Dysfunction Junction……..All Aboard!!

 DJunction

My noggin has been working overtime and that is not a bad thing unless, of course, I blow a mind-fuse or my Motherboard.

Oh no, there’s that “M” word again!
 
Mother, the person who contributed to my existence on this troubled earth we live in and the foundation of my writings. I find it difficult to get through a day without tripping over some reminder of the woman who dabbled in selective motherhood.

On top of it all, those darn skeletons have been creeping out of the closet for the last day, or two, after being locked away for the last 3 years since…. “the crash”.

Yes, the big one….that dreaded Blue Screen of Death!

It happened shortly after Mom died as I went into my office to finalize the revisions on my book. Fired up my Dell and it fired right back with a series of messages that my hard drive was Done, Kaput, Finito!

Guess what I had neglected to do?

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Yes, guilty as charged for not having backed-up all my data. There was no fix, no rescue, no Geek Squad; my work, photographs, my book…..gone. Fortunately, thanks to my participation in a local writer’s group, I did have hard copy on most of the book, just not the latest updates added after Mom’s death.

Hey….I never said I was perfect!

I regarded this as an omen, a reason to step away from what had been so important to me and packed my book away, shoving the skeletons to the back of the closet in the process. Somehow I thought that my mother’s passing relieved me of having to share her story, and mine, that closure had finally come to pass now that the hurtful progressions of the past had come to an end.

The very day my mother died, my husband turned to me and said “You’re free now”.  Indeed I was, or so I thought.  No more endless nights of screaming and attempted escapes out the door; no more diapers, laundry, ducking from hurled food across the table.  No more rushing to get her ready for day care so I could work or making the 50 mile trip back home each day to pick her up again.  Ahhhh….I really was….free!

Until the skeletons picked the closet lock and made a break for it, causing the anger set in once again, and I started thinking.  After all, you need a license for a dog, a license to get married, well, there should be a similar requirement where a child is concerned. Think about it.
 

I make a good point, do I not?


Consider the red tape adoptive parents have to wade through in order to bring a child into their lives. Agencies mandate months of exhaustive investigations in an effort to assure that the adoptive child goes into a stable, productive and safe environment.

Giving birth does not give every woman the necessary credentials that guarantee her of being a responsible mother. Let’s face it, having a child is a learning process unto itself apart from the help and assistance of relatives, friends and books. Some women are exemplary mothers from day one, others cannot separate themselves from the baggage of their past to responsibly provide for the child they bring into the world.  

Understand that I remember because I choose to do so unlike my mother who made the conscious decision to forget long before Alzheimer’s disease started its assault on her brain.

How do you forget your only child, any child, for that matter? Sure, everyone has their moments of parental ignorance, deliberate or otherwise and, raising children, at times, can be an on-going test of wills and a losing battle of patience versus demands. But, where I was concerned, I was a good kid.

Honestly, I was!

Okay, my defenses are kicking-up here, as usual. It always happens when I delve too deeply into my painful family history. There’s no graceful way around it for I’m totally committed to sharing what must be said in the hopes of reaching out to some other kindred spirit who, like me, grew up, and has become a survivor, in spite of fractured parental units.

Survivora person who continues to function or prosper in spite of opposition, hardship, or setbacks.

  • Continues to function – Yes, for the most part. 
  • Prosper In this economy? 
  • OppositionDealing with remarks like “That’s in the past; why do you want to dwell on it?”
  • HardshipAlways feeling like damaged goods.  Does that qualify?
  • Setbacks Nightmares, flashbacks, old family photos that trigger bad memories and cause that chill to slide up the back of your neck.  Sound familiar? 

Anyone, anyone?

I know you’re out there….talk to me.






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That twisted circle of life….here we go again!

How addictive is this?  Blogging, I mean.

First, that little voice lurking inside your head keeps telling you that “you’ll have nothing of interest to write about, so why bother?” then, thanks to a friend who has taken the blog-plunge before you, it grabs hold of you with a power all its own and….voila`!

So much of what is shared on blogs revolves around topics similar to events taking place in each of our lives; no matter what age-stage we’re presently stumbling through, the same principles apply.  One of my favorite web logs is written by the sister of a good friend; a young mother with a small tribe of children who shares her quest for sanity with intense humor and wisdom.  Here I sit, more than 30 years after experiencing the same “toddler turmoil” and this could be me writing her same words.

30 years ago, there was no internet, no “mommy groups” or “play dates”, just good old Dr. Spock which I carried around like a bible with the page on “Toddler Troubleshooting” permanently bookmarked. 

Okay, there wasn’t any such page, I made it up.  Sue me. 
Just a test to see if you were paying attention.

My point is that everything stays the same, it just wears different disguises as we find our way down that bumpy road of child-rearing.  I only wish that the ability to share, to vent, laugh and cry, as I raised my three children, had been looking back at me through a computer screen all those years ago. 

                                                               

I only wish that I could do it all again. 


Yes….really, I do!

Thank you…….Narragansett Number 7!

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The girl with the little red shoes…

Why is it that sometimes those closest to us can, without warning, become strangers in our midst?  We’ve all experienced the division of families over senseless disagreements but the cruelest of all is when some debilitating disease takes over the very being of someone we love, a person who once loved us in return.

It’s been four years now since she passed away; four years since I had Jekyll & Hyde, in the form of a petite, gray-haired, foul-mouthed, sleepless, 80+ year old woman, residing in the guest room of my home.  My Mom; outwardly charming to everyone she met but behind closed doors she morphed into Joan Crawford faster than I could hide the wire coat hangers.
MDearest

Mom left without saying good-bye, twice in my life. The first was in 2003, when Alzheimer’s finally took over its devastating control of her failing mind.  The second was the day she died shortly after I left for work.  

In some way, Alzheimer’s disease created a new stage for her, one where she could perform as if she had some starring role before adoring crowds who laughed at her every word and rose to give her applause at every opportunity, especially when she recited this “bar toast”/poem, over and over, to anyone who would listen:

“Here’s to the girl with the little red shoes
She drinks my whiskey, she drinks my booze
She lost her cherry, but that’s no sin,
She still got the box that the cherry came in!”


I, for one, was not in her audience and was not amused. I was the “bitch”, the one who dressed, bathed and fed her along with giving her meds. My parent became my child, rebellious and ornery at every turn. You see, to her, I was her daughter no longer, just someone she resented, not that I could blame her; I resented her right back!


Ah, yes; the role of a caregiver can be quite unpleasant and when one is the only child giving that care, it is a combination of frustration, anger, and exhaustion. Did I mention sarcasm?  Enter my husband who, to this very day maintains that my mother was putting on an act (as she often did pre-Alzheimer days) and that it was her normal way of escaping from things that made her uncomfortable.   I always give him “the look”, whenever he attempts to again render his, unsolicited, opinion. Men often tend to minimize things like this.  Of course, I blend some of my sarcasm with one, or two, well-chosen words of profanity. 

Why not?  I’m good at it and it has helped me survive some terribly difficult situations but, not without scars. We all have them, in one form or another, at least those of us who grew up having rough childhoods. How we step beyond the damage and proceed through our lives, striving to be better human beings is, in itself, a life-long battle but very much worth the effort.

Thus, my decision to write a book, a small book of memoirs, to leave behind for my children and grandchildren and anyone else of interest. It has become a rush against time now that I live with the fear of someday losing my own memories as my Mom did.  I’ve no visions of sitting on Oprah’s couch as she interviews me about my book or having it land on any best seller list of notable writings.  I dream only of having time and making good use of whatever may be left.                                                                                                      

All of this brings me to a favorite line from a book, Bridges of Madison County …”the old dreams were good; they didn’t all work out but it was better than having no dreams at all”.  At this delicate stage of my life, I can finally dream again and hope for better days to come in the time I have left on this planet.  I’m slowly approaching an unmentionable birthday and I stand determined to tie up all the loose ends of my life. Things like scrapbooks of my children’s school drawings, photographs that need to be put into memory boxes for my grandchildren and so many treasured Christmas items, each holding warm, cozy, thoughts of holidays past.  So many memories that need to be passed down before it’s too late.


And, of course, my book.  The most important memory of all.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is workshop-button-1.pngFrom Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop:  Share a blog post you wrote years ago, what has changed?

Honestly, nothing has changed except the passing of time but not the sad memories I write about.  Hey, that’s life and we all know that our brief stints here on earth come with no guarantees.  Life is what we make it, how we learn to jump over its endless hurdles, stopping now and then to enjoy whatever happy moments come our way.

My manuscript sits neatly organized and still unpublished, not because of a lack of motivation, more a lack of confidence.  But, the fear of slowly, mentally, drifting away, as my mother did, kind of pushes me to keep writing, head to the publisher…and stop making excuses along the way!

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