Category Archives: Life

So…

I kinda binge on things. Favorite recipes, TV shows, working out. If I get into a routine, I cling to it like nothing else. I have to finish the book I’m reading. I can’t stop knitting. It may be 1am but there are still funny pictures on Pinterest…

When I stop, I stop. I’ll eat salads every day for eight months and wake up one day feeling nauseated at the thought…and I won’t touch lettuce for a year.

Apparently, this is also how I blog.

Not the part where I get nauseated. The part where I binge and then ignore. Obviously.

I’ve been going through what I call “composting,” where I let my life and thoughts stew for a while to see what crazy awesome things spring forth. And some crazy awesome things have popped out! I’m excited to get started.

Some of my biggest passions, tea and vegan food, are going to become a beautiful new focus in my life. I can’t wait to share this stuff with you!

Just don’t count on me to blog consistently. ‘Cause that probably will never happen.

On Being The One

A few months ago I was talking about my life with a friend and she said, “It’s because you are The One in your family. Every family has The One.”

To be The One means you can be relied on to do the responsible thing. You’re there to support the family when they need it. Even if they deny needing your help, deep down, the family knows they can turn to you when things get rough.

There are fewer supports and more needs in my family right now. My grandfather claims he’ll either die this year or last until 2025. He has no one left. I am his One.

Most of my siblings are adults and have created a support system which works for them. None of them are particularly interested in taking care of our younger brother who has Down Syndrome–with good reason. They don’t have the stability or resources. But the question everyone has been asking, now that mom is dead and dad has to be the emotional, practical, AND financial support of the family, is what is going to happen with J? What will his future look like? Will he live in a group home? Will he live with one of us? No one can answer that one in the affirmative. But everyone has assumed that a large part of that solution will involve me.

I love knowing that I can be of foundational help in my family. I felt deep satisfaction when the pastor approached me at mom’s memorial because I was the organizer. Being in my job, working with developmentally disabled adults, and knowing all that info will be used to make my brother’s life better someday is sometimes the one light.

But what happens when The One is only recognized when everything is in chaos? What happens when The One’s advice is routinely disregarded…until she is called in to fix the clusterfuck?

This is my dilemma. I don’t want to turn my back on my family’s needs. But I can’t be The One and be true to myself, either.

What Legacy Is Left

When my grandmother died two years ago, I began to formulate a theory about the roles we hold in our families and communities.

My grandmother was always the one to socialize, throw parties, connect the family, and try every new hands-on craft she came across.

(Seriously, she sold handmade candy, knit, crochet, sewed, painted in oils, acrylics, and water colors, gardened, took piano lessons in her 70’s, canned famously horrible relish every year…)

The older she got and the less she remembered as Alzheimer’s took her mind, the more I found myself doing things like making truffles and trying new knitting projects. Mom took over the family connection role. After Grandma passed away, I had a burning desire to own a lemon tree. Her original lemon tree is just across town where my grandfather and his gardener take care of it, but I needed one of my own.

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(I think her name is Callie.)

My grandmother was also a bit of an amateur actress. Later that year I found myself accidentally acting in a children’s play for the first time in my adult life.

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When my mom’s health was getting worse last fall, I realized that she was the one connecting all of us to all of our relatives and I went on a frantic Facebook search to connect with them myself. It was almost uncontrollable, as if those connections would forever be lost if I didn’t locate them before she died. (The prosaic practicality of the family address book did not occur to me.)

Mom would lose her voice for weeks anytime she got a cold. Minor cold? Major laryngitis. Only one in the family. She had to use a bell to get people’s attention and couldn’t talk on the phone. In the last month, since Mom died, my sister and I both got minor colds which have affected our voices (although not to the same extreme as mom’s).

So I wonder, when people die, what happens in the people who are left? Naturally, we move to fill the vacuum. Someone else steps up to be the family historian. Someone waits in the wings for her turn to be the matriarch. When the family comedian leaves, another family clown, thankfully, takes their place.

But what about specific things? What about lemons? What about laryngitis? Are there things which float about in the world we can catch when they are released by the death of someone close to us?

I had a visit with a friend last week. She brought me an African violet.

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African violets were my mom’s favorite. I can’t remember a time when she didn’t have at least one growing in the window.

It was just a bit uncanny to receive one of my own.