The good, the bad, the wonderful

13 09 2007

I’ve been a volleyball of emotions lately, bouncing from one extreme to the other and back again.  On the good - we had a great visit with E.’s family, and I saw the area with new eyes, picturing living there for the first time.  On Sunday I visited the local UU service and really enjoyed it.  I fell in love with our new nephew, who is so completely precious and cute I just can’t stand it.  I feel so blessed at E.’s parents’ offer to put us up when we first move there so we can get on our feet.  I’m a bit nervous at what so much Fox news blaring in the background will do to my psyche, but I’ll figure out how to deal.

On the bad - my aunt who was battling breast cancer for a long, long time passed away over the weekend.  Although not completely unexpected, it hit me hard.  She was only in her 40’s and had 2 middle-school-aged children.   I just kept thinking about them, her husband, my dad, and everyone, and was near-tears all weekend.  The funeral is this weekend - so we are on road again.

This makes my second aunt claimed by breast cancer at a young age.   Another aunt currently has ovarian cancer.  One of E.’s aunts has breast cancer.  I feel surrounded by the possibility of untimely death - like if we breath the wrong way we’ll catch this cruel disease  (that actually might not even be too far off).  Mostly I feel angry and powerless to give back these young kids, these brothers and sisters, these parents - the beautiful women they deserve.

On the wonderful - the ultra-sound was yesterday, and again I was teary but thankfully for different reasons.   This new life we longed for and created together is there - and I saw all of it on the screen - happy and healthy and playing peek-a-boo with its hands.  Talk about a distraction from grief - I was so completely happy and humbled seeing those 10 little toes and fingers of our child.

It amazes me how much more fragile life seems as I get older.  Life can come - and go - so freely of its own accord that the realization of it literally feels like it stops me and takes my breath.  When did I reach Adulthood - this learning to watch life come and go and focus on both the big picture and appreciate the little things?  Either way, I’m thankful for it - it’s the only thing that keeps me sane.





Becoming the Path

29 08 2007

It’s always strange when I happen to be reading a book that explores and dissects the very issues that have recently bubbled to the surface of my brain - or it could be that I chose to re-read this favorite because some part of my subconscious knew that reading it would help me work through something. In any case, stars and books aligned, I’ve been mentally immersed in contemplating my relationship to geographic place – that is, re-evaluating what I want or need for myself and my family where I live.

I can link this near-obsessive contemplation to a minor event that happened recently that made me realize what few real and close connections we have to people where we live. But I’d be lying if I said that parts of it haven’t been brewing for a long time – finding it difficult to meet people here and form a sense of community, longing to give our kids the experience of living near relatives that we both had growing up, the lifestyle change of having relatives so close by to help with childcare and general emotional support.

Perhaps the latter two points have only been hypothetical until recently, and therefore the fun of living in a college town won out over making the move toward family. E. has nudged me in the direction of this move for a while, to which I always retorted with, “Move to god’s waiting room, where our neighbors will either be over 55 or will move to their ‘winter homes’ each year?” I then would proceed to tout the endless opportunities for fun in this area – the live music, the restaurants, the political protests, college lectures, the festivals and fairs. All of which we’ve been enjoying less and less of each year either because we are getting older and more boring, or we’ve gotten a bit wiser with money. Still – I remained enthralled with possibility just outside our door if we ever wanted it. I feared taking that away would be the end of fun as I knew it – or rather, the ever-present possibility of fun.

But, in choosing whether or not to move, do I fear the closing up of possibilities around me, or the chipping away of what I consider to be important parts of myself? Which parts of myself are enhanced by, or thrive on, place? How do I identify what parts of a place are the most important for me (and my family) to thrive?

E. and I moved here strictly on the basis of place. We had no jobs and didn’t know anyone here. We chose this area because of its culture (realize this was in relation to near-Northern Maine), outdoor activities, live music, good food, education, and geographic locale to 4 surrounding states, many with similarly-fun activities waiting to be discovered. Not to mention that we could be queer – and queer parents – with little a thought to how we would be treated in most parts of our everyday lives. I fell in love with this place – and thought we’d likely be here forever.

Perhaps love at first sight is also blind – because over the course of 4 years I’ve figured out that this place is not perfect – as of course no place is. We meet friends our age and they move on – to graduate school or to live in some other place better set up for permanence – and I realize the great parts of a college town are also its downfall – people move in, people move out. Our friends have come and gone – and one day I look around and see that what this place has never been able to offer me are lasting relationships and community. And meanwhile age has worked its magic and gone and changed my priorities while I wasn’t looking – and now I long for a sense of community so much I’m mystified as to how anyone finds or creates it. We can’t even leave our cats for a weekend – no one we know well enough to ask them to shove a couple pills down our cat’s throat each day while we are gone. Granted, living on a college campus probably hasn’t helped much, and perhaps if we’d been living in a neighborhood things would be different. And not that I’m holding cat-sitters as the standard, but I immediately get a picture of how hard parenting will be without close connections and a sense of community. I can’t deny that family who we (miraculous as it may be) actually enjoy and are close to provide a ready-made mini-community. Particularly in terms of our kids, E.’s sister-in-law said it best once: “No one takes care of your kids like family.” And I know first-hand it’s true.

And what is it again that I love so much about this place? We’ve maybe seen live music once in the past year, and rarely take advantage of the many offerings this area has, save for some random hikes and pond swims here and there. For the amount of times I take advantage of the “unique” offerings here, I could find those offerings in a new place. And then I’m left with the question: “What parts of our selves depend on place?” More specifically, “Who will I be if I’m in a new place?”

There are, of course, many things I love about the Cape – the beach, the rural-ness, P-town, the tiny unexpected pockets of locally-owned health food stores and activists, not to mention the warm, cozy UU church we were married in. And, of course, E.’s family, who we are very close to. And this is where, for the first time, my thinking shifts from myself to concerns outside of myself, to consider what’s best for my whole family. Perhaps this is the crux of my emotional breakdown the other day – a sort of reckoning with myself that I can no longer afford to only consider mine and E.’s needs – a thought both terrifying and invigorating.

But I fear leaving this place – perhaps because I feel I’ve become it – so much that I fear leaving it would be leaving myself. When we moved here, parts of me were able to be fed on a daily basis just by being here. Would I lose myself if I left this place?

The author of Drinking the Rain struggles with this very question – since she becomes quite a different person when she spends summers in a different place – and worries if those parts of her will remain when she has to move. A wise friend assures her that place has no power to dictate who we are, and quotes the Buddha: “You cannot travel on the path before you have become the path itself.” Her friend assures her:
“Everything you learned here will go with you. And what you haven’t yet learned you’ll be able to discover somewhere else. That’s what it means to be on your path – your understanding will just keep deepening.”

Of course, I am me no matter where I live. Perhaps what we think we need from a place mostly resides within ourselves – we just have to notice and nourish it. And if a place is truly not able to enhance what we value, we can always leave. But I need to trust that I am becoming the path I’ll soon be traveling, and will already have the tools necessary for the journey.

And, I know, the irony that I’ll soon become another young person leaving this place is not lost on me.  At least I’ll fit in really well when I hit retirement age.





Happenings

15 08 2007

I just finished the final HP book and all I can say is, J.K.R. better write many, many more books.  Wow.  The book has consumed me for the last 4 days, I’ve been thinking about the plot even when I’m not reading it, thinking out the twists and turns as I drift off to sleep.  How does she do it?  Amazing.  And now it’s all over. Sigh.

Our baby shower last weekend was amazing - people are VERY generous and it really is true that (most) people just LOVE an excuse to buy lots of baby stuff.  And it actually is all really cool and cute when you are the one opening the gifts for your own child.  And wearing a sash that says “mom to be.”  I admit I was slightly nervous if any of it would make me feel too much like the “other” mother, but as I sat right next to E. and took turns opening gifts, it all felt fine.  And if she gets a bit more of the attention - then well, she is the one growing this baby!

Friday I’m off to my hometown to reunite with fabulous friends from High School and see some family as well.  A mini-vacation without E., and also my last “hurrah” pre-baby.  Although I have lofty thoughts of drinking in excess, staying up late, and getting into trouble just like the good ‘ole days, I’ll most likely be in bed by 11 and wake up from a 2-glass of wine headache.  Ah, age.

Although I’m staying with my bestest bud instead of with my parents (thank Jesus), I’m sure I’ll have some stories from my family driving me mad, which I do even when I see them for a mere 12 hours.  Stay tuned…





Blood Ties

7 08 2007

*Note: Very likely the longest post I’ve ever written.

There are times in my life when everything is whirling around me in some tornado of new stuff, confusing stuff, or just plain emotionally-heavy stuff. This pregnancy/journey to parenthood turns out to be one of those times.

In creating my recent “Meme,” I didn’t put much thought into adding the fact that I have never met my biological father (or donor, as I’d like to call him instead, since he most certainly did no fathering whatsoever). It’s something unique about me, and when I’ve told most people they find it interesting.

It’s something I’ve dealt with my entire life, and I’ve gone through - and continue to go through - various phases of dealing with it. My father, that is, the man who helped raise me and I’ve known since I was a year old, is the person I consider my father. So - who is this other person whose DNA makes up 1/2 of me?

He’s a fantom father, a figure in my head I can imagine to be anything I want him to be. When I was an adolescent and angry at my dad for scolding or punishing me, he was my savior, someone who would most certainly treat me better if only he were my dad instead. Other times he was the loser my mom always described him as, an uncaring a**hold who couldn’t get over himself enough to know his own daughter.

The truth is, all I know about him is his name and address. I don’t know what part of my face might resemble his, or if my walk or way of sitting when I’m not noticing myself might be a direct trait from his family line. To cope with this unknowing, growing up I pretended that all my features – my body build, my laugh, my skin tone, everything – was from my mother’s family. I convinced myself so much that I pretended we were clones – that I had no other possibility out there to help explain myself. I saw everything about myself in her – and it helped me forget about him.

Eventually accepting that almost everyone I know has something that resembles each biological parent – either in looks or personality – was a difficult and only recent development. It brought back the wonder that I buried deep down inside me so long ago: would meeting him explain my out-going-ness, my artistic leanings, my reflective nature – all of which are clearly not from my mother? Or are these parts of me just the uniqueness that comes from my own personality that has nothing to do with biology?

When we started our journey to parenthood, both E. and I decided that a known donor would be the best choice. Aside from the logistics of cost and availability, we both wanted our child to know his/her donor. For me – I thought of my own experience, and honestly didn’t want it for my child. I had to grapple with why I felt so strongly about it – after all, I was the one who chose not to contact him, and may never make that choice. But I have the choice to make. And that became so much more important to me for our child. Known donors did not work out, and so I was adamant that we use identity release sperm.

I never expected that I would have a child with a similar relationship to his/her biological dad/donor. Of course, circumstances are different, but those feelings I had as a child trying to piece myself together might be the same feelings that he/she will have. As the non-biological mom, this experience has had an added twist, as I’ve felt surprisingly hostile at friends or family who over-emphasize blood ties by taking keen interest in the ½ siblings we know online, stressing that it will be an amazing connection for our child to have. Will it? Are people assuming it will be an even more important connection than the one to members of my own family because there is no blood relation? Will my child think the same? I have to wonder.

And this puts me smack dab in the middle of a dream I had last night, in which a small toddler was talking to a group of people, much like a prophet might lecture to a group. He (although genderless) turned to me and simply said, “Can you deny that two blood-related parents are what’s best for a child?”

I stood there, dumbstruck and looking down at him, and promptly woke myself up. The question haunted me in my near-sleep state – a question asked by so many right-wing nutjobs that I so often dismiss and rail against. Of course I could write an essay on why I disagree, and recite a million reasons in front of 20,000 people crowded on the Washington mall, and cite myself as one example of someone who will be a loving, caring, great parent despite any blood relation to my future child.

But my subconscious has a different narrative all-together, one that undoubtedly is mixing childhood and present experience with social messages I’ve absorbed since birth. I see myself struggling to both provide my child with at least some ties to his/her blood line, while at the same time defend my role as primary parent to an onslaught of one of the most powerful forces I’ve ever had to deal with. As I deal with my own identity of both feeling ½ mystery as well as knowing myself so well, I have to think my child might feel the same. I’m in a moment where I can burry and ignore my feelings as so many generations did so well with hard emotional stuff before me, or I can embrace them as a possible kinship and point of understanding with my child. I’m thinking my subconscious prefers the latter.





Joint Ventures

30 03 2007

Hop on over to my wife’s blog for a post we co-wrote about starting our adoption journey.





Passive Passiveness

13 12 2006

Me, via email: “Mom, we decided to book a hotel room when we visit this weekend.”

Mom, via email: “OK, whatever you want, let me know when you would like to get together with us.”

Look “passive aggressive” up in the dictionary: you will find my mother’s picture.





Braided Rugs and Sullen Teens

29 11 2006

Apparently E.’s family is from the 40’s and mine is white trash. Or, one would think by looking at this New Yorker cover portraying what seems to be “Thanksgiving Through the Ages.” It took us a while to actually get the point - all we saw was that everything about the top version screamed E.’s family, everything on the bottom, mine. I mean - right down to the braided rugs and sullen teenaged girl alone in the corner. Oh, did we have some laughs.





Happy ThanksGendering…..

26 11 2006

I majored in Sociology. I happened to do pretty well in school, particularly in Sociology and Women’s Studies. Books like “Love Between Equals” changed my life. In short, I like to think I really “get it” when it comes to gender. (read: gender roles, gender expression, multiple genders, and also “gender” as different than “sex.”)

So, why, when I’m hosting Thanksgiving, do I feel like I’m back to square one? My mind is completely blank as I’m asking myself: “You are born with a penis (and a usually ugly body when naked - let’s be honest) - and that magically translates into entering a family member’s house on a holiday only to sit on your ass to watch T.V. (which you do every other day of your life), tell your host/daughter to turn the music off so you can hear (and see!!) the score of the game, and basically feel your only part in this day is to do just this? I mean really. This is where theory hits practice in the face and I’m staring dumbstruck at the penis-people. Are you 5 years old? Is your only job in life to eat, shit, and stare at moving objects with the utmost concentration?

I’m not a man-hating feminist, really…..

I just don’t get it. To me the metaphoric child just sums it up perfectly. Replace mom with wife. Continue playing like you actually “contribute” to the household by looking under the hood of the car once a year. Straight women have got to be the most resilient women I’ve ever met. I sure as hell couldn’t do it.

I sure as hell won’t do it again in my house on Thanksgiving.

How did your gender wars go?