It’s a Jeep Thang

September 23, 2008

In the early hours before dawn on the Thursday of my infamous birthday weekend, our doorbell chimed its melodious tune announcing the arrival of a visitor.  It was our across-the-street neighbor, and she’d come over to inform us that, while we slept in unknowing slumber, she’d misjudged the distance from our curb – all the way across the street – to her driveway and plowed into the back of my 1998 Red Jeep Cherokee Sport.

So ends the era of the Jeep. Today her insurance company called me and told me that it was a total loss as the amount of damage is more than the poor thing is worth.

That Jeep and me have been through a lot.  Blizzards in Colorado and torrential downpours in Missouri – two across three states moves in less than a year – the Jeep’s gender change, several fender benders (but only one that was my fault), quite a few speeding tickets, a new car and lots of good times.

I can’t help but feel this is my fault. After all, I’m the one that relegated her to the curb upon the new purchase of my silver shark.

I’m gonna miss that damn Jeep.

And while I felt for my neighbor that Thursday, today – I’m not liking her so much.


A Kind Of Goodbye

May 13, 2008

In January, I went to visit my brother who had just returned from the hospital after his stroke. I’d visited him in the hospital between that time, and of course, we talked frequently on the phone. For months, my brother had wanted to talk about our past, to talk about what happened, to give his side of the story… to find forgiveness.

I’d not exactly put him off, but I’d really not responded in kind either. I’d listened to his stories and comments without providing any feedback, good or bad. I mostly listened in a kind of awe as I realized how differently we remembered our past.

I couldn’t find the words to express what I was feeling about our past, so I decided to print out the posts from this blog that I’d written specifically about him. I took them all and asked him to read, keeping in mind that some were written prior to us talking again.

He read the post I’d written about our parents’ death first; I sat silently while he read. After a few minutes – a lifetime – he set the papers down and said that was how he remembered it too. He then said to me, with tears running down his face, “Even when it was bad, I knew we’d be together again as a family – you and me and Joe (our other brother).” He stood up and I stood up and then we wept together. In sadness and in happiness, we clung to each other and cried out our mutual pain. He said again he was sorry and we let our past go.

I left before he read the other posts but he called me later about them to share that he’d forgotten some things and those posts brought it all home. But we’d said our goodbyes to those painful times. He still spoke about our past at times, still asked me if I remembered this or that – sometimes I didn’t remember things he did and it was eye opening. Other times, I remembered it differently, and we’d start to bicker until I remembered that it wasn’t all that important right now.

My brother asked me once what I remembered about him when I was a teenager, as a father figure to me, and I responded, “what I remember most is how angry you were… just so angry.” He called me later to thank me for opening his eyes to that anger, and he wanted me to know I was right.

Jeff told me once he couldn’t understand how I could forgive Richard for our past, for the things he did or didn’t do when he was my guardian. But what I realized as I listened to Richard’s stories was that we were at a point in our story where we were both beyond forgiveness. We were both learning about acceptance. Because my brother was dying and this was our last chance. This was my last chance to grow the hell up and realize it isn’t always about me, and this was his last chance to face what he’d done.

The truth is my brother lost a set of parents too. He lost a mother and father who adored him. He had to be the adult, the big man – he was the one who everyone turned to and expected him to make it alright. He was 24, true, but how many of us are truly adults at 24? How many of us have to face the burial of not one, but two parents and the responsibilities that entails AND the responsibility of a 13 year old sister?

I never once really considered what my brother went through when my parents died. I got a little taste of it with my brother’s death now, and I feel great sorrow and empathy for the 24 year old boy my brother was at that time and facing such a daunting task. All these 17 years, I held on to this anger and pain about what my brother did to me. I never thought of what he did to himself. In the end, my brother lost his whole family – his parents, his brothers, his sister, aunts, uncles, cousins… what a steep price to pay when I believe, with all my heart, his original intentions were good.

I don’t know exactly what’s changed my perception of my brother but I can’t look at the past with the same eyes. With the same venom and spite. With the same anger and hate. I just don’t have it in me. What I see is the sick, suffering soul I saw in the hospital about a year ago. Down, out, sick, without his family. I never wanted that – not for anyone and especially not for my brother.

So I got over myself. Dealt with my shit and learned how to be there for a man on borrowed time. I became the sister he needed. Not out of duty but out of love.

He was my brother. He deserved his family. It was the best choice I made in my life ever. To let go of my pride, to let go of the past, to stop being a victim to my own perceptions – no matter how justified they may seem. I let go of what he did to me long enough to meet the man he became. And found something in myself I never knew I needed to find, didn’t know I was missing – I found a sister. I was – I am – Richard’s sister.

Maybe he couldn’t be strong for both of us 22 years ago but I could be strong for both us now. I wanted to be strong. This is what love is -this is what it means to really love someone; not self sacrifice, just acceptance.

Goodbye, Richard. May you be at peace. May you know that you are loved and missed by your family. You are loved by me, and I will miss you.


Who Knew?

May 6, 2008

There is so much that needs to be done when a person dies. I had no idea… is this what my brother went through initially when my parents died? I certainly didn’t know AND I certainly didn’t give him enough credit. What a dumb ass kid I was… this is entirely too stressful.

My sister-in-law and I spent TWO hours just in the funeral home alone. It was a drawn-out, painful process. All I could do was stroke my sister-in-law’s back when she broke down and try to hold myself together. I made jokes with one of the arrangers, which is how I sometimes deal with pain. So that helped.

And we have to start all over again tomorrow. Picking out clothes for my brother, arranging a family get together… I’m tired just thinking about it.

When will this be over? I keep telling it to be over…


In Memory

May 5, 2008

Richard Leo Medina

November 6, 1961 to May 5, 2008

May He Find Peace


Not Ready To Make Nice

March 30, 2008

Last night I had a dream about my friend – we were talking on the phone while she was at work, laughing about this and that. It felt so good, and so I suggested to my friend that we go to lunch. “We haven’t gone to lunch in so long,” I said to her. She agreed and wondered if I knew where her work place was at, since it been so long since we’d seen one another. I woke up smiling, excited about my lunch date… until I realized it was a dream.

Forgive, sounds good
Forget, I’m not sure I could
They say time heals everything
But I’m still waiting

Forgiveness is something that once again is on my mind because of this friend, as I realize forgiveness and forgetting are two very different things. Once, a long time ago, I betrayed this friend and kept silent. Years later I confessed, believing the truth would be better than a lie. Knowing I could lose my friend, but also knowing I would deserve it. I wasn’t blind to my betrayal, nor to the fact it was my price to pay if it was meant to be paid. I was surprised and humbled when she selflessly offered forgiveness. I didn’t question the quickness of it, and I guess neither did she.

I’m through with doubt
There’s nothing left for me to figure out
I’ve paid a price
And I’ll keep paying

I learned recently that the real reason my friend let the break between us stay a break was not because of the fight about my ex-girlfriend or even her new boyfriend but because of the this one act of betrayal that she thought she’d forgiven me for but hadn’t. If I’m honest, I knew it wasn’t only about those silly fights. I knew what it was about and part of me thinks I deserve it.

It took me a long time to accept that I couldn’t change what I’d done. I can’t take it back, I can’t make it right, and I can’t make it go away. Ever. Regretting it won’t give anything but heartache. People are more than one particular act; rather they are a collection of many acts. Concentrating solely on just one act takes away from everything else that person has done or been to others. I am not that one selfish act I committed years and years ago. I won’t make excuses for it but neither will I live my life trying to make up for it. Because I can’t.

I know you said
Can’t you just get over it
It turned my whole world around
And I kind of like it

In some ways, that one act allowed me to see what I am capable of – it allowed me to see that we, as humans, are capable of incredible goodness and terrible badness. All of us have the potential to be great and the potential to cause great harm. There is a line between good and evil and we all can dance on either side of the line. I know now, from personal experience, that good people do in fact do bad things without ever intentionally meaning to hurt anyone in particular or with little thought to the consequences until its too late.

The whole reason I confessed to my friend was because I realized my silence took away her right to choose. It took her right to learn and grow from her own life experiences because she didn’t know. It was selfish of me to lie about it because I was afraid of losing her. She had a right to choose her own path from that experience, and I denied her that choice by not being honest from the start. I don’t say this now to be a martyr or a victim. I just felt I’d grown from that scared, selfish girl of years ago to a person who understands that truth is the better than a lie of any kind, even a lie to yourself.

We all owe it to ourselves to look inside internally before judging people. Can you, dear reader, look back at decisions made in your own life, with respect to others in that life like husbands, girlfriends, lovers, wives, and honestly say you’ve never made a decision selfishly without thought or care to how it would affect someone else until it was too late? Can you throw around words like honor and integrity and honestly say you’ve never made a mistake?

I’m not ready to make nice
I’m not ready to back down
I’m still mad as hell and
I don’t have time to go round and round and round

When I think about this friend now, knowing the truth about why she isn’t talking to me anymore, I go back and forth between sadness and anger. Denial and acceptance. I’m paying the price for my actions and I’m not surprised or even mad. I’ve also been judged without a word to me about the true nature of her anger, without a chance to defend myself. Not that I could. Not that I would even bother. I told her the truth and apologized without making excuses. I have nothing left to say and there is nothing I can do about the past.

It’s too late to make it right
I probably wouldn’t if I could
‘Cause I’m mad as hell
Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should

In the end, I owe her nothing. Not even my shame. It is mine to bear or get over if I so choose. And I choose forgiveness. No one is perfect. I refuse to dwell on a choice I made six years ago, in another life, as a different person. I will not spend my life attempting to make up for it. Nor will I allow myself to be treated poorly by the person I unwittingly hurt. Even if she has the right to be and stay mad, to not forgive, it is her own choice to make and live with.

I made my bed and I sleep like a baby
With no regrets and I don’t mind sayin’

I personally have no regrets.


What’s The Hold Up?

December 19, 2007

I’ve was asked recently if I’ve started looking again for another girlfriend. The question of whether Jeff and I are looking for a “third” as a replacement also came up. I giggle a little inside every time this question is asked, even though I know people don’t mean it as it sounds. As if I can so easily replace a beloved person who was a part of my love life for almost two years, not to mention the previous four years of friendship I shared with this woman.

Honestly, I’m having a hard time with the thought of dating anyone else right now. I can’t fathom searching for another love when I’m still so twisted inside over my previous lover. I have a lot of self-directed anger with regards to the relationship over not facing the truth sooner, not trusting my instincts more, and for not being stronger to walk away. I thought I was stronger than how I acted, and I feel let down by the fact that I’m not. I know folks may say that I was strong enough to try this unusual relationship, strong enough to stick it out even during rough times, even strong enough to love when I wasn’t sure the love was returned. But I don’t feel strong enough.

I will admit something here now that I’ve not admitted to anyone – I wanted out of the relationship mid-April. I contemplated ending the triad then because I was sick of the drama and I was doubly sick of being blamed for the drama when I knew it wasn’t me. But I was scared of what it would mean to my relationship with Jeff. I was afraid that I would have to walk away from Jeff as well in order to get out of the triad. I wasn’t ready for that. I knew we were compatible, and we had a lot going for us. I wasn’t ready to walk away from that because of someone else. I wasn’t ready to lose us.

So, being the logical creature I am, naturally, I reviewed my options. I could break up with my girlfriend, let the two of them date, and keep dating Jeff separately. But given our history, knowing what our girlfriend expected from a boyfriend, and given how she treated me and him – I could only see pain in that future. My second choice was to break up with both of them and go solo. But as I already stated, I didn’t want to break up with Jeff. Finally, I could try to work it out in the triad even knowing I would have to live with the drama-prone antics of our girlfriend and her inability to really share in a relationship.

So I was in this state of limbo from mid-April until about mid-May. I couldn’t decide a path, because none of the outcomes were what I wanted for myself. In the end, it was really a case of what could I live with most. So I chose to stay in the triad and weather it as best as I could. And then we had the final meltdown at the end of May.

What transpired to cause the breakup is not important. We were once again at a point where it had gotten ugly strictly because of one person and the three of us were all feeling like crap and communication was gone. And once again, I said to myself – is this worth it? Why keep going through this when you know it is just one person? I stated in an earlier post that I made the personal decision to end the triad. And it’s partially true. I did decide I couldn’t do it anymore even if it meant losing my relationship with Jeff, as painful and hard as it was to come to that decision. We all got together to talk it out once more, and my intent was to end it even if it meant I had to break up with both of them. But in the end, it was Jeff who said he couldn’t do it anymore.

I wasn’t expecting that. We hadn’t talked about any of it before – we’d lost that ability months and months before. So going into the discussion, I was sure he wanted to us both to keep trying with her – to give her the benefit of the doubt yet again. I was certain that even if I said no, that he would choose to be with her still. When he ended the triad, I was in such shock all I could do was nod my head in agreement. And that is where most of my anger at myself comes from – knowing that I wasn’t strong enough to do it on my own. I can’t even say with certainty now that, if Jeff hadn’t done the breaking up, that I could have followed through with my own breakup plan.

So it’s hard to open myself up and be receptive to finding love outside the relationship I have now. I don’t trust myself to be strong enough to handle it. What if it turns ugly again? Will I be strong enough to stand up for my convictions and for my needs? Will I be strong enough stand up for the wonderful and loving relationship I have now with Jeff, especially if someone else isn’t as committed to treasuring and nurturing that love?

There is comfort now in the love Jeff and I share. The two of us still being together even after the demise of the triad may prove to others that Jeff loves me, but I never needed the proof. I saw it in his eyes every day. I saw it in the things he did for me out of the goodness of his heart. I see it now today just as I did then. I even see it when we are with others, in the way he will glance at me to see if I’m alright. I know he loves – I’ve always known; his love for me is never in doubt. It is that love that kept me trying long after I myself would’ve walked away.

There is contentment in what we share now – the life, the lovers, the friends. We are learning again how to be ourselves with each other. We are learning how to communicate again, now that communication isn’t looked at as a threat but as a joy that should be shared between and amongst lovers. We are learning how to share our lives in the path we’ve chosen separately and together.

I am content with what I have now.

Someday I want to get to the point where – if love presents its beauty to me again in the form of another person, or a couple, with Jeff or through Jeff – I can accept it and not question it as I did for the past two years.

I hope I find my way.


Live With Your Own Choices

November 15, 2007

I’ve never been accused of walking away from anything. At times, I feel people think I’m too confrontational. I can beat a point to death like it was a serial rapist who dared to break into my house. I prefer talking issues out over avoiding them and pretending everything is perfect. I’m just not made any other way.

I’m also not shy at sharing when I’ve been hurt by someone whom I care about and who I feel also cares about me. In fact, I recently got myself in trouble by posting right after a confrontation with a friend that left me feeling rejected, hurt, and yes, a little abandoned. This friend then sent me a scathing email in response to the post placing the blame for our argument squarely on my shoulders, absolving herself of any responsibility, and throwing on top of all of it the fact that she found me a horrible friend – as if it were icing on this guilt cake she been waiting to shove down my throat.

Now. I am far from perfect. I admit that I’ve made choices during our friendship that were less than perfect. I’ve unintentionally caused my friend pain, and when she pointed it out to me (much in the same manner I would’ve done to her), I’ve apologized for my mistakes and worked at not repeating them. She always said she forgave me, and we moved on. But I guess it was all face talk, because in that email, she threw those circumstances right back in my face as proof that I was a horrible person apparently put on this earth to intentionally cause her pain.

Since that email, I’ve thought of her numerous times, almost called her so many times I’ve lost count BUT then I remember that email. The email where it was made clear to me I was less than a stellar friend in her opinion. And I find myself at a loss for words. I don’t know how to respond to this person with whom I’ve always shared what I thought was a loving and supportive friendship. What do you say to someone you love who has thrown these kind of accusations in your face? Especially when other people have done far worse to this friend, and she kept them in her life without the recriminations like the ones hurled at me via email.

I admit that what started this whole ugly mess was that I was upset with her. You see, my ex-girlfriend is now dating her boyfriend’s brother. I unfortunately know this fact because my friend felt the need to tell me. Everything. About. It. About the fact that my ex is deliriously happy, and the ex and the brother have this amazing connection, and the four of them are so close and they share every moment together. Isn’t that just spiffy?

Not really wanting to hear all about how my ex has moved on after breaking my heart, I asked my friend to maybe not mention my ex so much to me. Her response to me was that she would try, but she didn’t want to compromise her own integrity by feeling she had to lie to me. So for her, it was a choice between consideration of my feelings and what she felt was her integrity. By asking her not to share the ex’s love life with me, I was asking her to be a liar.

I’ll be honest – I don’t get her position – even now after so much time has passed. I was hurt and upset that she couldn’t understand my pain, especially when she knew what the three of us had been through in the triad. I felt the fact that she wanted to share every little aspect of my ex’s new relationship was more important to my friend than the fact that hearing it caused me pain. And I said this to my friend – I didn’t pretend it didn’t bother me. I asked for her consideration. She then shared the same information with Jeff, who had to deal with knowing as well.

We both loved our ex deeply and the break up was not easy and left us with our own personal scars. Maybe some folks can break up with someone and immediately get over it, and you know what? Props to them. I am not built that way. I love deeply, and when hurt, bleed as deeply as I love.

After I posted the rant on my blog and after my friend sent that email, we agreed mutually, if somewhat hostilely, that a break from each other was needed. I continued to live my life because, well, it keeps happening. It doesn’t stop because my heart is broken over losing a very important person in my life. I don’t really know how to mend a rift I didn’t even know existed until that email. All I asked for was consideration and what I got was accusations. I am at a loss.

But I wasn’t the only one who “walked away.” For myself, I realized I needed to accept some aspects in my friend’s life took precedence over my friendship with her. There isn’t any room in my friend’s life for consideration of my broken heart. I also considered that maybe these accusations, while obviously part of something bigger between us, were the excuse she needed to focus on those other aspects of her life.

We all have our lives to live. We all make our choices.


Truth

August 1, 2007

There are days when her scent haunts me.

I was in the store the other day… I bought a new scent, in the hopes I could rid myself of the lingering smell of her spray.

There are days where what happened consumes me.

I don’t know how to drive the memories out.

Even worse are the days when I dwell on the fact that all my fears in our relationship were too close to the truth. Living with that knowledge is more painful than only thinking the fears were right. In this case, outside validation is my tormentor.

Yet, there is solace in the knowledge that it wasn’t my imagination. There is peace now that the conflict is gone from my life.

And there are other joys to be shared, other people who inspire hope. I am more than content to move on from the past now that the demons are out in the open.

Truth is better than any fantasy you let someone else build for you. Even if it is painful to hear sometimes.

I lost a piece of me in you;
I think I left it in your arms.
I forget the reasons you got scared,
But remember that I cared quite a lot.

Blue October, It’s Just Me


What You’ve Been Missing

June 19, 2007

I realize I haven’t posted all month. A lot has happened to me in the last few weeks, and I’ve been dealing with a flood of emotions and I haven’t been able to write. It is a new feeling because usually I cannot shut up about my feelings.

If I’m honest, the change started in mid-April. It came during a difficult time, when I was dealing with issues that arose in my relationship. For the first time in a long time, I realized I had no control over those issues. And I was okay with that – instead I focused inward at myself and what I could control – my feelings and my life.

I struggled internally with what I needed to do to right myself since I couldn’t right the relationship. And I spent several intense weeks focusing on what I needed to do, what I could find the strength to do in order to be comfortable living with myself.

During these intense weeks, my relationship kind of balanced itself – in so far as we – as a thruple – continued to function together and deal with the emotions that came from the issues that popped up mid-April. At one point, I remember bringing the two struggles together – my internal struggle with what I needed to do and the struggle my thruple was working through. And I thought, we are going to be okay.

Also during this time, I started a new relationship with my oldest brother. It is in its infancy and its very fragile. I don’t even know what I’m doing in this relationship; it’s scary and exciting. This man has not been a part of my life for 17 years. I do not know him, and neither does he know me. I’m not sure I can trust him and a big part of me is scared too. And yet, he calls me and we talk and laugh and I even sometimes miss him when he doesn’t call. He is reaching out to me, and I want to reach back and at the same time I want to run. No one can tell me how to handle this or what to do – not even me.

Then the last weekend in May came and with it more turmoil in my relationship. I came to the decision alone that it wasn’t healthy to stay in this relationship with so much hurt and pain. So my girlfriend and I broke up. I am sad and sorry it is over. I struggle with what more I could have done, what more I could have said, how I could have been a better lover, friend, companion. And I miss her terribly.

So here is where I’m at – still me, still loving, if a little more sad. I do not know where my journey will continue to take me. I am not sad that I tried my thruple. I still love both my ex and my boyfriend. I am trying to pick up the pieces my life is right now. And I’m still hopeful.


A History of Mon-Mon, Part 2

April 4, 2007

Recently, two local (to my area) teenagers were charged with murdering a parent. You can read about the story here. The local community and the extended family are in shock over this tragedy, especially given the behavior of the deceased’s daughter in the weeks after the murder.  While I certainly don’t condone what happened to this mom, I think I have insight into how it may have occurred. Many of you are familiar with the death of my parents. Those of you who know me personally also know that I did not exactly have a traditional upbringing once my parent’s passed away.

 

My memories of my teenage years are not happy ones, and I rarely talk about those times. My legal guardian during this time was my eldest brother, and I believe that he did want to do right by me. But he was mentally ill and addicted to drugs. My past is filled with memories of drug abuse, abandonment by him at times and obsession from him at others.

I can remember wanting him desperately to disappear during those times. I longed to come home from school one afternoon and find him gone, never to return. I can also remember sitting by the window of one place or another, waiting desperately for him to return after days and days of not coming home. No one can ever imagine what I went through during those times – hating him but needing him, as he was my guardian and the only adult figure in my life at that time. There wasn’t another adult family member who wanted to take care of me and I was painfully aware of this fact.

Because I am strong, I did manage to escape my guardian the summer before I turned 15, though he remained my legal guardian until I was 18. And despite my bad times, there were – there still are – many other wonderful, supportive people in my life who loved me and showed me in their own way how valuable I was during those dark times.

When I was 25 years old and long away from his tyrannical obsession, my eldest brother told me that he often sat in our living room with his gun in hand, contemplating killing me while I slept in the next room. Then he thought about turning the gun on himself. Chilling, indeed.  But his confession did not surprise me. I was often awake myself those same nights, and I also thought about his gun. I thought of killing him and freeing myself from the misery and pain of our mutual existence. I dreamt of a world without him in it, and it was many years before I could forgive myself for those thoughts.

There are some wounds that never heal. Not even with time. Not even with all the love in the world.

So even though this story is sad, and the path these two kids chose is hard to understand – I find myself relating somewhat to these kids.  Most days you would never know that I came from such an existence. Most days I am the happy, well-adjusted adult you’ve come to know, appreciate, and adore (you know you do.) Sometimes I let those closest to me take a peek at those turbulent times, and if you ever hear a story from that time, then you must be someone I’ve really let in.


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