Dating is Weird

I am so confused by the whole dating thing! I’m 41 years old. I’ve been married and divorced twice. You’d think that I’d have this down by now. I feel like I should be pretty fucking comfortable with dating, but no. Not at all! So let me give you a little back story, without going too far back and getting lost in all the stories of all my failed relationships. I have jumped from one relationship to the next for what seems like my entire life. I always thought that was just a character defect of mine. Or at least that’s what everyone else told me, I chew men up and spit them out… and I kinda did, so that was an easy thing to believe. Well it turns out that it actually comes from the the fact that I have some serious abandonment issues that started back when I was twelve, when my mom kicked my dad out and he fell off the deep end and disappeared for a few years. Then my mom dumped me into a group home and then foster care. I had no idea at the time that those things were contributing to my constant need to be with someone, but when I look back at my dating life, that’s when the whole relationship hopping thing started (this knowledge is brought to you by years of therapy). So that’s when I started searching for the perfect someone who would rescue me and make me feel loved and wanted and safe; and that meant falling in love at first sight over and over and over again starting at twelve years old, the first being a 20 year old guy who I met at a little party that my Aunt brought me to (my aunt was only a few years older than me). Yeah, unhealthy shit right from the start. No, I didn’t have sex with the 20 year old, but this was the first of a lot of really inappropriate relationships.

Let’s now fast-forward to more recent times and skip the plethora of episodes where either I or the flavor of the day/week/month/year was left completely broken hearted. After my last relationship ended and I watched that dude go straight into another relationship only a couple weeks after I broke off our engagement, I felt like I was looking in a mirror and finally realized how unhealthy that behavior really was, so I decided to stop that destructive pattern in my own life and take some time to reflect on why I had always done that. Even thinking about how my last relationship got started, I started dating him on a rebound less than a month after my previous relationship had ended. So that’s when I decided I was going to take a year to be by myself, no dating, no relationships, and yes that’s right, NO SEX… (pause for effect). Best. Idea. Ever! Seriously! No sarcasm!

I thought the year alone was going to be rough, but it wasn’t. I learned so much about myself. I was able to feel loneliness and process why I was feeling that way instead of finding someone to make me stop feeling that way. I was able to process a lot of stuff that I had never really dealt with because I wasn’t distracting myself by turning that focus to another person. I had to deal with my own shit! And I did! After the year was over, I felt like I had reached some kind of landmark and had graduated from some kind of “Relationships for Dummies” program, so I decided to test the waters and try dating again. Ha! I was not ready. I went on handful of first dates and felt generally uncomfortable with all of them. It’s not that the dates didn’t go well. They were fine, the conversations were good, but I wasn’t feeling it at all. It felt a little forced. It felt like I was making myself do something I wasn’t ready for; and honestly I was really enjoying being alone! Whaaaaat?! I know… crazy. So I deleted the dating app and continued on my journey of self discovery, but was open to meeting someone if that’s the way the cards fell.

So my last dating experience was over a year ago (two years of being single… a small miracle really). I’m sure the whole Covid lockdown contributed to that. I probably would have gone on a few dates if the world hadn’t shut down, but who knows. I did meet a couple nice people in the last year though and have had some great conversations. I’ve even felt myself getting a little attached/emotional/excited about them… (god, I suck at this), but if I’m being really honest with myself, it may be that I was excited because I was seeing and hoping for things that weren’t really there, which has always been a problem in my previous relationships. I like to paint myself a really pretty picture in my mind and ignore the red flags… Being very aware that I do that, I almost feel like I’m starting to overcompensate in that department and that I’m getting hyper sensitive to anything that MIGHT be a red flag. But hey, I’m still the sickening optimist and I still want to meet someone incredible! Why is that so difficult?! Hope is a real bitch sometimes.

On that front, my optimistic inner monologue told me to get back on a dating app just before this past New Year. I had two very brief daytime lunch/coffee dates and then deleted the app for a couple reasons. One, dating apps are so fucking overwhelming! It’s like a constant flood of messages and most of the time it is fucking painful trying to have a decent conversation…

Them: “How are you today?” (sometimes accompanied by some super cheesy line.)

Me: “I’m well, thanks. How are you?”

Them: “Good.”

And that’s it. No response. The next day, same three texts. The next day, same three texts… Aaaaaand I’m bored to death. Thread deleted.

Reason number two, my body literally decided to have a meltdown and I had some serious medical issues to deal with that made dating next to impossible (Read my blog post on Women’s Reproductive Health for more on that). At that point all dating was put on hold. I take that back. Not all. There was someone who I had met a few of months before my reproductive organs decided to fall apart, and he was pretty great, but we have very different plans for our future so I couldn’t keep that going no matter how much I wanted to. That’s just setting myself up to be disappointed down the road and I’m really tired of being disappointed. It’s actually kinda weird trying to figure out how to add that whole experience into this story because I don’t know what it was, but I can’t leave him out of the story because he was the closest thing I’ve had to any real dating in the last two years and if things were different… blah, blah…story of my life… Anyway, moving on with the story!

Okay, so two weeks ago at my last post-hysterectomy follow up appointment, my doctor said I could start screening people for possible partners. His goofy way of saying I was almost cleared to have sex (My gynecologist is fucking hilarious). Naturally, I started thinking about dating again. No, I didn’t get back on a dating app. Actually, one of the guys I had gone to lunch with back in the beginning of the year had been texting and saying hi here and there and he text me again the day after my follow up appointment and asked if I was free for dinner anytime that week. I had super mixed feelings, not because of him, but because I have been single for so long and haven’t really dated other than the one dating/not dating experience, I just felt awkward and a little nervous, I guess? Nervous is not the right word, but I’m struggling to find one that works. So I finally agreed to meet him and we made plans. I figured the worst that could happen is that it would suck and I wouldn’t see him again. Well, it didn’t suck. It was really nice. It was fun and easy and we had a great time! You would think that that’s great, but this is when my brain goes totally crazy. I’m so used to things going wrong, that I’m almost more worried when nothing goes wrong. It’s like that feeling that you get when your kids are too quiet, you know?! Like, what the fuck are they up to? That’s how I felt after a wonderful date! Fml, thank you childhood and past relationship trauma…

I had an amazing time. We were at the restaurant and then talking in the parking lot for 3 hours and didn’t even realize how late it had gotten. I got into my car with a shit eating grin on my face, like some stupid teenager crush-y shit, and then halfway home my mind is questioning everything, “He has a house in another state, does he have a wife in another state too? If he has property out of state how long is he even planning on staying in town? Is he just trying to ‘have fun’ while he’s here temporarily? Am I ok with just ‘having fun’? Because I just ended a dating/not-dating thing with someone I really liked because ‘just fun’ isn’t what I want…” and of course, “Am I even ready for dating at all?” Holy sweet goodness… Why do I do this to myself?! And then I start spinning out about all the shit that has made all my dating history a complete nightmare. Like how 10-15 years ago the fact that I had kids deterred people from dating me and how fucking annoying that was, but now the fact that I can’t and don’t want to have more kids is the deterring factor. Great. It seems like everyone just wants to “have fun.” Um, no thanks. You mean, let’s just fuck until one of us meets someone that we actually want to be with? No. No, thank you. That was me for the first half of my life and I’m over it. I’m not interested in half ass meaningless bullshit anymore and quite frankly people that want that are a dime a dozen… I’m also over people being on their best behavior only to find out a few weeks or months later that they’re nothing like that in real life. I’m over people not being straightforward about what they want and don’t want. I’m over people telling me what they think I want to hear. Ugh. Gross! All that shit makes me not want to date at all.

I think that’s the worst part, that things always start out great, but then the truth comes out, our best manners start to slack, the effort that was put forward trying to win you over starts to fade, and then it just feels like it was all a game (and not even a very good one). Why waste time being someone you’re not?! So, even after a great date we’re completely skeptical of the other person’s intentions because of how many times this has happened in our dating experiences. It’s not just me, is it?! I can’t even begin to tell you how many times I’ve heard this same story from other people. So we all assume the worst every time and yet we’re totally disappointed every time the worst happens, yet again. We’re skeptical of dating because we have a long list of good reasons for being skeptical. And yet here we all are, creating profiles on all these dating apps, ridiculously hopeful that we’ll find someone that we vibe with… I want to date because I like the idea of finding and having someone do life with, someone whose company I really enjoy, but I’m so over the bullshit that I’m having a hard time believing in this whole dating process.

Dating is a crazy fucking weird ass shitshow… The End. XO

Update! Read what happened with the guy I got all crushy about in my “Dating is Weird Part Two” post.

(Photo: Found on a google search, it is not my actual app menu.)

The Beginning of My Do-Over

In my first post I briefly mentioned my first year in sobriety, but I said we’d leave that story for another post. So here’s how it started… Let me start by saying that getting sober was not my idea. Well it was, but no one else knew that I was even considering it. It was one of those ideas that would pop up, but that I would quickly dismiss because it seemed impossible. I had no idea how to even attempt life sober and the very idea was absolutely terrifying. I didn’t want to do anything that I thought I might fail at because I already felt like I had failed at everything. I hated who I was. I hated the life that I had. I woke up every day and felt like I was living someone else’s life and I didn’t understand how I could have everything that I was supposed to want (according to society’s standards) and be completely miserable, but I was. I would get up every day and go through the motions, but I always felt like I was stuck on the wrong side of the looking glass. So every day I would start drinking as soon as I got home from picking up the kids from school so that I didn’t have to feel the anxiety and depression that completely consumed me every single day. My kids were the only that made me feel like my life was worth living at all. Being a mom was the only area in my life where I felt I had been successful, but I was even starting to feel like I was failing at that because my older daughter (who was 13 at the time) was noticing how much I drank and was aware of the fact that my mental state and my behavior were not healthy. I was a hot fucking mess and I had no idea how to fix it.

The shit finally hit the fan when I had a full on nervous breakdown on Mother’s Day of 2013 and I dealt with it by getting completely wasted. My family of course didn’t know about the breakdown, they just thought I was being a selfish drunk. To be fair, I can see how that’s what it must have looked like on the outside. I could go into all the fucked up shit they did to contribute to the meltdown, but today I’ll keep to my part in all of it. I hadn’t admitted to anyone that I wasn’t sleeping, that I had panic attacks that made me feel like I was going to pass out, that made me feel like I couldn’t breathe. I would tough it out and deal with it how I had always dealt with everything; I drank it away. What I would come to find out a couple weeks later was that my family started planning an intervention after that weekend. Was an intervention necessary? I don’t know. I can see how they felt that it was. I will admit that in those days (and for the majority of my life) I was a fucking hurricane when I got mad and no one wanted to deal with that without a trained professional. Like I said, I knew I had a problem. I had thought about stopping and none of this was new. I started drinking and using when I was just a kid. I started going to drug and alcohol counseling when I was 13. I went to a rehab when I was 14 and again when I was 22. Shit, I did part of my sophomore year in high school at a continuation school called The Teen Recovery Center. This was however the first time I had experienced an intervention and I feel that the way that it was handled was not awesome… but it got me to go to rehab, so despite the horrid train wreck that it was, the goal of the intervention was accomplished and my entire fucking life changed because of it. So even though it was one of the worst days of my life, it lead me to some of the best days of my life.

I knew exactly what was happening when I opened the front door that morning and saw some professional looking woman standing on my porch with my mom, sister, daughter, and my two aunts behind her. I actually said, “Oh fuck no,” and shut the door. Earlier that morning my sister had called and asked if she could come pick up the kids so my husband (now ex) could have some time alone. He had been stationed overseas for a year, came home for two weeks in December 2012, and then left for his next duty station. We had decided to wait till the end of the school year before the kids and I moved up to Monterey to join him. He would come home a couple weekends a month while he was in Monterey and we’d party it up like we always did when he had a chance to be home. So it had been about a year and a half of him being away and me raising the three kids alone, so breakfast alone with him sounded like an awesome plan. Well, we didn’t even get to eat. The kids left with my sister. He started making breakfast and told me to go relax. I poured myself a screwdriver and sat on our balcony, and then came the intervention.

I was instantly pissed off and not kinda pissed off, really, really fucking pissed off. I went straight from the front door to the back door and started walking down the street away from everything. Then the intervention woman started yelling at me that she was going to call CPS on me. NOT a good idea. I mean, it got me to stop and come back, but the hurricane started building… I gave her a good, “fuck you bitch” as I walked past her on my way back to the house. I went in and sat down on the couch, amongst the circle of family members in the living room. Everyone looked like they were waiting for me to explode, but my daughter was there, so I didn’t want to make a scene. So then intervention woman (who I called the intervention nazi until only a couple years ago), gave the instructions for everyone to follow. I was to say nothing while they went around the circle and let everyone say why they were there. My aunts started. They were crying and saying how worried they were. It was touching and made me feel like a miserable failure, but it was constructive. My daughter didn’t have much to say and I can’t say I blame her. I guess she had no warning of this whole plan so she wasn’t really prepared. I don’t even remember if my sister said anything. But when my mom started in, I thought I was going to lose my shit. The story of my relationship with my mother is long so I’ll save it for another day, but I’ll summarize and say that it is completely fucked and she was a piece of shit parent. A horrible, awful, emotionally abusive, narcissistic, piece of shit… So when she started in about what a piece of shit I was and what a piece of shit mother I am, I could not stay quiet. I told her to stop talking. I told her I will not listen to any fucking thing that she has to say about me as a parent. Then my poor husband started. This poor guy… Not that he was a saint by any means, but he cannot handle confrontation at all (hence the paid interventionist). So he said what he had to say, but ended with a big fat ultimatum which was, “either you go to rehab today, or we’re packing the kids’ stuff.” That did it. Mom had pulled the pin and he just let go of that grenade. BOOOOOOM!!!!!!!!

A couple years ago, I heard someone say the phrase, “a choice of no choices,” and this story immediately popped into my head. Both choices sucked, which was exactly the reason they concocted that ultimatum. I had a conversation with my ex several months later about the whole thing, as our marriage was coming to an end, and he said that he knew I wouldn’t let anyone take my kids (my two oldest are not his by the way). He said that his first idea was to threaten to leave me if I wouldn’t go to rehab, but he knew I would let him leave. He was right. I wouldn’t have given up drinking to save my marriage. No way. To me, drinking was survival. Drinking was breathing. If you look at the research behind addiction and the way an addict brain functions, you’ll see that that’s exactly what your brain tells you. It becomes something that your brain thinks your body needs in order to survive… of course none of this is conscious, it’s all brain chemistry, but having learned about that wacked out shit in an effort to better understand myself, I was able to understand why I felt the way that I did when I had to consider giving up booze. It kicked me into survival mode, literally fight or flight survival mode and I was ready to take down anyone who got in my way, but they used the one thing that was more important to me than my own survival, my kids. He knew I would pack my shit and go if he threatened to take my kids, and he was right. Today, I get why he did it, but at that time and for a long time afterwards, I hated him for that. I lost all trust in him the second he used my kids to get me to do what he wanted.

I stood up after he gave me that ultimatum and said, “well I guess I’ll go pack my shit cuz no one is taking my kids anywhere.” I remember the intervention nazi telling me that it was my choice to make. I remember wanting to sock her in the mouth. I remember saying, “this is not a fucking choice.” I did everything I could not to throw anything and everything, not to hit everything. I was so mad that I could feel my entire body shaking as I walked to my room and tried to pack my stuff. My sister walked into the room and said she was sent in there to watch me… That was when I lost it. I started screaming at her to get the fuck away from me, to get the fuck out of my room. I probably looked like a fucking crazy person. She wouldn’t leave so I told her I was going to hit her if she didn’t get the fuck out so she finally left. Then my husband came in and I just kept screaming, telling him I was done with him, that I would never ever forgive him for threatening me and using my kids as a tool. I got my shit and went outside and a bunch of other family members were there with my two younger kids so I could say goodbye. The intervention nazi let my oldest daughter and my son come with us in the car to drive to rehab (they were almost 14 and almost 9 at the time). We sat in the back seat and all cried and hugged each other the whole way. I remember trying to tell my daughter that she had to convince my husband to let me come home. I can’t even describe the level of panic, and fear, and anxiety that I felt during that drive. It was the scariest thing I’d ever experienced… and I was homeless as a teenager, so I have experienced some crazy scary shit.

It was a twenty minute drive to the rehab but it felt like an hour. We pulled up to the front and I felt like my entire world was crashing. I was 33 years old pulling up to the same rehab that I had gone to when I was 22. I knew what to expect at least. You start out in detox and then go into a 28 day inpatient facility. It looked exactly the same, but it didn’t feel the same. The first time I was coming down off all kinds of shit and was still high walking up the steps and up the pathway to the entrance. The first time, I agreed to go to get everyone off my back, but I had no intention of actually staying sober when I was 22. I figured it would help me get off the hard stuff, which it did, but I was still having a good ol’ time partying. The first time I was there I liked my life. I liked myself. I was 22 and enjoying life! I was still successfully bottling up my past. But this time was terrifying. This time I knew I needed to do something to change my life and I knew that the changes that I needed to make were going to be incredibly difficult because I knew that it meant dealing with all the shit I had been burying with drugs and booze my whole life. So I started up those mother fucking steps and made my way into the detox facility. Part of me was relieved to be there and part of me was thinking up some award winning argument that would convince everyone that I was really fine and that I should go home.

After getting checked in to the medical detox, I immediately sat down and started writing up a contract of what I promised I would do if I could just get sober at home. I promised I’d stay sober. I promised I’d go to meetings. I promised that I’d go to therapy (again). And at the same time, on a separate piece of paper, I was making a list of stuff I wanted my husband to bring me from home so that I could stay… Talk about internal conflict! The next day was supposed to be family day at the rehab, where you could have your family come and visit. My husband had told me that he would come that day and bring the kids. Well he showed up by himself so I freaked out again. To make matters worse, I had refused all the meds and food at the rehab because, “I don’t need to be here,” so I was NOT doing great. It had been over 24 hours without any booze so I was rapidly approaching a downward spiral anyway. So I’m cussing and screaming at my husband in the hallway of the detox, scaring the piss out of the other patients. Those poor souls. I was begging him to let me go home and also telling the nurse to tell him that I’m okay and that I should go home. Holy fucking shit show… So my husband finally just left because I was a lunatic. Naturally that didn’t help the situation. The nurses insisted on taking my vitals. My blood pressure was through the roof. They tried to give me vallum and told me I needed to take it or I was going to have a seizure, but I refused that and got up and went to my room where I proceeded to kick the living shit out of my hospital room. I was crying and screaming and cussing at the top of my lungs. I threw anything that wasn’t bolted down. I literally kicked my hospital bed till pieces of it were flying off… I finally stopped after I punched the wall and discovered it was cinderblock. Ouch.

That did it. That son of a bitch hurt. Something clicked at that point. I went out and told the nurse that I broke my room and that I should probably take that vallum. She also gave me some sleeping pills. Ha! And that was it. I passed out and slept a whole night for the first time in months. I woke up the next morning and felt like I was where I needed to be. I ate breakfast and then went outside and bummed a cigarette off one of the other patients (who would later become one of my best friends in the whole world), and by the end of that day I decided that I was going to give the 28 day program a shot. My smoke buddy and I both decided we needed to do something and neither of us had any better ideas. That was the moment I became willing to do whatever it took. That was when life started to change, when I admitted that I was fucked and that I could not fix myself by myself. I have that date tattooed on my arm, May 28, 2013. The day that I walked out the doors of the detox facility and walked into the 28 day rehab, the day my do-over began.

Recovery is not an easy process. Anyone who has gotten sober understands how it feels, but it’s a struggle for families and friends too. One thing that has always stood out to me is how difficult it is for people who are not addicts to empathize with those of us who are. This is why I think we need to share our stories, so that we can better understand each other. Addiction is not about lack of will power. It’s about mental health. Yes, people do recover, but the reason so many of us don’t even try isn’t because we don’t want to, it’s because they don’t know how and we don’t believe we can. Before you judge an addict, do some research on the addict brain. There’s a great documentary called “Pleasure Unwoven” by Dr. Kevin McCauley that explains the brain chemistry behind addiction. So before you judge your family member to harshly for the decisions they’ve made and the things they’ve done in their disease, learn more about addiction and how it affects the addict. Help end the stigma around addiction. Addicts aren’t bad people, they’re sick people. Addiction is a disease, recognized by the American Medical Association and insurance companies as such since the 1970s. At least 10% of the World Population suffers from addiction.* It’s time we start educating people about it.

*According to research conducted by the World Health Organization in 2007.

(Photo: My sobriety date tattoo. I got it on my 3rd sober birthday.)

What They Don’t Teach Us: Women’s Reproductive Health

Due to some uncomfortable and alarming physical symptoms I started experiencing back in December of 2020, I was inspired to learn more about this issue I was having and was shocked to discover that it is SUPER common in the world of women’s reproductive health and yet I am 41 years old and had never heard anything about it. I’m talking about fibroids. If you know, you probably understand my irritation around the fact that we as women are not taught anything about these little assholes that effect so many of us. If you don’t know, listen up because it is very likely that they will effect you or someone you know in the future and you can spare them and yourself the months of worry and panic that I experienced.

So just to paint a more vivid picture of what it was that I experienced, I’ll start from the beginning of my little fibroid story. I have had a Mirena IUD for about seven years. It’s a hormonal IUD that has magical properties (progesterone) that basically stops your periods, for most women anyway. It was glorious!!! I always had fairly long periods, which sucked, so this was an amazing discovery and even during the years when I wasn’t getting any, I kept the IUD so that I could continue a period free existence. Everything seemed to be okay, but in November 2020 I had a period! Like a full on, week long period with cramps and everything. WTF?! I figured, “Okay, maybe it’s just a fluke.” Well December came and right on schedule, so did another period. Ugh! Nooooo! But here’s were it got a little scary… it didn’t stop after a week, or two weeks. Finally, after three weeks of full, heavy period, it reduced to just spotting. I was worried, but it was Christmas and I was in the last couple weeks of finishing my Teaching Credential Program and wrapping up my last semester of student teaching… I didn’t have time to deal with this.

The spotting lasted another two weeks and then my mother fucking period started up again! This was January 11, 2021. Now I was really worried. This is not normal. I called Planned Parenthood and made an appointment for the following week. I’ve seen the same doctor there for years and really like her. She said there were a few things it could be, so she wanted to start with an ultrasound so we could get a picture of everything and get to the bottom of it. She didn’t sound worried, so I was doing okay at this point, but I was exhausted from weeks of bleeding and cramping and all that. A couple weeks later I had the ultrasound, but the ultrasound techs don’t tell you a damn thing so I had to wait for the doc to call with the results. So from the time I called to make the first appointment to getting in to see the doc to discuss the results, I was going into five weeks of being on my period. And I don’t mean a friendly period. It was heavy, clotting, cramping. Burnin’ through the super tampons…

I was exhausted. I was worried. I just wanted to stop bleeding out of my damn vagina already… (yes, I said vagina. I’m a rebel). I get to my appointment and doc is totally calm. She said, “The IUD is fine, it’s fibroids.”

“Um, what?”

“Oh they’re really common and not life threatening, but there’s a few ways of dealing with them. Unfortunately, we don’t handle all that at this location so we need to send you to see the specialist at our other location.”

At this appointment they also tested me and found that my blood iron to be low because of all the bleeding so I need to take an iron supplement or kick up my high iron foods. Great, now I’m anemic. But I’m putting one foot in front of the other and doing what needs to be done to fix this shit! I was scheduled for another appointment with the specialist for the following week. Yes, we are up almost six weeks of being on my period at this point.

My appointment with the Planned Parenthood specialist was awesome. I cannot say enough about him, Dr. Kyle Bukowski. He was so easy to talk to. Very personable and comforting and makes little jokes to keep things light, but it wasn’t forced or awkward. He really helped me feel like everything was going to be okay. So, shout out to Dr. Bukowski for making the next step so much less scary. I had three different options:

The first was to take an estrogen birth control pill to force stop the period and build back the uterus lining and that would possibly fix the never ending period problem, but no guarantee.

The second was to surgically remove the fibroids. My biggest one was only about the size of a golf ball and it was under the lining of my uterus (these bitches can vary in size, number, and can attach themselves in all different places in our reproductive system). This option would require going in around/in my belly button so there is minimal scaring but it’s incisions in my abdomen so there is pain and some recovery time. This option is also not a guaranteed fix as other fibroids may grow and attach themselves in the future.

The third option is was a hysterectomy. This option is a permanent and guaranteed solution to all the issues associated with the fibroids. No more fibroids ever. No more periods, EVER! Also, no more babies ever.

I was totally fine with the baby thing. I have three children. My youngest is nine. I had already made my decision on that issue a couple years ago anyway, so for me this wasn’t even part of the equation. The concern I had was the recovery time. It’s about a six week recovery no matter if you have your uterus removed abdominally or vaginally, although the down time is longer for abdominal removal. Luckily, I have had three vaginal births so I was a good candidate for a vaginal hysterectomy.

You may think that I would go right in for the permanent fix, but I didn’t at first. I went for the first option and wanted to see if a pill could fix it (good ol’ alcoholic/addict tendencies. Ha!). Honestly though, I didn’t want to deal with recovery time. I am a single working mother, and I never stop moving! The idea of not being able to do anything for weeks is absolutely terrifying. No exercise, no driving, not being able to do shit for myself… Yuck! This is an independent person’s nightmare. It only took me a week of being on estrogen to change my mind though. Fuuuuuck that! I immediately started having terrible headaches when I started the pills and had them every day. I’ve never had migraines, so I don’t know if that’s what these where, but these bitches were awful! I have never experienced headaches like that in my life. I looked it up. The world wide web said the headaches are common but can go away. So I was toughing it out, but then vertigo set in. Sweet mother of goodness, come on! I finally stop bleeding and now I’ve lost my balance and I feel nauseous?! Nope. I’m not doing that shit. I called Dr. Bukowski’s nurse and asked her to have Dr. B schedule the surgery.

They scheduled the surgery two weeks out. March 17, 2021. Then it was a mad dash to get all my shit together for my students to do asynchronous lessons for the three days that I would be gone. I think this was one of the only times I was grateful that we were doing online learning! I prepped everything ahead of time. I confirmed with my wonderfully fantastic cousin that she could come down and stay with me for a couple days and play nurse (you will need someone with you if you ever do this surgery). I checked to make sure my Dad could watch little miss Alie on the day of the surgery just in case I was a hot mess (which I was so I’m very glad she wasn’t there). I met with Dr. B for my pre-op so I knew what was going to go down and I made sure to talk to him about pain management because I’m a recovering addict/alcoholic and it is my responsibility to protect my sobriety and make sure I’m being safe about meds.

The day of the surgery arrives. I was really nervous leading up to it, but I was okay. My cousin dropped me off at the hospital at 6 am. Alie came with her to drop me off. I walked in and got checked in. Went into surgery prep. Met all the amazing people that would be involved, the anesthesiologist, the nurses, and the other doctors that assist with the surgery. They were all so friendly and nice. It was a really good experience. Dr. B came in and talked to me and told me they were gonna start me on some IV meds that were going to make me feel pretty loaded, which they did, and wow… it had been a long time! Ha! Then we rolled into the operating room and the anesthesiologist asked if I was ready for a kick ass margarita. Haaa! I appreciate people who are comfortable making jokes about my recovery… I do, it’s funny! So I got my margarita delivered straight into my IV and that was all she wrote! I was out!

I woke up later, I had no idea how much later (I later learned that the surgery started at about 8:30 am and was done by 11:00 am). I was super loopy and was not very comfortable. The nurses asked how I was feeling so I told them that it hurt. They gave me more juice in the IV and I went back out. I kept fading in and out and I remember that I would hear beeping and then a nurse would tell me to take a deep breath. I guess I was so out that that my blood oxygen levels would start to drop and trigger the monitor… So it was foggy, but waking up, telling them it hurt, getting more meds, going back out, them telling me to breathe… That lasted hours, but I had no idea. I finally asked for my phone and wanted some water around 3:30 or 4:00 pm. The nurses said I had to pee before I could go home so they had me drinking water and juice. They brought me some graham crackers too, but the anesthesiologist told ahead of time that nausea and vomiting are a common side effect from the anesthesia, and she was right! Those crackers were not my friends. I didn’t know at the time, but I was given both fentanyl and oxy in my IV, so when you’re trying to figure out the pain levels, it was enough for those mothers… I was finally able to get up and go to the bathroom at about 5:30 pm, but getting up and moving made me super nauseous and I puked. Gross, but that’s the truth of it. I felt it coming though, so I was handed a cool little blue barf bag before I actually got sick. But I was cleared to go home!

The nurses wheeled me out to the front of the hospital to meet my cousin who drove me home. They gave me another blue barf bag for the way home, which was necessary and useful. My cousin had already picked up my meds for me so I started those as soon as I got home. I was NOT comfortable at home that first night. It was pretty fucking awful. The one thing that really helped was that my cousin went and got an electric heating pad from CVS. That thing was a life saver! The pain itself was not sharp pain. It was like a contraction. Like a deep aching kind of pain all the way through my lower abdomen and lower back. It sucked, I’m not gonna sugar coat it. I couldn’t tell if it was the pain or the anesthesia that was making me nauseous, but the pain and nausea was constant. I couldn’t eat. I threw up again. I was a hot mess, so I was very grateful Alie wasn’t there. I’m also glad that I had my cousin there and not just my son. While he was helpful and went and got me flavored bubbly water, I’m glad he didn’t have to deal with my puking and all that. Day two was more of the same. Uncomfortable. Lower back achy pain. Nauseous. No eating. Just generally miserable. But day three was WAAAAY better!

On day three, I ordered a Jersey Mike’s sub to be delivered for breakfast… so yeah, I was feeling way better, but I took it easy. I just hung out on the couch all day. Day 4 felt even better. I flushed the rest of my pain meds as I had gone 24 hours without needing anything stronger than ibuprofen. I only had Dr. B prescribe ten pills to begin with, but I flushed three of them. There was still some back pain, but overall I was feeling soooo much better and was eating and all that.

Day 5 was when I really saw the difference though. I had my Dad drive me to the grocery store, but when I got home and was putting stuff away I noticed that the fridge needed a scrub (I’d noticed it for months but hadn’t had the energy to deal with it). So I took apart my entire fridge and scrubbed the shit out of that mother. I took the shelves completely out! Then I cleaned out the bathroom drawers and cabinets, then the hall closets. I was on a good one! I had noticed for a little over a year that my energy levels had dropped, but I thought it was just age and that I overdo it and stretch myself too thin. I never thought it was anything related to a medical issue. Even when I started experiencing the never ending periods, I didn’t even think about my energy issue being related because it had been so long since I felt energetic. I didn’t make the connection until that fifth day when I was all over the damn place like a kid with ADHD who forgot to take their meds! I have ADHD by the way, so I’m not making light of that condition, it can be very frustrating to deal with. Anyway, my old self is back!

I can’t even tell you how grateful I am to feel like myself again, for the first time in so long! I am totally off any hormones that are not my own. No more IUD. No more birth control. No more fibroids. No more periods. Just me, with all this energy to burn! I’ve been waking up at 4:00 am, with no alarm, and am ready to roll! I don’t feel like I need a nap every day anymore. I feel fucking fantastic! And what did I decided to do with that energy since I can’t get into a gym till the recovery process is over? I mean besides clean the shit out of my house (which I did)… I finally started the blog that I’ve been wanting to start for about 7 years now! Ha!

That is my fibroid story, but on the statistical end of things, eighty percent of women between the ages of 30 and 50 will get fibroids. Thirty percent of them will need some kind of treatment for it. Thirty percent! And that number is higher for black women… And no one tells us about this! No one teaches us that we may start to bleed uncontrollably or experience any number of other painful or frightening symptoms. So, I as an educator, I feel it my responsibility to educate more people about this thing that I learned about so that I can hopefully save someone else the panic and fear that I experienced and that so many others have experienced. Thank you to all of you who have reached out to me on social media when I started posting about my diagnosis, and sharing your own experiences and your fears about how to deal with your own reproductive health. You inspired this post. And thank you to my high school friend Bonnie, who I’ve stayed connected with on Fb, who went through this right before me and posted about it and made me feel like I wasn’t alone. We are not alone in this shit! Talk about it. Normalize talking about women’s health.

(Photo: When I got my approval letter from my insurance company before surgery, it said, “You have been approved for the following procedure: Surgery of Private Part.” That’s fucking ridiculous! Can we please normalize talking about our bodies?!)

Gettin’ Preachy About the Past

A couple years ago I was watching a BBC Victorian romance (because I am and always have been absolutely obsessed with that shit. It’s like crack.), and there was a quote that punched me in the face. I had to pause and go back and replay it so I could write it down in one of my little notebooks I have laying around the house to capture life’s little golden ticket moments such as this one. The movie was called The Go-Between (2015), based on the novel written by L. P. Hartley published in 1953. While I’m not sure if all of it is actually from the book, here is the quote that hit me, “The past is a foreign country. They do things differently there… I’ve spent a good part of my life running away from that country, keeping it’s painful secrets locked away, buried deep. I’ve been a foreigner in a world of emotion, ignorant of its language. The truth is, I’ve been too afraid to live.” Well sweet holy mother of goodness… Thank you, L. P. Hartley and/or BBC for illustrating so eloquently the way I felt about the past for the majority of my life.

Now had I watched the earlier version of this movie or read the book prior to getting sober and doing some work around the treacherous jungle that is my past, I probably wouldn’t have thought twice about that quote. I probably would have been to inebriated to really notice it at all and I certainly wouldn’t have been able to write it down in one of my many little notebooks. Wait, I didn’t even have notebooks around the house at all back then… I was so rarely inspired by anything in my drinking days…

Anyway, back to the quote with the golden gloves! Jump forward to today, after being reminded of this quote while flipping through my little notebook, it hit me again because I realized that it was the work I’ve done on myself that allowed me to appreciate that quote at all. Today, I can fully understand how hard it is for so many of us to even consider unlocking those secrets we’ve buried away, let alone begin to translate the emotions we felt back then! But we need to be able to unpack that baggage and see what was happening at that point in our lives from this new perspective that time and experience has granted us. By letting that shit out in the open, we can begin to forgive ourselves for being ignorant of that emotional language that would have helped us process all that bullshit.

We spend our lives fearing our own emotions because we don’t know how to decipher those feelings for our own understanding, let alone attempt to relay those emotions to another human being. So yup, we fear exchanging emotion with others too! We don’t understand ourselves, so we feel that others won’t understand us either, and on and on that dysfunctional wheel turns until the whole vehicle that is your life hits a wall. Until we do something to change the way we process things, the way we talk about things, the way we feel things, we just keep going through life afraid. I know, I know, feelings, yuck! They’re messy, but the more we deal with those little bastards, the better we get at it, just like everything else!

You want to keep being fucked up about the past, okay, but you don’t need to be. You can learn the language. You can let all those feels out of the box you got ’em locked up in so that you can face them, see them for the overrated boogiemen that they are, and you can let those bitches go! Don’t let that old shit keep you trapped in fear! Have the courage face that shit, so you can live without fear of what you might feel. You might actually learn to appreciate your feelings and permit yourself to experience the whole spectrum of human emotion. You might even like it… Give it a try. I dare ya. XO.

(Photo: My “let go” tattoo I got in 2014, when I was around 9 months sober.)

Why, “It’s Just a Fly”?

Well that’s a funny story that I owe to my wonderfully dramatic daughter, Alie… I was considering writing a blog in my first year of sobriety, but whoa… what a year that was! I’ll save that shitstorm of a story for another day, but I’ve been rolling around this idea in my head for about 7-8 years now and have often found myself running through names that I would use when I ever got my life together and made this happen. A couple years ago I started a network marketing business adventure, also a story for another day, and I quickly came up with “Strong is Beautiful” as my company name and while I love all the different ways that can be interpreted and how all those interpretations are so fitting for my interests and my life story, it just wasn’t right for what I wanted to for this blog.

Just two nights ago, laying in bed with a million things going through my mind, the perfect name finally landed! No pun intended. Now I feel a renewed sense of purpose with all these blog-y ideas that have been running through my head all these years. If you read my little “My Story” section, you know that I am a sickening optimist. I disgust myself sometimes… the bright, sunny, happy, unicorn, and rainbow sprinkle shit that I do and say is pretty nauseating, but it gets me through! Trust me, it’s better than the alternative which is the raging asshole that I used to be (if you know, you know). I refuse to let the little things fuck up my good time! I just won’t do it. I will not let a bad server ruin my meal. I will not let someone cutting me off on the road get me fired up. I will not let a broken dishwasher, a leaky roof, fucking Covid, or anything else drag me down. I’ve been at the bottom. I’m not going back. You can’t make me. I wanted my blog to send that message, cuz it’s an important one! Whatever it is that may be happening in your life, it will be okay. You will make it through. This too shall pass! It’s just a fly! Who cares if it’s buzzing around your head or floating in your soup. It’s just a fly. How perfect is that?!

So Princess Alie’s contribution to this… Alie freeeeeaks out about most bugs. She screams, runs, panics, just so many different levels of meltdown that I do not understand as I was the kind of kid who would come home with live critters in my pockets and would use my mom’s tupperware to freeze bugs to death so I could dissect them later. Oh yes, black widow spiders and all. But not little Alie. A fly would get near her while she was doing her thing and she would tense up and scream how people do with bees. We all know those people and what that looks like. They press their knees together, tuck their elbows in close to their body, clench their fists, close their eyes, and say shrilly and repeatedly, “Bee. Bee. Bee.” Well that was little toddler Alie with flies. So I would say to her, “Alie, it’s just a fly.” Well that didn’t prevent future freak outs, it just changed them slightly so that when a fly would start buzzing around her she would do the clench up, eyes shut thing, only she would say over and over, “Just a fly! Just a fly!” It was the funniest thing to watch! She’s nine now and hasn’t done that in years, but whenever she screams about any sort of bug, my son and I use our little high pitched baby Alie voices and say, “Just a fly! Just a fly!” So thank you, Alie, for your contribution to this blog.

I hope you enjoyed this and will read my future posts! Be sure to hit that subscribe button on the home page if you want to be notified when I write new things. Xo.

(The photo: Alie in 2014, when the fly phobia began and also the year I started to think about writing a blog. I took this photo from the exact place where I was standing the first time I started to make a list of names I may want to use for my site.)

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