I posted this on a page instead of as a post, so I'm now moving it here:
I am older than Methuselah so please excuse me if my autobiography is a bit longer than most.
I
grew up in a coastal town in Connecticut during an era where during
summers your parents kicked you out of the house in the morning, let you
in briefly for lunch, and didn’t let you back in until the street
lights came on. Dad was a very logical engineer who was a bit of a
workaholic and during the weekends was busy with working around the
house or at church. Mom was a stay at home mom who was very emotional, a
bit needy, and wanted things her way. I have two older brothers who
ensured I was not spoiled because I was the youngest and a girl.
Basically, I grew up in a functionally dysfunctional family like most of
America.
I was never the athletic type (though I did
sign up for little league and was assigned to the outfield where I spent
the games daydreaming and looking for butterflies and bees). In third
grade my mother felt I was too pudgy (I wasn’t) so she signed me (not
us) up for an aerobics class. So there I was the lone 9 year old
accompanied by one of my mom’s friends in a room full of middle aged
heavy set women who were all groaning and moaning while following the
overly peppy & cheerful teacher strut her stuff on stage. Thus began
my love and hate for my body, health, and activity.
After
graduating high school, I went onto a state college without much
internal direction of where I wanted my life to go. Mom pushed for me to
go into teaching, and dad kept his opinions or lack thereof to himself.
I rebelled (one of my few acts of) and ended up in graphic design and
printing because it sounded interesting and one of my best friends
majored in it. I also began to show symptoms of depression and anxiety,
but this was during a time when mental illness was not something you
acknowledged. So when I did acknowledge it, everybody told me I was
fine. Plus, I was high functioning and able to hide it deep down inside.
I
met a boy (ok, maybe several but only one is pertinent to the story at
this point) and fell in love, got engaged and then married (I’m skipping
a lot of interesting stories, maybe someday I will come back to them)
got a job in the production department of a local academic publisher.
Marriage didn’t seem much different then dating other than we were
living together, but then I got pregnant, we bought a house and soon I
found myself raising 2 kids (my husband and my son) and then 5 years
later I was raising 3 kids (my husband, my son, and my daughter).
I
changed jobs going into marketing at a local company and then 8 years
later found a fantastic job as an Interactive Marketing Coordinator
which I loved. Not only was it interesting and fun work, but great
co-workers, and flex time as I needed.
When my daughter
was in kindergarden it came to my attention that my husband was
spending about $400 a month of much needed money on drugs, and that I
was also in denial of his drinking habit. Fast forward 8 long years of
lots and lots of therapy, AA, rehab, fights, tears, apologies, and much
unneeded and unwanted drama, to where I finally stood my ground and
ended our marriage. Cut to 1 year later where he OD'd, became physically
and mentally impaired, and went to live with his parents in Florida so
they could take care of him.
Brightside: Taking care of
2 children is much easier than 3 especially when one was your drug
addicted husband! Also, social security disability always pays child
support on time!
I, then, went about my life going on
anti-depressents to take the edge off the depression and anxiey. I
enjoyed friendships, my children, my family, and my life. I started
dating, never with the intention of getting married again, I was done
with marriage. I didn’t need it, had the kids and had the house. Been
there done that. I met several nice men and some real jerks, but I
always got a funny story to entertain my girlfriends. I also kept a list
of my learnings from dating of what a healthy for me relationship would
be like.
Then one night a half hour coffee date ended
up lasting 4 hours long. Somehow it seems the stars aligned and I came
across my soul mate (which is very weird as I didn’t and kinda still
don’t believe in that stuff). 2 and ⅔ years later we became engaged, 3
months later we got married and here we are living the dream.
I
still struggle with my depression and anxiety and continue taking
medication, and while he doesn’t fully understand mental illness, he is
extremely supportive. He will notify me when I seem “off”, provide extra
space, hugs, communication when I need them and tell me I am crazy when
I am indeed crazy. He provides me a space where I can relax, be
imperfect, be a bit irresponsible and enjoy life to its fullest. He
keeps me active and healthy with walks, hikes, kayaking, traveling,
gardening, and doing things around our house. We go to plays, movies,
museums, hockey games, and so much more, wherever our eclectic desires
take us. Ok, that is our marriage 70% of the time, the other part is
spent being cranky, arguing about kids, being annoyed, and the other
real marriage (and real love) crap.
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