Life Lessons for 2023

Life Lessons for 2023

It’s been several years since I did an annual Life Lessons post. They all seemed to be so bitter, so negative. When I was done typing, I’d invariably end up deleting them. So, as I approach 10 years as a single woman, did actual Christmas gift shopping and mailed out Christmas cards, here goes:

Colleen’s Life Lesson 2023

#1: Modern Medicine is nothing more than highly educated guesses. My Mom has had several heart scares this year, and I’ve struggled with my medications that allow me to live with Musical Ear Syndrome. The best medicine is a doctor’s education and experiences with patients who have similar conditions. When the patient doesn’t respond like everyone else or the condition is so rare even the specialists have never treated a case, treatment is mere guesswork. That’s not to underestimate doctors, surgeons, PAs or any other medical professional. But it is merely all highly educated guesses. I’ve been fortunate to work in partnership with my therapist, my psychiatrist, my surgeon and my PCP – all of whom have helped me come up with therapies and combinations of medications to survive MES and the stress it creates. But it has been all guesswork, trial attempts to find what works. Same for my Mom.

#2: I’m not interested in dating or having a partner in my life. After 10 years of living single, I’ve become very protective of my home, my time and my energy. For the first time, I actually had a few dates this past year. Met some nice guys and a random few not-so-nice guys. Part of my reluctance is that I always put my husband’s and my son’s needs before my own when I was married. Everything was focused around their jobs, careers, hobbies and education. Whatever I wanted was acceptable only so long as it didn’t interfere with their plans. I refuse to live like that ever again – and sometimes that’s what it takes for a relationship to work. So, sorry guys, I really believe I will be #single4life and I’m actually kind of enjoying it for a change.

#3: If you’re not likeable, you’re career is going nowhere. This has always been the hardest concept for me to accept. I’ve always believed that hard work, dedication and evolving skills were always more important in a person’s career advancement. I prided myself on always meeting deadlines, doing my best work and being eager to take on new challenges that forced me to learn new skills. But the sad reality is that none of that matters one tiny bit if you act like a jerk at work. The boss has to like you to get ahead. It’s really that simple. Maya Angelou was on to something when she said people will forget what you said or what you did, but they always remember the way you made them feel.

So there you have it – three life lessons that this past year has taught me. What has 2023 taught you? Please comment below!

Red Letter Dates

Red Letter Dates

We all have red letter dates littered throughout our lives.

November 8, 1965

The day we were born. The days when loved ones died.

August 15, 1988

Days that brought pure joy, or conversely, deep loss and sadness.

October 28, 1989

We mark them each year, sometimes with a quiet nod. A little smile. Others by pulling the covers over our heads and staying in bed.

January 16, 1991

Even if we forget sometimes, our bodies keep score. Reminding us with a rumbling tummy, a slight headache or a general feeling of dread.

March 14, 2014

Sometimes we smile and delight in a cherished memory. Sometimes those memories are dust causing tears to trickle down our cheeks.

July 7, 2014

They are the dates that clearly mark who we were before, shattering every aspect of the life we’d known and lived. The Before.

August 15, 2014

We take those shards of our soul to create something different. With each step forward on this new “after” path, we find more pieces, different parts of ourselves.

And we create a mosaic from the broken shards, rediscover parts we thought we’d lost and explore a path so different from anything we’d ever imagined.

The goal is to accept what comes After, to craft something whole and beautiful from the pieces left. To be better, not bitter.

Thirty Years Ago….

Today is my son’s 30th birthday.

I didn’t send a card. I won’t see him or talk to him. Sadly, we are estranged. Out of respect for his wishes, I no longer attempt those types of contact. Nor will I use his given name in this post. But turning 30 is a milestone.

When you are estranged from a loved one, birthdays – along with Mother’s Day, Christmas and Thanksgiving – are tough days. I felt the darkness building this past week, dragging me down. So I turned to a book, I’ve come to rely on during dark times. Done With The Crying by Sheri McGregor and her website offer parents like me the comfort of knowing I’m not alone and a positive way to process the grief and loss.

McGregor writes: “As loving mothers, we surely made mistakes. All parents do. But as kind and supportive parents, we did our best. We must recognize that no matter the choices our adult children make, their behavior doesn’t diminish the good we did or continue to do. Someone’s inability to see our value does not detract from our worth (160).”

Instead, McGregor urges parents like me to focus on happier times.

Thirty years ago, on the day of my son’s birth, my smiles in these pictures show my happiness. It had been a very difficult pregnancy but a textbook smooth delivery.

After a long day of labor, my husband and I greeted our son. He was my parents’ first grandchild, and my paternal grandparents first great-grandchild. He was and is the only child to continue the Steinman family name, something incredibly important to my former father-in-law.

So today, 30 years later, I celebrate the joy his birth brought to our lives. I remember the happy times throughout his childhood. And I pray for his health and happiness for many more decades. I hope he is celebrating this milestone birthday with people who love him.

As the years pass, I accept that we will never recapture this lost time. Yet, my heart is always open; my love will never end. A dear friend once told me the end of our story is not yet written. I hold these happy memories close to my heart. I know that one day we will meet again, even if it’s in the ever after.

Happy birthday, my son. I love you. I miss you. Always.

 

Alone Again, Naturally

Alone Again, Naturally

Thanks to a global pandemic, a whole lot of people are going to find out what it’s like to spend a holiday alone.

I’m a seasoned pro! This will be my sixth Christmas alone – a 55-year-old divorcee estranged from my grown son. Oh sure, in previous years I’d get together with my parents, my siblings and their families. We exchange Christmas gifts, eat way too much food and spend a lot of time laughing, but it was rarely actually on December 25.

There won’t be a gathering this year – thanks to Covid-19. Sadly, too many others are mourning the loss of loved ones, like Kaylie Hanson Long, a 33-year-old widow.

No matter the reason, being alone for a major holiday isn’t easy. In the early years after my divorce, holidays were hard. Grief never plays nicely, but we humans are remarkably resilient. We adapt and learn ways to cope.

Even before a global pandemic, I’ve come to enjoy this time alone, naturally.

I’m not tempted to overeat. My Thanksgiving dinner this year was a delicious homemade seafood enchilada, heated up in the microwave and served with a tumbler of sweet peach iced tea. I’m going to splurge this year for my Christmas feast on potato chips and French onion chip dip – two things I rarely eat.

I don’t decorate for the holidays. No Christmas tree, no tempermental strings of lights and no mess.

I usually pick a special project that takes intense concentration and time. Or I find a new trail to explore – if the weather isn’t excessively cold and the snow isn’t too deep. This year, I have so many new trails to pick from in my new community.

Holidays are yours to do with whatever you chose – to wallow in your pajamas all day, to binge watch a new series, to make your favorite treat, to splurge on takeout , to volunteer with your favorite organization, or to create something that will be donated.

My plan includes a Zoom Christmas! I spent a very short, masked in-person visit with my parents installing Zoom on my Mom’s phone and laptop so we can still visit and stay stafe. Fingers crossed that everyone’s technology and wi-fi works on December 25!

We have all faced so many challenges this year, suffered so many losses, but being alone on a major holiday doesn’t have to be traumatic. Like so much of life, it’s going to be what we make of it.

My apologies to Gilbert O’Sullivan for using his song lyrics for this post’s title, but it fit.

A Different Thanksgiving

A Different Thanksgiving

SunsetIn the fall of 1998, I was half way to finishing my master’s degree. I’d been invited to serve as lead teacher of basic writing, mentoring a group of undergraduate seniors who would teach the remedial English courses for 98-99 school year. I had begun to build my capstone portfolio, a requirement for graduation.

And my husband decided to take a promotion to Northeast Michigan, some 300 miles away.

I vowed to continue my studies and divided my week vertically being a student and teaching assistant at Western Michigan University Monday through Thursdays and being a wife and mommy Friday through Sundays.

It was a challenging year. Several of those Fridays were spent in marriage counseling sessions. As a wise mentor told me, “In all marriages, there are good years and bad years. You push through the bad years to find the good years.”

We pushed through that year, as tough as it was. I graduated in April with my master’s degree. We broke ground on a brand new home on 20 acres and celebrated Thanksgiving 1999 by moving in. Seriously, I had a huge turkey dinner ready on moving day!

In many ways, 2020 has been like 1999. It’s been so very hard for so many people.

Business are shuttered; people have lost jobs; some are facing hunger and homelessness as we move into the new year.

We can’t hug each other; can’t visit and share family times. We can’t have funerals to say goodbye to our loved ones. Weddings are postponed, shrunk to smaller outdoor venues. There’s so much we’ve lost as a result of this global pandemic and this potentially fatal virus.

Many of us are going to be alone this Thanksgiving, trying to do our part to keep loved ones safe. For our family, we’ve already cancelled Christmas.

But we have to push through the bad years like 2020 simply to get to the good years. We have to keep putting one foot in front of the other, even when you can’t see where the path leads. Even when the pain of moving makes you want to give up.

My Thanksgiving challenge is to find something to be grateful for this year. One small thing. One big thing. But something that has helped you get through and keeps you pushing forward.

I’m thankful to be employed again after six months of unemployment. I’m thankful to work beside good people for an organization committed to keeping staff safe while carrying out its important work in the community.

I’m thankful for friends who gave me a place to live when unemployment was my only income. I’m thankful to have a spacious, comfortable apartment to call home again.

I’m thankful to have a new community with miles of trails to explore and sunsets to watch.

I don’t know what the future will bring. There’s no guarantee that 2021 will be better, and we face many, many challenges yet as this virus continues to wreak havoc across the globe.

No matter what the future holds, I’m thankful to be alive.

Happy Thanksgiving!

 

When Fairy Tales Come True

Three times. That’s how many times he returned to the fundraising rummage sale to catch a glimpse of the woman who was dishing up ice cream.

Three times.

Amy and SteveHe bought a few books, looked at some other items he didn’t really need . But he returned later and asked her about the wine fridge. He didn’t drink wine, but he wanted to talk to her. And he bought it. The man who didn’t drink wine, bought a wine fridge.

She celebrated the sale of such a high-ticket item with her daughter and sat talking with some of the other choir moms, tired after a long day. Her makeup was long gone; her hair scraped back in a ponytail and her too-big baggy jeans kept sagging on her hips.

He drove home with his new wine fridge and worked up the nerve to write his name and phone number on a 3×5 notecard before returning to the sale for the third time.

This time he approached her directly, holding out the notecard: “I know you don’t know me, but would love to meet for coffee.”

She debated calling the number, but her teenaged daughter urged her to go for it.

Why not? It’s just coffee.

They both had daughters close in age. They were both divorced. They both had busy, full lives and careers. They discovered they knew several people in common and both came from large Polish families who had helped settle the area.

Wedding fineryA few months later, he introduced her to several friends as “the love of my life.”

A year later, after she was diagnosed with stage three breast cancer, he told his boss he couldn’t travel for work for a while. He was there by her side for every doctor appointment, every scan, every test, every surgery and every chemo treatment. He was there when her hair grew back, still the love of his life.

They melded their lives, moved in together, helped their daughters through college and a wedding. They weathered a major flood and a pandemic.

And now they’re getting married, a small, private ceremony later this month with just their daughters and a new son-in-law.

Sometimes, fairy tales do come true.

 

Donate the Dress and Bury the Past

WeddingPortraitI’m giving my wedding dress away this week.

The bits of lace, pearl buttons and satin are going to become burial garments for stillborn infants and linings for those tiny little caskets. Like the marriage for which I wore the dress – dead and buried.

My wedding dress wasn’t anything like what I thought I wanted. It was the ‘80s and everyone was wearing leg-o-mutton sleeves, big butt bows and rooster bangs.

I wanted something different. I had a picture in my mind of my ideal wedding gown, something off the shoulder, with a deep vee for the waist, almost medieval in design. I’d tried on the ‘20s style dropped waist designs with handkerchief hems. But nothing felt right.

My mom, sister and I went dress shopping one Saturday afternoon. We ended up in a small single story brick building north of my home town. The place now advertises ‘gator and ostrich jerky.

I was skeptical when the bridal attendant brought out a dress with a high lace collar and wide lace cuffs with peal buttons up the sleeves. But when I tried it on, I knew. This was the one.

Of course there was no price tag on it and I remember holding my breath while the attendant went to look it up. My parents had agreed to buy my dress, but I wasn’t going to bankrupt them.

“It’s two-fifty,” she said.

I couldn’t speak for a minute. “You mean two-hundred-fifty?”

“Yes, $250 for the dress, but that doesn’t include any alterations.”

I think I spent just as much for the satin cap and veil, the undergarments, hose and satin shoes with rhinestone clips. I made my own garters and a satin-lined velvet cape in the same deep pine green of the bridesmaid dresses.

After the wedding, I had the dress professionally preserved, spending nearly half as much as it cost. The sealed box traveled all over Michigan and across the country as we moved again and again.

My wedding dress was one of the things listed in my divorce papers – proof that it’s mine to do with as I wish. I have often wondered what to do with it. My son was never baptized so I never needed a christening gown. Styles have changed so dramatically; I can’t imagine anyone would ever want to wear it again.

It’s time to let it go. Time for someone else to find solace from bits of lace and pearl buttons as they grieve and bury their hearts.

Grateful for the Dance

I went back to the old ‘hood today. Our former neighbors’ “little” girl was having a graduation open house.

In the last six years, she’s grown into a lovely young woman who wants to be a nurse and will head off to join her big brother at college in the fall.

It was wonderful to see her family and reconnect, however briefly, with old friends. But after only 30 minutes, I was struggling to hold it together. I said my goodbyes and walked down the street to take few snapshots of the home where my family was last intact and whole.

DeWittHouse_2015The trees are so much taller, the bushes are so overgrown, and that big ol’ messy shaggy bark hickory tree is still a big mess.

I cried the whole way home, wondering how different things would have been had I stayed here in the Lansing area in 2009 when it all started to unravel.

I never would have met the wonderful people I still count as friends in Tallahassee and Boise and Tampa.

I never would have walked the sandy beaches and enjoyed the salt water of St. George Island, seen the salty marshes of St. Marks and its lighthouse, nor lived in the beautiful Southwood with its wisteria-lined streets.

I never would have explored the high plains deserts of the Owyhee Mountains, the Sawtooth passes from Stanley to Sun Valley, the shores of mighty Lake Pend Oreille nor explored the stark, barren landscape of Craters of the Moon.

I wouldn’t have driven across this beautiful country of ours – twice.

I would have never had the opportunity to work on Florida’s very first drowsy driving awareness campaign nor witnessed a community rally around a stolen stained glass butterfly.

As that beautiful song by Garth Brooks says, I would have missed this bittersweet pain, but I also would have missed all the wonderful things that have happened in the last six years.

So tonight as I sit alone on my weathered deck, listen to the birds shrill calls, feel the cool evening breezes, breathe in the evening dew and watch the golden red sun sink into the horizon, I reminisce about all the things I have gained on this journey and all that has brought me to this point, to this here and now.

I am no longer a wife, no longer a mother and no longer a resident of that wonderful neighborhood. But I am still grateful for the dance….

Reaching into the Past

In the spring of 1999, I graduated from Western Michigan University with a master’s degree in English with emphasis on profession writing. That final semester, I produced a staggering number of essays, proposals, position papers and more. My life was split in two, vertically. Monday through Thursday, I lived in a small apartment in Portage, attended and taught classes, and spent hours writing at an old Acer computer on a card table. After my final class got out at 9 p.m. Thursday, I drove straight through to Alpena to spend my weekend with my husband and son. This is an except from my a memoir I submitted on Feb. 25, 1999.

 

Lexicology: A Memoir of Words

writingI kept a pile of books in the corner of my childhood bedroom within easy reach of my single bed. Two walls painted a shade of the blue sky propped up the three-foot stretch of glossy-coated romances, a rainbow of color — red, white, purple, teal, and green — against the blue. My favorites were Harlequins, and I inhaled them like smoky incense, breathing in their stories. “I was raised on romance,” I tease my oh-so pragmatic husband today. Perhaps more honestly, I escaped my adolescence in those stories, a book propped up on my pillow. In my favorite romances my glasses never sat crookedly on my face, pimples never appeared on my chin, and I was never without a date at the school dance. No, I was a governess for a wealthy recluse on an island in Italy. Or a companion for some troubled child who had lost her mother in a tragic car accident. Or a professional editor working with a difficult author who refused to leave his estate in Greece. And I always managed to fall in love.

The stories branded my brain. Many mornings I woke to find sentences printed backwards on my forehead after falling asleep reading and my fingertips black from the ink that smeared from the pages. Words like love, passion, and kiss became part of my vocabulary and I learned how they fit into whole sentences. Naturally my first attempt at a novel was a romance. I wrote it longhand in pencil in a spiral notebook with a fuzzy sailboat on the cover. I consulted my set of Childcraft encyclopedias to make sure I had the details of setting right. Yes, Colorado Springs was at the base of Pikes Peak. Yes, Candlestick Park was in San Francisco. Daily I scribbled away — on the bus, in my classes, late into the night.

*  *  *  *  *

In high school, my English teacher and I cracked heads over her grammar lessons.

“You can’t say that: Everyone should bring his book,” I read the sentence she had written on the board with my favorite simpering voice. “Nobody talks that way and it sounds stupid!”

Ms. Leigel stared at me open-mouthed while her red hair bobbed in agitation. Nothing in her 20 years of teaching prepared her for my mouth, the words that spilled out of me. I could see the confusion in her bony face, watched her hands twitter that anyone would be so blunt, so contradictory. Irritation flashed across her face, and she opened her mouth to respond. Then she remembered where she was and the other faces in the room. She smiled sarcastically and hid behind the grammar book open on her desk.

“Of course that’s the way it is, Colleen. The pronoun must agree with the noun antecedent.” She carefully circled the pronoun his and drew an arrow back to the one in Everyone. “One person is a his, not a they. If you had read the assignment for today, you would have known that.”

“Well you’ll never get me to write that way,” I retorted. “EveryONE will think I’m a fool and don’t know how to write. And I DID read the assignment.”

She gave me an “A-” and carefully added up the points I lost for refusing to learn her lesson in noun-pronoun agreement. She couldn’t overlook the “knack” I had for stringing words together in “pleasing combinations,” as she so often wrote on my weekly themes.

*  *  *  *  *

During my junior and senior years of high school, Ms. Leigel was granted a reprieve. I took two hours every semester of journalism instead of American literature and started writing things that mattered to me. I started telling stories, stories about people who were real and hadn’t lived hundreds of years ago. I wrote about a boy dying of cancer who, after losing his left arm, still found a way to repair his car engine. I wrote about the boys swim team and the girls volleyball team. I earned the nickname Ms. Sports Illustrated because I was at every basketball game burning miles of film under the backboards, hoping for that one photograph that would be sharp enough to print.

When the school paper didn’t have enough room for my stories, I went to the local community weekly. And I learned more words — paste up, half-tone, banner headlines, grip-and-grab shots. And I learned about truth in a small town. When Mr. D— didn’t want a story run about the break-in at his store, it didn’t run. He was, after all, one of the biggest advertisers. I hadn’t yet read Nat Hentoff or learned the words freedom of the press. Those words were yet to be discovered.

*  *  *  *  *

Very little in my life prepared me for my first professional assignment as a police reporter. I entered drug houses with my pants tucked in my socks so cockroaches wouldn’t crawl up my legs. I didn’t turn away when cops carried out babies wrapped in coarse blankets. I learned to talk to people who had family members killed in brutal murders and bloody accidents. They had stories to tell, and I encouraged them to talk, letting their own words illuminate their losses. I was prepared for the child who killed his best friend while playing with a shotgun. Sitting at my computer minutes before deadline, their words spilled out of me, through me — loss, tragedy, death and crime.

One Sunday morning, I opened the paper to the metro cover and three out of four stories carried my byline: the children who had taken up a funeral collection for their friends who had been killed earlier in the week by a train while playing on the tracks; the study that showed the housing market in Lansing was closed to minority couples; and the train derailment in a neighboring county. I had filled a whole page with words that meant something. I celebrated and slept that night with the page on my pillow, smearing newsprint all over the crisp sheets. I didn’t care.

*     *     *     *     *

I married a man raised on numbers, not words like me. Life, for him, can be reduced to a geometric equation balanced on both sides of the equals sign. He measures success in the number of zeros in his paycheck and the number of dollars of roadwork he oversees. When we fight, he argues in numbers while I yell the words I’ve learned throughout my life. It is a strange pairing, one that defies his logical equations. I once convinced him to read a whole novel, something he had never done in six years of college. He taught me to balance my checkbook, but I cheat and use the calculator. He still orders magazines with pictures, like Country and Western Horseman. He is tall and lean; I am short and chunky. Our pairing is like a cliche written a million times, a cheap gimmick I found in my romances as a child.

He has taught me more words that I never would have known had we not married — commitment, honor, logic, and reason. We’ve given up trying to change each other. He will never be the strange recluse who brings fresh flowers every morning to his daughter’s governess. He will never dance a tango in a tropical garden. He’s much more likely to take me a rodeo or teach me the unique chemical composition of soil rich enough to grow sweet corn. He can’t even dance a two-step. But he taught me about love and trust in ways that books could not.

*     *     *     *     *

Words failed me when my son was born. The strange alchemy that created his maleness from my female body didn’t have a word. Miraculous never seemed adequate. Instead I have learned to marvel in a new language, that of intuition, of sensation, of sound and smell. The feel of a child sleeping in the crook of my left arm. The pitch and tenor of his night cry. The warm scent of his skin as he is sleeping. I have learned to listen and not speak, to let other means of communication guide me as my son grows.

And I learned how our child combines his father’s logic of numbers and my play of words. Ethan dreams of flying in outer space, discovering a new planet, or naming a comet that has never been seen before. He uses a telescope to line up complex mathematical coordinates to locate the planets visible from our backyard and then writes a story about how Scooby-Do rescues the astronauts lost in the space shuttle. He sits at the table with his dad working on double-digit subtraction.

At eight he is not too large to snuggle on my lap as we read a book together, him reading the even pages, me reading the odd. We giggle loudly when he gets a word wrong. I purposely change the character’s name to Ethan.

“Mom!” he says, using the tone of voice that every parent has heard from a child. It’s the tone that says: You’re being really silly and I’m pretending that I don’t like it, but I really do.

“What does that mean?” he points to a word and wraps his lips around the mouthful of letters. “Literature.”

“It’s really, really good writing, words that everyone wants to read.”

 

Image from Flickr Creative Commons: LMRitchie’s Photostream

 

25 Years Later…

I used to joke that if Paul and I didn’t make the trip to England to celebrate our 25th wedding anniversary – there wasn’t going to be a 26th.

Guess the joke’s on me. Or my math was a little off; numbers never were my strong suit.

Obviously I’m not in England – nor am I celebrating my 25th wedding anniversary on Oct. 28, 2014.

I had planned to take a long weekend for a color tour to Southeast Michigan, visit a few wineries, a couple chocolate shops and wander the Lake Michigan shoreline. I wanted to make some new memories – just for me.

Even that plan was scuttled when I used my time off earlier this month during a nasty ear infection, complete with a 102-degree fever and a nauseating case of vertigo.

Instead, I’ll be in the office and I’ll go to movie night with the ladies as I do on most Tuesdays. Just another day.

It’s almost as if those years and decades I spent as a wife and mother were just a dream. There is no husband anymore, and my son, too, has apparently decided he no longer wants me in his life. His decision, his choice and I will respect it, but damn it hurts to accept.

I’m left with a diamond ring, a long white gown and the stretch marks. And the memories, those bittersweet memories that leak out of my eyes and trickle down my face at the most inopportune times.

But life goes on – and so do I.

I have a hectic, crazy and fulfilling job with good people. I volunteer for a cause that I care deeply about. I try to get into the pool to exercise at least twice a week. I’m working with a builder to have a new, more permanent home built for me, a small compact space just for me.

No, I’m not in England, but I’m home.