Sunday, September 16, 2012

God grant me the serenity...


It was brought to my attention that I have an addiction. Like any addict, I’ve denied for years that I had a problem, until the problem bit me in the ass like the venomous snake it is.

I have been addicted to a man for the last 15 years. He’s a charming motherfucker, to be sure, and even though I wasn’t completely blind to his bullshit, I made allowances for it, based on what I felt was a deep eternal connection.

He may or may not be my soul mate. There is no denying that the deep telepathic, spiritual connection was and remains real. I can still feel his thoughts in my head and his touch upon my face. But that doesn’t change that he’s broken and using his own abilities…abusing his abilities for his own selifish means. It sucks.

But I am an addict and I must admit to myself and others that I am powerless over my addiction and that my life has become unmanageable.

I have come to believe that only a power great than myself can restore me to sanity.

I have made a conscious decision to turn my will and my life over to the care of a greater  power as I understand it, to overcome this addiction.

I have been making a searching and fearless moral inventory of myself to better understand what caused me to cling to this addiction.

I  have admitted to God/Goddess, myself and my readers the exact nature of the wrongs I committed in my addiction.

I am entirely ready to have a Higher Power help me overcome these defects in my character.

I pray and ask the Universe every day to remove my shortcomings and help me be a better person.

I’ve made a mental list of all the people I’ve disappointed and harmed during the course of my addiction, and am willing to make amends to them.

I would love to make direct amends to some of the people harmed as a result of my addiction, but doing so would cause more injury than good to certain people.

I continue daily to evaluate the person I am, and the person I want to be and I admit when I’m wrong or off-track, or having a hard day with my struggle at overcoming my addiction.

Only through prayer and meditation will I better understand my spirituality and spiritual connection and how my addiction was an obstacle to my own personal power and strength.

Understanding my addiction and the havoc it has wrecked on my life, I will carry this message and recovery to other addicts and stand as a witness that no matter how much you love someone, or how connected to them you may be, you have no control over their choices and actions, nor should you be a victim to such.

I don’t want to feel this pain any more. I don’t want to hear him in my head begging forgiveness, or contemplate giving it. I want to wake up in the morning and not give him a single thought all day or night. I want to feel free and happy in my soul without the shadow of his taint spoiling every good thought and feeling I have.  I want to stop feeling dirty and used and stupid. I want to end this Karmic rollercoaster and be done with him for eternity.  I want to be the happy, healthy strong woman I know I am inside, instead of this doubtful, doubting mess, that keeps reliving these moments of gut-kicking pain when I remember something that must have surely been a lie.

Most of all, I want to re-connect with the spirituality I let languish over the last 4 years because my addiction blinded me to all that is true. Every hurt is a blessing in disguise. I want to get past the hurt and uncover the blessing. God grant me the serenity.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Someday

I'm not very into poetry, or a very good poet for that matter. But this just kind of wrote itself: 


Someday, when you're on the ground,
Someday, you'll look around 
I just wont be there.

Someday, when she's long gone,
Someday, when you're all alone,
I just wont care.

Someday was a promise you made.
Someday, yet you still caved
To demands that weren’t fair.

Someday. You knew what it meant.
Someday, we’d begin our ascent
To fulfill a mission so rare.

Someday. Now it cant be undone.
Someday. The other side won.
Someday. Blown up in mid-air.

Someday, I’ll get back on the path.
Someday I’ll finish my half
Of the mission we shared.

Someday, before I’m too old,
Someday, I’ll be treated like gold.
But you wont be there.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Wake me up from bad dreams

There will be no LOLs posted this weekend out of respect for the victims of the Colorado Theater shooting and their loved ones. I have a few thoughts to share, then this page will be "dark" until Monday. We live in an increasingly crazed and twisted world. 'The evil that men do' has always existed but we live in a time when media technology not only exposes stories of violence and depravity, but overexposes it as well. Good news doesnt increase ratings or sell advertising space.

After 9/11 I found it very hard to watch shows depicting "blow 'em to hell" violence. While it may be make-believe on the screen, it still numbs us and desensitizes us in the clever disguise of entertainment. The same goes for reality television. Mindless entertainment about vapid people engaging in outrageous conflict boosts ratings. The global state of affairs and bad economies make us want to numb ourselves. I totally get that. Bad things happen to people all over the world every day, and we shake our heads, feel grief and anger, and then go back to sleep until the next tragedy.

Today, I implore you to ask yourself....Is this the world I want to live in? Columbine taught us some important lessons. It certainly taught law enforcement and emergency responders better procedures to act quickly, decisively, and safer at on-site situations. It taught us about bullying in schools, and the ease and access of weapons to under-age kids. It taught us that smart, troubled kids can fool authority figures when attempted help is required and given.

What have all the senseless acts of violence in the last 13 years taught us as a nation and individuals? I certainly dont have the answers to those questions, only my individual opinions. But one thing I know for certain is that we shouldnt have to be living in a world where these questions are even having to be pondered.

Ask yourself....Is this the world I want to live in? And then DONT go back to sleep!!!! WAKE UP!!! Wake up and look at the world around you and commit yourself to being part of a better world for yourselves and your children.

All of this is one of the main reason I refuse to allow negative comments and bashing on this page. Changing the world starts with one person making a stand. Changing the world starts with kindness, tolerance and understanding. Changing the world starts with saying, "No. I will not buy into hate, and fear, and ignorance." 

This has nothing to do with politics or public policy. Regardless of party affiliation or social leaning to conservative or liberal, any human being on this planet can be kind and decent to their fellow human beings muddling through on this planet. Ahmed in the Middle East, Boris in Eastern Europe, Jose in Mexico and Kwame in Africa all have the same common concerns as every other person on the planet. We all want enough to eat. We all want shelter. We all want to be able to earn enough to feed and clothe our children. We all want to feel safe in our homes and daily routines. We all hope to live without falling victim to some sort of violence. We shouldnt have to say that someone lost their life because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.

But the change starts with each of us at our own individual levels. The change starts with staying awake. The change starts with deciding this is NOT the world we want to live in. The change starts with being a little kinder to every single soul that crosses our path. The pressure that we are under in today's society is unlike any ever seen in our human history. If you add that pressure to someone who is already mentally ill or unstable, its no wonder their psychosis spins out of control. 

I'm not suggesting that we can fix everyone who is suffering injustice or emotional pain or mental illness. But we can offer anyone, regardless of their state of existence, a kind word, an understanding smile, a moment of concern. As Gandhi said, "Be the change you want to see in the world." He also said, "The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong."

Be strong. Be kind and forgive those who wrong you and who have done wrong. Start the change in your own world today. And please, for the love of God/Goddess/Divine Love or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches...whatever you believe in....dont just read these words, nod your head in agreement and go back to sleep. 

Stay awake this time. Be kind and be the change.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Sweet Dreams Are Made of This


Good morning , LOLers! It’s a bright new day with unlimited possibilities. I spent part of the day yesterday with Colleen, my bestie and sister from another mother. She knows me as well as anyone in my family and she’s able to point things out to me that I might be too close to view objectively. I got a good night’s sleep with no weird dreams, celebrity sex dreams or otherwise. 

And I feel completely different this morning.

Breakups suck. Everyone on this planet has had or will have their heart broken at some point, and we gauge the emotional pain based upon how deeply we cared for and were committed to our former partner. Sometimes we feel like we dodged a bullet, and other times we feel as if our entire insides have been ripped out leaving us about as functional as the Walking Dead.

The first time Max and I broke up was the worst heartbreak of my life. I couldn’t eat, I couldn’t sleep, and a good day was when I could wake up and make it to the shower before I started crying. I had been living in Vegas when we split and shortly after, went to Oklahoma to stay with my mom while she was going through chemotherapy and to try to put my own head back together. You can imagine the culture shock from Vegas to OK only added to my heartbreak and depression. But slowly I started to put myself back together and I measured my recovery not in feeling better, but in acknowledging that I didn’t feel as bad as the day before.  But this was the beginning of my on again, off again relationship with Max.

Three and a half years ago, we started back on again. At that point, I was still employed and going to school, and he had a home and obligations, so it wasn’t an ideal time for either of us to move to be together. We agreed to a long distance relationship for a specified number of years, and in spite of everything, we were making it work.

As I’ve said, I won’t go into the details of what precipitated this final breakup. But to be bluntly honest, I’d been willing to give up everything to move to his home, despite the fact I extremely dislike the area of the country where he lives. At the time it made sense, because he’s a homeowner, and the market still sucks and it would take forever to sell, probably at a lower price, blah blah, etc. But this morning, I feel a little angry at how little he’s been willing to concede over the last three years. I won’t deny that he’s been really supportive since my diabetes diagnosis and subsequent recovery and management, and encouraging in my job search. But the fact remains that I feel less valued at his reluctance to make concessions to my life, fully expecting to get his way to reduce the disruption to his own.

He’s not a bad man. He has some wonderful qualities or I would never have loved him the way I have for so many years. And I’ve always been aware of his faults and accepted them, knowing I couldn’t change him. But he is a selfish man, and ultimately this is what I cant live with.  But oddly enough, I’m not devastated. I’m not angry. I’m not bitter. I am deeply disappointed, though. His willingness to so blithely dismiss the depth and commitment of our relationship and me when he’d professed I was the most important thing in his life, has left me feeling completely unvalued to him.

But. Here’s the important thing. I know my own worth. I know what I brought to the table and contributed to the relationship and the depth of love and understanding that I gave to him. If he fails to recognize that once again, as he obviously has, then I realize there is nowhere left to go in the whole affair. I am finally finished and have him out of my system. He’s been like a drug to me for 15 years, whether we were together or apart. Yet I woke up this morning absolutely knowing I was done and he was out of my system for good. I could never want him back now because his latest act of selfishness closed the door to any future we may have had.

Instead of being a crying mess wondering what was wrong with me, wondering what I lacked that he couldn’t give me what I deserved, I woke up this morning knowing I deserve so much better and that there’s something inherently wrong in him to be willing to throw away what he himself claimed to be the greatest and best thing that had ever happened to him.

I may not have much right now. My future is very uncertain on many levels. But I have a future that is wholly my own. I have myself, which is a pretty damned awesome self. I have my self-respect. I have an open vista of possibilities before me. I may have just turned 48, but I still have the option to choose anything I want for my life. And that is something available to each and every one of us regardless of circumstances. Nothing is impossible. Regardless of your obligations, or commitments to family, children, or job, if you have a dream you have the power to make it happen. It may require sacrifice or finding a balance to make everything work. But no dream is too improbable.

I woke up this morning feeling renewed and clearheaded. I’m not sure what I want for my own life going forward. The only thing I know for certain is that I still need a full-time job. I’m partway there with the part-time job I just obtained. But the fulltime gig is necessary to rebuild my financial house. Other than that, I don’t have the first clue about what I want this next half of my life to look like. But I’m alive, I have my own inner strength as one of my best resources, and I trust completely in the Universe that everything really is going to be okay. It really is. And actually, I know its going to be better than okay. Its going to be stellar, because I have the ability to make it so.

I woke up this morning knowing it was time to dream a new dream.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Father's Day 2012


The man I call my father was not my biological father. I share DNA with a horrible man, an alcoholic, wife-beating child molester. My memories of this biological sire are fuzzy, for which I’m grateful. I have no wish to remember or honor the man who means little to me other than the sperm that brought Little Lainey Zygote into being.

The man I call my father married a woman with six unruly children ranging in ages from 18 to 4, three weeks after they met. This man did his best to love them and bring them into his heart as his own. And this man was good to my mother.

The man I call my father threatened my biological father with bodily harm the first time the sperm donor came to take me from my family. The second time, the man I call my father was away at work, and I was kidnapped. Later I was the center of a custody battle which the man I call my father willingly accepted the financial burden and fought as hard as my mother to get me back.

The man I call my father helped me learn to read before I was ever school-aged. He recognized my intelligence, and encouraged it. He was proud of the grades I made and always wanted to know what I didn’t understand when my grades weren’t up to snuff, instead of punishing me. He took me to the library and picked out children’s classics for me to read. He wanted all of us to be educated, and I can remember him saying once, “You may not ever have money, but you can have education and good manners.”  People still compliment me on my table manners to this day.

The man I call my father was a good man. But he was not a saint. He was very old fashioned in his opinions of how young ladies should behave, this being at the height of the Women’s Lib movement of the 70s. He was very strict with all of us, and unjustly stern with my brother. But again, he took on the financial responsibility, not only of raising us, but of the court costs of the adoption processes to adopt those six children who weren’t his. My oldest sister was already married and pregnant with her first child when he adopted those kids. She was afraid she would deliver before the papers were approved, because she wanted to put his name as her maiden name on the baby’s birth certificate. Another part of our family lore is that when they finally got me back from my biological father, I came home on my step-father’s birthday.

The man I call my father was unable to adopt me. The biological father would not allow it. And, unfortunately, the man I call my father was killed in a work accident just days before my 9th birthday. But when I was 13, my mother had my name legally changed, and now I have the same last name as the man who I will always think of as my father.

I have often wondered how my life might have been different had he lived. I’ve grieved the loss of not knowing him as an adult. I’ve wondered how he might have advised me and steered me away from some of my bad decisions, especially with regards to the men I chose. Would he be proud of the strong, independent, educated woman I’ve become? Would he be disappointed that I chose not to give him grandchildren?

The man I call my father would be 87 if he’d lived. Probably a doddering old man now instead of the epic, giant of a hero my child’s mind remembers. But today I honor him and love him and miss him; all that he was, all I perceived him to be, and all he may have yet been.

The man I call my father was named Keith William Thomas, and I am proud that three of my nephews bear parts of his name. I look forward to learning who he is when I see him again when its my turn to go into the light. I look forward to his fatherly comfort and his guiding friendship.

No, he was not a saint, but he was a good man. The man I call my father was only my step-father and only in my life for a few short years. But he is my father and I am his daughter as surely as if it were his blood coursing through my veins.

Happy Father’s Day, Daddy.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Some Sunday Thoughts

I went off on a bit of a tangent this morning on my Facebook page. My intent was not to sermonize or change anyone's point of view. It was just an expression of my thoughts concerning the recent growing theme of kindness I've been posting about lately.

Here are those posts, in order:

Just for the record, I'm not an atheist. I do believe in a loving Creator/Higher Power/God/Goddess/The Ultimate Peanut Butter & Jelly Sandwich. But all the biblical stuff, to me, is not much more than an historical record of a group of people. My God only wants us to love and learn. 

Oh...and another thing....some of you may be confused because lately I've been talking about kindness and love and how that may seem to conflict with some of the more sarcastic posts I put up. Here's how I see it: Humor is good. Laughing at a situation because of the humor and not because its maliciously making fun of something is an okay thing. We all have thoughts that are less than kind. But we choose to not act on them. And that's part of what makes sarcasm funny. We can ALL relate to frustration with others, and the thoughts we have of doing or saying something when we're frustrated, whether its someone in the express checkout lane with 40 items, or the kid that looks goofy-ridiculous with his pants down around his butt. But we have the thought, CHOOSE to not act on it, and laugh at the situation AND ourselves because we are so far from perfect. Some types of humor are NOT okay with me because they are so blatantly unkind. That's why you wont see them here. We're all just stumbling through life, a day at a time, trying to live, learn, and laugh. :) 

And while I'm on the subject...I have nothing against organized religion, per se. Some folks...probably even some of you LOLers find a great comfort and sense of community in the churches you attend. There is nothing wrong with drawing strength and sharing spirit with a group of like-minded people in my book. At one point in my life, the church I attended was mostly my whole world, and that was what I needed at that point in time. As I grew and changed, I found that didnt fit my own spiritual needs anymore. Church and love and spirituality are good things. But if any man or woman tells you that his/her ideology is the only ONE TRUE WAY...I'm sorry, but I call bullshit. God doesnt care how we arrive at our own truth of love being the greatest force in all the Universe. He only cares that we discover that gem, and then live it. Anything else is just a tool we've been given to help us on our journey. So my "making fun of Jesus and religion" is not done out of spite or mean-spirit. It is a tongue-in-cheek poke at all the things we're bombarded with as we search to find the still small voice inside ourselves that tells us within our own hearts and minds what is right and what is kind.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

So much energy

This morning while cleaning, I had a burst of creativity and this basically wrote itself:


AFTER
After you dumped me I decided to try things I had never done before.
I let my armpit hair grow, just to see how long it would get until it bothered me.

After you dumped me, you shaved the goatee I’d asked you to grow.
In retaliation, I shaved my pubes like you’d always asked but I never would.

I started getting regular pedicures in protest of your neglected and dry, scaly feet
that I’d ALWAYS hated.

I cried, I ranted, I moaned and mourned.

After you dumped me I found a person at the core of my being
I could never have been with you.

After you dumped me, I went on living.
Just like I always said I would.