Category Archives: love

Light Up YOU.

Standard

I can look in the mirror and pick apart my flaws. I often do. It doesn’t take much. The fucked-up eyebrows I gave myself on purpose back in high school because I hated the emphasis people put on beauty and makeup and how they should be a certain shape or only so bushy. The acne breakouts from stress and my need to pick—I hate this about myself, how I take my stress out on my body. The small boobs that rival a scrawny prepubescent boy’s; so small an ex asked me if I’d consider implants before he became overtly happy with the pregnancy boobs I was later granted and then disappointed again when they disappeared; so small he wasn’t even the first to ask me if I’d consider getting implants. The sternum that points out and highlights my already small boobs, that I was relentlessly teased about when I was young, that I’m still highly self-conscious of every time I take my clothes off for a guy. How I went from a little too much meat on my hips to a boney ass in less than a year.

Oh yes, my body isn’t perfect and I’m the first to notice it.

You’d never guess with a glance at my Instagram account, though, with the selfies that pepper my page and the abundance of #youareenough quotes. When I realized how unhappy I was with my looks, I forced myself to take selfies and accept my looks. I never wanted my daughter to grow up doubting herself—her mind, her strength, her wit, her beauty, everything—and began to change my view of myself, my outlook after she was born. When I’m told I’m beautiful, my immediate thought most times is still, “and you’re so full of shit” or “are you for real?” before I respond with the appropriate “thank you.” It’s a work in progress. Society teaches us that to accept our beauty makes us conceited, to not accept is insecurity, and to question is appropriate—unless we somehow have mastered skinny with curves and flawless skin. I haven’t.

I’ll never forget the Halloween a few years back when my drop-dead gorgeous friend turned to me and said, “T, tonight is the first time I feel pretty. I haven’t felt like this in years.” My jaw hit the floor. I couldn’t believe she would doubt her looks when for years I’d watch guys fight over her and comment on her natural beauty. But how many people question their looks? Stare at themselves in the mirror and pick apart their flaws, put everything they have into diets and fitness and makeup and clothes to change their appearance? I don’t want my daughter to dress for anyone but herself.

I want her to shatter glass ceilings, as either a plain Jane or with purple streaks in her hair and a tattoo sleeve on her arm or in high heels and pearls or as anyone in between. I want her to know there’s more to her than looks. I want her to be able to look at herself and not only accept her but be happy, too.

I want her to shine. She lights up my world, why shouldn’t she light up her own?

And I want the same for you.

Be You Unapologetically.

Standard

Tomorrow Taylor turns 20. That’s insane. I always get asked what is wrong with him or more specifically, “What does he have?” But doctors don’t know, there isn’t a clear diagnosis, and people tune out his issues, not grasping the severity and losing interest or becoming uncomfortable. Instead, I’m telling you this:

Stop smoking. You have clean lungs you don’t need suctioned multiple times a day to breathe. You aren’t hooked up to an oxygen monitor—yet. It’s an insult to a little boy who has never smoked a cigarette in his life that you freely walk around with that white stick between your lips and between your fingers and crack jokes about having a smoker’s cough.

Stop wasting your day on the couch. You have two functional legs. You can walk. You can run. You can hop, skip, and jump. Build a snowman and take your kid(s) sledding, and then sled yourself. You aren’t confined to a wheelchair. Take the stairs without complaint when there’s a line for the elevator. Stop bitching when someone beats you to a good parking spot and you have to walk the length of the lot—you can do it! Stop complaining about boredom and endlessly flipping through stations and not having anything to do—you have the world at your fingertips. You don’t have to have your parents roll you from side to back to side routinely throughout the day so you don’t get bedsores.

Step outside. Again, you have the entire fucking world at your fingers tips. You get to witness the seasons change. You watch the leaves fall and spring bring rebirth. The only time Taylor goes outside is from the house to the vehicle and from the vehicle to the hospital, and then from the hospital to the vehicle and from the vehicle to the house. Breathe in the fresh air. Soak up the sun. Bathe in the heat. Dance in the rain. Jump in the leaves. You can breathe fresh air without being seized by a fit of coughing, do it.

Stop being stagnant. If you aren’t happy with your life, move. Take four steps back to make five leaps forward if that’s what it takes. You have the ability to change your life. It starts with a dream and is implemented by action. Just do it and buy the Nike apparel if it motivates you to do so even more.

Lose or gain the weight. I’m against body shaming but I’m not talking about the lack of or robust of curves you may have. I’m talking about obesity and anorexia. I’m talking about overeating or starving yourself. This little boy is fed through a G-tube and at about 5’5” weighs only 68lbs, maybe. He used to love ice cream—eat your sweets without feeling guilty. Make it happen by eating healthy 80 percent of the time. If you complain to me how you’re overweight or need to lose weight but fail to make changes in your diet and physical activity, I will tune you out. I don’t want to hear it. I don’t want to hear about your high blood pressure and high cholesterol as I watch you eat a pound of bacon while binge watching Netflix. I don’t want to hear about how you’re a perfect candidate for heart disease but are lucky enough to still be walking when there’s a boy laying in a bed all day every day who is unable to take the steps to make the changes. But you can, and you choose not to. Stop it. See above, stop wasting your day, stop wasting your breath, stop complaining about boredom, and start moving. Be active.

Be you. Be you unapologetically. In a healthy and positive and do good manner, be you unapologetically. Taylor loves people. He loves interactions. He loves attention. But he can’t talk and he can’t communicate, making it hard for many, myself included, to relate to him. If he were to go out, you’d stare at him and his differences and he would smile at you. He’s a hermit due to his condition with a social butterfly inside waiting to be released. It won’t be. He’s cocooned in his room. The few times he was taken out to restaurants in his wheelchair, he was happy. But his happiness becomes the noises patrons get annoyed at, wondering why his parents won’t shut him up so they can enjoy a meal in peace. Eat at home. Your judgments shouldn’t enter the world. Leave them at your door, in your own home. Since Taylor’s last big surgery back in 2012, the one that landed him in bed and on oxygen with lungs that needed suctioned, he hasn’t been out to a restaurant. My parents don’t want to disturb other patrons and be in the midst of negative attention. I don’t doubt they would love to shout, “Fuck you all, this boy deserves to be in public without scrutiny”—I sure would, I can be unladylike and not-at-all classy like that—but that’s an unnecessary confrontation. Shave half your head, cover your body in ink, wear stripes with polka dots, sing at the top of your lungs at the grocery store, and be silent when you don’t want to say anything and talk endlessly when you have a lot to say. You can go out and express yourself. Do it. Don’t let society hold you down. Stand up and be you, unfiltered.

Tomorrow Taylor turns 20 and we are at a loss at what to do in celebration. This is a huge milestone—him surviving two decades. We never expected this. We were told not to expect this. We could easily not do anything, treat it like any normal day, and he wouldn’t know the difference. But that idea is absurd. Outrageous. Insulting.

He can’t blow the candles out on the cake he can’t eat—there will be no cake.

He is sunshine, how he smiles despite his troubles, his pain, his suffering. Don’t put out another’s light, make it brighter with your own. Celebrate. Go out and appreciate your life for him. Breathe, run, be you. Fucking shine.

 

img_7472

Pictured: Taylor with his niece Evelynn. Told you he loves company, & she loves giving it.

Tulips In Springtime.

Standard

The past year has been one long lesson in dating, with September marking the one-year anniversary of my reentering the dating world. My single mom status led my daughter to be assumed as “baggage” by a number of guys (assholes!), easiest method of knowing not to give them my time. My single mom status also led to plenty of guys getting “cold feet” at the last minute, canceling the night before or the day of a date, only to never be heard from. Again, quick method of determining who was worth my time, I just wish I hadn’t wasted the time leading up to that point. Then there’s the guys who assume because I have a child, I’m quick to bed. Honey, I’m not desperate—I’m borderline shallow.

Clarification: entering into the world of online dating.

Six sites I have done stints on in the past year, and most of them didn’t last a week as the blocking of assholes became too much of a hassle. Tinder, the notorious hookup site, was downloaded and deleted monthly. Weekly I swore off guys. And weekly my high standards inched higher.

What happened when a guy called up a girl? Being asked out in a text message is so unflattering, almost degrading. And can someone please explain to me why guys want to “hang out” but then refer to it as “dating” later on? Like no, dude, two totally different phenomenons there. I know, I don’t sound like I just turned 27 yesterday. This is the norm, & completely unacceptable to me, to many. Then why do we accept it? Go with it? Allow for it?

What happened to chivalry? Dave Chappelle thought women killed it and Meg Ryan believed it simply caught the flu. I think it hides in shadows like abandoned, trapped flies.

Last weekend I went on a date and it blew my mind when the guy held open my door. Every time. It’s a lost art but it wasn’t lost on me, not when I nearly asked him what he was doing—I thought he had to rearrange shit or was simply out of it. (Awkward turtle.) It’s sad when such an act, one many fail to do for strangers—we should!—is lost in a world where kind acts need to thrive. What happened to the simple “hello good mornings” and “goodnights”? Those have always been a favorite in dating but rarely appear throughout the entire relationship. They eventually get swept under the rug with everything else. After the first impression has been made, why do people slack on the simple things? Relationships are often made and kept over the little things—it’s the little things that will also often begin to drive the wedge into the relationship.

Male or female, reentering the dating world is always ripe with fear and concerns. With each ex, I learned something about myself, what I’m not willing to put up with, how I want to be treated, and what I deserve. And it has also added up to a mountain of trust issues and second-guessing the guy’s intentions.

I have always jumped into relationships, letting the guy choose the pace—fitting considering my nonchalant attitude of going with the flow, but that only lasts until I realize we aren’t on the same page. I’ve been with the guy who wanted me to commit, for us to be exclusive, only to find out the beginning was an act or the same rules didn’t apply to him—he had needs I couldn’t fulfil due to distance, I couldn’t expect him to do the same, according to him. But I don’t do cheaters. I don’t do second chances.

The disrespect and “not good enough” that comes with cheating is mind-fucking. If they remembered you, you weren’t enough to keep them from performing the act. If they did remember you, you didn’t mean enough to keep them from performing the act. It’s a lose-lose. The hilarious part is when they use the former as an excuse. Thank you for telling me how little of significance I rank in your life.

I stayed with Evelynn’s father longer than I should have. It was another relationship battling distance, among a slew of other issues. I lost myself. I compromised too easily and lost my identity, what I wanted. I settled for settling. It was over before it ended. When it did, I went off the grid for nine months. Then I jumped into a relationship with a guy and once again sidelined what I wanted and needed in a relationship to be happy. It only lasted through the holidays but afterwards, I went off the grid again.

I compromise myself in dating.

I find myself in solitude.

It’s a trend.

Correction: it was a trend.

Dating is harsh. It’s constantly opening myself up to heartbreak and re-erecting walls when they confirm my fears, only to be the one to demolish them again if I want to make an effort. It’s exhausting and draining. It’s empowering when I remember I control my happiness—it’s ultimately my decision to allow a guy in. I control my own happiness. I dictate my future.

Dating might be degrading and harsh but I also learn my strength, the heartbreak I can take.

We aren’t made of glass to shatter on the floor, prick others to bleed with us. We aren’t rock, to stand still and lie doormat, to crack and be irreparable. No, we are tulips. We soak up the sunshine and take beatings from rainstorms, bending until we break…and then we grow back again to reveal our beauty, our strength.

We are tulips in the springtime.

Single Mom Hypocrite.

Standard

I am a hypocrite. For I do not date single fathers. Those I have known over the years & those I have met more recently do not give the great single dads a good name. Parenting is not based on DNA. Donating the sperm that lead to the birth does not make one a parent. Even if done unknowingly. It does not automatically give a parent the right. I have listened to men complain of exes having majority custody but then choose to drop the kid(s) off with a relative in order to hit up the bar. Or when with their child(ren), spend it on their phone instead of interacting. Or they nap. It is a turnoff. & I hate this negative view I have against single dads.

When I hear them complain, I question their honesty & wonder if it’s simply a place of rejection or lack of control they are coming from. I have been the pregnant woman alone in bed, curled in a ball, wanting nothing more than to surround my baby with all the love I could give. & then more. Despite being in a relationship at the time, I was very much alone. I lied to friends & family about my happiness of the situation and the relationship when I feared the future and single parenthood. Sympathizing with the guys’ ex is automatic for me & I wish it wasn’t. I know the frustration of being judged on a title, a label. But I am a hypocrite for immediately casting off guys because they own the same title as me, one that I hold very proudly: single parent. Being a single mom is rewarding, knowing I don’t need a guy to make it.

But it can also be lonely.

Lonely by no means translates to desperate. As if I wasn’t already shallow before I became a parent, I’m definitely not willing to settle now. & that makes dating a questionable event. Most days, I’m convinced if Dante was a woman it would have been included as a circle of hell. The last minute rejections & cancellations get old & are bullets to a penetrable ego. I stopped planning for a babysitter months ago–pathetic, I’m well aware. The frustration & judgment from guys who don’t like Evelynn’s father being involved in her life & seeing her regularly is appalling. I may not be a fan of his, but I am a fan of her. Some days, I wonder if it’s even worth it. Then there are nights where I could kick myself in the ass for not being settled in a career with great insurance because I don’t need a man to have more kids other than the sperm necessary to reproduce. I entirely realize that may make me crazy, but I love being a mom. More than anything. That’s not feminism speaking—not needing a man by my side—it’s reality. Being a mom is what makes me happy. It’s not a hobby, it’s a lifestyle. & this is what separates parents everywhere: parenting as a hobby versus parenting as a lifestyle.

Every choice I make involves Evelynn. The job I choose, the route I drive, the money I save, the products I buy, the goals I set. I’m stuck at home living with my parents because my child can’t live in the city—she’s that allergic to chlorine—& to purchase or rent in the country is not affordable for me at the moment. I don’t take vacations because I’m not willing to walk away from my daughter for such. Not at this time. The first thing I’ve done for me in the past two years was join a co-ed soccer league I play in once a week out in Grand Rapids—across the state—but even then, I haven’t been making it to every game. The guilt of leaving my kid after working a morning shift or closing the previous night is a little overwhelming. I can count on one hand the number of friends—close, not acquaintance—I consider myself to have. I’m not willing to go out to the bar or sporting events multiple times in the week because I prefer to spend my time off with my daughter and any extra money spoiling the hell out of her. People assume I’m tight lipped and unsociable—I am—because I don’t take the time to make new friends, the effort to hang out. It’s single parenting 101: my kid has first dibs on my free time.

No Thanks, Superman (I’ve got it covered).

Standard

It’s my spring break and I joined a dating site. Well, three to be exact. What a hassle. I’m not entirely convinced I don’t want to end up alone. Dating as a single mom is more complex than people seem to think. The assumption seems to be that I would want to replace her father, gain a partner to tackle parenthood with, jump on the idea of a date to get out of the house. These people are wrong.

Everything I do is done with my daughter in mind.

New Years Eve 2014, when my daughter was only four months old, I broke it off with her father. It was not a decision I made with little thought. Becoming a single mom was not something I decided to do on a whim. I never wanted my child to grow up in a home where her father didn’t reside. That wasn’t a goal of mine. Yet, I hit a point in the relationship where I could not imagine beginning the New Year, 2015, with him. I wanted a clean break, a new year.

When I date a guy, I am letting him into a world where previously, my trust was greatly broken. I am giving him the privilege and honor of meeting this little girl who means everything to me. Our future together isn’t a given and I refuse to jump into a marriage simply because a guy is willing to date a single mom. I may not be happy about my past following me, the inability to leave my ex in the past where exes belong, but I deal with it because my daughter deserves to know her father.

Dating a guy doesn’t mean replacing her father. It means my daughter will be lucky enough to have two dads. It means one day, if she wants, she will have two dads to walk her down the aisle, two dads to report amazing news to, two dads to treat her like the gem she is. And unfortunately, dating a guy doesn’t give him the allowance to make decisions regarding my daughter when we have only been dating a few months. He doesn’t get to jump into every mother-daughter activity after only a couple weeks or even a few months. And unfortunately, time isn’t something I seem to have a lot of these days, between my daughter, my studies, and subbing. When I’m forced to choose between the two, it’s almost a given I’ll choose time with my daughter. Some people can’t understand this concept of why I’m not willing to immediately allow for the guy to spend a lot of time with my daughter. I’ve been told it takes at least a year to get to really know someone. I’m not willing to have my daughter get attached to a guy when the relationship may not last. This isn’t pessimism speaking, it’s realism.

Everything I do is done with my daughter in mind.

I’m not willing to be disappointed by another man.

I’m not willing to allow a man to disappoint my daughter.

My pregnancy was a difficult one ridden with worry and constant sickness. I had to drag the father to two of the appointments. I got more checkup phone calls and texts from people I rarely talked to or hadn’t seen in years. We easily went days without speaking and unless I brought it up, he never asked how the checkups went. I was alone in a complicated pregnancy.

When I got the call late at night telling me I had to be induced into labor because they were worried about the baby, the father wasn’t going to be there. His boss told him to come with. I had to drive from Grand Rapids to Ann Arbor to be at the hospital in the morning and he was planning on having me drive it alone. He chose to not see his daughter for six weeks because he wanted to manipulate me into moving across the state. He sacrificed seeing his own daughter.

Everything I do is done with my daughter in mind.

It’s a given for there to be complications and drama between parents who are no longer together. It’s a given that there will be days of frustration. The last guy I dated understood this to an extent. He assured me I could talk to him about it but instead I would get the silent treatment in return. He was jealous when my daughter spent time with her father. Her father became jealous when he found out I was dating someone and stepped up in seeing his daughter more and not cancelling on her last minute—not that she’s old enough to know if he cancelled, anyway.

Unfortunately, when dating a single mom, the guy enters into a relationship with the father as well. With me, that means he’s expected to take the high road. There is no talking shit about her father in front of my daughter. I don’t accept anger because my daughter deserves to know her father. That is to be respected. I have this end goal that her father and I will reach a point where our future families can take vacations together so my daughter doesn’t feel left out or forced to choose. I refuse to put her in the middle of any dispute. This also is to be respected.

I wasn’t lying about the complications and drama.

I may be a single mom but that doesn’t mean I’m willing to settle for any guy. I’d rather remain single than be in a loveless relationship. There are days I’d love to share with a partner, but reality is the world of dating is complicated tenfold when a child is added into the equation. I would never want my daughter to settle, so why should I?

“You’re making a mistake.”

“You’re lucky I was even willing to date you.”

“You think I want this drama.”

“You’re a single mom, it’s not like guys are lining up.”

Some of the shit that comes out of people’s mouths amazes me. Being a single mom doesn’t mean I need help. It doesn’t warrant judgment. Being single and being a mom are two separate labels—I hate that word. When combined, it simply means I’m Superwoman—that’s what I keep telling myself anyways.

I’m not looking to be saved. I don’t need Superman. (I’ve got it covered.)

we dance, we sway.

Standard

Whisper in my ear, call
me from afar, you’re near.
I dream, we’re dancing;
not dreaming–your voice
tickles my neck.
We dance, I’m smiling.

Place your hand upon my back,
draw me close, hold me safe;
we dance, we sway.
Butterflies in a midnight song
we cross the room, you hold me tight.
We dance, I’m shaking.

Stars in the sky, fire bright
in the distance light up your eyes.
We dance, we sway.
You hum a tune–the nightingale’s
lullaby–against the silence.
We dance, I’m falling.

Not falling–knees buckling, suspended
in your captivating charm.
We dance, we sway.
You bring me back, those lips:
soft, full, inviting, pure.
We dance, I’m soaring.

Beautiful stranger, set me free
from this déjà vu–reality
& dreams uncontrollably collide.
We dance, we sway.
I smile
I shake
I fall
I soar
skin upon skin, we touch;
I fly.

you should let go

Standard
You wade into the sea,
the vast ocean that has become us;
the tide is in, seizing
you in its bleak emptiness.
Your screams are drowned,
your apologies bitter, the saltiness
dehydrating—
I spit them out, throw
you a rope burned
to ash by our blinded
hatred. You ask me
how I could toss the oars, you say
I’m the reason we’re drifting
apart, why the rudder
can’t be fixed—you’re right,
I am, but you tossed
the compass, we’re lost
with no direction. I’m setting
sail, I’m saving
us,
our sanity, by letting go—
you should let go, too—
you’re barely afloat.