Thursday, December 25, 2014

5 Things That Happen When You are the Only Parents at a Christmas Party

5 Things That Happen When You are the Only Parents at a Christmas Party

J and I are the first of our close friends to have a baby. We still are the only one who have a kid. Throughout pregnancy, and even the first few months, I didn't feel like anything was different; however, that has changed. Here are five things that happen when you are the only parents at a Christmas party.

5. You are ruled by the clock. 



You only have 4 hours of baby-free time, so you better make the most of it! If there is food to be had, then eat! If there is a game to be played, then play! You can't sit around making idle chit-chat because you have to squeeze in at least three months of party into a few hours before parental responsibilities take over.

4. You have to perform intense, rapid math to determine how much to drink.



Husband takes over one wall to multiply mass by time divided by alcoholic volume, while you take another wall to calculate how long alcohol is present in breast milk. Needless to say, the host(ess) does not appreciate the living room being turned into a math classroom.

3. You say, "Screw it, I'll just stick to 2 beers. 3 maximum. Maybe 4."




After becoming lost in functions and binomials, you decide to just stick to a few beers. They'll wear off by the time you leave, right? Well, you don't have to worry about that because you start your second beer, set it down somewhere, and forget about it.

4. The scale of acceptable white elephant Christmas presents has changed.


Matchbox cars and candy? Yep, I'm keeping this one. Being parent means both growing in maturity and regressing in maturity. It's a complex paradox.

5. As excited as you are for a few hours without the kid, you are more excited to get home. 


It was lovely to carry on conversations that didn't involve "poo poo," but being a parent is amazing. The changes are good; they are a part of life. Cuddles, smiles, and kisses from my baby are the best things in the world.



Sunday, November 2, 2014

The Day the Teacher Died

October 13, 2014 is the day the teacher died, metaphorically, of course. This is the day I sat in a departmental meeting for a high school in Somewhere, Texas, and my fellow English teachers and I were told to hold off on novels, lengthy dramas, projects, research papers, and anything else that drew out extensive creative, critical thinking until after the STAAR test. The test is around the beginning of April; therefore, we are left with two months to work in a novel, drama, and research paper.

My mouth could not voice my concerns because I was having difficulty picking my jaw up off the floor. Excerpts, passages, short stories, anything that resembled the beast that is the State of Texas Assessment of Academic Readiness. I traded concerned glances with like-minded colleagues and silently left to pick up my son. With a babbling baby in the backseat of my car, I bawled the entire drive home.

A few have not understood why this affected me so much. Wouldn't reading excerpts and doing all STAAR prep make planning easier? Grading easier? After all, you only have to prepare for a passage no more than ten pages long. For God's sake, no more than ten pages long!

I am a bibliophile. I love books. My life is not complete without books. Books rank somewhere just below my family, oxygen, water, and food. My passion for literature is what pushed me to become a teacher; I want to share my love with others. I believe literature holds the answers to life's questions. To be told to stifle that passion for a test which is, at best, flawed broke my heart. Literature is the Romeo to my Juliet; our passion is young, all-consuming, and a little irrational. While reading Fahrenheit 451, ironically, without permission, I could commiserate with the woman who burned with her books. Do you get my point? Literature is BAE (as my students would say), before anything ever.

Burning Book
                  You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. - Ray Bradbury

To take a more logical approach, this will not help our students in the long run. Hundreds, if not thousands, of students in the next few years will graduate high school in Somewhere, Texas, having never read a book. Some of them plan on entering college, having never read a book. What will they do when their professor expects them to purchase, read, and analyze books? Complete books? Or at least, something longer than ten pages? For those who choose not to attend college, they will probably have to read something at their future jobs. My husband J did not attend college and is a blue collar worker, but he still has to read and understand manuals, many of which are longer than ten pages.



I was written up for insubordination the week after this directive. For reading a book. For reading a book the week prior to this directive. For reading a Fahrenheit 451 with my PreAP students. The teacher within me has died. I am to become an automaton for the STAAR test. As teachers morph into standardized testing machines, unfeeling, soulless, without creativity or passion, students will follow.

The picture is from http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/photo/burning-book-royalty-free-image/90247043 

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Fighter

An assignment for my Writing Process class was to write a personal piece. Here is my personal narrative.


Fighter

“Chrissy,” my mom gently said, “you’ve been in an accident.” I groggily rolled my eyes around the room. I knew she was telling the truth because I was lying immobile in a hospital bed, and the smell of antiseptic, gauze, and burnt flesh assaulted my nose; however, I could not remember the last few weeks of my life. That was the first day that I had gained consciousness. Later that day, I was wheeled down the hall, down stairs by way of elevator, and through double doors to have my second surgery. The lights on the ceiling raced by dimmer and dimmer as the anesthesia took hold.

While recovering from surgery, I took inventory of my body. I stretched my face and wiggled my fingers. Right hand? Check. Left hand? Bandaged and pulsing with pain. Right leg? Check. Left leg? Nothing. No movement, no feeling. Temporary paralysis resulting from a tear in the right cerebral cortex: doctor words for “your leg can’t move.” My brain tore in the spot that controls the left leg. The same head injury that impaired my walking, running, and dancing left an empty trail through my memories.  I could not remember the accident, that week, and bits of my previous. In addition to my immobility, my back was a constant dull ache, and no amount of morphine could take away the pain.  With thirteen fractured vertebrae, battery acid burns on my stomach, chest, face, and left hand, and a tear in the right cerebral cortex, I was confined to my bed. 

Time has no meaning when you cannot move.  Days and night were marked only by the amount of activity in my room.  During the day, I had constant visitors: family, friends, and strangers.  My room looked like a stuffed zoo with animals stashed all around my room.  Teddy bears hidden behind bouquets of wilted flowers.  At night, I had a reprieve from others but not from my mind.  Before my evening pain meds would kick in, I could hear my mom sleeping on the couch beside me, and I would try to grasp my circumstance. 

I would stay up night after night, as long as I could, trying to move my left foot.  Paralysis.  That word seemed strange coming from my lips.  Paralysis.  That word happened to football players and daredevils not to a timid fourteen-year old girl. After I had a brace fitted for my back, I was taught how to move myself from bed to a wheelchair. Nurses, doctors, my parents, everybody seemed all too willing to accept my fate.

“You will never walk again. You will never go to college. You will never, never, never” the doctor droned on.  My future looked dim.  Doctors predicted that I would not finish high school, that I would, at best, be restricted to a walker. I did not want that future.  Despair slowly morphed in rebellion. “No! I will walk! I will finish high school! And, I will go to college!” my heart cried.  I stubbornly refused to accept the limits so many had placed upon my future.  Within a month of the accident, I was able to twitch my foot.  Within six weeks, I could climb stairs with a walker. I did all I could to start school on time with my friends.  Then, I did all I could to keep up since I had physical therapy three times a week for the first four months. I was determined to fight to achieve a normal life, to fight to survive.

Dealing with the physical wounds was so much easier than dealing with the emotional ones.  A few days after gaining conscious and discovering my physical handicaps, Mom told me, “Amanda did not make it.” My friend was dead.  She died on impact. Guilt is harder to deal with than pain.  Physical pain can be handled through willpower and determination. I understood physical pain; however, my heart had never dealt with the pain of losing a friend or survivor guilt.

I had never heard of survivor guilt until my accident. Amanda and I had switched seats moments before the bus driver passed out from ingesting cocaine and valium mere hours before leaving the parking lot.  The thought that I should have been the victim, not Amanda, haunted, and still haunts, me.  My mind was convinced that I should have died in order for a better person to live.  I did not tell anyone about switching seats with her for years because I feared people blaming me.  Although I blamed myself for her death, I could not cope with friends and family looking upon me with resentment.

In addition to the guilt which racked my soul, I felt like an outcast.  How many freshmen start high school wearing a back brace, using a walker, and sporting pressure garments?  I seemed older and wiser than my peers due to my experiences. Whenever my friends would complain about bad hair days or silly boyfriends, I would shake my head at the pettiness of it all. At the same time, I also felt younger because my mind struggled to move past a frightened, confused fourteen year old.  While my friends were exploring their independence, I would have anxiety attacks upon entering a new environment.  My mind concealed a split identity of a wise, old woman and a terrified, little girl.

Every year in high school, I would miss at least twenty days, and my junior year I missed over thirty days.  The absences were due to surgery and to going to court.  I had two surgeries once starting high school and would have to miss a few days due to recovery and to pain.  I remember attending school not long after the tip of my left index finger was removed.  My hand was wrapped in a bundy, which resembled a club.  Sitting in class with throbbing pain and unable to use my left hand made concentrating in class difficult.  I fought to not be held back; I fought to excel academically.

About two and a half years after the accident, sixteen of the teens in the accident, including myself, sued the bus owner for neglecting to perform a drug test or a drive test on the driver, who ended up in pieces. I missed most of the month of November because I became an icon of the accident.  Besides having four different lawyers talk about me, I was called to testify.  I limped pathetically up to the stand and swore to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing about the truth.  Once settled on the stand, my lawyer asked me to parade in front of the jury with my scarred left hand on display, so I limped off the stand and began my runway walk of pain.  To make matters worse, pictures of my scarred chest and legs were shown to the entire court.  As a self-conscious teenager, I found that almost as unbearable as the battery acid.  Once back on the stand, I was asked to relive a moment that I do not remember. 

Although I did not remember the accident, or even the two weeks following the accident, most of the other survivors did.  I heard stories of teens having to climb over dead friends in order to escape.  Some kids were caught in the wreckage and thought they were going to die in the twisted metal.  While going to court, a flashback I thought long buried was resurrected: The color is faded. All I hear is screaming. Screaming from children. Screaming from my wounds. Mrs. Meehan, Amanda’s mom, holds my hand while I am on a stretcher. “Amanda is dead,” she whispers. Physical and emotional pain work together to squeeze my throat and stifle my cries as I am wheeled away. It becomes dark, and I am scared, so scared. A fear that is all encompassing. Flashbacks still attack upon occasion. A particular smell, sound, or sight can catapult me back to the terror I felt.

I survived high school by refusing to feel sorry for myself. Even though I had to work twice as hard due to brain trauma, missing school, and emotional healing, I knew that anytime spend wringing over “what if?” and “why?” and “not fair!” was wasted time. I am grateful for my experiences because I am a survivor, not a victim. The grit I learned as a young teen helped me to persevere through college and graduate magna cum laude from TCU despite a traumatic brain injury. I have participated in softball, volleyball, tennis, and martial arts despite a limp. I seek to inspire others with my tenacity. Although I had to endure more than I ever thought I could, I learned that I am a survivor, I am a fighter. Lessons that I will never forget.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

This Present Darkness


I fear the darkness inside of me. My exterior is rough and tough with a smile and a wink, but buried deep inside, too deep to arise except on occasion, is a crippling darkness. Darkness that comes from a void, a black hole of panic and pain.

I have always been melancholy, even as a child. My surroundings greatly affected(s) me. I fear failure and causing disappointment. I volunteer and take on more than I can handle. I allow people to walk all over me. I am a sad puppy looking for affection and acceptance.

Growing up enveloped by a legalistic Christian church and family, I was pressured to be ashamed of my melancholia. Good Christian girls do not get sad; a true follower of Christ does not feel doubt and shame. My right to feelings was stripped away from me. If I was not 100% utterly joyful, I felt like I was being sinful. I think the pressure to constantly be happy created so much shame when I wasn't happy that it turned simple discontent to panicked despair.

                                     "If you're happy and you know it. . ."; "And now, I am happy all the day. . ."

If you are a Christian, you will always be happy. Well, I am often having to stop myself from thinking thoughts of darkness. If you see me shaking my head, murmuring, "Stop, stop, stop; it's over, it's over, it's over," I'm trying to shake away the darkness. Sometimes it works, and sometimes (most times) I just look crazy. Maybe, I am crazy. Maybe the darkness has roots inside my brain, twisting my thoughts.

The smallest things can trigger the darkness to rear its ugly head and take control like a body-snatcher. Today, my sub did not give my students the handouts I printed out for them. I choked down tears at school. I was feeling numb and beyond exhausted, overwhelmed with trying to keep the darkness down. On the drive home, I would look back in the mirror at Ish and frantically pray, "God, please, not now. I can't. I can't. I have to think of Ish. Ish. Ish."

My husband could not understand why I wasn't responding warmly to him when he got home. I could not think. I was shutting the darkness out, and in the process, I shut out light as well. Others cannot understand how I do not want the darkness. I do not ask for the darkness. I fight it the best I can. He's too tired of playing this game, my game of melancholia. a game I always lose. When he drove off to go to the gym, I collapsed. Bawling, howling, moaning. "I can't, Oh God, I can't."

My darkness drives away friends and family. I do not connect well to others because I know they will eventually be tired of my darkness. It is why I graduated high school with no friends. It is why I only have a handful of friends now, friends who have never seen the darkness.

From what I have read of the Bible, there is no commandment to be happy. I think the personality God has given me leans towards extreme empathy and self-awareness. Perhaps, those are gifts. I wish I would have been taught how to turn the melancholia into a beautiful gift, a useful resource, instead of being castigated for not having a zombie-smile (a la the Duggars). Telling me I am being sinful because I am exhausted from fighting darkness only provides fuel for the next round.

Now that I have wiped my tears, I am going to hold my baby tightly.

*My blog title is from a Frank Peretti book. He's a prolific author, and one of the few Christian authors I enjoy.

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Gotta Have It All

Tonight, I have just finished two assignments for grad school (yes, I know, I'm a horrible procrastinator). I waited until after playing volleyball at church to start the second (and most meaningless) assignment. Even after I arrived home, I took time to cuddle with Ish. Then, I rushed through the assignment, barely registering what I was supposed to gain from it.

My life is a constant juggling act: baby, husband, work, grad school, church, life, family. I make faulty priority lists, and something always gets left behind. Right now, it's my house. Thankfully, my meager salary as a public school teacher keeps my house from being featured on Hoarders: Buried Alive.

I will never be able to "Have It All." I think having it all is a lie, and Facebook is the tool of liars. I know I should not compare to others (especially to people I'm apathetic towards in real life), but when I see posts from stay-at-home moms about how developed, how smart, how snowflake-like their child is as they capture filtered moments in clean houses of organic, GMO-free, gluten-free, preservative-free, dusted with unicorn farts food, I can't help but to feel inadequate. Posts about how this person is so thankful for her medicine-free birth (what she has dreamed of since she was a child!) or about how this person would never let the poison of formula near her angel's face hole (#breastisbest #organiclife #imabettermommythanyousosuckit) do cause tiny stabs of inadequacy to pierce my heart.

                                                     My child is a speeshul snoflayk.

Most of the time, comparisons do not bother me. I need to drop roughly a bazillion pounds, but I'm hella sexy. I'm smart. I'm successful at my job. I have an awesome husband. My baby is the cutest, smartest, estest baby ever. But, mommy-guilt is very real for me. I feel like a failure almost every day for something or another. My child has to drink formula while I was at work because pumping does not work for me. I don't always make Ish baby food fresh from fairy circles. Sometimes, he has to eat from the dreaded baby food jar. His tiny hiney is wrapped in a disposable diaper instead of organic cotton (#bestforbaby #ihavetimetodoatonoflaundryeveryday).

The icing on the cake (I'm on a diet, so icing is on my mind a lot) is that I think these moms are purposefully posting the silver lining of their lives. I think making others feel less-than-worthy boosts their sense of self-worth. Facebook is their PR, so they carefully craft a perfect image (no perfect image is complete without snarky hashtags, #amiright?) I value genuineness, so my facades are less-purposeful, less caked on (again, diet). I try hard to be myself, to love myself despite (and maybe because of) my flaws.

I am no theologian, but I eschew facades because I think they do more harm than good from Christian perspective. We are not perfect. People are not perfect. From my own experiences, I have felt that since I cannot live up to the perfection of Perky Peggy, Cardigan Karen, or little Suzy Homemaker I am not good enough for God. I am not good enough to be a Christian. I was using a false measuring stick. I am human. I am genuine. I am trying to be better. My struggles are real, and I want to share them with others to encourage them. (BTW: The struggle of being sooooooo pretty that you're a stumbling block for helpless men is not a real struggle, but that's for another post.)