On Running

When I drive home from work in the evenings, there are always people on the trails and sidewalks in my neighborhood running and jogging. Older people, younger people, pairs and singles and groups, people with dogs, people with strollers. We are a very active suburban neighborhood is what I’m saying.

I like seeing the runners and joggers. Some of them are graceful and gazelleish in their running shorts; they are beautiful to watch, and I am always jealous of how easily they run. But others of them are like me: middle aged, a little pudgy, a little jiggly, not fast, but stubborn. Stubborn, and out there running.

I started running for reals in July, because in June my friend asked me if I wanted to run a half marathon with her in January. Before, I had done a few 5K runs that involved more walking than running, things I didn’t train for and attacked without any strategy or training. But a half marathon is Serious Stuff, so I signed up with a training group and told everyone I was doing it and then I registered because if I already paid for it, I’m more likely to do it. And then I started running.

And oh my lord it sucked at first. It hurt and I couldn’t breathe and I thought my head might explode. But it was exactly what I needed when I started up at the end of July, because I was not fit for group exercise since I was still angry and sorrowful and by and large just had no patience for people. But running was something I could do all by myself. It’s me versus me.

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The world came crashing down

I’ve started and stopped this entry roughly 200 times. The first 50 times I had to stop because I kept crying when I started. The next 50 nothing I wrote made sense because my brain was just not working well. The last hundred times, I opened a file and suddenly found myself unable to find the words to say what I want to say.

My mother called me at 6:30 on a Sunday morning. When I answered all I heard was my mother saying “You have to come! She won’t wake up!” I asked all the usual questions (did you call 911? what hospital are they taking her too?) while Kevin threw on clothes because he had awoken to me saying “Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god” while hunched over the bed. Just before I hung up, I heard her say “I don’t think we’re going to a hospital.”

We didn’t talk during the entire 30 minute drive. I clutched my phone, waiting for my mom to call me again, to tell me that Jackie was awake and they were on their way to the hospital so I could meet them there. But she didn’t call. The phone didn’t ring and as we drove into my mom’s neighborhood, I saw an ambulance turning out of an intersection. No lights. No siren. And that was the moment I knew.

Jackie was gone. And our family will never be the same.

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Sudden death of someone close to you is a shock to the system, like dipping your soul into a bathtub full of ice. This is something I have learned over and over and over again because every person I’ve lost has gone suddenly, sometimes violently, always too soon. But this time was different.

She’d had yet another surgery, the fourth in 3 years. This time it was her sinuses instead of her pacemaker or her hernia or the giant 9 lb mass that filled her abdomen. She’d had pain issues afterwards but seemed to be doing better.

And then she was gone.

When I got to the house, there was a sheriff standing guard, because they were waiting for the medical examiner to come and pick her up. I have never cried as hard as I cried while my mom and I huddled on the couch clinging to each other. And then we stopped, and started walking around in a fog that didn’t life for the entire month of July.

I made so many phone calls that day, the next day. Calls that started with me being calm and ended with me trying not to sob into the ear of the person I had just called. I could not handle calling my friends, because I knew that talking to them would break me. So instead I sent the worst text messages ever.

“Can you tell Char I won’t be there this week? Jackie died this morning.”

“I won’t be at Bunco, Jackie died.”

“Can you call me when you have a chance. Need to talk, v important.”

I told Laura while she was sitting in the car on her way to the Grand Canyon. I told my uncle while he was at his lake house enjoying the holiday weekend with his grandchildren. I woke up one of my mom’s best friends and said what my mom said: you have to come over.

Jackie’s dead. We lost Jackie. She passed away, she’s gone, she died. I said it over and over and over again but it didn’t seem real until I came home to get some clothes and took a minute to tell Twitter.

And then I cried so hard I almost threw up.

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Mom and I were talking the other day and we agreed that it was for the best that Jackie’s death was automatically a medical examiner’s case because of her recent surgery; if it hadn’t been, we wouldn’t have had any idea what to do as far as removing her body from the house (and we would not now know that they charge $20 for body bags). She hadn’t planned her funeral, other than putting down in writing that she wanted to be cremated. So we went to the funeral home and memorial park where so many of our friends had buried family members.

The funeral director looked 12, but she was sweet and efficient and completely respectful of my mother and her relationship with Jackie. We had everything planned before we picked anyone up from the airport. It was an odd way to spend the 4th of July, surrounded by sad people, quiet people, and a million boxes of Kleenex. I remember wondering what their monthly Kleenex bill must be; it has to be astronomical.

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The phrase I kept saying to my mother as I put away files and reminded her to lock up Jackie’s purse and put away things we didn’t want people snooping through was “Death makes people stupid.” Above all, I wanted my mother’s privacy protected. I fielded phone calls from family members asking what happened, how did she die, will your mom be okay? I searched through paperwork trying to reassure myself that she would be okay, that their lawyer had covered everything, that my mom wouldn’t have to sell the house and move to some horrible tiny apartment.

I ordered a case of wine and made Kevin pick it up to bring to my mom’s house. I taught my uncle how to make a good, strong Paloma. I bit my tongue when my family members acted like idiots and treated me like the flighty 12 year old I once was, and I poured myself another glass of wine. I took Jackie’s almost 4 years old granddaughter on “abentures” in the backyard that her grandmother designed and tended to so happily.

Family relationships have already started shifting. Jackie’s son and I are talking more now than we ever used to, but it’s good. Jackie’s sister is being too hovery and bossy for my mom’s liking but luckily, she’s in another state. My mom spends a lot more time on the phone and Skype with far flung friends who keep calling her.

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I feel guilty saying it but things are easier between my mom and I now. She and I worked out our shit years ago, through a lot of arguments and discussions and honest conversations. Jackie and I were getting there when she got sick in 2009, but then things got bad. She was in pain, she didn’t feel well, she worried about my mom, she worried about being out from work, and she missed her son and her grandkids.

And she took a lot of her frustrations out on me.

So it was hard, because Mom and I had to pick and choose how and what we talked about sometimes. There were things she would do for me without letting Jackie know because it was just easier that way. It was what it was, and I had every faith that things would get easier and more comfortable again once Jackie got healthy again, once they figured out how to get her heart beating calmly and her sinuses cleaned up so she wasn’t in constant pain.

But before that could happen, before we could get to that easier, more comfortable spot, Jackie died. Her heart wore out and stopped while she slept, and my mom and I are left behind to have the relationship we always had minus the tension. We text and email and call, I sit with her at meetings with the lawyer, she watches my dog when dogsitting arrangements fall through, she lets me do laundry at her house and I help her do her Costco shopping.

We are, above all else, friends. All those people who told me to take care of my mom don’t realize this, and they don’t realize that we take care of each other. We always have, and if all of this has proven anything, we always will.

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Losing a parent really fucking sucks. Knowing that I will someday go through this again and lose my OTHER parent is enough to make me want to crawl under the covers for good. But if there’s one thing I learned and that I know with all of my heart, it is that I am loved, by so many people. I had an Army of Girlfriends who called and brought lasagnas and wine and ice and babies to keep our spirits comforted, fed, entertained. They let me talk when I needed to talk and they let me cry when I needed to cry; they still do, to this day. I had friends who had never even met Jackie making CDs for the funeral, setting up for the reception after the funeral, sending flowers and Starbucks cards. They were my safety net.

They were my safety net, but Kevin was my rock. Someone once told me that the person you marry should be the person you can imagine standing next to your parent’s grave with. He picked up food for people, he made sure I had coffee and Jamaba Juice and Kleenex. He took care of me and my mother without any consideration for other people; we were his only concern, which was what we needed. He’s never once told me what I should or shouldn’t be doing or feeling or saying (except for the day he kept me from biting the head off of a very sweet employee at the funeral home); he’s let me just *be*.

Love seems inadequate to describe what he’s given me. I only hope I am half as good as him when it’s my turn to be his rock.

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Everything is settling now. The 40 days we had to wait before the house could be transferred is almost up. Mom’s looking for a CPA and a financial planner to figure out where to go from here, but she doesn’t have to leave the home she shared with Jackie for 32 years. She’s starting to clean things out of the house that Jackie refused to give up, and we’re getting into a new routine of emails and phone calls and text messages and biweekly visits.

The fragile days are getting farther apart, but we can all see the rough spots coming up. Her birthday in September. Thanksgiving. Christmas. Everyone else’s birthdays. The Fourth of July.

I miss her. I miss being able to ask her how to fix things in my house, I miss arguing with her about whether my memories were wrong, I miss her pie crust, I miss her making coffee in that damn percolator.

I guess that part probably won’t ever go away though.

Catsup/Ketchup

Point The First:
In April, right after I posted that last entry, Kevin was told that he would be losing his job as of June 24th. We did not panic for at least a month because I still have a job and therefore we would still have health insurance even if we ended up living out of our car (because yes, that would be preferable to living with any of our various parental units). So we rewrote his resume and I lit fires under his ass and he’s been looking for a job. Ironically, there is a very good opportunity that has been dropped into his lap that would mean more money, more advancement opportunities, a better group of coworkers and a generally happier spouse. The ironic part is that it is at his current company, so all of my fluttering around redoing my W4 to cover insurance payments and figuring out how we could live on just my salary may be all for naught. Maybe I will instead try and figure out how to live on his salary! Anyway, hopefully we will know something by Friday but in the meantime, I will keep practicing burying my anxiety under layers of sarcasm, tears and wine.

Point The Second:
Last Friday morning, I worked for Company A. By the time I left for the day, I worked for Company B, because a third of my company got acquired/merged/all of the above so the rest of the company projects got spun out into a new company. It took a year to make the deal, 2 months to prep the spin, and we’re all still trying to remember which company we work for when we answer the phone. We have a new logo, which I designed and Leslie’s brother-in-law refined, but I have not yet been allowed to order stationery, and for some reason that is driving me bonkers. (And I just got cc’d on an email from my CEO and damn if he doesn’t have his old email address in the signature. Oy.) Everything that is filed under “Minor, Annoying and Necessary” is something I am in charge of, and for some reason those things just keep popping up and landing on my desk. Which leads me to Point The Third.

Point The Third:
Saturday is my graduation ceremony, when I will receive my MBA in all its glory in front of friends and family and yadda yadda. And my friend is throwing me a party and my mother-in-law is driving down from Sacramento and all of this is leading to a lot of “So what are you going to do now that you have your MBA?” And the simple answer is I don’t fucking know. I feel like Dustin Hoffman except no one is telling me to work in plastics. I have at least figured out that I want to go into project management, but without some actual experience that degree isn’t going to help me much. So I’ve made sure that my CEO and my CSO and my direct boss (who happens to be one of my best friends, AWKWARD) all know that I want to do more than sit at the front and send FedExes and remind people to clean out the fridge (okay, I already do way more than that but sometimes, I am bitter). So the six month plan is for them to start using me to help with existing and new projects and eventually transition me into a new role. I’ve already told Leslie (she who happens to be my boss now) that if the company doesn’t step up there’s no reason for me to stick around much longer than that. Supposedly we will be sitting down in the next few weeks and figuring out exactly what I’ll be doing with the new projects in the coming months. In the meantime, I will continue to be the Most Educated Office Manager.

Point The Fourth:
I am trying to figure out what I am passionate about. I am trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow up. But I am also so very, very tired of examining myself, going through the minutiae and figure out how to fix things, how to do what I “should” be doing. Maybe I am passionate about being lazy and hanging out with my dog and drinking wine and watching bad TV and worse movies. Maybe I already am what I want to be when I grow up. I have a cute apartment and a good husband and great friends and an okay job and a closet full of dresses. Maybe it’s okay if I’m happy with that and don’t want to chase after something else. Ugh. Now I’m annoying myself so obviously I should shut up.

Redirecting my crazy

So I’ve been doing this thing where I go and work out with my friend Charlotte (aka my Crazy Crossfit Trainer Lady) and a few others of our friends a couple times a week. And she makes me do crazy shit like push-ups and ring rows and wall balls and oh my god so many squats. And she makes me run in between all those things and I usually collapse on the ground at the end of a 20 minute work out and the words “MOTHERFUCKER!” quite often get spat out by me and you guys, I love it.

I love making myself do things that I never ever thought I could do, I love waking up the next morning wondering which random muscles are going to ache, I love being proven wrong when I say “I can’t do that, Char”. It’s not 100% CrossFit (we don’t deadlift, and there’s only so much a school playground can offer in terms of gymnastic equipment so forget muscle ups) but it’s CrossFit-esque and it’s kicking my ass and it’s awesome. Last night’s workout was 11 minutes long, almost made my friends puke and left me on the verge of tears. It was the best workout of my life so far, because I was jumproping! Without tripping! And I was dipping and doing dumbbell tosses and doing thrusters and Charlotte was all “DON’T QUIT!” and I didn’t because I’m kind of scared of her when she yells.

My goal here is to survive A) bear attacks when we go camping and B) the inevitable zombie apocalypse. As I told Kevin, I don’t have to run the fastest, I just have to run the longest.

In other news, I have realized that surviving on coffee and carbs is not conducive to making it through one of Charlotte’s workouts alive. So I’ve started doing all this cooking and meal planning and thinking about what I’m eating and I have to say, I feel great. I miss bread, and I still indulge in quality chocolate on a regular basis but I also stopped drinking Monday through Thursday (I KNOW! California wineries are weeping right now) and last night I made turkey burgers with my own bare hands and they were freakin’ good (even without buns!). Kevin is rpobably a little annoyed with me for encouraging him to not eat any rice with dinner but hey, I’m not making him do ring rows so suck it up, buttercup is all I have to say.

In other news, for Admin’s Day today I received a giant gift basket with 4 bottles of wine, the largest wine glass I’ve ever seen (pretty sure it would hold all four bottles, actually) and my favorite gourmet chocolates. Good thing tomorrow’s workout got cancelled!

I Feel Pretty (Thanks, Igigi!)

The one thing about me and my personal style that has changed dramatically since my whole Weight Loss Saga started is that I am in love with dresses. This is mostly because somewhere along the way I shifted from being a definite pear shape to being more of an hourglass shape, but it’s also because finding a pair of pants that fits my big butt and stubby legs without causing me to spend the day fidgeting to make things fit right is pretty much impossible. Therefore in the Pants vs. Dresses debate, I have come down firmly on the side of Dresses.

The problem is that even finding good dresses that fit right is still a problem, because I’m a weird size. I’m a 14/16 but in today’s world of women’s sizes that can mean roughly 15 million things. So when Wendy Bix emailed us and said “Hey, Igigi wants to send us clothes to wear at Weetacon! Who’s in?” I said “Oh hells yeah!” and started picking out dresses left and right. And then I promptly forgot which dresses I requested because man alive, i was busy and shit.

So imagine my surprise when Wendy gathered us to explain that the lovely women behind Igigi were beyond generous and had sent us not one piece of clothing apiece, but instead multiple pieces…2, 3, 4 items to wear! And KEEP!! And next thing I knew we had gone from excitedly jumping around in the parking lot to frantically changing clothes together in the stairwell so we could put on a fashion show for the rest of the Weetacon revelers. (Please note: yes, I got to keep the clothes I am about to discuss. No, I was not told what to write and yes, these are my honest opinions.)

The first dress I wore was the Tres Chic Dress in a lovely black & white pattern. I love, love, love patterns on dresses; they distract the eye and hide any lumpy bits you might be trying to hide. This dress takes it a bit further and adds a princess knot that makes the front of the dress the perfect tummy cover and the cowl neck draws the eye up. I honestly wasn’t sure how I would like the cowl neck; it’s super tough for me to find one that doesn’t make me look dumpy. But this one hit just right, and I think the wider neckline kept it from making me look thick around the chin. The longer sleeves and modest neckline make this a perfect work dress, and the fact that it’s fully lined means no need for slips or Spanx. (I actually ended up wearing this to work my first day back from Weetacon since we had no time to do laundry!) Two thumbs up for sure on the Tres Chic!

The second dress I wore was the one that made Kevin drool; it was the Jackie 2-in1 in a lovely, lovely shade of royal blue. I love this dress. LOVE. BIG GIANT LOVE. Not only does it hug my curves as though it was made specifically for me, it has pockets! And can be worn multiple ways! The detachable belt can be worn aqua side up or blue side up, or it can be left behind entirely. Sleeves rolled up to show the aqua accent, sleeves rolled down or heck you can even wear the belt as a scarf (which would be a good way to cover up the top a little bit). This is definitely a dress I would grab for a night out; those pockets would be perfect to hold ID, lipstick and money (and yes, phone!). I went ahead and wore it to work but I will admit that I felt a little over exposed; I ended up putting some double sided tape on my bra to hold the top a little more closed. Next time I might try doing the scarf trick. Another two thumbs up plus a star because of the pockets.

Last but not least in my own personal lineup was the Carmella Lace dress, which quite a few of us got to wear. This is an absolutely lovely dress with tons of quality lace and little details like different lace edging around the neckline and satin belt. The cut of the skirt is one I would not have thought I would like on myself since it was somewhat trumpety and that shape always makes my hips look ginormous. But this one didn’t do that. What the Carmella DID do was confuse the hell out of me. It is a true wrap dress, and the satin belt was long enough to wrap around more than once so I wasn’t sure where I should tie it. I tried it on the side but then it was too loose and kept busting wide open; once I tied it in the back it stayed shut but then I felt like there was way too much ribbon hanging out over my butt. I did finally make it fit me right but  I think I need to try it on again when I have more time to fiddle with it than I did that night. I have a gala to go to in September and I think this dress will work well for it once I finally figure it out! So one and a half thumbs for the Carmella; that might get bumped up to two once I know how to wear it. (I think I might have been able to figure out the Venice Dress more easily but alas, that one is sold out in my size.)

So here’s the very best part of all this generosity that Igigi has shown to me and so many other women at Weetacon….I get to pass on some of that generosity! Yuliya has given me the opportunity to give a commenter a $50 gift certificate to Igigi so that you guys can feel pretty too! (PrettiER, because my commenters are the prettiest already. All three of you!) All you have to do is tell me which piece you are lusting after and where you want to wear it, and then I will use some fandangled random number generator (probably random.org) to pick one of you to give a piece of Igigi. I’m even going to give you a couple weeks to do some window shopping before posting your comment. Winner will be announced on April 8th (because I know for sure I will post an entry then!) Yay! Contest! Pretty stuff to wear!

(Big thanks to Jorie Tappa for taking the lovely pictures in this entry!)

Finally warm! Thanks, Grandma!

Everyone thinks I’m a wimp when I say I’m cold. Because I live in San Diego! It’s never cold there! It’s sunny and 75 EVERY DAY.

Except it’s not, that’s just what our chamber of commerce wants you to believe. Also, I do not technically live in San Diego anymore, I live in Poway. And Poway is “The City In The Country”, with coyotes and rodeos and big ass town parades. Seriously though, we’re 30 miles away from San Diego proper and are basically nestled up against the mountains so our weather is way more variable. Summers get all kinds of Africa Hot (I think our highest temp last summer was 112 F), which sucks. But what sucks more are the winters.

Daytimes aren’t too bad, because it usually stays around the low 50′s. Totally manageable! But the winters mean it’s regularly low 40′s to mid 30′s at night, sometimes even colder. Which would not be a problem if A) we had central heating in our vaulted ceiling apartment or B) our building was better insulated and didn’t have drafty windows ALL OVER IT. On top of that, our bedroom is set up in such a way that we basically have to have the head of our bed under a window; handy when trying to catch a breeze in the summer but hell on my poor delicate nose during the winter.

Last winter was not as bad as this winter, because this winter it’s been freezing and I wasn’t able to come up with the right combination of blanket/pajamas/socks to keep me warm enough without getting too warm. I was sleeping like crap because I kept waking up shivering and needing more clothes or sweating and needing to strip off either blankets or socks. Basically, I’ve been seriously jonesing for my Grandma Blanket. My Grandma had a thing for crocheting. After she and my grandfather retired, she spent hours each day sitting and watching her stories (Young and the Restless was her favorite) but since she was never someone who could just sit still not doing anything, she crocheted. Mostly she crocheted blankets, of the classic zig zag stripe variety. One day she decided to make a blanket for me, big enough to cover my twin size bed. It was the very early 80′s so she of course picked a stellar color combination:

Yes, it is burnt orange, chocolate brown, tan and ivory. Never mind that my entire room was decorated in a Strawberry Shortcake motif, that was the color set she liked.

She liked that particular blanket so much that she tried repeatedly to recreate it. I am not sure why that particular pattern was so hard for her to remember but it was. She never did duplicate it exactly, but she made a dozen or so in that color scheme. We found the resulting blankets stashed in a cupboard when she and my grandfather died, and now all of us cousins have a Grandma Blanket.

It’s a hideous color, but it’s the very best blanket I own. It’s heavy and warm without being stifling, and it covers exactly half of the bed so Kevin doesn’t complain about being hot because I have an extra blanket on the bed. I’ve been freezing this winter, but last night Kevin was finally able to find the Grandma Blanket in our carport storage unit. Sophie immediately made a nest in it once I had it on the bed; she knows a good blanket when she sees one.

And I slept better than I had in weeks, because I was finally, blessedly, perfectly warm. Thanks, Grandma

Things of Note

I bought a new trash can, and it made me much happier than I even thought I would be because of a trash can. Really, if anything screams “BORING MIDDLE AGED SUBURBANITE” it’s getting excited over a new trashcan. But here’s the thing. Our old trash can was one of those plastic ones with the swingy tops that always got caught on the trash we piled into it (because we are Uberconsumers, I swear) and I really, REALLY wanted one of those cool stainless steel ones with the little foot pedal but have you seen how much the big ones are?? EIGHTY DOLLARS. FOR A TRASH CAN. And I’m sorry but my trash can should not cost more than the trash it holds, so I refused to buy one.

But then I was wandering through Sam Walton’s Kingdom of Things Made In China and found this awesome Rubbermaid trashcan for $12. IN RED! So it matches my randomly decided red theme in the kitchen, keeps the dog and cats out of all our trash AND has a nifty lid. I am not at all ashamed to say that I bragged about my awesome $12 trashcan for a few days after I found it.
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I got a used bike, and I love it but I have yet to ride it. And this is because I bought it from my friend who just happens to be a good 4 inches taller than me and when she was fixing it up she neglected to lower the seat so when I sit on it I am barely able to reach the ground with my tiptoes. I am planning on riding it down to the bike shop this weekend and get it adjusted, and then I am going to get my new bike basket mounted and then I am going to make Sophie ride in the basket to the dog park. She gets exercise, I get exercise, win win!

Kevin keeps wanting me to buy a bike helmet despite the fact that California law doesn’t require me to. He forgets that I rode a beach cruiser through the streets of LA for two years without a single fall, injury or car incident. Also, I only get hurt when doing mundane things like walking so I don’t really know what he’s worried about.
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Speaking of car incidents, I got rear-ended last week. And not in the good way (BA DUM DUM!) Instead a dude in a Civic slammed into me, then got out and said “That was totally on me, sorry. My chest hurts.”

One of my friends texted me about it later and asked how badly I beat him up. I managed to resist beating the crap out of the non-attention paying idiot but I cannot promise anything when it comes to the mushroom-headed adjuster who is dealing with my claim. That dude may be in for quite a verbal lashing later this week since so far he has managed to A) not call me within the required contact time limit and B) tried to send me to a body shop near my house instead of my job even AFTER I specifically told him I wanted to go to one near my job.

Anyway, my lower back starts hurting if I sit for more than 20 minutes, wine is the only thing that makes it stop hurting, I wake up with headaches and I do not have time for this shit. So I am trying to fix my car and fix myself and ARGH. Pffbbbt.
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I am watching Rachel Getting Married. Will the wine help or hurt my enjoyment of this movie?
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Susan and Shawn came and stayed with us last weekend and celebrated the 4th of July with us. My parental units were even more charming than usual (thank goodness JM got a full night’s sleep the night before) (and also had 9 pounds of bitterness taken out of her last fall), the fireworks were awesome, and we drank a lot of wine and gossiped and it was like a weekend long summer camp.

I lurve my girls.
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Speaking of my girls, Laura had her baby!!! And he is my cute little boo, Kendrick Monkeybutt Squishy Shmoo. It KILLS ME that I am here and not there, and that I have yet to hold him but I am flying out there over Labor Day and then I will smother him with kisses and loving and cook casseroles for his mother.

AND I just found out that Niblet is going to get a sibling next February so it is Auntie M in full effect up in here.

Also, holy cats, as I typed that I got a text message that JM’s son (my stepbrother for all intents and purposes) just welcomed HIS baby boy (his second) an hour ago. This is why I don’t feel bad about not having babies, people. All these awesome, smart people are having babies around me, and I get to do all the fun stuff with them and just bask in my auntiedom.
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This movie is pretty boring so far. I think I need to find some Law & Order
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I have nothing else to say, so here is a gratuitous picture of Sophie on 4th of July. (And yes, I made the collar. Because that’s how I roll.)

I think I might be broken

My therapist called me a few weeks ago, to let me know that she was going to have to leave town indefinitely; her sister is sick so she had to move to go  and take care of her. We agreed that I was probably okay without transferring to a new therapist, since we’d already cut back to once ever 3 weeks or so. My Big Giant Underlying Anxiety seems to be relatively in control (by which I mean I’m not chewing the fuck out of my cuticles and laying awake nights obsessing over all the ways I had probably offended my friends that day), and when I told her I was dieting but not going crazy over it, she cheered for me and told me she thought I was going to be okay.

Fast forward through the next few (incredibly busy but super awesome) weeks. Still doing the Weight Watchers thing, working out more, taking my vitamins, not having any weird crashy symptoms or hot flashes, feeling great all around. Lost a few pounds, gained back a fraction of one of those pounds, then all of a sudden it was April and our anniversary was here and whee, time to escape to our favorite bed and breakfast in Julian, the town where we got married.

Julian is not known for health food and exercise. It is known for comfort food and pie and apple cider and wineries and relaxing. So here is what we did when we went there: we ate fresh, homemade breakfast that involved thick slices of bacon and the best scones ever; after buying half a case of wine, we ate barbecue pork in the sunlight, then strolled down the road to get dessert (pie for Kevin and cinnamon ice cream for me); I drank wine on the patio while reading a magazine; we took naps and snuggled and read really, really old issues of National Geographic; we ate a leisurely dinner involving giant shrimp and an apple galette that was a lovely way to finish the meal.

I dutifully entered it all into my nifty little WW online tool and it told me that OMG I ATE TOO MUCH!!! DANGER ZONE!!! TOO MANY POINTS! And I said “Meh” despite the fact that the scale this morning said that the weekend had knocked my weight up a pound or so. I looked at what I ate and yeah, it was probably more than usual but it was all real food, homemade and crafted by people who care about serving unprocessed, creative, nutritious food. And I refuse to feel guilty about eating food that filled my soul as well as my belly.

And today’s little uptick on the scale could be me retaining water because I’m PMSing. It could be because I didn’t drink enough water this weekend, choosing wine and fresh pressed cider instead. It could have been because I hadn’t pooped yet. Who knows? And honestly, who fucking cares?

Because I don’t. I’ve said it before but I don’t think I really meant it. I know this because today, I do mean it.

(Before I go any farther, let me say one thing: This isn’t me preaching about fat acceptance or getting on my soapbox about HAES (both of which are awesome and have better people than me speaking for it). This is me taking responsibility for accepting my own damn self and being proud of it.)

How much am I going to demand of myself before I say it’s good enough? How thin do I have to be? How small does that number have to be?

Here are the facts: In 2007, I weighed 318 pounds. A day at Disneyland exhausted me, there was no higher size of Lane Bryant jeans that I could buy (at least not in the stores), I eyeballed plastic chairs with trepidation, and I spent most of my time either feeling guilty about what I just ate or planning what foods my next binge was going to involve. Today, as I have for about 6 months,  I vary anywhere from 220-228. (This morning, I weighed 226.8) (I told you, I do not care about that number anymore. And therefore, I do not care who knows it.) Yes, this is 25 pounds higher than my lowest weight after surgery. It’s also 90ish pounds less than I weighed the day I went in for my gastric bypass….the surgery I had almost 3 years ago.

So I’ve kept NINETY POUNDS off for 3 years. When I think of it that way, it’s kind of stunning. It’s stunning and amazing and it makes me more than happy. It makes me proud.

I did not have this surgery to be a special butterfly for the rest of my life. I did it to be normal, to be someone who wasn’t completely obsessed with food and the consumption thereof, to have a body that felt good after working out, to be able to keep up with my incoming niecelets and nephewlings, to have lower blood pressure and cholesterol and higher activity levels, and to be able eat the same food as everyone else without feeling guilty about every bite I eat.

Check, check, check, check, check and also, check.

But I’m an American woman, and I’m a size 16/18 and I’m supposed to hate my broad, jiggly hips and the fact that my arms are somewhat winglike and my belly is floppy even though I’ve never had a baby. I have the boobs of a woman who breastfed twins (seriously, I compared my boobs to a friend’s during a bridesmaid dress changing room situation and she breastfed twins and I did not but we had the EXACT SAME BOOBS) (and thus ends tonight’s TMI section) but I have Really Great Bras so who cares?

In other words, I’m broken. I don’t care! I’m still fat according to everyone and everything and I don’t give a shit because I’m way less fat than I used to be and I run and I look GREAT in dresses (a fantastic side effect of the weight loss) and tonight I walked a mile or two to go pick up dinner just because it sounded like a nice idea and the weather was lovely and the dog needed a good walk.

And yet I’m still going to keep keeping track of what I eat with my nifty WW online tool because I have to admit, the whole keeping track of what I’m eating does keep me aware of what I’m putting in my mouth, and that is not a bad thing. I feel better than I have in a few months, simply because I’ve been taking my vitamins and drinking more water and not having weird hot flashes and sugar crashes from eating too many carbs and in general feeling great. My bloodwork is all still awesome, and I signed up for a trail run next month (3.5 for my 35th birthday!).

So basically, I’m saying fuck it all. Fuck the number on the scale, fuck the BMI number, fuck the fashion dictators, fuck societal norms. I don’t give a shit anymore about any of it.  It’s enough, the weight that I’ve lost. If I lose more, so be it. If I don’t, that’s cool too.

As long as I keep being able to run farther, I’m happy. And if being okay with weighing 226 pounds makes me broken and weird and not normal, that makes me happy too.

My head is harder than it looks

Remember how I went and had weight loss surgery? And then I lost all that weight and was all “WOO, I’m done! I never have to think about it AGAIN!”

Man, I am delusional.

But even the best delusions come to an end for me, so last week I buckled down and admitted that hey, I need to DO SOMETHING to get myself back on track with the whole eating right & keeping fit deal because good intentions were not getting me very far. My good intentions were instead getting my ass a bit bigger, because even if I don’t absorb all of the food I eat, if it’s mostly carbs and processed junky food, that food that’s being absorbed is still going to add back some of the pounds I lost. So even though my doctor says I look good and my bloodwork says I’m super healthy, I decided to go on a diet starting this week.

I know. I thought I would never have to be on one again either.

I remember the day I found out from my surgeon’s office that I didn’t need to go back to any Weight Watchers meetings because my surgery had been approved. I threw away all of the materials, and I felt so very good doing it. I never had to sit around and listen to people talk about how good that fake cheesecake recipe was! Or be told I was going to be disappointed with myself because I gained half a pound! Or listen to them talk about good foods versus bad foods and then watch my own binge eating disorder rear its ugly head on my way home from weighing in.

(You can probably guess where this is going.)

Yesterday I signed up for Weight Watchers Online, and I spent the day remembering one simple fact: Dieting is hard, yo. Thinking about what I’m putting in my mouth and deciding if it’s worth it. Weighing the difference between a scone (yum!) or a spinach wrap (also yum but not scone yum). Paying attention to portion sizes and vitamins and how much water I’m drinking (a lot, by the way). Telling myself that no, I’m not actually hungry, I’m just bored.

I would rather be back in Managerial Accounting, quite frankly, and I dreaded that class.

Before I told her I was doing the WW Online thing, Sheila suggested that I join an in person program that she is running, and I had to tell her I couldn’t. For one thing, it costs too much, but for another (more major) thing, I realize now that I cannot do that group diet thing. I cannot be told “This is good and this is bad” and listen to other people’s tricks and manipulations and weird food issues because they just trigger me to do my own tricks and manipulations. And that kind of setting has never done anything for me other than make me rebellious and bingey and unhappy. And I don’t want to be unhappy.

But this time I have a friend to help me through the “Dude, this SUCKS” part that always happens at the beginning of a diet, and I have a plan to follow without anyone policing me and most of all, I have an actual true desire to turn my behavior around. Dieting is hard, and it sucks, because it makes me be responsible for what goes in my mouth and it makes me think about things that I don’t want to think about and it makes me stop finding weird justifications for everything.

But weirdly enough, for the first time ever in all my years of dieting, I feel good about this. I feel good about eating a salad with tuna and going for a brisk walk at lunch because I know tonight’s dinner will be full of tasty, tasty calories. I feel good about finally taking my vitamins and drinking my water and eating breakfast.

Most of all, I feel good about being able to acknowledge that dieting sucks and is hard and does not feel good but still not considering giving up. Sometimes, uncomfortable can be a good thing. I get that now, in a way I never was able to before.

My therapist will be so proud.

This is what I sound like in real life, too

So hey, how about that February that just whizzed by? That was good times, right there. I think I did some stuff and saw some people and maybe did some homework in there somewhere. OH! I definitely went to LA and gave Shawn  the best birthday present EVER (the 1980 Black Barbie, complete with ‘fro, pick and pantsuit!) I also greeted Patrick at the airport with a giant obnoxious sign and ate cupcakes with Trish and Jared. And hung out with my dog and my husband and the little asshole cats.

In other words, I did the whole day to day life thing.

And then March came and Weetacon was finally here and real life went far far away and I cried in a bar about how awesome Wendy Bix is and I ate chicken fried steak at 2:30am (MISTAKE) and I drank the best home brewed beer ever and dropped my Nano in my bathtub and lost my voice and didn’t show my boobs, not even once. And it was magical and sparkly and awesome and then I came home and had to work and ugh.

I have to say, for someone who actually usually enjoys her job and its flexibility (hello, I am writing this entry while scanning business cards), I am easily annoyed by it. Maybe that is why I was told during my review that I tend to be “discourteous when feeling under pressure.” (Apparently that bothers me more than I let on, since I have told that story to oh, 50 people now.)

But I mean come on. There was apparently drama about who was going to answer the door while I was gone (our facility is locked down and people ahve to be buzzed in, whoo whoo TOP SECRET SHIT HERE), because apparently everyone else is JUST TOO BUSY to answer the door. Amazingly enough, they discovered that having to answer the door constantly means that a person gets interrupted all damn day. HELLO, WELCOME TO MY WORLD. Ask me again why the Big Giant Filing Project isn’t done. It’s because I am basically chained to my desk until 2 or 3 in the afternoon, that’s why. And this is why I’m getting an MBA, so I can get unchained from the front desk (By the way, I totally aced Managerial Accounting somehow.)

So anyway, I got to come back and listen to the fall out from that drama and I really just wanted to tell everyone that they were grown ass adults and to stop complaining about it because damn if it’s going to keep me from going on vacations (especially now that we have found out that my coworker is basically the best petsitter ever in the history of the world.) But then I remembered that I really like my coworkers and I really like my hours and I really, REALLY like the fact that my company is actually successful in these uncertain times, so I shut my mouth and ate some chocolate.

Speaking of chocolate, have I mentioned that I have an entire chocolate drawer in my fridge? This is because my dear friend David sells chocolate through Dove, which now has this whole home party enterprise. Think Tupperware but for chocolate. And it’s actual good chocolate so I buy some or I host a party and then whammo, chocolate drawer. I’m like the worst WLS patient in the history of the world.

Speaking of worst WLS patient in the world, I’ve had these weird symptoms lately that sent me over to my doctor asking if there was a possibility that I could be starting menopause early. Or maybe it was my thyroid! Or something! So she took a ton of blood from me (because my doctor does not pshaw her patients’ concerns) and tested me up, down, left and right and declared me perfectly normal. (Aside from the hot flashes and dry skin and usual insanity, of course.) So I’m telling my friend this and drop in there that oh, well, I haven’t been taking my vitamins lately (I KNOW) and she basically smacked me with her eyes and sarcastically said “Oh, maybe you should try taking them then? MAYBE?”

So I’ll start taking them again, I promise. Because I really don’t like the hot flashes. And I hear beri beri sucks.

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