Saturday, December 27, 2014

Time Doesn't Wait For Us

One week ago today it was a beautiful Friday.  I had the music playing in my office as I was making my way through my work day thankful for the weather and looking forward to picking Hunter up from school.  I heard Rusty downstairs talking on the phone in a tone different from his normal. This tone caused me to pause, mute the music and listen.  With our years together I can usually tell who he is talking to by the tone of his voice. This was different.  I couldn't tell.  
I couldn't hear his words and the conversation seemed to continue and his tone leveled out.  I un-muted the music, finished up what I was in the middle of and went downstairs about 15 minutes later.
Rusty was sitting at the table looking at something on the laptop.  
As I walked toward him, he looked at me over his glasses.
His look caused me to stop.
I knew he was going to say something to me and I knew it wasn't going to be good.
I stood there looking at him for what seemed like an eternity before he said these words - 
Renee, your father died this week.
I pushed out a whispered ....What  ?
The voice in my head was screaming .....NO NO NO NO NO NO
He continued with information about what had happened but I couldn't hear him.  I could see his lips moving but I couldn't hear him.  All I could think about was the letter I wrote to my Father in June, 2011 and that I never called him.
Now he is gone.  Really gone.  Now I can't call him.  I can't ever call him.
Tears filled my eyes and I couldn't get out of that room fast enough.
I went into my bedroom and shut the door.
I continued into my bathroom and shut the door.
Rusty knew I would need to work this out alone and didn't bother me.  I was thankful for the solitude. 
I fell completely apart, surprised by my reaction.
I had feelings of loss and sadness and emptiness and anger and the finality of the situation was overwhelming.
Why didn't I call him??  Why??  Why did he never call me???  Why??    
This can't be happening.  I need just a little more time.  Please.  Just a little more.  I need a little more time to work up my nerve.  Just a little more time.
I just had to get it out.  I had to come to terms with the fact that it was over.  I didn't have any more time.  I had to decide that I wasn't going to understand it.  I wasn't going to fix it.  
I waited too long.  He waited too long.

Life is not a fairy tale.  It is twisted.  It is harsh.  It doesn't apologize.  It is tough and painful.
And... Beautiful.
We just need to make sure that our Beautiful out shines our twisted, harsh, tough and painful.
Mine does.  A million times over.

Rest Peacefully Jerry Allen.  I do not hold any ill feelings toward you.  I have an understanding that you did the best you could and I'm appreciative for the life that you gave me.
Good-bye.  I will carry you in my heart.
I love you.  



Cry. Pray. Love

There are some lines in the movie “The Bridges of Madison County” that are so eerily truthful.  These words just stir inside me every time I hear them.  Meryl Streep does them so beautifully that the feeling of sadness is palpable.  Every time I hear that part of the movie it makes me think about the journey of being a woman.

“When a woman makes a choice to marry and have children, in one way her life begins but in another way it stops.  You build a life of details and you just stop and stay steady so your children can move and when they leave they take your life of details with them.  You’re expected to move on again but you don’t even remember what it was that moved you because nobody has asked you in so long, not even yourself.”  ~Meryl Streep, “The Bridges of Madison County”

Motherhood is such a beautifully difficult and complicated job.  It qualifies as a job because so much rides on how the task is performed.  Chocolates are not being boxed on an assemble line; people are being shaped and molded.  Lessons are being taught that will set the course for the rest of a life.  These are little people that we are responsible for.  People that will be the next leaders of our world.  That should rank high on the list of important jobs.
  
One of the beautiful parts of Motherhood is that there is not just one right way to be a good Mother.  We are all different, we learn differently and we teach differently.  Thankfully our babies love us even when we make mistakes and forgive us through them all.
Through the years when they are babies and toddlers we spend countless hours worrying, praying, feeling guilty, doubting ourselves, crying, not sleeping, making lists, making plans, reading snip-its of books or magazines, learning, praying, worrying, crying…over and over and over.  And then they become pre-teens and it is a whole new ballgame of learning, reading, planning, crying, worrying and praying.  We are trying to make sure the homework is done and that there is some kind of dinner, that they are driven to their activities that we sign them up for so they can have opportunities and be well rounded humans,  we’re trying to make sure they are clean so they’re not the stinky kid in class, getting them to bed on time, washing the clothes, finding matching shoes, signing the stack of papers in the book bag, packing lunches, crying, praying, worrying, doubting ourselves.  Then they become teenagers and the real battle begins.  We have to find a way to compete with their friends, we must learn detective skills to stay on top of the truth.  Our actions during this time is the most crucial so there is even more praying, crying, doubting, reading, learning and praying.  Then they get their drivers license and we stand there and watch them drive away on their own.  On their own.  Free to make choices.  Free to be careless.  And we are just helplessly left with the hope that they heard us all those years and that they make the right choices.  It is a vulnerability that cuts deep to your very soul.  So we cry and we pray and we worry.  We try to get them through high school and we try to help them make a plan for their life.  And we pray and we cry and we worry and we doubt ourselves. 

And through all of this we are trying to keep pee and poop and puke off of our clothes, we are trying to maintain a relationship with our husband, with our friends, we are trying to wash our hair or at least brush it, take a shower and keep our job if we have one outside the home.  We’re trying to clean our house, wash the clothes, make the grocery list, cook a meal.  Whatever we thought we wanted to do or be when we grew up now happily takes a back seat to our new priority.  And in-between we cry, we pray, we worry …and we love.

To someone without kids this sounds like a horror movie and sometimes it is.  But most of the time it is beautiful.  Everything we do for these kids is because of the strong, enduring, unconditional and gut wrenching love we have for that child from the very moment we feel them in our womb or take them into our home.  It is something you can never go back from and you would never want to.  They are our priority by choice and nothing gives us more pleasure than to see them happy and healthy and successful in their life.  It is all worth it…the pee, the poop, the puke and the sleepless nights of praying, crying, worrying and doubting.  Once you’re a Mother you would never choose to not be a Mother.


And then one day your babies tell you that your “Mothering” is no longer needed.  They have reached an age when you “have done all you can do and at this point you are just making suggestions” .  You need to back off and you realize that you have no idea how to do that.  You have been responsible for these people all these years.  Mothering them has been your job 24/7 and now all of a sudden you are not supposed to do that anymore.  So, what do we do?  It is a very difficult transition for a woman and one we have to work out on our own.  We have to remember that before we were Mothers, we were just girls…girls with dreams.  The hope is that we find her again and marry those old dreams with our new dreams and top it with all of our life lessons to come up with a new plan for ourselves.  A plan where we Mother from a distance and learn how to be just a girl again.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

A Friday In February

It was a beautiful Friday afternoon in February.  Perfect for an outside Tea Party.  You got dressed up in your Wedding dress and high heel shoes and I gathered the china and set up the table in the yard.  You dressed Cupcake and Marshmallow, your new dog and teddy bear that you got for Valentines day in their party outfits.  You picked out the table cloth, we gathered chocolates, cookies and poured the tea...let the party begin.



 We drank our tea and talked about our day.  You taught Cupcake and Marshmallow the proper way to drink their tea and shared your chocolates with them.  "Hold your saucer under your cup and when you drink your tea, always hold your pinkie up", you said.  These are the moments that I treasure.  These are the moments that I hold close, the moments that are etched in my mind.  I am so grateful that you want to spend this time with me.  I am also grateful for these photos because I know the time will come when you won't have time for tea parties with your Nana and I will have these photos to remind me of these precious moments.

This is Marshmallow, the teddy bear.

This is Cupcake, the dog.

 

I found the tea set on the left at an antique store.  As soon as I saw it, I knew it was perfect for our tea parties.  The china on the right belonged to my Mamaw Florence.  It is not expensive china but to me, it is worth more than gold.  I am so grateful to have it.  Every time I look at it I think of her and how she gathered the pieces a little at a time.  She loved the pattern.   I love that I now get to share this china with you.


You have such a beautiful spirit.
I am incredibly blessed to be your Grandmother.

Until our next tea time...

Nana
xoxo

~February 15, 2013

The "Fansy" Tea Party


Your Papa loves you very much.  This past Friday it was very evident.   He reminded me just how special he is and how lucky you and I are to have him in our lives.  You made invitations for a Fancy Tea Party for me, Papa, Bunny and Tinkerbell and decided at 9:30 pm that you wanted to have the party.  Even though Papa was exhausted from cutting wood all afternoon, he accepted your invitation for a Fancy Tea Party.  You very carefully picked out our outfits all by yourself and laid them out on the floor for us.  We all three dressed up in our fancy clothes and had the best tea party ever!  You set a beautiful table and you were a gracious hostess!  We look forward to many more "fansy" tea parties with you.



The cutest invitations I have ever seen!
"Hello, it's Hunter.  Oh and be fansy"



You chose our outfits and walked me over to the closet with my eyes closed so I could reach them for you.  Then you carefully laid them out on the floor.



Saying Grace.
We Love You like Crazy, "fansy" or not!!

~January 29, 2013

Monday, August 13, 2012

To Dustin




I got a little emotional today.

It was totally unexpected and caught me off guard.

Even though I’m a big sap and cry at Hallmark commercials, it caught me off guard.  I have no reason to cry.  

Today was your wedding shower.  We have been talking wedding, talking shower, wedding planning, preparing invitations, buying Cricut machines and doing mock table centerpieces for weeks.  I have loved every minute of it because I love Carrie and have enjoyed spending this time with her.  I’m happy for you that you found her and that she loves you and understands you.  I’m happy for our family because we all love her and she fits right in.

I was so excited about the shower.  So excited to share it with the people we love.  So excited for the beginning of your life together in your new home.
Again, no reason to cry.

But, when you walked in that door toward the end of the shower I looked at you and in that moment I saw my Baby Boy, my first born Son.  I saw you in that hospital room with that full head of hair and those kissable lips.  I saw you the day you started Kindergarten in that black Old Navy tee shirt carrying your lunch box with that grin on your face.  I saw you at 16 standing beside your Toyota truck holding your keys.  I saw you in your high school graduation cap and gown.  I saw you walk across that stage and accept your college diploma.  I saw you as a grown man.   
I saw You.

And, out loud I said, “My baby is getting Married”.  And the tears flowed.  Uncontrollable Happy Tears.   

I am so proud of you for so many reasons and so content that you are what I always wanted you to be:  Happy

Congratulations, Son.  Always enjoy every day of your life and remember that I am eternally in your corner and your biggest fan.

Love,
Mom


Sunday, July 22, 2012

48

We're headed to the beach for a long weekend. It's my birthday. My 48th birthday. It's me, Rusty and Hunter. As Hunter slept on the way we talked about our graduation beach trip and how it seems like just last week that we graduated high school. Now we're driving our granddaughter to the beach.
We couldn't be happier.

As we sit on the beach this Thursday evening the sun has set and the ocean breeze is stronger than usual and the waves are crashing with greater force. That familiar smell of the beach is in the air and I am flooded with sweet cherished memories. Hunter is dancing and twirling down the beach silhouetted in the darkness the further she goes.  We both watch her. We can't take our eyes off of her. Without words I know we are both thinking the same thing, how beautiful she is and how blessed we are to have her in our life. And we are. She has brought more joy and love to us than I ever could have imagined.
 
As I celebrate my birthday this year I am reminded of everything I have to be grateful for. I have a great life. I love and I am loved and that is the greatest gift of all. I pledge to be thankful for every birthday. Thankful that I had another year to live and share life with my family and friends.  I hope you will pledge the same.

Happy Birthday to me.  And many more.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Coyote?

You were sitting around the kitchen table the other day having a conversation with Uncle Dustin about various subjects like why motorcycle helmets are necessary, fishing and the names of all of our dogs.  Dustin explained how each dog got his/her name:

Harley - He was such a little thing we had to give him a bad boy name.
Curtis - He is named after Dustin's good friend that lost his life in a car accident.
Pork Chop - She was named after the cartoon dog.
Popcorn - She is the color of Popcorn and Pork Chop's daughter so you thought it was fitting.
CJ - She is CJ for "Curtis Junior" because she looked just like Curtis when she was a puppy.

That conversation led to this...
Hunter:  "Dustin, what is your middle name?"
Dustin (in a low voice): "Codey"
Hunter:  "Coyote?"
Dustin (snickering):  "No, but now I wish it was because that is way cooler."

Dustin Coyote Moore.  I should have thought of that, it has a nice ring to it.



~ May 2012