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Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts

Sunday, March 26, 2017

"...I have promises to keep..."

"...The woods are lovely, dark and deep,   
But I have promises to keep,   
And miles to go before I sleep,   
And miles to go before I sleep."


Happy One-Year-and-a-Day-Since-I-Last-Blogged!

Source  via Kate on Pinterest

Robert Frost is possibly my most favorite poet.  Every time I hear the finishing lines of the poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," I picture an exhausted person who, despite wanting to pause a moment longer, realizes that he or she must continue to move forward because there are people somewhere counting on him or her to keep a promise.

Source  via Kate on Pinterest

This poem--and the final stanza in particular--continue to creep to the front of my consciousness lately, and I think it's because I, too, have promises to keep.

I have made it known to many people that I have dreams of becoming a published author. Despite the fact that many of these people have never seen any of my writings, many of them have still been very encouraging and supportive of me, and some have even made me promise to pursue my dreams.  Just like with this blog, though, I've often used many excuses for why I haven't tried harder to pursue this dream or transfer my ideas from brain to paper: I'm too busy; my kids need me; I'll do it over the summer; I have grading to do; I have lesson plans to write; there are other more important things going on that I need to take care of first; investing that much time in something I want to do for myself is selfish; maybe someone will make fun of me; maybe I'll get rejected; maybe I'm not any good. But despite all of this, these amazingly supportive people in my life continue to push me forward and encourage me to pursue my dream.  I'm not really sure why, but they are all good people, so I guess maybe I owe it to them to try.

Source  via Kate on Pinterest

I always figured that someday I would finally sit down and make myself write on paper the novel that has been floating around in my head for years (since high school to be exact); however it wasn't until recent years that I finally realized that the time to start should probably be sooner rather than later. Like many people I've told myself that I have an entire lifetime to complete all of my goals and follow all of my dreams, but I, better than some, should know that we aren't guaranteed any certain amount of time on this earth, as I've seen many people I've known and loved leave this earth entirely too soon. Also, something about hitting the age of 30 the other year made me feel rushed, as though a significant portion of my life had passed me by already, and I should probably get to work on that bucket list of mine.  So, when several seemingly serendipitous events occured within this past year, it made me think that maybe there's a driving force pushing me to pursue writing and publishing a lot sooner than I would have pushed myself, and perhaps it's time I listen.

In the spring of 2016, I heard news that John Rhys-Davies was being booked as a special guest at a local SciFi convention. As a huge Lord of the Rings fan, I saw this as a perfect opportunity to geek out and meet somebody whose work I had admired. The price was reasonable, the venue was close, and I had my sister and my husband to tag along with me.  It seemed like a no-brainer.  So, we purchased our VIP passes to go meet him, get a photo, get an autograph, and hear him speak at a panel.  Be still my geeky heart.

Source  via Kate on Pinterest

First up, was our autographs.  We made sure to get in line very early, and even got to see him round the corner and walk through the hallway right past us to enter the room where he would set up shop at his table and await his eager fans.  When I finally got the chance to go up to Mr. Rhys-Davies, my mind raced a million miles an hour trying to think of what to say, as to not sound like a complete and total numpty.  So, as I handed him the photo to sign, he talked to me and the brief conversation ran as such:

JRD:  “What is it you do?”
Me:  “I'm a teacher.”
JRD:  “And what do you teach?”
Me:  “7th grade English.”
JRD:  “Ah, yes, teaching English.  I did it myself for a while.  It’s for people who are no good at maths and too lazy for foreign languages.”
Me (laughing):  “Sounds about right.”

There may have been a few more words exchanged.  I seem to recall a comment about my Game of Thrones t-shirt ("Ah, yes, Game of Thrones!  I believe we have some of that stuff here!"), but by and large my personal encounter with this mammoth of a man was quite short, mostly due to my own brief answers as I stood paralyzed in nerdy awe.

Next up was my sister, and when he asked her what was she did, she stated that she was a student in college as an English major.  When he asked her what she wanted to do, she told him that she wanted to be a writer (why didn't I say that).  He went on to talk to her for quite a bit of time (I'd say a solid 5-10 minutes). I was actually quite impressed at the amount of time he spent talking to each and every person that came up to meet him, and I have heard that he is always this kind and personable to his fans.  During their conversation, he offered my sister some sage advice for writing and told her that, no matter what,  if you are trying to write a book, you should write three pages every day:  no more, no less.  His reasoning was that three pages a day keeps you on pace to finish a book ("If you write three pages a day for 365 days, by the end of the year, you will have a book!"), but it also keeps your ideas fresh because forcing yourself to stop can build the same kind of tension and excitement as stopping at a good part of book that you are reading.  He feels that this stopping forces your mind to think about the book more before actually writing the next day, potentially causing newer and better thoughts to emerge.  Doing this also gives you a chance to start fresh every day.  Makes sense.  Somewhere in there, he gave an example of how one can build on a story and pointed to my husband behind her in line and said, "For example, this young man, he has the heart of wolf!"  We got a kick out of that.

I wish I could remember the exact words off the top of my head (I believe my sister wrote them down as best as she could remember and has them stowed away somewhere), but this was the general gist of his motivational pep talk he offered to my sister (who, by the way, is currently researching and writing her first book, as her college sought her out her freshman semester to write a brief history of the college; I want to be like my little sister when I grow up).  Although this advice was intended for my sister, I continued to stare and listen and take the advice to heart myself. I left the convention with the renewed passion for wanting to put my words down on paper.  I WOULD write those minimum of three pages every day, and I WOULD have that novel written at the end of the year!  I would!  I would!   But... this was just the beginning of summer, and as a teacher, I had to go back to work in the fall.  So, those dreams and motivations, once again, lost momentum and got pushed to the back burner, as such lofty goals often do.

John Rhys-Davies and me, reveling in my geeky glory, as he flicked my ear to make me laugh/smile for the picture.

Later in the fall, the school where I work had invited published and celebrated author Marc Tyler Nobleman to visit and speak to the children about his journey to become a writer and how he overcame difficulties along the way.  I'm sure his speech was meant to inspire the students and help them see the importance of learning, writing, exploring the world, and seeking the truth always; however, I, too, was inspired at the end of this speech.  Once again, I sat in awe of this person who was living my dream and wondered, "How can I make this happen for me?"  After the assembly I went to the front of the auditorium and spoke very briefly with Mr. Nobleman and asked him if I could e-mail him with some questions I had about publishing.  He very graciously agreed that I could contact him, and that I did.

Marc Tyler Nobleman, inspiring people everywhere to find their own inner super hero (Picture Source:  Scholastic).
Check out his latest children's book The Chupacabra Ate the Candelabra.

I always try to have a back-up plan for everything, and as such, I am always trying to think of what job I could do if, for some reason, I could no longer teach. I talked to a couple people about freelance editing from home.  I had heard that it could be a viable career if a person can motivate oneself to work as/when needed, be flexible, and meet deadlines. I thought to myself, "I could do that.  It will probably be less stressful than teaching, and perhaps, if I am working from home, I will have enough time to write that book I've been thinking about for decades."  It seemed like the perfect plan.  When I discussed this and several other questions I had with Mr. Nobleman, he responded by saying, "Couldn't say if freelance editing work will help with writing.  Probably, but unless you would be doing it more for the money, why not instead use that time to write?" I never thought of it that way before.  Why would I spend so much time editing someone else's writing when I could be spending that time doing my own and pursuing my dream?  Maybe I never valued my own dreams of writing enough to even think of this as a possibility.  These words really got me thinking and reignited the flame that had been simmering since my summer encounter with Mr. Rhys-Davies--a flame that had been ignited as an elementary school student who had unwittingly won 2nd place in a poetry contest (read more about that in my first blog post here), a flame that had continued to burn as an angsty teen who wrote poetry in junior high, the flame that surged in high school as a novel idea (there's a pun there) crept into this young girl's mind and latched on, like a parasite, that would not release its hold until it had exited her brain via paper and pen.  And, it has been this flame and the echoes of promises that have continued to gnaw at me ever since.


Source  via Kate on Pinterest

I am not really one to believe in coincidences.  In fact, as strange as it will sound to say this, when my idea for my first novel popped into my head, it almost didn't feel like it was my own.  It felt like the idea had been uploaded into my brain by the universe, which was telling me to share this story with the world.  I felt this obligation, this burden, to share this story, and this idea has continued to pester me ever since.  In fact, for a long time after this thought first popped into my mind, I couldn't even begin to think of another idea for a story.  It was almost as if my brain needed to release this story before it could make room for a new one.  Now, there are three of these ideas floating around in there, and truth be told, it's getting kind of crowded in my head, so I think it's time to get some of these people and their stories out of there.  So, when these events began occurring, seemingly, all at once, it felt too serendipitous to be anything other than the universe elbowing me angrily in the side while saying, "You have GOT to get a move on!  How many more years are you going to wait?  You'll never be done if you don't even start.  These ideas will die with you if you let them."

One would think that all of this should be more than enough to push me, but there is another BIG promise that is motivating me now more than ever, and that is a promise, or more like a pact, that I made with my mother years ago.  She would probably not be too thrilled to know that I am talking about her on the internet, but I feel like I need to explain.  At a young age, I discovered that I liked writing and that I was at least mediocre enough at it that maybe I could make a career out of it or at least out of teaching it.  As much as I wish I had other great gifts to share with the world, I have just never had any other standout talents that really made me go, "Yes!  I need to do that because I'm so, so good at it!"  Writing and language have always been the things to which I came back.  I don't know when I realized that my mother wrote, too, but somewhere along the line, I realized that she had been keeping notebooks and notebooks of ideas and writing that she did not share with anyone.  I called her out on this at some point and made her promise that, if I were ever able to get anything published, then she needed to try too.  She agreed.  She probably did so to help motivate me, but also because she knows better than anyone how I am my own worst enemy and the world's worst procrastinator, so she probably felt pretty safe putting herself out there like that.  I, however, plan to force my mother to make good on her promise.  This desire, more than any of the others, is what is truly driving me because, in this way, writing and attempting to be published becomes less about me attempting to achieve my goals and more about me trying to help force her to pursue hers.  And that is a promise that I truly intend to keep because, if there is one person in this world  who deserves to have her dreams come true, it is the woman responsible for helping so many of mine to come true already.  So, Mom, you're probably not reading this, but I have promises to keep, and so will you because... this book... it's happening.


(Ignore the horrid punctuation error.  Unfortunately, internet memes and graphics are not held to very high standards).
Source  via Kate on Pinterest

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Seeing is Believing... Literally...

We are not going to talk about how it's been months since my last post.  I will not make excuses.  However, it is summer now, so hopefully, this happens more.

Back in December, I got LASIK eye surgery, and I've been meaning to blog about it ever since, so here it is!

Modern medicine is nothing short of miraculous.

I remember a time in fourth grade before I knew I needed glasses, before I knew just how horrible my vision truly was.

I was sitting in the classroom of a fourth grade teacher who was not my own.  We were watching The Great Panda Adventure.  I was squinting so that I could see the television screen and assuming that that was what everybody had to do in order to see the television clearly (I certainly couldn't remember a time when I did otherwise).  As we were leaving the classroom, I remember that teacher saying to me, "Next time, bring your glasses," and I remember thinking to myself, "What does that jerk know?  I don't even wear glasses."

Source:  diply.com via Kate on Pinterest

It was discovered toward the end of 5th grade that I did, in fact, need glasses something horribly.  As I sat in the optometrist's office, I remember him asking me to read a line, and I recited the letters as I saw them with confidence.  My older sister Julia, my mother, and my father were in the exam room with me because they were getting their new glasses that day, and I remember them stifling laughter after witnessing my performance.  I was convinced that I kicked that Snellen Chart's @$$.  Turns out, I did not.  Turns out, I did very, very badly.

(You may have to click on the link to this image to zoom in and read the captions, and I highly recommend that you do, as they are hilarious and similar to my Snellen Chart experience haha!)
Source:  dumpaday.com  via Kate on Pinterest

I remember being so mad that I had to get glasses, and I remember my sister being glad that she was no longer the only sibling who needed glasses.  Isn't it funny the things we remember from our childhood?

Putting on glasses for the first time and realizing what the world was supposed to look like was kind of like this:

Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) based on the book by Roald Dahl

Flash forward to 2014, and I had been a glasses/contacts wearer for 18 years out of the 29 I have spent on this earth.  For years, I had contemplated LASIK and its benefits, and for years, I lamented the fact that I could not afford the procedure.

Source:  buzzfeed.com via Kate on Pinterest

A couple of years ago, my eye doctor told me I was the perfect candidate for LASIK:  I had horrible vision; I was at the age where my eyes had finally stopped changing dramatically; and I was young enough to enjoy the greatest number of years of benefit from the procedure because 90% of people end up needing some form of reading glasses around the age of 40.  All I needed now was to not be pregnant for six months and have the money.  So, when my son was about 18 months old and my husband heard from a friend that they were offering a special and financing for the procedure at a local eye clinic, I thought, it's now or never.  So, this past December 2014, I finally took the leap and had LASIK eye surgery!

I had had surgery before, but none of those procedures seemed to terrify me like this one did.  I had a double lumpectomy at the age of 21, just a few short weeks after having a tonsilloadendoidectomy.  At the age of 28 I had my two wisdom teeth removed (I only had the two, which was surprising after my dentist and hygienists had told me that it looked as if I had none; imagine my surprise when I started teething around the same time as my son).  Then, finally, at the age of 29, I had several moles removed.  That is the extent of my surgical history.  None of those surgeries seemed super scary (except the lumpectomy before I knew that the tumors were benign; that part was a little scary, but not so much the surgery itself).  All of those surgeries involved removing undesirable things from my body, so there really did not not seem like a downside to having them.  However, with LASIK, there was always that fear in the back of my mind:  what if this surgery does not fix my eyes, or worse, what if I go blind?  A botched mole removal or lumpectomy might leave an undesirable scar, and the scariest thing about the tonsilloadendoidectomy and the wisdom teeth extraction was the anesthesia.  But, LASIK?  LASIK was surgery ON MY EYES!  That is terrifying!

Source:  buzzfeed.com via Kate on Pinterest

Thankfully, my surgery went off with nary a hitch.  The first eye was finished, and despite the fact that it takes several days for the eyes to heal and the full effects of the surgery to be apparent, I was reading a blurry 20/15 immediately afterwards.  I know this because I had to wait for my second eye to be operated on because a small air bubble found its way under my corneal flap when they started on my left eye.  Just imagine the terror that spread through my body when the doctor had to stop, mid-surgery, to explain that something had gone wrong!  Ahhhh!  Thankfully, the air bubbles are nothing to be scared of; however, if they had gone ahead with the surgery while the air bubble was present, it could have affected the accuracy of the surgery, so I was glad that they were cautious and made me wait for the bubble to dissipate.

The surgery ended.  All appeared to have gone quite well, considering.  The one optometrist who checked my eyes after the surgery told me to go home, nap for a few hours, and take it easy.  However, because my surgery was delayed, I didn't make it home in time to nap like I was supposed to, and I soon figured out why I was told to sleep.

No one had warned me about the excruciating pain which occurs within a few hours of the surgery.  Not a single person.  But, sure enough, I was waiting in the car while Shawn went into the pharmacy for my eye drops, and the pain slowly started creeping in to my eyes.  It was mild at first but kept intensifying as time passed.  Soon, it felt like sand was being rubbed vigorously in my eyes, and I was powerless, as the one instruction they were very adamant about was "DO NOT RUB YOUR EYES!"  My eyes began furiously tearing up, and as a result, my nose soon began running uncontrollably.  I told my husband to drive me back to the surgery facility immediately!  We had to stop to get gas first, and by the time we got back to the office, it was closed.  So, we had to call the on-call optometrist back in to come look at me, and he was a good hour and a half away.  While we waited, I swore I was going to pee my pants, so we had to go back to the gas station, where Shawn had to lead me to the bathroom because I could not open my eyes long enough to make it to the restroom without running in to somebody.  I'm sure everybody in that Sheetz was thinking, "What the heck is going on with that lady?!"  Then, we drove back to the eye doctor's office, where we were waiting for what felt like an eternity.  When the doctor finally arrived, he looked at my eyes, said that they had dried out pretty badly, but the corneas had not torn (which was a super good thing).  He decided to load me up with tons of numbing drops and then put contact lens "bandages" on my eyes to keep from having another attack of pain.  He said that the oils from my tears had irritated my eyes, which caused my eyes to tear up even more, leading to more irritation, and thus, a vicious cycle of pain.  After feeling like a total idiot when the pain finally subsided, I went home, slept it off, went in the next day for the one day follow-up, had the lenses removed, and all was right with the world.

Now that I have thoroughly terrified anyone who was thinking about having LASIK, here is the good news:  even despite that somewhat traumatic experience, I would do it all over again... in a heartbeat!

Just under 6 months later, I am still reading 20/15, which is better than 20/20!  For someone who was reading worse than 20/100 prior to the surgery and was told that I would not legally be allowed to drive without glasses or contacts, this is absolutely miraculous!  It is one of the best things I have ever chosen to do in my life!  As a contact lens wearer, it took a while for it to really set in what had happened.  I still have the occasional thought before bed that I need to remove my contacts, and then, I remember, I'm not wearing any!  I gave all of my lens solution to my younger sister who is a glasses/contacts wearer, though I'm still not sure what I'm going to do with my glasses and leftover contacts.  That day, it felt like a huge burden had been lifted from my shoulders!  I could see!  :)

To think that centuries ago, I would have been disabled and relegated to a job that only required limited near sightedness, and I probably would have rarely, if ever, been able to leave the house.  But, thanks to modern medicine and the invention of corrective lens, I have been and am able to live a full and functional life.  As I said, modern medicine is nothing short of miraculous!  :)


Source:  buzzfeed.com via Kate on Pinterest

I am due to schedule my 6-month follow-up appointment, and I know it sounds silly, but, every day I think about being able to see clearly unaided, I feel like I need to say a quick prayer of thanks and gratitude, for fear that if I take for granted the amazing blessing of modern medicine that I will slowly begin to lose the benefits the surgery has given me.  Absolutely crazy, I know, but I still fear it all the same.  I know that my eyes will slowly get worse again, and I am 100% certain that I will need bifocals at some point in my life, but I am hoping that, by getting the surgery fairly young, I will get the maximum number of years of benefit out of the surgery, just as my doctor said.

So, if you are thinking or have been thinking about getting LASIK and you have been on the fence, consider this my endorsement.  Definitely do your research, talk to people who have had it done, find a place with a great reputation, look into your financial options, and if the opportunity presents itself, you really, really should consider taking it.  It may just be one of the best decisions you ever make.  It definitely was for me!

Sunday, July 6, 2014

The Blog is Back...

I really wanted to title this, "The Blog is Back" followed by an alliterative expletive because I have a very twisted and dark sense of humor, but I decided to keep it a little more PC for my first day back at the blog drawing board.  So, instead of calling my blog by the aforementioned title, I told you a quick story about what I wanted to call it; therefore, you can now imagine that this post is titled as such, but I still come off as looking slightly more classy... maybe?  If you are reading this thinking, "What the heck is she talking about?" welcome to a small sampling of the ramblings that constantly go on inside my brain while I pretend to be a normal, functioning member of society outside of it.

Eh, being classy is overrated...
Source:  http://gevaaalik.com/facebook-funnies via Pinterest

So, has it really been just under a year and a half since my last blog post?  Don't you hate rhetorical questions with obvious answers?
Source:  http://www.zazzle.com/rhetorical_questions_coffee_mugs-168395714520086649 via Pinterest

What can I say?  Life happens/happened.  This is a sentiment peppered throughout various posts on my pitiful excuse for a blog, but in all seriousness... in this year and some odd months... life got CRAZY!

The last time I blogged, I was giving up Facebook for Lent... in 2013.  I mentioned all of these grand plans of being a blogging fiend during my weeks of Facebook withdrawal, and to be perfectly cliche, as many of "the best laid schemes of mice and men" often do, this pie in the sky dream went straight down the toilet.

In my defense, I was just about 5 months pregnant when I wrote my last entry, and as if the pressures of impending parenthood aren't daunting enough, I was told not long after this post that I would be switching teaching assignments AGAIN.  So, picture this:  a very pregnant lady told she has to move classrooms and teaching assignments for the third time in five years of teaching (which means somehow moving boxes while 9 months pregnant and somehow mapping out a whole new curriculum during her first few months of motherhood), all of this happening right around the time of the stress-filled insanity that is standardized testing season, and all while she is trying desperately to finish up classes to meet her Level II teaching requirements so that she does not get suspended or lose said teaching job.  Well, that pregnant lady was me, so I don't have to imagine.  In addition to all of this, I had just very recently, before that post, quit my weekend job of wrapping silverware for a local restaurant because, not only was I too pregnant to lift heavy trays of silverware, but my position had become redundant; if it weren't for those two reasons, I would probably still be teaching full-time and wrapping on the weekends.

No, not THAT kind of rapping on the weekends...
Source:  http://indulgy.com/post/fe6Zf9OxP1/yeeaah via Pinterest

Needless to say, I was a very, very busy and very, very pregnant lady, and so, when push came to shove and I had to let some things slide, of course, writing was the first thing to go because it was my "leisure" activity.  However, when writing goes, so does my sanity.  It's a vicious cycle really.

Source:  http://writerunboxed.com/2010/12/04/cartoon-caption-winner/ via Pinterest

Then, of course, motherhood happened.  For me, parenthood has been the most amazingly crazy joyride ever.  Parenting is not for everyone, but for me, it really put life into perspective.  I learned to put off things that were not absolutely essential in order to make room for those that were.  I learned to prioritize my time (still working on that, but getting better daily).  I learned how much I really can accomplish in a day, not even because I want to, but just because I HAVE to.  I learned just how much love I was capable of feeling and to what lengths I was truly willing to go to in order to care for those I love the most.  I learned sacrifice.  I learned true selflessness.  Being a mother (or a father) is a FULL-TIME JOB!  So, being a working mother (or father) is essentially like having TWO FULL-TIME JOBS!  It is not for the faint of heart!

However, I think everyone reaches a time in their parenting experience when they realize that it is okay to make time for yourself.  It is okay to find a baby sitter while you and your spouse go on a date night.  Doing such does not make someone a bad parent.  But it is also okay to put off grading those papers for one more night and hold your baby instead because, after all, he will not be this small forever.  It is also okay to tell someone, "No, I cannot make it to this event," or "No, I do not have time to volunteer for this," because, let's face it:  no one can do it all.  Those that pretend they can are only fooling themselves, and it won't be long before they, too, become burnt out and realize it's okay to ask for help, it's okay to say no, it's okay to not be perfect.  I feel like parenting has really taught me about balance, or I guess, it would be more accurate to say it is TEACHING me about balance.

Source:  http://www.briantracy.com via Pinterest

Well, now, with one year of parenting and one year of 7th grade English under my belt, and with my Level II teaching certification being officially completed and approved, and my ESL certification very close to being finished (it will be done by the end of summer), I finally feel like I can come up for air again.  I really have a feeling like 2014-2015 is going to be the year where things finally start to settle in their places (at least I can hope, right).

So, with all of that being said, here's to hoping that somewhere, somehow, and sometimes in this crazy, rat race that is life I can find some time to write again.  It's not even a matter of "if" I can find the time; I WILL find the time.  I HAVE to find the time.  Writing is one of the few things I do for me, and if we want to be the best version of ourselves for the most important people in our lives then we must realize that part of that is making sure that we take care of ourselves in the process.  I WILL find time to write, and who knows... maybe you will even find some time to read... ;)

Source:  http://www.pinterest.com/rainasfancy/ via Pinterest

So... ladies and gentlemen... the blog is back... ;)