I "worked" thirty minutes yesterday. That was the amount of time I was scheduled, so that is what I had worked. It seems crazy to think about it, but that is the definition of government inefficiency.
My sense of purpose used to be tied to going to an office everyday. Granted, there were some days (especially in the last year or so), that felt like that was a reach...but... I would still get up everyday, get showered, make the kids breakfast and go to work.
Now, I make the kids breakfast, drop them off at school, then maybe "work", maybe go do physical therapy exercises, maybe do this, maybe do homework. The possibilities are endless.
My days are, as Forest Gump would say, "like a box of chocolates. You're never sure what you're going to get."
It is interesting and exciting, but it's also terrifying. What is my sense of purpose if I'm not going to an office to do work?
Yesterday, I dropped the kids at school, then came home to work on a scholarship application. Then I worked for thirty minutes in Cumberland, RI. Then I made my way to a doctor's appointment in Warwick, RI. Following the doctor's appointment, it was off for a quick bite for lunch. Then there was a late lunch meeting for a potential job opportunity in Providence, RI. Then off to Mansfield, MA to pick up some stuff for another job. Then off to a 6pm meeting in Wellsley, MA for volunteer work with the JDRF.
My sense of purpose was not showing up to an office to get work done. My sense of purpose was to try to make a difference in small ways. I applied for a scholarship to hopefully reduce some of the financial burden for school. I went to the doctor to make sure to try to keep myself healthy to be able to be around (a long time) for my kids. I read the family read called "The Crossover" while I had a quick bite as I had been overdue finishing it. I had a late lunch meeting to discuss how I could make a difference for an organization that I think does some really cool work. While in Mansfield, I picked up stuff for a co-worker too...to save her a trip. Then when I went to Wellsley, I kept thinking about my son, my niece, our friend's child, our friend and all the other people that have to deal with T1D...24/7.
While in Wellsley, I was reminded of something my son had said shortly after diagnosis. "My Mommy and Daddy are going to do whatever they can to raise lots of money so no other kids will ever have to get this disease."
Then, I was reminded of my sense of purpose.
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
Monday, May 21, 2018
Tidal
It was a miserable rainy day, but I had a hall pass for the day. I was out with one of my closest friends to a beer/punk music festival. Combining two of my favorite things...beer an music was a genius idea. Until we heard the weather forecast. That said, nothing was going to ruin the day. We were out, without any worries of the world at home or work. We were going to drink beer and listen to music.
Until the phone call came. I had spoken to my mother earlier in the day, so I didn't know why she was calling. She sounded off, so I knew something bad was coming next. She told me that my sister was bringing my niece down to the local hospital as she has been diagnosed with Type One Diabetes. I felt as though the wind was knocked out of me all over again. All of the feelings from diagnosis day for my eldest came rushing back. I would never wish this upon anyone else...most especially family that I love very much.
The clouds hung over the day bringing a lot of rain, but this news would hang a heavier cloud over my soul. As much fun as I would have during the day, there was a lingering sense of doom about what my sister's family would be going through.
In my writing practicum class last year, I had to do a piece of writing that was personal. I wrote the piece below. I have shared it with very few people, but it seems incredibly important now as families that go through this, need to know that all of these feelings are normal and real and appropriate.
So, here it is...Tidal:
The edges of my vision looked
like the sun peeking through an eclipse.
The grains of sand wrapped around the contours of my spine. The heat, usually so unwelcome and the darkness,
so contrary to the day…felt like home.
The sounds of the rhythmic drum faded away as did the voices of the
children and the ocean crashing. I lay
in peace and surrender. No thoughts of
work. No thoughts of the fear of
returning to another year of school. No
thoughts of family finances. Most
importantly, there were no thoughts of the meaning of the day.
This day, August 27th
stands in familial infamy. It was four
years ago that I had received that call from Missy. It was tough to understand what she was
saying. There were tears and the
shortness of breath that you get when the world seems to be closing in on
you. I don’t even remember the words,
but I remember hearing the words get caught in her throat, then get muffled as
they bounced between the strands of blonde hair on the way to the receiver. It was the fear that we had both had for
days. Parental intuition, with a healthy
dose of Google…it all made for a dangerous cocktail in 2013.
We had been down this road for a week. We were all exhausted. It seems as parents, the failure to sleep train our two boys had come back to haunt us as every time he had to get up to go to the bathroom…one of us had to snuggle into bed with him until he went back to sleep. He was getting up six to ten times a night, which meant we were getting up three to five times a night each. We had cut off all water after dinner as it had seemed as though the excessive drinking might have been contributing to the excessive urination. It hadn’t made a difference though. This was the third time. Thankfully, it was midnight and I hadn’t gotten to sleep yet. I was nestled in close, almost hanging off of his twin sized bed. There was silence. Until there wasn’t:
Daddy?
Yes buddy.
Is it almost morning?
(Concerned) No. In about six hours. Get some sleep. (Pausing) Why do you ask?
(Groaning) I’m sooo thirsty.
He eventually drifted off to
sleep and I slowly tiptoed away, hearing every creak like an orchestra on our
hardwood floor. When I was free and
clear, I got into bed and reached for my Kindle. Google.
Search. Excessive thirst and
excessive urination. Enter. Type One Diabetes is the first thing that
appears.
We both knew what had been
coming, but there was the hope that it was just a miscellaneous infection. It was the hope that you have as a kid that
your parent won’t find the note from the teacher buried in your backpack…but
they always do. It felt like a
hurricane. You knew it was coming, but
you weren’t sure of the impact and all you could do was hunker down.
We spent seventy two hours trying
to understand how life would be different for everyone in the family with a
child that has a busted pancreas. The
doctors and nurses and educators would use the door of the room like a
revolving door in a department store. It
was a blur of colorful hospital scrubs. Every
time someone entered, we sat at attention and listened…and asked questions…and
got overwhelmed. It was the panic as the
peaceful wave in the ocean that you were going to ride, somehow crashed on top
of you.
Your job as a parent is to keep
your child happy and healthy, but suddenly it had become a lot more difficult. You now have to, without prior medical
training, calculate and dose your child with insulin. Insulin had overnight become the life blood
of your child. Without it, they will
die. It’s said that children are like
bees and dogs, they can smell fear. This
six year old child smelt it like the chum in the water in front of a
shark. He knew that you have no training
and absolutely no idea what you are doing.
The tears rolled. They moved like the senior walkers in a mall
prior to open. Slower than expected, but
still with a purpose. I tried to cover
it up, but I wept…uncontrollably. Head
in hand, in a hallway that reeked of alcohol.
Suddenly those blurs in scrubs came into focus and asked if I was
ok. I wasn’t. I mourned for our previous life. It was a life that had dropped dead suddenly,
in a doctor’s office with a urine specimen on a desk.
They tell you it gets
better. It doesn’t. It gets easier. The new normal becomes the only normal. The life that died is replaced by a new
one. One filled with love. One filled with hope. It’s a life that has calluses on its feet
from having walked over thousands of little needles that are at first shocking
and painful, but in the end just make your skin tougher.
The heat becomes unwelcome again
and begins to irritate my eyes. The
burning makes the tears roll down my cheek.
I reach to push them away with the back of a callused hand and they move
in a circle, having taken a lap or two.
The grains of sand start to shift and move. No longer wrapped around my spine, I am suddenly
surrounded. Sand, salt water, children,
heat and noise. There is no peace. There is no tranquility. And happiness is not a destination, it is a
series of moments.
Sunday, May 20, 2018
It's Been A Long Time...
It's been a long time since I sat down at this laptop to write a blog post. I had made it a point to try to write every day or so, but that didn't work...
I would say life gets in the way (and it does), but that is ultimately just an excuse.
This has been a massive year of transition for me. For the last two plus years, I have been living on this tightrope. I have tiptoed between the career I have and the career I want to have.
Let's backtrack for a moment. I have been a marketing professional for over twenty years. I started just out of college working in the music industry. When the bottom fell out of that industry I was laid off (along with 999 people - over the course of two days). I jumped around after that doing some customer service work, some non-profit work, bounced at clubs, etc. until I landed with a family-owned restaurant and hospitality company.
I stayed there for over eleven years. I liked the work, enjoyed most of the people I worked with...but didn't love it. I didn't have a passion for it. I have an underlying need to make a difference in the world around me, but I didn't feel as though I was able to do anything in this job.
I had tried to get another job...with more money and more responsibility, but I kept coming up as number two. I would make it through lengthy interview processes and hundreds of resumes, then be the number two choice. That happened five times in two years. It was a tough pill to swallow, but it helped me get to a realization. If I was going to advance my career, being a marketing generalist wasn't enough. I needed to look to get additional education.
Then I thought to myself...I have another twenty plus years in the workforce. Do I want to continue to do marketing or do I want to do something else? I decided that I wanted to do something else. After a lot of soul searching, I decided I wanted to be an Elementary School Teacher.
Yes, the vacation time and summers' off played into the decision (as my oldest son, is a Type One Diabetic), but the biggest factor was feeling like I wanted to make a difference and be a change in the world.
So, I started (close to three years ago) the process of looking into schools, applying to programs taking standardized tests and getting into a classroom (which I hadn't done in over twenty years). Needless to say, I got through all of the hurdles and found myself in August of 2016 in a classroom at Rhode Island College. I was terrified, but excited all at the same time.
Two years later, I found myself an Elizabeth Carr Scholarship Recipient, with a 4.0 GPA, needing some flexibility in my schedule at work to finish up my coursework. I am two-thirds of the way through the program. I needed work to be able to flex my hours so I can take a summer course, two practicums in the fall...then I would need to change jobs before the spring semester, as I would be Student Teaching (Monday through Friday during the whole semester) in the Spring.
Last year I was pushed by work to take vacation days whenever I had practicum classes. In 2017, I used fourteen of my twenty vacation days to go to school. They were not very flexible.
So, a few weeks ago, the moment of truth happened...I gave my two weeks notice. I decided that the life and career I wanted was more important that the career I had. There was an attempt to keep me on, but at the end of the day, I needed the flexibility to do what I needed to do to complete my journey.
It is scary and exciting knowing that I am on my way, all in, towards being what I want to be when I grow up.
My three year journey continues...living the "gig economy" life and working on finishing what I started.
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