumping ground. 
It is full of trash...and treasures.
I just have to sort out which is which...
...which feels hugely overwhelming at the moment. 

There's grief. 
Not the expected grieving for my mother. 
Nope.  Not a single tear. 
Those were all cried many years ago. 

The grief I am feeling is for the end of an era. 
Twenty-one years identifying with military life. 
Feeling like an outsider for most of those years...
...and suddenly realizing that I'm on the other end of things...
...and that *I* am an expert on military life. 

Then there's the grief of missed things. 
This year has meant that we are missing out on so many things. 
Cousins, and grandkids, and travel, and friends.
Time with my husband, vacation, plans for the future...

Everything feels so big and overwhelming...
and also minute, and unimportant in the grand scheme of things. 

I want to be able to plan. 
I can barely drag myself out of bed each morning. 
I want to have some idea of where, and what, and when...
I'm lost as to why and how. 

There's so much to be done...
Financial decisions.
Jobs to be found. 
Retirement plans to be made. 
Studying and passing exams. 
Children in college to be paid for and organized, and encouraged. 
Children out on their own to be called, and loved at a distance. 

The everyday has to keep happening.
Laundry.
Dishes.
Pet food.  And kitty litter.  And Doggy grooming. 
Children fed.
Medical appointments.
Daily job/work responsibilities. 
Dietary goals.
grooming.  hygiene. clothing. 
Mental health.  For me.  For the children. For the spouse. 
vehicles (all 4 of them).

There's still grief around the losses of the last two and a half years. 
Losses of jobs. 
Losses of people.
Losses of possessions. 
Losses of relationships. 
Loss of progress.
Loss of trust. 
Loss of hope. 

There's so much anger. 
Anger at the people who treated us unjustly. 
Anger at the people who should have cared, but instead blamed. 
Anger at injustice. 
Anger about loss. 

There's fear. 
Fear that I missed out, and will miss out on so much that I want. 
Fear that no one will ever believe us, or trust us, or want us.
Fear of the unknown. 
Fear of more loss. 

I'm tired.  Overwhelmed.  Sad.  Depressed.  Fearful.
I have *almost* lost hope. 

Saturday, February 29, 2020

My life - Part 1 - an overhead view

I was born on February 13th, the oldest child of two oldest children.

My first brother was born 13 months later...the child that my maternal grandmother was convinced SHOULD have been aborted...who later ended up being the Golden Child.

My second brother was born when I was 6 and in first grade.  He was born with a congenital heart defect, which was discovered after a month or so of failure-to-thrive, and he died on the operating table at 5 months of age.

My third brother was born 18 months after the death of the second one.

My only sister was born 12 YEARS later, after 5 or 6 miscarriages, born when our mother was 43 years old, and I was 19, and in college.

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

My mother grew up in a family that looked perfect.
Grandpa's family was a Presbyterian family with generations of Presbyterian ministers.  He broke that tradition, eventually becoming a professor, after working for the Presbyterian church in their TRAV (Television, Radio, and Audiovisual) department.  They lived in Arkansas and moved to Atlanta, GA when my mother was 8 years old.  After she was out of the house, my grandparents moved to Austin, TX, where Grandpa was a communications professor at the University of Texas until he retired.  When Grandpa retired, they moved to their newly remodeled vacation home in Montreat, NC.

My mother graduated from high school, and went off to college in St. Petersburg, FL, and graduated from there 4 years later with a Bachelor's degree in Spanish and Russian.  The way she told the story, she was offered a job at the UN, but instead wanted to get married.

She met my father at the church she attended in Atlanta.  Daddy was a college student in Atlanta, originally from Staten Island, NY, but having moved to St. Petersburg, FL, when he was 17 years old when his father sold the family hardware store and retired.

My parents were married on June 25, 1966, and immediately moved to South Carolina, where my father had a job at Regal Textiles as an engineer.  They lived in Fork Shoals, on a "lake", and spent a lot of time skiing on the lake. While they lived on the lake, my uncle Brent came and spent some time there, but tragically committed suicide as he was mourning the recent suicide of his girlfriend.  My parents moved from that home quickly thereafter, living in Ware Shoals until they bought the farm in Due West, SC, which my father still lives on more than 50 years later. 

My mother was 24 when I was born.  Daddy was 28. 

They moved to The Farm just prior to my birth...it was one of two places I lived before leaving for college.  The Farm was the scene of almost all of the abuse I suffered...though The Dairy Farm also saw some of the same behaviors in the 5 years that we lived there. 

We moved to The Dairy Farm when I was 10 years old, and lived there for 5-ish years.  The years at The Dairy Farm were long and hard.  There were endless 18-hour days, injuries, losses, and financial hardship, as well as unexplained illness for Mother.  During those hard years, she experienced 2 or 3 miscarriages, and a kidney infection that could very easily have been fatal. 

At the end of the years on The Dairy Farm, we moved back to The Farm...back into the 150-year-old house with leaky walls, wood heat, and a dying well.  We never lacked for food...there was always meat in the freezer (that we had butchered), eggs in the refrigerator (that we had gathered from our chickens), fresh veggies from the garden, and fruit from the orchard.  But there was never enough money.  Daddy kept the cars running by constantly fixing them.  We stayed in the private church-affiliated school by the contribution of other church members.  We gladly wore hand-me-down clothes.  We never went on vacations, and rarely did any of the entertainment things that our friends took for granted. 

For a few years, we attended a local Presbyterian church, but my parents became concerned about the direction the church was headed and started looking around for another church.  We visited a local Baptist church but landed in a newly-planted Mennonite church. 

Adjustment to Mennonite life had to have been hard for my Mother.  She never quite forgave the very restrictive rules or the fact that some members of the church could get away with the blatant flaunting of them, while others were punished for minor indiscretions.  She was never comfortable in the clothing dictated by the rule-book, but never quite gave it up once they made the decision to leave many years later. 

My school years started with homeschooling.  My parents found Calvert School's curriculum, and did a very unpopular thing for that point in time, and decided that they would educate me at home.  Technically, that would have been my kindergarten year, as I entered first grade with my peers at Cold Springs Mennonite School, where I finished 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grades, prior to our church starting their own school, and my brother and I transferred there for my 4th-grade year, and his 3rd-grade year.  This school was where we graduated 8 years later.