Does choosing happiness in life necessarily mean that you chose to be happy?
Is "Human flourishing" a more accurate way to describe happiness?
(do not consult the dictionary)
I think I have made a conscious choice to be happy all the while finding happiness in the choices I've made to be happy.
I rarely ever self pity but I usually am suspicious of others pitying me.
the single girl.
the single mom.
There isn't a anything single about me.
I do double of what any non single parent does, then how come I'm deemed a single parent, I'm actually a double parent, even quadruple parent at times.
Truth is, I pity the crowd, the majority.
The ones who took the road of the expected.
The ones who took the road traveled by, worn paths and directions included.
The ones who chose to be "happy".
With their perfect married lives and their perfect two car garages, walking their perfectly behaved dog while their perfectly aged children run around the outdoor suburbs of their perfectly mowed lawn while the soundtrack to their perfectly timed lives is almost too perfect for the latest Jcrew Christmas catalog.
Are they really happy?
Does the sound of nothing keep them overjoyed with contentment by the positive, pleasant emotions they are overcome with?
Or is the picture perfect catalog shoot simply a photoshoot?
When all the photogs are gone, the costumes removed, the makeup washed off and the lights go out, when door is shut, is the same happiness alive?
Does looking at your spouse make your heart skip a beat?
Are you truly, madly, deeply in love with the person you vowed to spend the rest of your life with?
Or has it merely become a comfortable routine?
The American dream.
The one in which boy meets girl, boy dates girl, boy proposes to girl, girl becomes wife, wife becomes mother and they live happily ever after.
The perfect groundhog day dream that you are forced to live in day after day after day after day.
Yup, I pity them.
I am just not the "happy" housewife type of woman.
I'm more of the looking for a really deep connection kind of bitch.
The one where we may or may not live in a big house, our apartment may be the size of a garage, my child may or may not be biologically yours but hey a badass blended family we have become...and we eat out ALOT...and we do non traditional things like dress up as a trio for Halloween and dance to Madonna and LFMAO naturally.
I don't want it all.
Not the traditional American dream, I want even more.....I want my twisted version of it.
The one where I am really happy.
I chose my happiness.
In all of its frowned upon glory, judgment passing, sympathetic smile invoking, I choose it.
Pity me and my single mom ass.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
to be or not to be
Labels:
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Monday, October 5, 2015
Dating 101: Part 1
Don't.
To be continued.....
Labels:
date,
dating,
dating while momming,
single life,
single motherhood
Sunday, February 15, 2015
Oh It's just emotions taking me over.....
Caught up in sorrow, lost in the song?
But...
I don't want anyone to come back.
Don't need anyone to come home to me.
Don't need a darling.
There IS someone left in this world to hold me tight.
Emotions are there though.
High emotions.
A weekend full of emotions started on Friday. I'd love to blame Paddington but it was a cute movie that the kid and I enjoyed.
Truth is these emotions have been there, surpressed, bottled up, almost disguised themselves as nonexistent.
I sat and watched as the family of four welcomed the orphaned bear.
It started with the mum. Someone kind and gentle, caring enough to lend help to a stranger. Her children were open and willing, a trait they seemed to inherit from her. The father on the other hand, stubborn and angry.
The disconnect is what once brought the couple together to form the dynamic seemed forgotten.
Paddington went on to be the amazing little teddy that helped them all realize what the love was made of that once fueled the family. He brought out the best that was always there but masked by life and the individual.
Then my thoughts got ahead of me.
And the tears slowly rolled down my cheeks.
I kept them pretty quiet.
My mind couldn't help remember that I had chosen this life.
Approximately 6 years ago I did just that.
I decided to become a single mom.
Everyone has choices and I have previously said that mine was a given. I would have a baby.
I couldn't help but think that I hadn't quite thought it all through.
6 single years.
6 picky bitch years.
6 learning years.
6 amazing little boy years.
But it's just the two of us.
I yearn for a significant other and at the same time I don't.
The kid wishes he had a little sister but he doesn't.
Then there's the big elephant in the room of not having a father figure.
I'm afraid.
I don't like to be vulnerable.
I don't like to admit I need want someone.
I don't like to let myself believe the fact that it's nice to have someone care about me for a change.
So I hide.
And I surpress.
And then when a brilliant kid movie like paddington comes out, the unsuspecting mom in me that's got it all figured out suddenly turns into a softie.
And then my friends, the tears came.
Panic mode was interrupted when the kid turned to me and asked why were there tears on my face.
The softie swallowed hard and replied, no reason.
The kid insisted on wiping my tears and then we sat in silence and watched the rest of the movie.
Oh but friends to my dismay the flood gates were fully open.
My emotional weekend had just begun.
The kid has begun to say things I can't handle in the most adorable almost 6 year old way. With a flourishing vocab and curious questions, I stare. I honestly can't get enough of him.
I then tell myself
It's just emotion taking me over...caught up in....?
NO
Not caught up in any fucking emotion.
Just dreams and thoughts of what ifs and what could've beens and what isn't.
Now I'm really in my head.
And I can't stop thinking of the stupid family dynamic and the stupid father figure we are lacking but may I remind you that I don't want need...the stupid second child that I may have had if I had the stupid father figure/stupid husband that I may have enjoyed but let me remind you of the fact that I don't want need any more kids.
Labels:
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Stupid love,
suppress,
wants
Thursday, January 9, 2014
New Year, SAME HOPE!
As I embark upon my fifth year on this solo mission called
parenting, I reflect.
I think about my pregnancy and it being one of the happiest
times in my life. The tiny person
growing inside of me and the miracle I was put in charge of. The simplest
things like the best sleep I’ve had in my life and the movement of my curved belly
after a generous meal. At the hospital, I panicked. The pain was overwhelming and realistically
unpredictable but the joy shortly after gave me full satisfaction. Returning
home to my tiny unprepared apartment made me emotional. Nothing was ready. The
new apartment I had moved into at almost 7months pregnant 3 months prior was
still not completely unpacked. The first night alone with the tiny human became
the first feeding to the first bath, the first tooth, the first walk and the
list goes on, and I became better at being a mom.
I even created an alter ego of the person I’d become while in
mommy mode multitasking my way through life. Her name is Obstacle Anne. She is
a fierce superwoman. From carrying a dozen grocery bags along w a stroller with
a sleeping baby strapped in, to shoveling out a Honda buried in snow with a toddler
safely warm inside. I’ve owned this character. I became her.
I look back at the struggles and triumphs with laughter and
fight back a few tears.
The birthday parties I’ve managed to pull off seem
effortless now. Countless last minute details forced me to forget something
each year. Our dynamic duo costumes at Halloween have proven to be exceptional.
We debuted in Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion complete with our own little black
morkie. Jessie and Woody one year, Princess Leia and Darth Vader the next, one
crowd favorite was his choice of the Stay Puft Marshmallow man (myself) and he
was my little Ghostbuster. This past year our costumes couldn’t have been a
better fit. My little superhero has no idea how he has saved me. He chose to be
Wolverine, claws and facial hair, plaid and leather, and I did not feel like I had
a costume on. A silvery white wig, white contacts and a black cape, of course
people got it, but I feel like the person I was dressed as meant so much more
to me than any person could tell. We are a team, and as Storm and Wolverine it
made me realize how much I depend on the little guy.
On this journey we
have had the pleasure of meeting several amazing people who have impacted our
lives. An art instructor who fell in
love with Aurum and his sweet and kind personality; a summer camp teacher with
whom we’ve forged a bond with long after
the summer came to an end; and a grandmothers special connection with the
little guy that adores her. The people who have crossed out paths lead me to believe
that I am doing something terribly right on my solo mission.
Pride overcomes me.
Thus another year has crept up on us, but the same hope
remains.
I have conquered much in these past 4 years and as he grows
taller, we both grow stronger.
They say it takes a village to raise a child, maybe in our
case the village means the many people who have touched us in passing, held a
door open, flashed a friendly smile or simply took the time to enjoy a special
moment with us, but at the end of the day it will always be JustMommyNme.
Labels:
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Thursday, October 24, 2013
family dynamic
I always thought it would be my own thoughts, views, beliefs and opinions that would be the source of my sons teaching.
Speaking with other parents and understanding different views on family dynamic did not change my opinion that opposed the idea that school aged children are subjected to uncontrollable views.
Pre Kindergarten is such a ripe age for education.
Physical activity is huge while teaching lessons also extremely valuable.
When we started receiving homework assignments, I was very excited.
It gave me a look inside what the actual learning was and the lessons that were being taught in class. I was eager to aid in his learning.
The first assignment was coloring and tracing shapes and the letter S.
The second was about family.
I hesitated.
The remembered a good friend of mine going through a similar exercise in a doctors office.
Her son was asked by the doctor to draw his family.
He drew his mom, he drew his brother, and he drew himself.
The doctor asked about his father and then the conversation started to flow.
Imagine my fear.
A fear I have yet to confront.
An explanation I have yet to give my little monster, who is growing at the speed of a very well planted seed.
An absent father who has yet to appear.
As we completed the homework assignment, I read the instructions aloud, prepared to explain the plethora of blended families there are, but I didn't have to.
"Draw your family in the house, do you know who is part of your family?''
Yes Mommy.
"mommy, me, Jakey (cousin), grandma, Chris(step grandpa) and auntie''
I breathed a sigh if relief.
He seemed happy.
He drew smiles on everyone.
He drew hair.
And he wrote the names of each person as I told him.
Never mentioning, questioning, or simply including his father.
Should I have?
Part of me thought I should say, what about Papi?
If that door of memory is slowly closing, why should I stick my foot in and hold it open.
The other part of me quietly shouted, YES!!!!!
Selfish? maybe.
But hoping that I may not have to deal with this much longer and he's forgetting his father on his own by his fathers own doing.
Yet another ounce of me thinks I should have a conversation with him and honestly tell him I don't know what happened to his father.
Fear wins.
His family dynamic consists of so much love that he had to draw people outside of the house and that is explanation enough for me.
Speaking with other parents and understanding different views on family dynamic did not change my opinion that opposed the idea that school aged children are subjected to uncontrollable views.
Pre Kindergarten is such a ripe age for education.
Physical activity is huge while teaching lessons also extremely valuable.
When we started receiving homework assignments, I was very excited.
It gave me a look inside what the actual learning was and the lessons that were being taught in class. I was eager to aid in his learning.
The first assignment was coloring and tracing shapes and the letter S.
The second was about family.
I hesitated.
The remembered a good friend of mine going through a similar exercise in a doctors office.
Her son was asked by the doctor to draw his family.
He drew his mom, he drew his brother, and he drew himself.
The doctor asked about his father and then the conversation started to flow.
Imagine my fear.
A fear I have yet to confront.
An explanation I have yet to give my little monster, who is growing at the speed of a very well planted seed.
An absent father who has yet to appear.
As we completed the homework assignment, I read the instructions aloud, prepared to explain the plethora of blended families there are, but I didn't have to.
"Draw your family in the house, do you know who is part of your family?''
Yes Mommy.
"mommy, me, Jakey (cousin), grandma, Chris(step grandpa) and auntie''
I breathed a sigh if relief.
He seemed happy.
He drew smiles on everyone.
He drew hair.
And he wrote the names of each person as I told him.
Never mentioning, questioning, or simply including his father.
Should I have?
Part of me thought I should say, what about Papi?
If that door of memory is slowly closing, why should I stick my foot in and hold it open.
The other part of me quietly shouted, YES!!!!!
Selfish? maybe.
But hoping that I may not have to deal with this much longer and he's forgetting his father on his own by his fathers own doing.
Yet another ounce of me thinks I should have a conversation with him and honestly tell him I don't know what happened to his father.
Fear wins.
His family dynamic consists of so much love that he had to draw people outside of the house and that is explanation enough for me.
Labels:
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homework,
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prekindergarten,
school,
toddler
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Dating and the Bull shit detector.
I do it all.A recent date lead me to believe I am through with dating.Don’t get me wrong it was a great date.The guy was a charmer, a perfect gentleman and held my interest in more ways than one. But the time and energy it took out of me makes me want to continue my life as a single mom. My evenings usually consist of making dinner for my son and I, having bath time then bed time then me time. Do I risk the life I’ve become so accustomed to for the life I so secretly crave?SINGLE is and always seemed to be a temporary for me. Dating on the other hand I haven’t done serious enough since my son was born. In the beginning I thought I’d be a single mom for a year or so then I’d meet this fabulous man, fall in love, he’d love my son as his own and then we’d walk off into the sunset and work on extending our cute little blended family.Newsflash, it didn’t quite work out that way.I did think I came close once. I met this fab man who had himself grown up with a step dad since the age of 2, JACKPOT.Turns out he was just not there altogether and I was back to square one.Fast forward 4 years later, I am an independent, self sufficient single mom who hasn’t really dated at all but more importantly has become more of a woman in her own right.
When I think of “dates” I’ve been on in the past 4 years I can count them on one hand. I’m the type that does not pursue but rather succumbs to the pursuer if the interest is there.So back to this one date, I had an amazing time but I also realized how much I have changed since the last time I’ve dated as well as how much the dating game has.There I was sitting across from a man that I seemed completely interested in and wanted to know everything about. In the days to follow we kept in touch and even had a second date. Communication was there almost daily and I seemed to be loving it. To my surprise things came to a screeching halt within 2-3 months and I was not as irritated by it as I thought I’d be.The adult independent me didn’t care. Life goes on, right?For the most part, the woman I had become did not care to deal with bs.Honesty had become a trait of this woman, and she gained a bull shit detector.Back to me and my life as a single mom, this meant not losing sleep, guilt over leaving my kid with a sitter while I went on a date, and not having someone on my mind. Simple.In my somewhat twisted mind I was relieved. Screw it.It’s like a weight was lifted.The truth is I did like him. I did like text messages and calls from someone other than my mom and my sister. I also liked that he was kind of a secret. One thing I’ve learned as a single mom is to keep my dating life guarded. Everyone is waiting to see me settle or date or bring someone other than a girl friend around. It honestly can’t happen, the explanation of what happened if it did not work requires way too much energy. So secrets are good in that aspect.I liked the attention. I liked him as a person. I liked his conversation and support.But I am guarded.I have had this conversation with girlfriends time and time again, I am going to need one hell of a man to fill the void I have already managed to fill on my own.And my detector lets me know whether or not I care enough to deal with someone that is not serious about me.The fact that I have this bull shit detector will weed out a lot of phonies, but the possibility of it eliminating one of the good ones is a chance I'll just have to take.
Labels:
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Wednesday, May 29, 2013
from Ariel to Dora
Pink is for girls.
Blue is for boys.
I must admit, my shower was a blue/green/yellow color scheme. This was solely because that was the day I found out I was having a boy.
Why can’t boys like pink and girls like blue? Is it because we teach them the exact opposite?
I recently started to notice, and by notice it’s been mainly through other people’s reactions that my little boy loves it all.
Since he started learning his colors, the two that he would consistently point out were pink and purple.
All the other colors came after but I thought nothing of it, just that he loves pink and purple and knows those two colors.
We recently watched the little mermaid, and he loved it. So much that he asked for an Ariel.
Since we had already been making weekly trips to the Disney store, I knew exactly where to find her.
She was his new found love and he wanted to take her everywhere, on subway rides, to the playground and by his side in bed as he fell asleep.
One thing I was immediately cautious about was him taking Ariel along with him on his weekend visits with his dad. I took precaution by suggesting he take another toy that was as cool as she is.
Most of the time his mind was already made up and he always decided to leave her home. The week following one of his visits he mentioned in a very mature 3 year old way, that his dad had made him sad. He explained that his dad told him to throw Ariel (who he refers to as Mario) in the trash.
In one of my strongest single mommy moments, I simply told him that boys and girls like Mario and it is a yeco (translation: muneca) that everyone can play with.
I refused to look up but rather ignored the comment and kept my composure.
“A boy? .…why does he have a doll, dolls are for girls…
I felt a reaction crawling up my throat to scream out of my mouth but I fought it back, patiently waited for our stop and hoped that my innocent little boy holding the little mermaid did not hear.
Am I wrong in the eyes of machismo dads and men who believe that boys should not play with dolls?
Or am I teaching my son the value of being an individual, having choices and marching to the beat of his own drum?
Blue is for boys.
Or at least that is what society teaches us to teach our
children.
When a woman finds out she is pregnant with a girl, her baby
shower will be decorated pink and with a boy blue. I must admit, my shower was a blue/green/yellow color scheme. This was solely because that was the day I found out I was having a boy.
Why can’t boys like pink and girls like blue? Is it because we teach them the exact opposite?
I recently started to notice, and by notice it’s been mainly through other people’s reactions that my little boy loves it all.
Since he started learning his colors, the two that he would consistently point out were pink and purple.
All the other colors came after but I thought nothing of it, just that he loves pink and purple and knows those two colors.
We recently watched the little mermaid, and he loved it. So much that he asked for an Ariel.
Since we had already been making weekly trips to the Disney store, I knew exactly where to find her.
She was his new found love and he wanted to take her everywhere, on subway rides, to the playground and by his side in bed as he fell asleep.
One thing I was immediately cautious about was him taking Ariel along with him on his weekend visits with his dad. I took precaution by suggesting he take another toy that was as cool as she is.
Most of the time his mind was already made up and he always decided to leave her home. The week following one of his visits he mentioned in a very mature 3 year old way, that his dad had made him sad. He explained that his dad told him to throw Ariel (who he refers to as Mario) in the trash.
In my mind I knew I couldn’t react the way I wanted to, for
his sake I had to keep cool. As he stood there his little frustrated angry face
waiting for my reaction, my mind raced. I knew I had been careful and I knew
for a fact that he had never taken Mario with him. But how else did his dad
know about her?
The only conclusion I could reach was that my little boy
loves his Mario so much that he shared that with his dad, only to find out that
his dad did not love the thought of it. In one of my strongest single mommy moments, I simply told him that boys and girls like Mario and it is a yeco (translation: muneca) that everyone can play with.
He was reassured, I think.
But I also made sure to tell him that mommy said it is ok
and if his dad has a problem with it then he should talk to mommy.
Then I made him repeat it.
And then he promised to say it if his dad ever told him to
throw Mario away.
But that’s not where it ended, on a recent early morning subway ride, I was
once again reminded of society’s rules.
As Aurum sat in his stroller, Mario in tow, I heard a stranger’s
voice. I refused to look up but rather ignored the comment and kept my composure.
“A boy? .…why does he have a doll, dolls are for girls…
I felt a reaction crawling up my throat to scream out of my mouth but I fought it back, patiently waited for our stop and hoped that my innocent little boy holding the little mermaid did not hear.
What do you do?
As a parent, if your child is threatened in any way, you
rise up and protect them!! In any circumstance you stick up for your kid!
I never realized by fulfilling my sons wish of having Ariel
that I would spark this fire inside people starting a battle over the innocence
of a child vs. the role society plays in our lives. Am I wrong in the eyes of machismo dads and men who believe that boys should not play with dolls?
Or am I teaching my son the value of being an individual, having choices and marching to the beat of his own drum?
I’ve concluded that people will always have opinions of
their own, and right now that is what I will teach my son. His opinion matters
and until he is old enough to defend it he is to tell people to talk to his
mommy about it.
I am proud to say nothing has stopped him from playing with Mario;
he loves her nonetheless since the day he got her.
He also recently asked for a Dora plush pillow from Target,
and he carries her along with him from time to time.
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