Happy Birthday to Me

Today I turn 37.

What does a single mom with a son who is too young to be able to organize anything for his mom’s birthday do? She writes a post about it on her blog as a shameless attempt to get people to wish her a happy birthday.

Well, maybe, but what she also does is celebrates herself!

I got over waiting for people to do things for me for my birthday. I found that I got nothing but disappointment from sitting around and waiting for someone else to plan any type of celebration.

I no longer have any expectations of what my birthday will hold. I usually buy myself some kind of treat and plan my own celebration of sorts with friends or family or both.

I know there are plenty of people who think you should not plan your own birthday party. I think that is a bunch of bunk. We are not talking about hosting your own baby shower, folks. If no one else is going to plan anything for you to celebrate your special day, why in the world would you not plan something for yourself? It’s all about self-care.

Not sure what my treat this year will be – a vitamix blender, a hair removal system, something special for me off etsy? At 34 I bought myself necklace crafted by a local artisan. For my 35th a beautiful watch that I wear daily.

The celebration of sorts – not sure what that will be yet either. Last year I went with family to the Sound of Music sing-a-long at a local theatre. It was a blast! They showed the Sound of Music and during each song they had the words of the song in closed caption at the bottom of the screen and the audience sang along.  Loved it!  I am that type of girl.

I thought for sure I would have all my birthday plans figured out by now, but I don’t.  Right now it looks like pizza and ice cream with littleman after swimming lessons tonight.  Yes, it will be great, but nothing super special.

So, ideas?  A girl only turns 37 once.

Dinner for 1

A girl has got to eat and to celebrate having a little time to myself I decided that I would take myself out for a nice dinner last night.

I could have tried to find someone to go with me at the last minute, but decided that would be more hassle than it was worth. Not to mention the likelihood of me finding someone would be slim anyway – I already know what a fabulous weekend everyone is having via their Facebook statuses. (I definitely have a love hate relationship with Facebook.)

I got home from my walk, took a shower and dressed as if I were going out with friends or, God-forbid, a date. I was having a date with myself and I deserved to look the part. I looked pretty darn cute, if I do say so myself. (Women who are 5’1″ are never hot – always cute.)

Tried to walk out the door several times, but I kept getting sidetracked with things (read: was getting cold feet about going out to a nice restaurant by myself). I checked the restaurant’s web site. Reservations were recommended. Did I need a reservation for one? The restaurant closes at 10. If I wait until 8 to leave then most of the dinner rush should be over…

Thankfully my brother-in-law called me. He only calls for one of two reasons – he needs something or he is bored. Last night he was bored. My nephew was already asleep for the night and my sister, who works as a PICU nurse in a children’s hospital, was at work. His call was just the push I needed to get myself out of the house. A God moment for sure! I refused to stay home to talk on the phone with my brother-in-law on the one night I could go do anything I wanted.

I talked to him on the phone on the way to the restaurant. [We can still talk and drive in this state. I know people have all kinds of feelings about that, but I have to say talking on my phone and driving is safer than what I am doing most of the time,
which is driving and passing drinks and snacks back to littleman. Mamas, you with me here?] Being on the phone allowed me not to think about the fact that I was actually doing this.

I got out of my car and headed in. I hadn’t decided if I was going to get a table or eat at the bar. I decided on the bar. Yes, probably a bit of a cop out, but it’s baby steps, folks.

I plopped myself down gracefully sat down at the bar and said, “I’m here for dinner,” with a great big smile on my face. Greg, the bartender, introduced himself to me, got me a water (since I won’t drink a drop if I am driving) and handed me a menu.

I had a wonderful dinner of salmon and dessert of banana foster turnover. Yes, dessert was a must. If I was going to do this, I was going to go whole hog and I am so glad I did.

It really was a wonderful and empowering evening. Yes, I will probably do it again. Next time I will opt for the table.

Choice #2 – Yay!

Littleman left today to go to his grandparents. I miss him already. It is harder for me to leave him with fs’s (former spouse’s) parents than it is for me to leave him with my parents, but it is important to me that he has a great relationship with all his grandparents and I want to do all that I can to make sure that happens. So, he is with them on the other side of the state for a week. I am here. Did I mention that I miss him already?

At this point I have two choices.

Choice #1: Feel sorry for myself, sit around the house, mope, eat food that I know is bad for me, continually check my news feed on Facebook and think about how everyone else’s life is great compared to mine.

Choice #2: Get off my *ss and use this opportunity to do some things I never get to do – like exercise.

Not gonna lie, at first I picked choice #1, but I took a nap and now I am over it. It doesn’t take me too long, but it is a process.

Now I pick choice #2.

I have the chance to exercise every day for a week! A whole week! Now I am not ready to start training for an Iron Man or anything, but if nothing else I will be out walking. Don’t care that it is 80 degrees outside. My cousin who is deployed to the middle east somewhere is currently in 125 degree heat. I think I can hack 80.

An Ultrasound of a Different Kind

Yesterday I had to go back for a follow-up mammogram and ultrasound. Going in for my first mammogram at 36 made me feel old. Going in for a follow-up scared me. I know that lots of women are called back, but I am 36 and there is breast cancer in my family.

I arrived at the appointment early. They called me back and I was escorted to a dressing room where I removed all deodorant and put on an ever so lovely and flattering hospital gown. I then moved to the internal waiting room. I sat in that waiting area with about seven other women. The only thing we had in common is that we were all naked from the waist up and wearing the same gown. These women were all different shapes, sizes, colors, ages, nationalities. It was a reminder that underneath it all we are all women and we all have way more in common than we realize.

I brought a book to read while I waited. I scanned the reading material in the waiting room and realized that it was filled with OK! and People magazines. I opened my book and wondered why these type of magazines were the reading material of choice.

I read a bit, but every few minutes another name was called. Everyone looked up and around to see who was called. Everyone watched the woman who was called disappear into the room with the loud machine.

I found myself reading and then re-reading lines in my book. I couldn’t focus. I gave up on the book. There was a Marie Claire, which I figured had a little more depth than OK! I dug into that, but soon realized that even Marie Claire was too deep for my current mental state.

I picked up an OK! from several months ago. I realized immediately why this was the reading material of choice. It required no thought. It was made up primarily pictures of people who live in an entirely different world than I do. I read short blurbs about people that I couldn’t relate to at all. It transported me to a different world. The women in these seats don’t want to think and want to mentally be in a completely different place.

I flipped through several issues of OK! magazine, but even those couldn’t ease the anxiety that was rising by the minute.

The elevator music wasn’t helping put me at ease either. The longer I sat, the more that music grated at my nerves.

I was called back for my mammogram. I found out they were worried about a place on my left breast. Several pictures were taken. I was sent back to the waiting room.

I sat for a while longer, but was then called back for additional pictures. Additional pictures did not make me feel any better. I was sent back to the waiting room for the second time.

The women in the waiting room were rotating through. As women left they were replaced with new women. One woman even said to me as she was leaving, “You’re still here?” “Yes, ma’am,” I replied with a smile. The smile was fake.

I was in the waiting room for what seemed like hours waiting to be called back for the ultrasound. I wasn’t attempting to do anything but sit at this point. I didn’t want to read. I didn’t want to talk. I didn’t want to think.

I watched the radiologist come back several times to visit several different rooms. Each time he had his head down. Each time I made eye contact with him had a sad smile on his face. I felt sorry for him. Good news is not delivered personally.

I struck up a short conversation with a woman who was there with her mother. Her mother was back in the mammogram room for at least the third time. She had already been to the ultrasound room. “You are a good daughter,” I told her. “Thank you,” she said. This waiting room isn’t a great place for small talk.

At last I was called back to the ultrasound room. I hadn’t had an ultrasound since I was pregnant with my son. This was such a different experience. When I pregnant with my son I was excited and filled with hope as the ultrasound was taking place. This time my feelings could not have been more different.

I laid on the table. As the wand moved over my breast I remember what it felt like when it moved over my abdomen. I remember the tech looking at my son who was just a little bean at the time. Now the tech was looking at what could be described as another kind of bean. One was life. The other one could be…

The tech pulled the paper sheet over my chest and told me she was going to see the radiologist. “You just lay right there and I will be back in a few minutes,” she told me. I stayed put and looked at the light in the ceiling. I tried not to think about anything. I didn’t know what was going to happen and so there was no reason for me to go down any road – one way or another. I just kept wondering whether one or two people would return with the results. One = good news. Two = bad news.

After what seemed like an eternity the door opened. Were there one or two people?

“Ms.”

“Yes, ma’am,” still not knowing how many people were there.

“I have great news! You are all clear.” She continued, yet I stopped hearing her after she said “all clear.”

Relief swept over me. I started to breathe again. I heard her say something about overlapping breast tissue. She told me I could get dressed and go home. And, I thought, continue on with my life as is.

I am very, very thankful that I have nothing to worry about. I know that I dogged a bullet. I know that all women are not so lucky. Of the women that I was with today I wonder how many are at home tonight thanking God and how many are at home tonight asking God to help them get through this.

I am thanking God, but I am also grateful that I had this experience. It has given me insight into a situation, which, until today, I couldn’t relate to at all.

Life is made up of experiences. The good. The bad. The ugly. Unless we have an experience where we get a glimpse into a life we cannot imagine we can’t begin to understand.

Gonna Make You Sweat – Yeah, I Wish

Generally I am not one of those single moms who cries “poor me!” all the time. I think I have a pretty good attitude about single motherhood and all that goes along with it. Honestly there are a lot of great things about being a single mom, but no situation is perfect – single mom or married mom.

{Do you realize no one ever uses the term married mom? Things that make you go hmmm… (Last C+C Music Factory reference. Promise.)}

While most things are great, there is one thing that drives me more crazy more than any other. Exercise eludes me.

I would love to take a nice long walk. I would love to go on a run. I would love to take Zumba or yoga or even just go to the gym.

I don’t do any of these things.

Now, I realize that anything is possible. I realize that if exercise was really a priority to me I could make it happen. I realize that there are any number of exercise programs I could do at the house – P90X, anyone?

Here’s my reality…

I work at a school. There is no lunch hour.

If my stay-at-home mom friends don’t have the time to break up a 30-minute session into three ten-minute sessions, how the heck am I going to have time to?

After a full day of work and being away from my son for nine plus hours I don’t want to have a sitter come over to watch him. I want to be with him.

I could put him in the jogging stroller, but he is no longer a baby. He doesn’t want to be stuck in the stroller. And from my standpoint – let’s face it, pushing 40 pounds is a lot different than pushing 20.

I don’t like to exercise at the house. I either want to get outside and enjoy nature while exercising or I want to be a part of a group activity. I bought the Zumba DVDs. I can’t express how depressing it is to do those alone.

My son doesn’t leave me alone long enough to do one set of any exercise. An entire workout is out of the question. If you have successfully maintained any kind of exercise program in the house with a young child, I need to know your secret. Yes, I probably could do it after my son goes to bed, but…

After my son goes to bed I am tired. Many nights I go to bed right after he goes to sleep fall asleep with him, wake up in the middle of the night and move to my room. Those nights I am lucky to get my teeth brushed.

I get frustrated and jealous when I see folks out running because I want to be running too. It is a visual reminder that I don’t get to exercise like I would like to.

I keep reminding myself that this won’t always be the situation. Soon enough my son can go on a walk with me without stopping to inspect every stick. Soon enough he will not only be running with me, but he will be leaving me behind in his dust. Soon enough I can go on a run while he is at (fill-in-the-blank) practice. Soon enough he will be old enough that I can leave him sleeping at home while I go to boot camp. Soon enough I will be complaining because he isn’t home enough and I will have plenty of time to go the gym.

This too shall pass. Hang onto your son’s childhood because it will pass in the blink of an eye and you will then wish you had it back. Blah, blah, blah… Heard it all before, and logically I get it. Unfortunately the logic isn’t making me feel any better physically.

Right now I need to exercise.

He Really Brought Up My Biological Clock?

I went to dinner with a friend of mine recently. At dinner he asked me several pointed questions and made a few observations, which quite honestly rocked my world. Here is the crux of our conversation…

Him: Are you dating?

Me: No.

Him: Why not?

Me: I am not interested in dating. I have a son to raise and he is my number one priority.

Him: So, you want to spend your life alone?

Me: {what I thought – ouch! no, but you just don’t get it. you are in your mid to late 20s and you are at such a different place in your life. you don’t have a clue!} what I said – Not necessarily, but I am just not there yet.

Him: So you don’t want any more children?

Me: {what I thought – ouch, ouch!} what I said – It’s complicated. If you had asked me how many children I wanted when I was your age I definitely wanted more than one. Now things are not that simple. I have one and I am thankful that I have one.

Him: But if you met the right guy you would be willing to / want to have more children?

Me: {what I thought – that is never going to happen so I don’t even need to go there.} what I said – [cue crickets]

Him: I mean, don’t take this the wrong way, but your biological clock is ticking.

Me: {what I thought – are you kidding?!? you did not actually say that?!?} what I said – [insert polite chuckle] Yes, I know, but I am not all that concerned about it.

Him: You just deserve to be happy and I want you to be happy.

Me: I know and I appreciate it. I am just not interested in dating right now. I will tell you what I have told everyone else – when my son graduates from high school I will worry about that then. It is only 15 years away.

Him: You realize you will be in your 50s?

Me: {what I thought – you did not just go there. you are unreal. 50s. that is so much different than 30s or even 40s. wait – let me do the math. yep, I will be 51. about to be 52. what?!? holy…!!!} what I said: No, I never really thought about it, but thanks for pointing that out.

Him: I’m not saying that you can’t find someone great once you are in your 50s, but… I mean, look at that guy – you could find someone like him. (Imagine an overweight balding man with glasses wearing socks with sandals, plaid shorts and a shirt that matched if you were squinting.)

Me: {what I thought – oh, God, help!}

I believe that God puts each person in your life for a reason. My friend is blunt, yes, but honest and I need more people in my life who will be 100% honest with me. I haven’t processed it all, but he has given me a ton of things to think about.

Let me be clear. My son is my number one priority, but I am also very aware that he will grow up. While right now I am the center of his world, I won’t always be and shouldn’t be. I refuse to be one of those moms who has an emotional death grip on her son, hanging onto him because she is all he’s got. Poor kid will need enough therapy as it is without adding that dimension. I know it is up to me to make sure this doesn’t happen.

Where does dating come into all this?

It is complicated – very complicated. Enter new category – Dating. Lots to process. Lots to figure out. Stay tuned.

Life Lessons from the Ocoee River

There is nothing greater than having an up-close and personal experience with nature to help me remember that I am a very, very small part of a very, very large world. It helps bring everything into perspective. After having some time to reflect on the trip down the Ocoee I realized is that whitewater rafting is a lot like life.

  • You never know what is around the next bend. You have to pay attention and be ready for anything.
  • Although many have been down the same river, the river is constantly changing. Each run is different.
  • Your river guide is key. He is the expert. To have a successful run you must to listen to him and follow his directions.
  • If everyone in the boat isn’t working together you don’t get anywhere.
  • It matters who is in your boat with you. Either they are supportive and you work together to have a great run or they are out to sabotage the boat and everyone in it to get what they want out of the run.
  • Even though everyone is in the same boat everyone has a different experience because their perspective is just a bit different.
  • Rapids are equal opportunity. It doesn’t matter where you are in the boat, you will get wet. It may be at a different time and you could get less wet or more wet than the others in the boat, but you will get wet.
  • Everyone has the same chance of being thrown out of the boat. Sometimes it just happens and there isn’t anything anyone can do about it.
  • If you do get thrown from the boat you have two options – freak out or stay calm. How you react to being thrown out impacts how safely and quickly you are able to get back in the boat.
  • If you fight the river you will only end up exhausted and possibly injured. The river will always win. You have to go with the flow.

If only I had gotten some life lessons out of my first rafting trip about 15 years ago it is possible my life might look a lot different.

That was then, this is now.

I stayed calm. I’m back in the boat. I’m ready for the next run.

Bringing it all together

Up to this point I have been keeping several different blogs, each having a different focus.  There have been many occasions when I couldn’t decide which blog I wanted to post on because the topic I wanted to write about did not fit neatly into one particular area.  I decided it was time to bring it all together at Simple Moments.  Here you will find posts on:

  • faith
  • simple living
  • children
  • single motherhood
  • relationships with friends and family
  • money
  • goals
  • education
  • work
  • our home
  • love
  • exercise
  • self care
and a myriad of other things, I am sure.
I will be transferring some posts from my other blogs over the next several weeks, which should help give you some insight and some background.  I can’t promise that everything you read here will be pretty, but I can promise you that it will be real.
Welcome to Simple Moments.  Thanks for stopping by.

Sight

I recently had eye surgery.  I looked at this as not only a physical change, but a symbolic change as well.  I felt that I could outwardly express the change that has occurred in my spiritual life over the past few years through physically correcting my vision.  

Over the past few years I have removed barriers that I had placed between God and me.  The removal of these barriers has allowed me to continue to develop my relationship with God and has, in turn, made life much simpler.  

This change has taken place and continues to take place in my heart over and over again, but I have longed to physically feel and experience this change.  I was sure that eye surgery would be the physical experience I have been longing for.

Unfortunately, although the surgery went well, the healing process has not gone as smoothly.  My vision is worse than it was before the surgery and does not seem to be improving.  My ultimate prognosis is unknown.

So, in fact, this surgery has turned out to be symbolic as well as physical, just in a different way than I expected.

Joshua 3:4 says, “…you have not passed this way before.”  No, I have definitely not passed this way before.  I don’t know what my future holds – in regard to my sight or in any regard – but I continue to turn it over to Him and know that He will be with me through it all.  

This experience continues to be a true test of faith.  I know that this experience, although I may not understand it now, is a valuable part of my story of how God is working in my life.  

I will continue to follow the regime that the doctor has prescribed, but it is ultimately in God’s hands.

Please go to A Holy Experience and find out more about the She Speaks Conference scholarship.  She Speaks is a conference for women who want to share with others their experiences with God through the written word, the spoken word, or through leadership in their community.  

I know that attending the She Speaks is in my future.  I just don’t know if God has it in my future for this year.  In this, as in all things, I am doing my part, but I am ultimately turning it over to Him.