Thursday, July 14, 2016

mended







Someone once meant the world to me. Years later, I gave them a second chance. All it meant, though, was a second chance for heartache. But Hemingway was right - we can be strong at the broken places. 

It took years to learn my lesson, but during those years I found that I had slowly mended. Unlike the first time, this second time around has not broken me. I've found my strength at last.

I will no longer look back on what might have been, but forward - towards the rest of my story. May it be a wondrous one.

It's finally time to fly.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

I'm Only Human (But Less Than I Used To Be)


                      
In two more days, I will have had these new knees for 7 weeks. 

When I read the above sentence, it seems like a short period of time. But living it? It feels like a lifetime. Not everything in that lifetime of 7 weeks has gone as anticipated.

Oh, I scoured the internet before the operation, seeking the magic words of "bilateral knee replacement". I read the blogs. I listened to others who had been through the procedure. Actually thought I had it all figured out!

My surgery went smoothly. I have nothing but praise for my knee doctor, my hospital stay, and my physical therapy sessions while at the hospital, home, and now at the office. The doctor was quite pleased with my new knees at my first checkup. The therapists all have said that I am doing quite well. 

It's only when you get to me, myself, and I that things don't go according to plan. And the biggest thing in my life right now is pain. Each day does get a bit brighter, but to someone who has dealt with constant pain for over a year, that tiny bit is not nearly enough. I want the pain to be gone; I am so weary of dealing with something that is wearing me down to a shadow. More tears have been shed in this last 7 weeks than I have ever experienced. 

That light at the end of the tunnel? I want to be standing in it. And not just standing, but dancing. Soon!

Saturday, July 19, 2014

No More Excuses









My life recently went through a change. I had both knees replaced. 


Both knees had been bothering me for years, and I finally had enough of the pain and limitations to go have something done. Now the operation, hospital stay, and home therapy visits have ended. Now I start going out for therapy.

None of this has gone as expected. It's all been much rougher on me, both physically and mentally. I continue to feel much pain. I call it a good pain, as now I am heading towards better instead of away, but pain still is pain. I have been enduring constant pain for over a year now, and I am so ready for it to be over and done. The pain brings me sometimes to the point where I cannot concentrate, cannot focus on anything that I had planned to do during my recovery. Then I fret about time wasted, and it brings me down. So I seek diversions. Out of everything available to me, what helps the most? Not the television, i tunes, internet, puzzles, telephone, or even my beloved books.

It is the small stuff.

I spent much time in the hospital after my knees were replaced. It felt as though most of that time was spent watching out my window as summer unfolded without me. I made myself a promise then and there - that once I was home I would not spend time watching out of windows as life went on around me. No, I would actively participate in that life, that season.

And so, each day, no matter the pain level, I grab my cane and manage a slow walkabout. It might last five minutes; it might last longer. But each and every day I get up, walk out the door, and savor what lies beyond my doorstep. It might be a new bird nest. It might be a curious weed peeking round a stone. Quite often it is an awesome cloud formation drifting across the sky. Usually I have a camera with me to record these memories, but sometimes I just want to savor the moment. Savor and store away to bring back out when the day is not as warm as today, when the green is gone from the grass and trees, when the warmth is a fleeting memory. Savor, and give thanks that I am still here and able to appreciate.

Life sends you wonders. They are all about. It is up to you to seek them out. Get going!

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

the listener


Every so often, I speak to the listener. He does what he does best. Listens.

I speak of my dreams, my fears, my frustrations....and he listens patiently. Then gives his advice.

Sometimes I heed that advice, sometime not. Sometimes I laugh, and sometimes I cry. But always I remember.

Finally, finally I realize that I cannot change anyone else.I can only change myself, and by doing so other changes will hopefully follow.

This advice I intend to follow, and then watch the wheels of change move slowly forward. It looks to be a bumpy ride. Wishing and wanting have gotten me nowhere. But life has been on hold for long enough.

I know that I can make it. I have the listener.

Monday, November 1, 2010

My father and I had been estranged for years. This daddy's girl very much blamed him for the divorce that changed my life forever. Some years ago, out of the blue, the voice (my conscience?) spoke, and told me to reach out and send him a Christmas gift. I did so, and in return my father also reached out and invited me to visit him in Arizona.

That visit was wonderful. But all visits must come to an end, and the day of my departure saw us both with long faces. Upon reaching the airport, my father excused himself to make a bathroom stop, and my then-husband followed. Soon it was time to start that long walk to the plane. To this day, I remember hugging my father goodbye. I remember, because I think it was the first hug we had ever exchanged. Halfway to the plane, again the voice spoke to me and told me to turn around. I did, only to see my father standing there with the most grief-stricken, yearning look upon his face. For a third and final time, the voice told me to turn back and return to my dad.

I did not listen.

Soon the ex and I were winging our way back home, and he turned to me and told me about the strange thing that had happened at the airport. He had followed my father earlier into the airport restroom, only to find him standing in front of a sink, crying. The ex said wasn't that odd? My heart sank, because I realized I had not listened.

To this day, I wonder how my life would have changed had I listened, and returned to my dad. Would I have become a better person? Would my father have survived his demons and lived to share a life, finally, with me? Would life have been easier for us both?

I will never know. He died a month later.

I returned to that place of wondrous light and shadow to strew his ashes beneath a palo verde tree.

Every time I look in the mirror, I see my father.

I miss him.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

are you living, or just existing?



Recently I watched a movie in which one character asked another "are you living, or just existing?" Those words made me stop and think. That happens sometimes.

I am very big on handing out advice to my friends who ask, but I'll be darned if I will listen to my own advice. Do as I say and not as I do, and all that. Lately I definitely have been shifting from living to just plain existing. 'Tis the season for me, but for more than one reason.

Fall. Yes, it is beautiful, but fall for me has always been tinged with sadness because I know full well what is coming - winter. Winter to me means aching bones and yet another chance to break something, anything, due to my general klutziness on any slick surface...and let's face it, winter means slick everywhere. I have thought for quite some time that I suffer from SAD in the fall/winter, and so my lunchtime rambles now become more important than ever. Soaking up some sun, no matter the temperature, is good for my spirit. I need all the help that I can get. Walking has long been my primary way to mellow out. But the catch is the knees. The painful knees. They just won't cooperate.

Oh, the aching knees. Right knee has been wonky and on the mend for over a year now. When I injured it, I had been walking up to 4 miles a night, and the injury led to a virtual standstill. Slowly but surely, with much help, I regained much that I had lost, and managed to work my way back up to about 3 miles a night. Then, about a month ago, the good left knee rebelled at having to work overtime for so long. Back to a standstill. No walking at all. This round has been much, much worse. The pain has been severe and constant. But there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Each day now, there is a longer and longer break in the pain. I am determined to overcome and keep going.

I have to. No longer do I want to merely exist.

I want to live. Again.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

outside

Outside.

Yes, outside.
Outside can be many things:

scary
enlightening
wondrous
confusing

But you won't know what it will be like for you until you experience it....and there is something new, every day.

I work in a box with windows. Every break, every lunch hour possible, I go ouside, outside of the box, to see what will pass my way. You see, the neat thing about outside is that outside is totally free. You just have to go, and there you are. Voila! What a gift. Just go!

Up until recently, I was quite the daily walker. Something that puzzled me, day after day, was to see all those television sets flickering away, behind closed doors, on all the beautiful days of summer. These warm days are so fleeting, after all. Why not cherish them while we can? I intend to, even though now it means painfully walking about. But it is worth it, since I never know what wonder I might come across.

I never know.