Monday, December 19, 2016

Panera Promotions

Hello, Dear Reader. It's been almost a month since my last post, and I have much to write about. But today I am going to tell you about how I am literally drowning at work. So I think I've told you I got a promotion and that I was going to start training for my new position soon. Well, I've started training, and I am about halfway through. 

Each day that passes I wonder more and more why my superiors thought it was such a swell idea to move me up the chain of command; because all I really do is avoid any actual work and burn anything I have to bake during the day.

I guess my charming, sarcastic personality and my insatiable appetite for sucking up worked in my favor.

Anyway, it has been a pretty big disaster on the work front. While I can pick something up quickly, I can't seem to retain about half the information I'm being given, so I just walk around saying "I-I-I-I, I just...I JUST DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH MY HANDS." Which is basically Alex Code for "Pardon my behavior, I am currently suffering a panic attack." No one seems to notice though. I guess that's because I am in a constant state of caffeine induced panic.

On a serious note, I am beyond thankful for this opportunity. I just hope my bosses don't decide that having to tell me I'm doing just fine 500 times a day isn't worth having an extra set of hands on the management team.


Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Jolliest Asshole This Side of the Nuthouse.

It's Thanksgiving here in the US, Dear Reader. You know what that means? It means it's almost Christmas, and my mood is steadily declining. Holiday season is super rough for me, mostly because it's freaking cold and I'm actual a reptile wearing a human suit to keep warm. But also because I always feel like I don't have enough arms on my body or hours in my day to get things done and visit with my loved ones.

So I fuel my already anxious and sleep deprived brain with red bull, coffee, and an occasional drag of nicotine.

Okay not so much nicotine. I haven't smoked in about 4 years. But thinking about the impending holiday is making me want to smoke an entire pack of camel crush menthols and drink a case of the cheapest boxed wine. (Mom, if you're reading this, on your way to my house tomorrow, you know what I need for the store now. *insert winky face emoji*)

We all cope in our own ways.

Anyway back to the point of this post. Christmas is coming which means work is getting busier because people NEED 66,000,000 bagel packs and 72 loaves of holiday bread, and I'm about to start training for a new position, and we just opened a drive thru. I am beyond stressed. So I started asking my coworkers how they handle their holiday stress. No one had any good answers. Which makes me wonder, why do we make such a fuss over the holiday season?

I mean, yeah, your buttface brothers come in to town, pin you down, and give you indian burns and pink bellies (this is from personal experience), and maybe you're grandma gets drunk and passes out in the living room floor before anyone has even sat down to eat dinner, but is it worth all the freaking out?

No. No it isn't. So I challenge you, Dear Reader, to relax this holiday season. Don't have any gigantic meltdowns, and don't yell at your coworkers because they're messing with you and your shift ended 2 hours ago and you're ready to leave, and then try to make up for it by bringing candy to work the next day. Just chill out and enjoy all the dysfunction, chaos, and alcohol....errr...I mean cookies. I totally meant cookies.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

What Happened In Here?

It's Sunday morning, Dear Reader. Are you gearing up for your impending doom...I mean work week? I'm not. I'm sitting at the kitchen table, drinking cold coffee that I forgot I had made until Robbie came walking over to me drinking it, and procrastinating. Procrastination isn't really something I take part in often *because there are not enough hours in my day* but I'm making an exception for today. Can you guess why? I'll just tell you. 

My house hasn't been thoroughly cleaned in about two weeks. It literally looks like a bomb went off in here. And it smells like the inside of a sweaty wool sock. I have about three weeks worth of laundry to fold, and a week's worth to wash. Also, the bathroom cabinet contents seem to have spontaneously combusted at some point during the madness of last week. 

I should insert a picture of the state of my living room floor right now. But it is cringe worthy. So I'm not going to.

I feel like I'm drowning in responsibilities. I felt like that as a stay at home mom too, but I actually got shit done then. Now I'm getting up at 3 am to be at work by 5 am, and getting home at about 3:30 pm, which means I rush through cooking dinner, paying bills online, and doing a load of laundry so I can have Robbie in bed by 7 pm and I can be asleep by 7:30 pm. It's kind of a recipe for disaster and embarrassment.

If my mother saw the way my house looks right now, she would be forced into an early grave. But not before she yelled at me for being a slob. 

I keep telling myself I am going to get a giant calendar to hang in my kitchen, and on said calendar I will plan my weekly chores. *I aim to be one of those got her shit together Pinterest moms* But it never happens. And even if I did get one, I don't follow my weekly plans on the giant calendar by my bed, and I'm constantly writing things in my planner and forgetting about it. So what's the point in wasting effort and money on another calendar?

Because office supplies and caffeine are my life blood, that's the point.

Anyway, I should probably get up and do something productive with this day. Mostly I just need to get up to change what is streaming on the TV right now, because "Mitkey Kissmass" is playing for the gabillionth time and I've had enough of that crap.





Sunday, October 30, 2016

So I've been gone for two weeks now. Sorry about that. I've been busy with work training and kid stuff, and I'm still recovering from a week long migraine/virus. It's been hectic around here.

Anyway.

Cameron and I are HUGE animation fans. Our Amazon video library is mostly Disney and a hand full of Pixar movies. And with having a 2 year old, you can imagine that the TV is always playing something child friendly. Well today I decided to watch Toy Story because Robbie hasn't seen it, also I apparently needed a good cry.

Watching this movie made me think of all the animated flicks that will make a person a little misty, and I started to wonder if the creators of these shows are really just black hearted, soulless, torturous assholes who wish to make adults sad.

Look at Inside Out. I know loads of kids and adults loved that movie, but it was far from a happy tale. The little girl the emotions belonged to was clearly depressed, AND THERE WAS NO REAL RESOLUTION AT THE END. I hated that one. It reminded me and millions of others of our terrible early teen years. Who makes a movie like that?

Oh that's right, the original buttfaces who gave us tearjerkers like Bambi, The Fox and The Hound, Lion King, and Dumbo. Then they made Andy grow up and get over playing with all of his toys. Jerks. I guess they weren't satisfied with the damage they did to our feels with the first Toy Story, because they made two more.

There was also Up. We don't talk about the crying that happens in my house when that one comes on. It was so not meant for children. They just can't get the complexity of the grumpy old man.

And what about when Ray dies in The Princess and The Frog? He finally gets to be with Evangeline. Insert multiple crying emojis.

My point is, we are all gluttons for punishment and the kid flick creators know it. So they stab at our feels while entertaining our children, AND WE PAY THEM FOR IT.

Monday, October 17, 2016

Wimpy, wimpy, wimpy.

Today I am coming at you from an over caffeinated state. I drank a Red Bull, and now I’m having coffee. I am pregaming for my loooonnngggg day. I’m a bundle of nerves, as I have a ton of stuff happening, and my financial well being is going to be determined by the day’s outcome. Also, we start training for the drive thru at work this week. And while I am surprised at my excitement, I am super worried about to how it is going to go the first few times.

It’s stressful. I need the boost. Don’t judge me.

Anyway, Halloween is upon us. This means I’m watching and reading everything spooky. This also means I am having crazy nightmares, because I’m a wimp.

I didn’t even watch anything scary yesterday, but I threw around the idea of reading The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer, which explains why I had horrible dreams about going to some weird estate sale and finding an original copy of an Ed and Lorraine Warren book that was about some murders and Lycanthropy that occurred in my home town.

First of all, the Warrens worked with demons. B, werewolves aren’t scary. So I’m not sure why it was so terrifying, but Lilly Rabe was in it. And she was the evil nun she played in AHS: Asylum. Except for she was actually convincing in my dream, unlike in the show.

 Side note Rabe should just stick to playing good hearted characters. She just seems too sweet to be evil.

Tonight I think I’ll watch a Disney princess movie in hopes that I don’t have any more nightmares involving the Warrens. Not that I don’t absolutely admire their work, I just don’t feel like waking up screaming again.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Sunrises, Travel, and Dreams.

Hello Dear Reader. Today has been rather rough. I woke up hangry and overwhelmed. But I’m feeling much better now that I’ve had a nice long nap. I had a hard time writing this morning. I had loads of topics, but nothing seemed to sound right once it was on paper. And then I thought, why not just ramble?

Because your mind is like one of those toys for kids in the doctor’s office with the beads that you move across the intertwined wires, Alex. That’s why we don’t ramble on the blog.

So, I guess I won’t just type whatever.

Anyway, I’m staring out my living room window right now. It’s a sunny, windy, typical Fall day in Oklahoma, and I wish I was out enjoying it. I think today would have been the perfect day for getting up before the sun, finding a place to watch the sunrise, and snapping a few pictures while drinking coffee and enjoying the stillness.

I know I talk about sunrises all the time, but morning really is my favorite time of the day. And in my opinion, sunrises are a thousand times more beautiful than sunsets. Sunsets remind me of loss and heartache. But sunrises remind me of all the possibilities and paths that are in my life. Sunrises are comforting.

I am aware of how silly that sounded. It is how I truly feel. Cut me some slack.

I think it would be amazing to travel around the country and capture the sunrise everyday. Just getting to travel a little would be amazing. The wanderer in my soul is getting a little restless lately. I haven't left Oklahoma in 3 years, and it would be a nice change of scenery to get the hell out of Mayes County and see what this world has to offer.

I’m a little envious of those who can afford to travel. It isn’t a luxury I have in my life. Having a small child and a dog means I am strapped to Mayes County for awhile. Not that that is a bad thing or that I regret it. I just wish that I would have moved around some more before I had Robbie.

My soul needs to experience something moving, and it is hard to come by such events around here. Unless of course it is a tragedy. We, unfortunately, have plenty of those to go around. I guess that is why people leave the towns the grew up in, isn't it? To escape the monotonous, and tragic.

Maybe one day I will be able to leave this area and see what is out there. For now I will just continue to watch the sunrises and stare out my living room window.

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Work Hard, Dress Smart.

I don't normally post on Thursdays, but today was a pretty good day, so why not? I'm window shopping on Amazon, which is something I usually reserve for purses, shoes, and watches, but today is different. Today I am totally looking at power suits. Yes, you read that right, I am looking at all things business professional. After years of working in the finance realm, I enjoy a pair of good quality, reasonably priced slacks, and the hunt is always challenging finding said slacks.

When I was a little girl growing up in the 90's, everything was all about girl power (thank you Spice Girls), so obviously I imagined myself as some big shot businesswoman with a corner office, a $200 haircut, and a wardrobe so sharp it would make you scream "owe!" when I walked by. This was also partly influenced by my mother who was a big shot businesswoman. Except, back then, I saw myself doing something with writing or music, and my mom worked for a rather successful trucking company (more on that later, because there is a hilarious story to go along with power clothing) so I was SO not going that route because it sounded boring. Anywho, I assumed by the time I was 25 I'd be a record label executive on Music Row, or an editor at some publishing firm in New York. And yet, here I sit, 25 years old, in a rocking arm chair I inherited from my grandmother, on my day off from my low man on the totem pole job, one town away from the one I grew up in, flat broke, and writing a blog on the iPad I could only afford because its cost was rolled into my tuition at the college I dropped out of.

Sounds depressing, right? Well you're wrong. Yeah, so I'm not where I assumed I'd be. But I didn't actually make the plans to get there when I was a kid. Now that I'm older, and less naïve, I realize being a top dog in any company at 25 years old is pretty freakin' rare, and takes so much more time and dedication than I had to give until recently. Also, those young professionals who did make it to the top early probably devoted their hard earned high school job cash to their wardrobe, and I didn't. I spent mine on cheap whiskey and take out, and one fire red designer handbag (That bag was life. I wish I still had it.)

I know you're wondering about that last sentence, hopefully not about the whiskey and take out, or the handbag part, trust me my mother was kept in the dark about those shenanigans, but seriously dressing the part is crucial. I went to high school with a kid we all swore would be president some day. This kid was hardly ever seen in anything but nicely pressed oxfords and creased jeans. Guess what, that guy turned out to be pretty darn successful as an adult. Why? Well he worked really hard, and he dressed very smart.

I watched a Ted Talk once about power posing and its impact on your confidence. Basically the speaker, Amy Cuddy, found through a study that standing in positions that symbolized power, you could increase your self confidence a little. Totally makes sense right? Well I wondered if the same went for dressing well, and I conducted my own little experiment through out my many interviews I've had in the last few months. And it works. I felt like I looked like I owned/belonged/was perfect for whatever position I was interviewing for, which made me more confident in my abilities, and made my interviews go as smooth as silk. Clearly I didn't get any of those jobs, but I did get recognition on my professionalism/humor, and my attire more than once. All of that inflated my already rather large ego to XXXL, and I have had even better interviews since. Dressing smarter also made me feel more comfortable with myself in front of total strangers who wanted to know every little detail about my work history, and a few details about my blog.

So I'm assuming there is a lot to be said about a person who dresses for the job all the time, and I'm wondering if I should start stocking up on power suits to aid in my efforts to the top. Which brings us back full circle to my window shopping on Amazon. My only problem is, who has the cash to drop on a slick suit, and then pay to get it altered? I certainly don't...not yet at least.

Monday, October 3, 2016

Kids Suck.

I know, I know, I'm posting later than I usually do. Sorry about that. I have a legit reason though. I usually write/edit on Sunday afternoons, because I'm typically off work. But I wasn't off yesterday. And I'm not sure if it's allergies or a cold, but I started feeling terrible Saturday, so after work yesterday I sat under my heated blanket on the couch and re-watched Making A Murderer.

Can you forgive me? I promise next week I will post on time!

Anyway, I'm watching my kiddo run around the living room, and I keep having this vision of the weird kid at school who runs everywhere...and they run really funny. That is probably Robbie's future, unfortunately. Her dad claims to have been the weird kid, and he is not athletic. I was just generally disliked. I wan't weird, and I was pretty athletic, but I just didn't fit in. Not that I cared, I was too busy listening to the most emo music possible while smearing eyeliner all over my face and spiking up my boy short hair in an attempt to look as "punk" as possible.

I actually looked pretty cute with spikey hair. Just in case you were wondering. And I was a total bad ass.

Anyway I'm telling you all of this is because I was reminded of just how hard school actually was for me, and I hope my daughter has an easier time than I did.

Kids are total assholes, did you know that? I was bullied left and right from elementary all the way up to graduation. In eighth grade, a kid pantsed me in the hallway while I was stapling stuff up on a wall. It was embarrassing, only for the fact that I totally was wearing a thong, and it had been revealed to everyone. My bad reputation was solidified.

*Intercom comes on "That's right classmates, Alex Jones is a confirmed delinquent. SHE WEARS THONGS."* Que the pearl clutching and shocked/distraught gasps.

Thankfully no one, but the jack ass who pantsed me, thought it was funny. Although I'm sure if any of you who witnessed this incident are reading, you're laughing hysterically.

Stop laughing. It still isn't funny.

Okay, maybe it's a little funny now.

In a high school English class, a girl told me how I was single handedly responsible for creating some guy's reputation as a "male slut". I swiftly replied how it was ironic that her family could afford to buy anything they wished for, but they chose not to buy her liposuction after she got fat.

I was the asshole there, and so was everyone else in the class, because they all laughed.

My point is, kids are such jerks, and I'm kind of horrified at what my daughter's future could be like. I know it is many years down the road, but how do I prepare for all the crap she might face? Do I just keep hoping that Robbie will be well liked, a good student, and a nice person? This parenting gig has some really rough stuff you have to deal with, and I often wonder if I will make enough good calls to lead her down a happy, successful road.

I guess we will see what happens, right?

Monday, September 26, 2016

The Great PSL

It's finally Fall. Which means it's basically Halloween. Which means I'm going broke buying all the Disney Channel Halloween movies on Amazon because I HAVE to watch Halloweentown everyday and I don't have satellite anymore. Halloween is my second favorite season and holiday (Yes, Halloween is a season. Don't try to convince me otherwise). In celebration of the second most wonderful time of the year, I had my first ever Pumpkin Spice Latte yesterday. I know I'm late to the game. But cut me some slack. I like hot tea, Red Bull, and actual coffee. So steamed milk with sugary syrup was not anywhere on my radar. However, I've been embracing my inner basic white girl lately, so I gave it a shot. *haha espresso pun*

Anyway, we happened to be driving by a restaurant chain that recently launched their take on this widely popular drink, and I thought why the hell not? 

At first I wasn't terribly disappointed. It was smooth, not too hot, and had whipped cream on the top. But the more I drank of this concoction, the more I wondered what all the hype was about.

First of all, the price of a small cup is equivalent to the price of a healthy human kidney on the black market. B, it doesn't taste even remotely like pumpkin, or the spice used to jazz up pumpkin purée for pumpkin pie. Lastly, there isn't enough caffeine in it to support my habit. 

I guess I just can't taste what is so appealing to folks around the world that they would set count downs on their phones and camp out in front of Starbucks, waiting to grab the first few brews of the season. Is this just some grand marketing scheme created by the coffee industry/Starbucks? I mean they have swindled me out of a good $21ish dollars in the last couple of months with their Coconut Milk Macchiato, which is really just iced coffee poured over coconut milk, so it is reasonable that this PSL craze is all just a ploy to get us to spend our hard earned dollars on subpar coffee drinks.

While I will never understand the hype, there is clearly a reason why people all over the world flock to the Great Pumpkin Spice Latte like it is a saving grace in the fall. I'm going to get weird here and blame it on subliminal messaging, probably placed in all those Halloweentown sequels that I've been watching.

Thursday, September 22, 2016

A Day on the Farm.

Happy first day of fall, Dear Reader. Here in Oklahoma, it's still hotter than hell on a bad day for Satan, but the meteorological professionals on the television keep promising cooler weather is on its way. I know better, however. This is Oklahoma for cryin' out loud. We get two seasons, Quakenado (Summer), and Blizzaquakenado (Winter). I'm not even kidding. Last Christmas Eve we had a tornado warning and a winter weather advisory for the same areas all day. In true Okie form, no one paid any mind to the warnings and we all celebrated our holiday.

Anyway, I'm not here to tell you about the Oklahoma weather patterns, or lack there of. No, my friend, today I'm going to tell you a little story about my grandmother, and a gorilla.

So many years ago there used to be an animal farm down the road from my house. Actually, the animal farm is still there but it is owned by a different person now. And they call it a sanctuary I believe. Anyway at the time it was one of those drive thru zoo attractions but it had a petting zoo and a few caged beasts. It was great fun, for me anyway. My poor Grandma took me there frequently and was probably bored to tears every time we went, except for the last time.

The very last time we went started out pretty normal. We drove through and saw the camels and zebras and the handful of llamas the farm had roaming around. We went to the petting zoo and I fed the baby llama that wasn't really a baby anymore. It chewed on my ear, and then spit at one of the fawns that was running around because that llama was certain that the fawn was going to steal its food and my attention. The llama was right. Eventually we migrated to the big caged animal area where there lived a giant, and I mean giant, monkey. I said earlier that it was a gorilla, and in my mind it was, but in all actuality, it was probably a chimp. This dude was old. He was rather grumpy and just ignored visitors when they came by. But for whatever reason, he was full of piss and vigor that day. He did a few typical monkey things, made some noise, threw around his toys, acted generally silly. I guess all that showing off made him thirsty so he reached through the cage and grabbed a piece of cut up garden hose, stuck it in his stock tank full of water, and got a big cool drink.

Of course I thought this was the best thing ever. I had yet to see this primate do much of anything but sit around and ignore everyone. I told Grandma how neat it was and she agreed. We stood there examining him for a bit when out of nowhere that old asshole spit that big drink of water he had taken all over my poor elderly grandmother. The monkey smiled a big yellow toothed smile, and laughed to himself. I'm certain I fell over from laughing so hard. But poor Grandma, she was mortified.

She marched straight over to the visitor's center and told the receptionist all about the monkey's awful behavior. Of course everyone in the office found the incident to be hilarious, but still, Grandma was not amused.

Later that day when my mom came to pick me up after work, Grandma told Mom what had happened. I distinctly remember Mom stifling her laughter as my distraught grandmother shuddered and said "And, oh, he smiled with those big yellow teeth!"

I will never forget that last trip to the animal farm, and I will never forget the look on my grandmother's face as that monkey spit all over her!

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Ahh, Sunday Morning.

Good morning, Dear Reader. It's a lovely Sunday, AND I FINALLY HAVE A DAY OFF FROM WORK!!! I was even able to sleep past my typical 4:45am wake up call, without the help of a sleep aide. I don't know if you can hear it but, there are angels singing songs of rejoice in my honor. It is glorious.

You know what isn't glorious, though? Sleeping next to your toddler.

Per her usual routine, Robbie woke up at 5am, got in our bed, and we all tried to rest peacefully. And at first we managed this. But then I started dreaming about the book I've been reading. (Gary L. Stewart's account of trying to find his birth father, and discovering his father was the Zodiac Killer. Super creepy, but I can't put it down.) Being that I am quite the sissy and couldn't return to sleep, I laid beside my sleeping toddler, quietly, when out of nowhere, the smelliest of smelly toddler feet smacked me right in the face.

Unsure of what to do, for fear I might awaken my child, I just suffered and suffocated under her toes and foot stank. It was awful. But it gets worse. Soon I found my face being crushed by BOTH of her stinky feet. Unable to stand the stench anymore, I rolled over to face away from her. At last I could breathe, and I was beginning to tire, so I decided to go back to sleep.

I'm certain I was starting to snore about the time the kicking to my back began, so I am sure I deserved that. But what came next was unjust. In my half asleep haze, I rolled back over believing I would cuddle with my sweet sleeping baby. But there were no cuddles to be had. Oh no. In place of the cuddles that should have been, my child gave me the gift of possible decapitation. She slashed her arms through the air, coming down directly on my windpipe. Still in fear of waking of the child, I tried to cough and sputter in to the blanket. My attempts were spurned by my child's head butting straight in to my chest. Such action surely left a bruise on my sternum. In my head I screamed in pain, but only bit my lip to keep from crying out and awakening the storm that is my offspring.

Blankets and pillows began to fly as my little darling pelted me with anything that was within her am's reach, and I began to realize that the entire time I believed my child was sleeping wildly, she was in fact very much awake.

I was hurt and insulted by her mischievous behavior, but I was unwilling to get out of my warm bed at the time, so I continued pretending to sleep. It was not long before I was found out, and demands for cereal and Mickey Mouse Clubhouse began. Defeated and battered, I limped into the living room to provide the solution to my child's demands and begin typing this for you, Dear Reader. In the event that I should pass away due to my injuries, or am suffocated by my toddler's beloved blankie at nap time, please remember me as I always was, dramatic, sarcastic, and over caffeinated.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Prayers, Poo, and Coffee.

Today I have a lot on my mind. Which is basically how I am everyday. But today is different. Today I am questioning my choice of going back to work full time. See, at 5 am, Robbie woke up crying. I assume she was cold, despite the mountain of blankets and stuffed animals she keeps in her bed. I can't blame her. I was also under a mountain of blankets and I was cold. Anyway, Cameron put her in our bed and the three of us snoozed peacefully until the alarm clocks started going off an hour later, and then there were demands for "seril, stooms, ohmel, Mitkey, and chocit stawbees mahl" (20 points to Gryffindor if you can translate all of that.) In the midst of the morning demands and the rush to get Cameron out the door for work, I realized at some point Robbie's diaper had leaked all over the place.

*insert mental eye rolls, sighs of exasperation, silent cursing, and a desperate search for the package of diapers*

This is where I started questioning my sanity and my will to provide for my family. My job called to see if I could come in today (Wednesday mornings can get scary over there), and I realized Robbie is almost 2 and a half. Which basically means she should be starting to potty train. And she is. At daycare. Because, I'm.Never.Home.Because.I.Work.ALL.THE.TIME.

I changed Robbie, hung up the phone, and put all of that out of my mind because I was being yelled at for not providing the immediate Mickey Mouse fix my little fiend needed. That is, until shortly before I started writing this, when my sweet little Shugie crouched down, farted so loud the house shook, and dropped the brown note.

Except for she didn't really "drop" anything. It went straight up her back.

I'm going to attribute the upwards motion of the poo to the three or four sips of coffee that were stolen out of my mug while I was fixing breakfast. I assume it was only three or four, but judging by her wild behavior post coffee thievery...it was more. A lot more.

So there I sat, dreading the doom that was contained in my child's pants/shirt. I could only imagine how terrible it would be. I was silently praying to God that he would provide me with magical diaper changing fairies or spontaneous potty training and perfect butt wiping skills for my child. There were thoughts of how I could possibly manage to full potty train my toddler on such little parental availability. There were tears of regret. This was the end.

In my mind, judgement day had arrived. This was my punishment for all of my sins. Eternal damnation and diaper explosions. Hell was real, my friends.

As it turns out, the mess wasn't as bad as I had expected, but the incident has left me with this nagging feeling of failure since I cannot work as diligently on potty training as I'd like (Thank you, workaholic tendencies.) It has also left the foul stench of toddler coffee poo in my living room and I am unsure of how to rid my house of such an atrocious odor.

So there you have it, Dear Reader, the contents of my mind today: Hell, poo explosions, potty training, and why in the world would I choose to return to work before said potty training was over.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Alex Laments. Episode 522.

Well hello, Dear Reader. Fancy meeting you here...I really shouldn't say that. I'm not entirely sure what it means, and obviously you're here because you read, and you like reading what I write. Soooo...

I believe some time ago I had promised I would write more when things calmed down in my life. Unfortunately my life has just gotten crazier and crazier. I finished out my last term in school for the year, in August, while working full time. That was, um, fun? But I did it, and I finished with like a 3.6 GPA. So pat me on the back and tell me I'm special. Because I am special, dammit. Now I'm working all the time. No seriously, like 6 days a week. That has not been fun. But it is necessary. There is hope on the horizon though. My employer has hired more staff, so I shouldn't be at work all the time anymore, and I've been working the job market a little. Pimping out my resume, if you will.

Wait, can you pimp out a resume that isn't impressive? Isn't that the point of putting your goods on the street? Because they're impressive and everyone wants them? I have no idea. My milkshakes DO NOT bring all the boys to the yard, so I'm probably going about this all wrong.

...anyway...I've been searching for gainful employment. Which basically means I've been thinking about how I wish I could work part time while receiving benefits and getting paid at least $1000.00 per hour. #realisticlifesgoal #igotsem. Obviously that is not going to happen. But I really have been considering what to do next, and what will be beneficial in my career path. I think I mentioned before that I had previously been majoring in surgical technology, because I couldn't afford the nursing program, but when the school announced it was closing I decided to pursue a creative writing degree? I still want to do that, but my heart is very much people oriented, and I need face to face interaction with folks to survive. I love people. So I've been tossing around majoring in healthcare admin or maybe a business focus of some sort, and minoring in writing. I mean, I've got to brush up my composition skills if I'm ever going to publish something note worthy. I still need to remind my brothers that I am better than they are and that I'm famous, and they're just butt faces. So a minor in creative writing is important. But trying to figure out my actual career path is hard. My heart  wants to be a healer, my wallet wants to be full, and my soul wants something that has family friendly hours. It's been a rather large task weighing the benefits and downfalls of everything, but doing so has made me realize just how much I really need more balance in my life.

I have NEVER been a balanced person. I zoom from one extreme to the next. I'm a workaholic and I prefer to always be busy. So when I started my current job, of course I offered to step up and work myself in to perpetual sickness (no really, since I started I've caught illness after illness, along with the majority of my coworkers). While this personality trait was a blessing before I had my daughter, it is now a curse. It leaves no room for family life, but it does improve the quality of the little bit of time we get together. The TV is playing more music, and we are all spending our time together instead of vegging out in front of Bob's Burgers re-runs. I just need and want to be home more. I'm missing out on so much. 

This time last year I was waking up to watch the sunrise and drink coffee while Robbie slept peacefully in bed. I was spending afternoons snuggling and playing with my little love. I was cooking every recipe I could get my hands on, and baking a new treat on the weekends. I didn't place enough value on those moments then. I knew they wouldn't last forever, but I didn't realize just how much I would miss them once they were gone. Now I am gone before Robbie or Cameron are awake in the mornings. I get home in just enough time to slap together dinner and spend maybe half an hour playing before it's time to go to bed. There is no meal made out of love. There is no baking. The sunrise is viewed in my rear view mirror. There is no rocking my girl or playing tea party with her. It's a strange place to be in. It isn't miserable. It is just unsatisfying. 

Which is sort of ironic, because this time has taught me so much about myself I didn't know. It has somehow made me into a better mother, a better person, a better student, a better employee, and strengthened my soul and my faith. I find myself almost admiring my growth. I am proud of who I am. 

I just want to enjoy who I've become with the ones I love more. 

So now I'm facing a very the very large project of making a path that will allow me to soak in those special moments again. I have no idea how or where to start, but I am going to make it happen. Some way, some how, I will get that balance that I need between career and family, and I will continue to grow. 

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

30 Days of Gratefulness: Day Five.

Well hello there dear readers! We are nearing the end of the first week of this challenge. What does everyone think thus far? Are you enjoying what I have to say? Are you inspired to write about what you are grateful for? Have the prompts been thought provoking for you? I didn't have any lofty goals of inspiring others with this. But if you are feeling the urge to write, DO IT! Share it with me! I would love to see what you've got to say! 

I want to take minute to say thank you for all the views and feedback I've gotten. I am always surprised at the amount of people who take time out of their busy day to read a piddly little blog that I put together. And not to brag, but it really is a lot of people. So yeah, thanks for reading, sharing, and liking!

Day five is about sounds. Like what specific sound you are grateful for. Can I just say music and use that as a blanket term for the vibrations that our ears sense? Is that cool with everyone? Yes? Okay, good.

So, music. Everyone I have ever met in my short little lifetime has been closely tethered to music in one way or another, whether they realize it or not. For me, music has always played a large part in my creative process. When I started writing I was an angst filled 13 year old who was fueled by tunes by bands like Good Charlotte and Evanescene. While I have since grown up and lost the majority of my moody sadness, I am still continually inspired by lyrics and melodies. Specifically a group called Purity Ring. If I want to write I just hop on YouTube and listen to a mix of their work and the words almost visably flow out of my fingers. It's like magic. Music has that power over pretty much everyone. It is as if music is the audible version of emotions and thoughts intensified by like a million. I'm sure there is some scientific mumbo jumbo behind why songs have such a great impact on humans, but I don't know it so I'm not going to cite it here. 

Moving right along, let's delve deeper into why I am so grateful for melodic noise. It brings people together, much like food. Little known fact: I love to sing and when I was in high school, I desperately wanted to be on Broadway. I was a talented dancer and my singing voice was pretty damn good. Now that I've grown up some and realized the stage would have eaten me alive, I belt out show tunes and twangy country songs at people for enjoyment. I do this so frequently that my two year old has started joining in the fun. Cameron has even been known to sing along on occasion. But he mostly waits for a Disney song to pop up. Who would have thought that the act of sliding my voice up and down the scales while speaking words has caused my little family to become closer knit? It's something we can all do and have fun at. And who doesn't love it when your family is getting along and not fighting over the Roku remote because half of you can't stand to watch another episode of Yu Gi O while the other half thinks it's the greatest show ever written?

I know you all have the same problem. Damn that Yu Gi O.

Music is also a decent sized chunk of my memory. Cameron used to call me a walking jukebox. But I'm not mentioning that here because I hold some knowledge about billboard topping hits. Instead, I am talking about my childhood and adolescence. I seem to have hazy memories of standing in my grandmother's kitchen while she cooked. She would be humming one song and then would start singing something else, probably from Elvis Presley, to herself. I always thought Grandma had a wonderful voice and looking back on those days gives me great joy now that she is gone. My mother also likes to sing. And she does it often. She used to spend countless hours in FYE combing over CDs with me. She's taken and sent me to loads of concerts. And she's given me one of her vintage tour shirts. But my favorite musical memory has less to do with music itself, and more to do with the atmosphere and the person I was with. But if it wasn't for the actual music, we would have never had this experience. My very best friend and I go to concerts together as often as life will allow, and this started sometime around our senior year of high school. One specific time she heard that Jeffree Star was playing a small local venue and that there were still tickets available. So we went and had the time of our lives. We danced, sang, touched J Star's leg, took pictures with him and another band. It was AMAZING. Since then, my friend and I have been to numerous shows together and we both cherish those memories deeply. 

I'm sure that I could continue writing about why I am so grateful for music but I'm going to leave it at this; music is at the heart of all of the important parts of my life. And without it I just wouldn't be the same Alex.




Tuesday, July 5, 2016

30 Days of Gratitude: Day Four.

Day four! I'm not going to lie, now that I've started this challenge and am about wrist deep, I find myself thinking "what the hell was I thinking?" Then I remember I was thinking that I am changing my major and will be doing something with creative writing so I need practice in any way that I can get it. Thank goodness I am also in comp 2 this month while I do this challenge, so I will get all the practice. If I could instert an eye roll/laughing emoji here, I so would.

Anyway. Today is all about what food I am grateful for. How is a person supposed to just pick one food? Shouldn't you be grateful for any food you get? Lord knows I am. In my adult life there have been plenty of times that I didn't have enough money to pay my bills and buy groceries so I went without food. It was rough, but I made it through to have a better understanding of what it is really like to go without. Now there is always food on my table, even if it is just fried bologna sandwiches.

I don't know that I could pick just one food that I am grateful for. Italian and Mexican are my favorite styles of food. But I wouldn't say I am thankful for either of them, because they give me horrible heartburn. I also love seafood and some fish. But again, not really something I'd say I am most thankful for. I guess I would have to say that any meal that I can make for my family is the food I am most grateful for.

Since Robbie was born, I have really come into my own in the kitchen. I've always been able to cook well, I just didn't like it. But having family meals everyday seem to make the chore of cooking a little more enjoyable. Especially when Robbie actually eats what I make, and Cameron goes back for seconds. All that hard work slaving over a hot stove and scalding my hands in boiling dishwater suddenly become one of the most important parts of my day. Funny how that works isn't it?

So there you have it. I'm most grateful for the food that I prepare for my little family. What food are you most grateful for? 

Monday, July 4, 2016

30 Days of Gratitude: Day Three.

Happy Independence Day! It's finally the 4th! This is my favorite holiday for many reasons; like celebrating our freedom, getting to yell "'MERICA", wearing American flag shirts, shooting off fireworks, and drinking beer. So it's fitting that today's question is "what color are you grateful for?" I'm changing this to fit the patriotic theme and I'm going to use three colors, red, white, and blue.

So what makes me grateful for these colors? Well, I have many trivial reasons. Red looks good on me. White looks good on me when I'm tan. Blue always looks good on Cameron and is one of his favorite colors. 

I'm not really that shallow, but our closets really do have loads of red, white, and blue clothing. Anyway, back to why these are important to me!

Red is probably my favorite color. It is the color of Oklahoma sunrises and sunsets. It reminds me that I am beyond blessed to live in a fly over state. Red is the color of the blood of Christ. Red is the color of the blood of the soldiers who have fought for our nation. It keeps me humble and kind. It reminds me of what has been sacrificed to save me from sin and protect my freedoms. 

White is what my walls are painted in my house. I am lucky to live in a nice house, in a nice neighborhood, with my beautiful family. The receiving blankets Robbie was wrapped in when she was born are white. Not everyone is given the chance to be a parent, and not everyone gets the chance to raise a healthy child. White keeps me grounded. It reminds me to hold my baby tight and love her dearly.

My brother wore dress blues in the Navy. He put his life on the line for a country full of people he didn't even know. Blue represents pride. It is thankfulness beyond measure or words for those who are willing to give the ultimate sacrifice.

These aren't just colors in a flag, or on a shirt. They represent everything we believe in and stand for in this country. They hold the blood, sweat, and tears poured in to everything we have here. Today, I hope you celebrate and hug your loved ones. I hope you think about what colors you are grateful for. And I hope three of them are the red, white, and blue.

Sunday, July 3, 2016

30 Days of Gratitude: Day Two.

Today's prompt is "what technology are you grateful for?" While I would really like to answer this with "cellphone and tablet technology", I will try to come up with something else. I started typing out the post and it just seemed trivial and a little dull. We are all thankful for our devices. They keep us connected to the world and our loved ones, and they let us access Pinterest which is almost as important as keeping up with your family. 

Okay, maybe Pinterest is only that big of a deal in my house. Cam and I both have a horrible addiction. Robbie has benefitted from it though.

Anywho, back to the topic at hand. I truly don't know what to pick other than devices. I mean, I'm grateful for coffee makers and stand/hand mixers. I also thoroughly enjoy the Internet and my Roku player. YouTube has brought my little family hours of entertainment in the form of toy unboxing videos (another serious addiction that all three of us will never be able to kick.) Beachbody On Demand is whipping my tail end into shape. Amazon and my Kindle app have allowed me to go broke and read countless books. Blog platforms give me access to the Pioneer Woman's posts which in turn feeds my family and gives me a good laugh (Ree Drummond is my spirit animal).

I guess I am just thankful for all of the above mentioned items. We are a first world family for sure. That being said, there is a lot that has impacted my life and allowed me to live as I do. You know, running water, electricity, indoor plumbing, heat and air units, automobiles, anything medical. All of those things that we in developed countries take for granted. I should really just say I am grateful for just about any and all technology and its advancements; because without it I'd still be living in a cave somewhere.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

30 Days of Gratitude: Day One.

So I found a 30 day writing challenge on Pinterest, and I'm going to make you, dear readers, suffer through it. The challenge is supposed to be about letting gratitude into your life, which is something I try to practice daily already. So this is really just going to be about me getting in some much needed wordsmith practice. I really do hope you enjoy it though. I think it will be interesting to go down the list and talk about what I am truly grateful for. Being satisfied and thankful is a choice we have to make daily and some times the little things can slip through the cracks. I am certain this challenge will be eye and heart opening.

Day number one's prompt is "what smell are you grateful for today?" I'm not going to lie, this is going to be one of the more difficult ones for me to narrow down. I have a list of scents that are near and dear to my heart and I could go on for hours about them. Seriously, I really could. But for the sake of this challenge, I'll just write about one. The obvious choice here would be my Grandfather's cologne. If you've read just one of my posts, you know Pa was my very best friend. So I keep his cologne sitting on my vanity and I smell it when I feel sad. But that is not the one I'm going to pick!!

You didn't see that coming did ya? I'm sneaky like that.

Instead I'm going to write about what I have often thought of as the scent of my life. It is the combination of sweat, dirt, lake water, and off-road diesel. I know you're probably like where the heck did that come from? Well, I'll tell you. My absolute, hands down, all time favorite past time is riding four wheelers, specifically below the dam at Grand Lake. I spent all of my teenage years there, and a good chunk of my adult years as well, and this smell is everywhere. It is all-consuming. It is present in summer and in winter. It is almost like lifeblood for the area. If the dry side of the dam had a vein you could split, this smell would pour out.

So why am I thankful for it? Because it was the scent of my first real relationship, which taught me to love. It is the smell of heartbreak and bad tattoos. It is the smell of warm bud light and Marlboro menthols. It is the smell of money and time spent. It is the smell that helped shape who I am now. It is forever in my memory and heart. If I had never smelled it, been bathed in it, all but worshipped it, I would have never had the hell of a journey I've had in my 25 years. I would have never met Cameron. I wouldn't have Robbie Jo. I would have never learned to live loud and bold.

So you can see, this dirty, gritty, scent means so much to me. It is me. Because of it, my life is what it is and I would never trade that or go back and change it. 

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Holding Hands With the Devil

Tonight I am finding myself a little heartbroken. A few minutes ago, I wandered into RJ’s room. She was sleeping peacefully, all snuggled up with her six or seven stuffed animals and her blankie. I couldn’t help but notice that for a moment she looked so much like my new born baby that I brought home from the hospital almost two years ago. Her sweet little mouth curved the same way. Her long dark eyelashes fell on the tops of her cheek bones. Her hair looked as dark as it was the day she was born, and it brushed the beautiful smooth skin of her forehead.

My beautiful, peaceful angel.

And then I tried to remember the times I stood next to her bed when she was an infant and watched her sleep…

There were very few of those tender moments.

I can think of only one time specifically. She wasn’t in her bed though. I was holding her in the middle of the afternoon. We were sitting on the couch. RJ looked just like she did tonight, only smaller. I just couldn’t believe how beautiful she was. So perfect. So sweet. I have a picture of her laying there in my arms from that moment. But it is one of maybe three or four.

That’s not to say that I didn’t take pictures of her or hold her. I have hundreds of pictures.I held her a lot. I snuggled her and smelled the top of her head. I played with her. I sang to her. I rocked her. I did all of those motherly things. But her first year of life was so hard on me that I didn’t enjoy the majority of it. I look back, and it is a foggy, hellish nightmare.

I am and was so blessed. My pregnancy, labor, and delivery were text book and uncomplicated. RJ was healthy at birth and is still healthy to this day. We had a blissful, sleep filled newborn period. But around the 8th week postpartum, something inside me shifted.

No, shifted isn’t correct. It slipped, fell, and busted wide open. I lost myself.

I think it started a few days after Cameron’s great grandmother passed. Unfortunately her passing was unanticipated and she never got to meet RJ. Nana’s death was rather tragic and it took quite a toll on our family. I’m not sure if it was the guilt I felt about RJ not meeting Nana, or residual guilt from my pregnancy. But something started eating away at my insides.

It turned me into a monster.

I became impulsive and obsessive. I stopped sleeping. I started fighting with Cameron constantly. I was so stricken with anxiety that I couldn’t leave the house unless I knew I would be with my mother or my best friend. Then the horrible, intrusive thoughts came.

I was convinced if I had to hold RJ over a hard surface that something would happen and I would lose my grip on her. I would see the scene play out behind my eyes every time. I could see her falling and her head splitting open as it hit the kitchen floor.

So I stopped going into the kitchen if I had RJ in my arms. I started keeping bottles and formula next to my chair so I didn’t have to leave her side or carry her across the hard floor.

Cameron and I had had a plan that I would go back to school after I left work. But I couldn’t bring myself to even think about applying for college.

I just knew in my core that I would put RJ in daycare and some horrible person would abuse her. Eventually I wouldn’t be able to think of leaving her with family members. Not even to step out of the room to use the restroom. I didn’t  want them touching my baby. At all.

Then my grandfather was hospitalized. He was my rock. His illness wasn’t new, but it still shook my foundation. He was in and out of the hospital for months. Seeing the man that I never imagined could fall ill in a bed hooked up to machines was horrific. But I was obsessed with making sure I was with him as much as possible. I wanted him to know how much I cared.

It felt like I was constantly in the car. In reality once, maybe twice a week RJ and I would take off to see him. He was the only person I could be around and not fear but the hospital staff and family coming and going during our visits put me on edge. I was afraid they could see my anxieties written on my face and that they would rip my baby away because I was crazy and an unfit mother.

A little more time passed and I started noticing I had some very obsessive behaviors. I would lay RJ in her bed, but I was certain she had died of SIDS. So I would run in and check on her two or three times an hour every night. I would check and recheck that I had locked the door, the car, and turned all but the laundry room light off.

In the time I wasn’t going through my check list, I was scanning all of the mommy forums online to make sure I was doing everything just right. If I wasn’t parenting perfectly, in my mind, I was failing my daughter.

In the middle of all of my checking and rechecking, Cameron’s father passed away unexpectedly, and I had a sudden moment of clarity.

I needed help right away.

Clarity gave way to fog quickly, however. I became convinced that if I spoke to my doctor she would institutionalize me. Or worse, Cameron would leave me and take RJ because he would think I was just a druggie out to get pills to fuel my addiction. After all, my searching forums and Web MD told me that I was NOT suffering from postpartum depression and anxiety. I was just plain crazy. So it was rational to me that no one would believe me.

The fog turned into a heavy precipitation with little visibility.. We were in a bad car accident. Because of limitations on our insurance, we had to take RJ to the emergency room afterward to be checked out. She was fine thankfully. We all were. But that sparked a horrible fear of driving and accidents.

I remember driving home from Claremore one day. I was just coming in to town. I had to cross a couple of small creeks. In front of me and in my mind I could see myself losing control and hitting the guard rail. I could see my car flipping over the rail, landing on its top and killing us. Of course the only solution was to start exclusively taking back roads to get anywhere I had to go. Driving the highway was just too much of a risk that I was unwilling to take.

A little more time passed. My grandfather’s health further deteriorated, and he eventually passed. I was completely broken. For a few weeks leading up to his death and a few weeks after, I cried myself to sleep during nap times and bedtimes. But I was sleeping again. And strangely I was starting to feel a little better.

RJ was now crawling so I didn’t have to carry her across the kitchen floor. Some of my behaviors started to dwindle. I didn’t dare to think that maybe I was on the mend though.

It took very little time for everything to come crashing back. We were transitioning RJ to solid foods and a sippy cup. She was teething. She was starting to nap less.

I was uncertain of my survival at this point. In fact a couple of times I wondered if she would be better off without a mother who couldn’t handle raising her. But ultimately not being with my daughter was a more terrifying thought and I never considered leaving her side ever again.

We pulled through and one bright summer morning I woke up and the clouds parted. It was like coming up for air after having held my breath underwater for awhile. I don't know what changed. But I imagined some black hole or vortex that sucked all of the negative of the last year up and sent it to God only  knows where.

In about three weeks time, it will have been a year since I regained my footing. I still struggle daily, but not nearly to the extreme that I did. I made it through by the grace of God. But I am now realizing that I was robbed of my only child’s infant hood. What should have been the most joyous time of my life was a walk through hellfire holding hands with the devil, postpartum obsessive compulsive disorder.

And so we’ve come full circle. Back to tonight where I am standing crib side, marveling in the wonder that is my beautiful daughter. I wish to have the time that I missed out on back. But I know that is not how life works. So, I will choose to enjoy the moments I get now. I will do my absolute best to enjoy RJ’s childhood.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Blog Mom, Blog!: Musings of A Wannabe Writer

Blog Mom, Blog!: Musings of A Wannabe Writer: The last few days I’ve been reading the Anne of Green Gables series. It is my most recent old/new obsession. And stupid ol’ Anne, she dreams...

Musings of A Wannabe Writer

The last few days I’ve been reading the Anne of Green Gables series. It is my most recent old/new obsession. And stupid ol’ Anne, she dreams of romance and poetical living. She’s my literary kindred spirit. She inspires me to write sappy poems about love and kittens and sunshine. But if you know me, you know I am a dog person. And that love and sunshine are just not my topics. Forget butterflies and flowers, give me doom and gloom. I can write a depressing and dark story or blog until I’m blue in the face…or fingers. You know, since we don’t write with our faces.

So trying to break out and write a poem, A HAPPY POEM *insert gagging emoji* is quite the challenge.

I just desperately want to write at least one piece that blows everybody’s minds. I mean that in the most disgusting, self centered, and attention seeking way. I want to write at least one piece that gains me an insane amount of notoriety. I want people to read my work and think “Dude, where did this Alex girl come from? Her work, I just can’t even. It’s totes amaze.”. Of course, this will give me the big head, and then I will humble brag to my siblings about how famous I am and remind them that they are butt faces until the end of time.

Is it too much to ask of my brain to formulate words in to sentences that are wondiferous? Is wondiferous even a word? Maybe I should just start making up words. Damn it. According to Urban Dictionary, wondiferous is already a word. I guess I better try harder if I want any recognition for my mediocre at best writing.

Back to this poem business. How do I even begin? Do you actually have to feel emotions like a real human to tackle such writing? That could be the problem. Little known fact, I’m actually a robot cat in a dog loving, human body.

This just got weird. Sorry about that.

I just don’t know how to write without sounding lame…and emo. Everything comes out pathetic and whiny. When I read what I’ve written, I feel like I need to sing it in a nasally voice, while I apply too much black eyeliner and rat up my overly razored scene hair. I just can’t get it right. But this honestly reflects my inner romantic child poet. Could it be that the world needs my angsty dribble about heartache, glitter, and raccoon eyes? Maybe I am at Anne of Green Gables poetical status after all!


Monday, April 11, 2016

RRRAAAAWWWRRRR

Today is a crap day. I started back to school recently. We planned and planned and planned some more so I would be able to go. But, life happens. Daycare fell through. Now I'm having to figure out a way to keep going to school, afford daycare, and go to school...and the hits keep coming. It's been one thing after another for the last couple of months.

I feel so...heavy. Like I am full of disappointment.

I knew going back to school was going to be an adventure. I knew it wouldn't be easy. I figured we would run into road blocks. I just didn't think it would literally come down to, quit school and go back to work, or sell my kidney so I can pay for daycare.

Okay so I don't really have to sell my kidney. That was a little dramatic. But it is how I feel right now.  I have been desperate to go to college for a few years. So I had high hopes for this to work out. And I guess it can. But I'm just not seeing how, unless I transfer to a different school and change my major.

There is an upside to transferring though. I could do business, and go to OSU. Then I could finally tell my OU graduate brother to shove it. That would be hilarious. *side note: My family is divided between OU/OSU. I am a Poke through and through!*

But business? Ugh. I REALLY wanted to do surgical technology. I have dreams at night about finishing this program and going on to medical school. Being a surgeon sounds like heaven. Instant gratification when you save a life, a constantly shifting work environment. I would never get bored. It would be like one giant science experiment for the rest of my life.

But sometimes you can't do what your heart wants you to do. Sometimes you have to buckle down and do what is best for your family.

So. Business in the fall, it is. I guess on the plus side, if I get the opportunity, I can always start over and try to get in to OSU's medical school. And I probably would have a hand full of Gen Eds out of the way. That's a good thing. No repeating comp or algebra!

Hmm. I guess there is a positive in this.

Friday, February 26, 2016

I was thinking of you today.


It's your birthday.
A week before mine.
It's almost spring.
Your favorite season.
The weather has been decent.
For Oklahoma, anyway.
Can you believe how fast time is going?
I know I can't.
I miss you.

It's been almost a year.
So much has changed.

My hair is longer now.
Aren't you surprised?
You know I've always preferred short and sassy.
The baby isn't a baby anymore.
She's almost two!
She's a free spirit.
She gets it from you.

I am doing fine.
And school starts soon.

But I can't seem to get past,
that I miss you.

Two weeks from now,
fills with me dread.

I replay all of our memories.
I listen to your favorite songs.
I remember the last words you spoke to me.
I wish I could hear your voice.
I think of your stories you told all the time.

If you were still here,
I'd come home today.
You'd half shout "HEY! Whatareyadoin'?" just like that, as came through the door.
You'd see RJ and start in "How's my baby? Come see Grandpa!".
You would be so disappointed in the stance of our world.
And you would complain, comically, about something or another of unimportance.
You'd ask for a swig of my Red Bull and make a sour face.
And then get on to me for drinking such disgusting things.
You would rub your face with your hands that were more like paws.
And probably say something like "ooohhhbooyyy" to no one in particular.

I bet if you were here,
We'd be eating chocolate ice cream with chocolate cake today.
Maybe we'd even go to Sonic.
Chili cheese dog with mustard, tots, and a diet coke for you.
When it was time for me to leave,
You'd probably find 5 million things for me to do before I left.
You'd just keeping talking about anything.
I would feel so bad that I couldn't just stay there with you.
You'd say "Be careful going home, and don't take any wooden nickels now.".

Do you remember the last time we ate chocolate ice cream together?
It was obvious you were trying to relive a few old memories.
Do you remember the last words you said to me?
"Don't get old Alex. It isn't worth it."
Mom thought you were rambling.
You weren't.
It was a conversation we had had not long before that.
Do you remember there very last time you held my hand?
I was in labor. You came to see me.
I remember how you turned your head and took a deep breath,
When I told you goodbye for the last time.
You died right after that.
You were waiting for me to say I'd be okay.
So I told you I would be.
I lied.
I'm not okay.
You "didn't want to leave the party".
And I didn't want you to go.
I feel like a broken hearted little girl.
You're the only person who ever loved me.
You're the only person who was ever proud of me.
And I miss you so much.

I'm sorry to ruin your birthday with my tears.
It should be a happy day.
You'd be 82!
You lived such a long life.
I know you were thankful for every day you had.
I'm thankful for those days too.

I guess it's time to go now.
I love you so much.