I wrote this post nearly a week ago – I published and then, worried about the way it sounded, I pulled it. With a few gentle nudges of encouragement, I’ve decided to put it back up.
Here’s the thing. I’ve been writing here for two and a half years, and yet… I feel like I’ve only let a small little bit of myself grace these pages. Mostly because I’m afraid. Of what? It’s hard to explain. I even created a new space where I hoped I could be more daring – but I rarely write there. Again, it’s hard to explain.
But that fear? I’ve decided that instead of letting it discourage me from writing, from being truly myself – I’m going to try and let it be my fuel. I’m still not going to edit this post – nor will I link to all the things I reference, although I know I should. I’m just going to hit publish, and beat fear with triumph.
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Three years ago, I was on the cusp of realizing a dream of mine.
I was finishing up the certification process to become a Childbirth Educator with the International Childbirth Education Association, and was preparing to teach my first class.
I had a gig all set up at The Birth Center, where I had both of my girls, teaching Natural Childbirth classes one evening a week.
I was 7 months pregnant, my baby and I were healthy, and I had an amazing 3 1/2 year old daughter who was thriving at preschool, and I was married to my best friend in the world.
And then my life flipped upside down.
I hemorrhaged after having Blythe and then nearly died two weeks later when it happened again.
I struggled to recover. My family and friends were an amazing help, but still I struggled.
At two months of age, my happy and content baby started having strange spells where her whole body seized up, and she would scream and cry, unable to be soothed.
At four months of age, it got even worse. She went from being able to sit up fairly well when assisted to not even being able to lift her own head. She was ahead developmentally, and then, suddenly, she was so far behind that her body movements resembled those of a newborn.
Her screaming and seizing got worse, and there wasn’t a doctor at our (expletive) HMO who would help us.
And then the economy took a dive, and the company my husband worked for decided to shut down its plumbing division. We had two choices: look for a new job in a flailing economy, or start our own business and take over the unfinished contracts from the old company.
We decided we’d take the contracts, so overnight we became business owners. Just like that.
And while I know it’s the American Dream to own a business, it wasn’t my dream. I exchanged my own dream for someone else’s, one I didn’t really want. But I feel bad for being ungrateful.
I miss my husband, my best friend. I miss talking to him about things other than work, I miss lazy Sunday afternoons, and I miss the carefree way we used to laugh.
One day, my hopes and dreams were right there in front of me.
And then they were gone.
My health, my baby’s health, my dream job… just gone.
It’s hard to describe what was left in their place. Post partum depression, resentment, confusion, stress, more depression, and a lot of tears.
I am trying so hard to stay positive, but it’s hard when so much of my life changed in such a short amount of time. When so many dreams were shattered, and I didn’t even get a chance to process the changes and accept them for what they were.
I am trying. I struggle every day, but I am trying to fix my attitude to one of acceptance and embrace what is, not what could have been.
Life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans. ~John Lennon
So true.
Author: Dre
Puppy Throwdown
We have a new family member!
Meet Alex, our 8 week old American Bulldog puppy.
{Saying HI!}
I wasn’t so sure about adopting another dog. I mean, it’s not like we’re busy or anything. I’ve been spending every waking moment with him so that I can fall in love – and what do you know?
Turns out, sweet puppies are incredibly easy to fall for.
As soon as we brought him home, Alex became best friends with Knight, the last of our Labrador Retriever Puppies. Watching them play and wrestle is so fun.
I staged a little tug-of-war throwdown the other day, right before Knight left to go live with his forever family, just so that one of them could end their relationship with bragging rights.
The beginning makes me a little woozy – I wish I knew enough about videos to edit out the part where I’m setting them up and am way too close. Also? I don’t know why my voice automatically goes up several octaves when talking to puppies, but apparently it does.
Enjoy!
tug-of-war from Andrea Edwards on Vimeo.
“Hugs”
I don’t hug.
I mean, I do willingly hug my kids and my husband. But they are the exception. There are people I love dearly, people who have burst into tears right in front of me and all I can do is pat them on the arm when I should be hugging them. I suck at comforting people, clearly.
Hugging just doesn’t come naturally to me. In fact, most of the time after I hug some one I have to go wash my hands. I don’t know why.
There are times that I am comfortable hugging people, like at BlogHer last year. I even hugged Marinka, before I remembered that she doesn’t hug, either. Beforehand, I imagined us being the two stiff non-huggers in the crowd, but lo and behold, I got to Chicago and hugged more people in one weekend than I had in my entire life.
There is something about getting to know people but only seeing them once or twice a year that makes me feel ok about hugging, and to even *gasp* initiate personal-space-barrier-breaking physical contact.
You’d think, then, that I’d be throwing out hugs left and right on twitter since the sentiment is there but I don’t actually have to have anyone up in my personal space.
{As an aside, this is one of the things I love about Twitter, blogging, and social media in general: I can socialize till my heart’s content without having to wash my hands between conversations. A life saver for neurotic little me.}
But, no. I’ve thought about tweeting “Hugs”, and goodness knows sometimes people seriously could use a good squeeze when they are in the thick of something difficult. But I go to type the word and *cringe* *hand wash*.
Today, though, I gave my first twitter hug. I couldn’t even type the word “Hugs” like a normal person. I had to type out “Sending you a huge virtual hug!” and I’m pretty sure that on twitter, wasting all that character space is probably against the law.
Any minute now, the twitter police are going to pop up and revoke my account.
And then where will I be? Lost and drifting, alone in cyber space with no one to tweet me “Hugs”.
Perspective
I wrote an emotional post earlier, and without even editing it or linking to things I’d mentioned, I published and left the house.
Now that I’m back, I unpublished. It was a huge woe-is-me whine fest and I’m embarrassed that I put it out there for anyone to see.
Here’s the thing.
I struggle. We all do. Every single one of us has our own personal battles.
But I am so tired of being overwhelmed. I need to make real, concrete changes rather than complaining. Sure, it might make me feel better for a little while, but the same issues pop up time after time, and they will continue to surface unless I make alterations in the way I’m doing things.
Sometimes life rips people’s hopes and dreams right out from underneath them. There are dreams that should never, ever be forgotten. Others need to be altered, put on hold, or left behind.
Life is so short, I don’t want to spend time being miserable. Not when I have so much to be happy about. I don’t want to look back on my life, 20 years from now, and regret the time I spent being sad.
So I will change my perspective. I will create new dreams, and try harder to take things as they come.
In the end, even though my old dreams were never realized, I’m so lucky to have had them in the first place.
So, Matthew at Childsplay x 2 recently shaved his goatee when twitter helped raise $300 for the YMCA.
Immediately, the question put forth by his twitter “friends” became – how much for the eyebrows, Matthew?
Unfortunately he seems fairly attached to that particular section of his face, so I suggested he get his eyebrows professionally waxed if we raise an additional $150 for the YMCA.
And he went for it. Heh heh.
I started the donations off with $25, and Melissa matched it. We need to raise another $100 before he’ll get his eyebrows waxed – so will you please donate to the YMCA?
For a good laugh, if not for the kids?
Also, the fine print I didn’t mention beforehand? We’re going to need some video of this wax action.
I can’t wait to see if his vlog ends up anything like this Friends clip of Joey getting his brows waxed.