Friday, December 31, 2021

2021: A Year In Review

 I am not going to sugar coat it - 2021 was a really hard, really awful year for me. I am sure that COVID added an extra layer to all that hardness making it seem at times that life was an impossible, never-ending uphill battle. 

I feel like not one area of my left was left unaffected by all of the hardness. Towards the end of this year I felt unanchored and adrift in every area of my life. While certainly I have felt that way in certain parts of my life before I don't ever recall a time when I felt that way in all areas of my life.

 If you have never felt this way in your own life before - my wish is that you never do. It is so disorienting and traumatic to truly not know which way is up anymore. To have all of your dreams and beliefs and visions for your future self and life destroyed is crazy hard. I can only describe it as feeling like you are living life in a floating bubble - with nothing to hold on to and nothing to keep you steady. 

After all that has happened in 2021 I cannot look towards to future - for anything. I can only take things day by day and, sometimes, even just minute by minute. 

I do not know if it will always be this way, or if it is just this way right now. All I know is that I am thankful to be rid of 2021. It was one of the three hardest years of my life. Maybe once I am removed from it I will be able to look back and see some glimmers of goodness - for now though I am still too close to it and the wounds are too open and too raw to see anything good at all. 

Good riddance, 2021. I am glad that I don't have to deal with you ever again. 

December Books Read

 Not a lot of reading done this month - or at least not a lot of books read. As I have mentioned before, some books are easy reads for me and I can get through them in a couple of days; there are other books that take me a while to get through primarily because they are just harder reads. 

All of the books I read this month were books I have already read before, but I love the history in them and find the books fascinating. I have about a dozen books or so (if I had to guess) that I could see reading over and over once a year for the rest of my life. These three books are included in that dozen. 


 


I ended up reading 59 books this year. I surpassed my reading goal by 7 books. I do not think that I will increase my goal for next year. I like the idea of reading 52 books a year anything above and beyond that is just bonus. 


The River of Doubt by Candice Millard

Astoria by Peter Stark




Thunder in the Mountains by Daniel Sharfstein



January: 5

Feb/March: 8

April/May: 6

June: 5

July: 9

August: 7

September: 9

October: 3

November: 4

December: 3

Total: 59





Monday, December 27, 2021

Homeschooling Weeks 9 & 10

 I don't have too much to report. The girls and I finished up our first quarter and began our second one prior to our taking a two week break from school to celebrate Christmas and the new year. Once this break is over we will begin the meat and potatoes of our school year. 

Sarah and I briefly talked about altering our school year (after we finish this one, of course) so that we school through the summer next year and take off November and December (and an additional month scattered throughout the school year) since we have so many starts and stops during those two months and it can be quite disruptive to the mental mojo of our school year. Summer here is pretty gross for us because of the humidity, so it would make more sense for us to school during those months and then enjoy the fall when it is gorgeous and we can still enjoy the out-of-doors while everyone else is in school. We'll see. 

The girls ended all of their subjects on a good stopping point by the end of week 10 which meant lots of tests the last two weeks. Both girls tested well and are in a good spot grade wise. 

Sarah is in the middle of writing a term paper, so that is not yet quite done, but she is doing a great job on it. She is writing about the ancient Egyptians - more specifically about mummification. I am impressed with her writing ability and am looking forward to having the final draft in my hands which should be shortly after we return back to school. 

Upcoming for us is getting Sarah signed up to take the ACT. We have reached out to our first colleges asking them to send Sarah information on their schools. So far Sarah has reached out to: Oregon State University, University of Denver, Vassar College, and New Mexico State University. She is looking to get a bachelors degree in Equine Assisted Therapy. She is hoping to work with battered women and children or war veterans.

It is crazy to me that I am in a place where I am looking at colleges with my third child. How in the world did I get to this place so quickly? 

Monday, December 13, 2021

17


Sarah turned 17 on December 1. We spent the day at the Atlantic Ocean in 65 degree weather that felt amazing. There were very few people on the beach and often it felt as if we had the whole coastline to ourselves. 

Josh was not with us as he was finishing up his semester at school. We felt his absence and hope that next year he can be with us. Sarah decided to postpone her annual blind olympics until Josh could be with us and so the kids are planning on participating in those this weekend at some point. 

Because we had just arrived back in NC after visiting OH for Thanksgiving it felt like Sarah's birthday was a little rushed and that we were unprepared for the day - at least more so than normal. I am hoping to change that next year as we do not plan on traveling back to Ohio for Thanksgiving and can dedicate more time to preparing for this special girl's special day. 

I cannot believe that Sarah is now 17. Because of her medical condition I am always so cognizant of how lucky we are to have her in our lives and what a blessing she truly is, but this rings especially true on her birthdays. 
You at the kitchen table reading Elizabeth's novel of a birthday letter.
Reading a birthday note. 
You in your braille birthday shirt.
Sarah's annual birthday shirt made by her dad. It says, "#17 Baby!"

You at the kitchen table opening up Nana and Papa's birthday gift.Dad taking a picture selfie with you and Elizabeth in the background making your beach hole by the water's edge.
Another picture of your beach hold with most of the family gathered around relaxing.Yet another picture of you girls working on your sand hole.You standing in the sand hole drinking a seltzer water.You in your sand hole about to spit out the seltzer in your mouth because you are laughing at something.
A random picture of the ocean with waves washing up on shore.
The sun getting ready to set, the pier in the distance, the ocean calm at can be.
A picture of the 5 of us with the sun setting in the background over the ocean.


A random picture of the sky and the ocean. The sky it dotted with light clouds as the sun is beginning its descent over the horizon.
Us (minus Dad) with Nana standing in front of the ocean.

A fisherman casting his line into the waves after the sun has set.


Another picture of the 5 of us on the beach.
A picture of the sand, ocean, sky, and setting sun.
Beach grass and a stormy sky in the distance over the ocean.
Your sister in a chair directing you on how to build your sand hole.
You and Elizabeth sitting in beach chairs at the end of the ocean.
Best friends.
Another picture of you and your sister in your beach chairs.
Picture of the beach and ocean
Random picture of the beach, sand, sky, and pier.


The front of the Chili's restaurant where we ate.
The birthday girl's dinner choice. (There weren't many options.)

You, smiling walking at the end of the surf.


Friday, December 3, 2021

Promises Kept

A little over seven years ago our family began a journey that has not left one of the six of us unchanged. We were on an adventure, yes, but we were on that adventure because we were seeking out a specific promotion through Bobby's employer. We followed all of the steps and did all of the things that we thought were supposed to be done in order to get this financial dream job. We built up in the kids' minds a sort of promised land of the perfect life replete with fancy family vacations and no longer having to carefully plan all funds coming in - that this job opportunity would create a land of plenty. We did so, because that is was we were lead to believe would be the case.  In hindsight, I can see that our lives slowly became consumed by this all but promised job opportunity.  I felt like our family had done "all of the right things", but this job remained just out of reach. Always, it was right around the corner. Feedback was constantly given that it was only a matter of time, that soon it would be him sitting in this chair our family so coveted. 

And then unexpectedly all of the rules changed. The path that we had been on was now null and void. None of it mattered. The sacrifice, leaving places we loved, uprooting ourselves time and again, learning new positions and different office dynamics - it mattered not one bit.  When that reality hit me - it shattered me. We have spent the last 7 years of our family's life moving them and moving them and moving them for nothing more than the experiences of living in different parts of this country, and while those things have been incredible I am not sure that those experiences alone have outweighed all we have sacrificed. To put all of your eggs in one basket - to believe in something so much - to be loyal to something, and then to find that it was all for nothing it earth shattering for me. We gambled and we lost. We gambled with our family's dynamics and we gambled with our lives. The hardest part about all of this for me is that I didn't even know we were gambling. I believed that this process was a sure thing. Do x, y, and z and the payoff is guaranteed 100%.  I mean, how can you lose when your supposed success rate is guaranteed? What a soul crushing realization that it was all for nothing. 

A bitterness that was once a slow moving vessel has, in the last 6 months, accelerated to the point that I thought I was going to combust from the red hot fury of a dream shattered. Even writing about it brings stinging tears to my eyes because I was made a fool and was humiliated. I hate feeling both of those emotions. 

I have spent a lot of the last few months living with such regret and feeling so awful that a good portion of the kids' lives were spent chasing a dream that was most likely never going to happen (unbeknownst to us). I have regret that I bought into this dream and that I sold this dream to them. I packaged it up to them in the truisms of life: if you work hard you can achieve your goals, if you are a good person then good things will happen to you, if you follow the rules the rewards will be great. I had my kids believe in a crock of shit. I now know that not every person who works hard achieves his goals and that good people sometimes get the short end of the stick and sometimes rule following gets you not a single reward at all. 

It has been an excruciatingly hard few months for me to say the least; it has been an almost equally hard few years waiting for something that was/is always just out of reach. I knew that I had to, I still have to, allow my emotions and thoughts to just do their thing. I knew I had to feel all of the feelings about this situation and think all of the thoughts about it too. I have been living in this state of flux - of always hoping, but never knowing when it was going to be our turn for the financial bounty we had been told was coming. This situation alone has been life altering (some days I think life wrecking) in its own ways beyond moving around the country. 

But then...

Just when I think I am going to break under the weight of the sadness, heartache, bitterness, anger, humiliation, and rage I stop and gather up the deepest breath I can muster and I breathe in and breathe out. The quiet voice within find me as she always does in my deepest darkest hours. She whispers in my ears all the truths in my life. All of the things that are most real and most important. She gives me hope that I will be able to find my life again - my truest most real life -  under the buried rubble of the remains of a false narrative I have been building my life on these last seven years - that this job was the end all be all. That this job promotion was going to make life great. That it was going to ease worries and offer all of the commercial fruits of success, That this job was going to be our savior. 

The quiet voice within is a godsend. She comes and saves me at my worst, weakest, and lowest moments. She finds me and she brings me back to myself. She whispers to me that it will be okay. That even though I have spent the past seven years chasing a false idol that I can still recreate what is real and true in my life. More importantly, she reminds me that I can still recreate the realest, truest sense of family life that is the foundation of who we are as the six of us. She reminds me that I can build on that foundation and create a life that is good and pure and true and relies on no outside influences. No false narratives. 

So, it is her voice that I have been listening to lately. Trying to regain my footing on the life that I know to be truest for not only myself, but also of the kind of life I want to build my family on again. It will take me a while to put the pieces back together and to remember what it is that I value and what feels right for our family, but I know that I can do it. 

And right now, it is that promise that I know I can count on.  It this promise to myself that will not let me down.