Brothers

I went back and forth on posting these. Joe’s grief is so apparent that it rips my heart. However, Bas’s paws/legs and Joe holding him in just this way, so tender, are too sweet. This was how they hung out together every evening.

Leahpeah Update I Suppose

They’re fucking with my head, switching around my medications. Huge-ass increase of lithium today. This afternoon I was able to stop crying and all signs point to improvement.

I hope this weekend finds me at home with Joe having coffee on the deck. Thanks so much for your love and support. It has meant the world to me and helped me through some very dark places.

xoxo.

dictated to Joe 8:15pm Eastern, 31st of August, 2010

The Slump

So, my friends, here I am, back with my ever lurking friend, The Slump. His good friends, Depression and Hopelessness are waiting in the wings, always knocking softly on the door, getting a bit louder as time passes and I sink a little further.

It’s so cliche and I hate even writing about it. I mean, how many times am I going to talk about being depressed? And then eventually, being amped up and slightly out of control? I think we’re on about 5,372 times up to today.

So, sighing, I tell you – I’m sad and getting sadder. I’m depressed and getting depressededer. I’m weepy and getting weepier. My iris’ are ratcheting ever smaller as I disappear on iota at a time, waiting for the inevitable moment when I vanish completely. That blessed moment of ceasing to exist and saying goodbye to this cruel, mean world etc., etc., etc.

Oh, look. Joe made cheese toast. I guess it’s not the end of the world if we still have cheese toast.

Fun in the Sun

We went to San Diego for a vacation recently and it was maybe the best vacation we’ve had since we got married. We did exactly what we wanted to every day for 2 weeks. You can’t beat that.

In these shots, it’s about 900 degrees F in La Mesa. We were melting. We were melting but didn’t stop drinking beer and cracking jokes all day.

You can see in this last photo that Joe may be close to reaching his limit of stupid Leah jokes. His eyes plainly say, “And hows about we get some food in you, M’Dear.”

Inky

Joe and I make our own cards whenever it’s feasible. Sometimes we do it alone and sometimes together. I think we make a pretty good team. I do the ink and he does the adorable tiny creatures and color.

Starting Over

Here’s the thing – life doesn’t give you the opportunity to really start over very often. I’ve been married and divorced and remarried and lived a ton of different places. I’ve had all kinds of jobs. I’ve been mentally ill, fake-cured, mentally ill again (and will be for the rest of my life). I’ve lived near my kids and far away from my kids. I’ve been in mental hospitals and released. I’ve been to individual therapy and family therapy and couple’s therapy. I’ve been sexually abused and in loving relationships. I’ve been happy, sad, depressed, excited and everything in between.

I’m sure many of you have been through some of those things, as well. And you probably know what I mean when I say that each time there was a positive change, I looked at it as a new beginning. A chance to get things right, do better. Be better.

These past few years have been a roller coaster for me and those close to me. I’m sometimes a bit (read: a lot) unstable when it comes to everyday life. It’s never been my strong suit. Being mentally ill has its challenges and while I’m really good at some things, maneuvering through life always capable of facing the day is not one of them. Working a straight 9-5 job is sometimes impossible while telecommuting and working my own hours works great. I have to create a life that works for me. I craft what I need for myself on the terms that make sense in all my weirdness.

If you’ve read my blog for very long, you know that the highs and lows of being with or not with my children is a regular topic around here. As a mother, I’d like to think that I’m the best thing for them. That they need me to be nearby and to take care of them. I’ve learned the past few years that they really don’t need me to take care of them in the way I thought. They get that from who they call their ‘Parents’, my ex and his wife. They don’t think of me like That Kind of Mom. I’m a friend and someone they want to hang out with sometimes. And when my mental illness makes an appearance in any variety of ways, it makes them feel like they did when they were little kids – scared, sad and worried for my well-being instead of experiencing their lives being taken care of by an adult and worried about regular things like school and friends. Their grades slip, they get depressed, they don’t sleep well, they find reasons not to visit my home and then feel guilty. As the person that wishes they were the mom that was able to take care of them, I feel horrible. I live with the guilt and shame every day.

Recent circumstances have brought these things to light with more force than ever before and I guess I’m finally listening. Yes, I want to be near them and just watch, if that is all I can do. But at some point, I really have toput their needs ahead of mine and give them their space. And now is that time.

As if that wasn’t enough, some of you know that Joe and I have been having some issues. Much of it too private to mention here, but let’s just say that being mentally ill is no picnic for your spouse. We considered a divorce, but that sounded too final and decided to try and do what we needed to do as Separated, which so far has worked really well. Part of the reason we are succeeding, I think, is because we do actually love and like each other. With that as a foundation, we’re pretty sure we can work the rest out.

As confusing as this is to others, it makes a lot of sense to us. We’ve come up with some solutions to help change our lives in a very real and substantial way. More on that very soon.

Here’s to Starting Over.

Date Night

Scene – After viewing Whip It!, Joe and Leah go to a local bar to have a beer and talk. It’s a private event, 4$ cover charge with mandatory ID check in.

Leah – I DON’T HAVE ANY CASH.
Welcome Lady – WEFHOS WHAADT GHDPPOOOAKS HIOAATTTSED! (plus 3 more minutes of unintelligible screaming)
Leah – WHAT?
Welcome Lady, laughing and pulling us inside – FHOOOOSENDA! QHTVEEEIAKALERRRR!

Joe and Leah use sign language and smoke signals to communicate until they go in the restaurant part, hoping to regain some use of their ears. They can’t hear anything the other person is saying. Anything.

Joe – DID YOU CATCH THE NAME OF THE BAND?
Leah – WHAT? I CAN’T HEAR YOU! WHAT’S THIS BAND CALLED? DO YOU KNOW?

Drinks are served. Leah looks to the left and notices a VIP table. An empty VIP table which is actually the corner booth in a room full of empty tables.

Leah – HEY LOOK. GOOD THING THEY PUT UP THE VIP SIGN. THE DEMAND FOR THAT TABLE IS OUT OF CONTROL!
Joe – PIE? OKAY! WHAT KIND OF PIE DO YOU WANT?
Leah – PIPE? INSIDE? WHO HAS A PIPE?

The young lady walking around with an extraneous weight belt over her Tshirt and a pad of paper in her hands, looking all doe-eyed and new and slightly shy, comes and asks us what we want to eat. We don’t know. She comes by 4 more time in the next 5 minutes and asks us the same thing every time.

There is a cameraman walking around trying to make it look like the crowd is much larger than it is using tricky camera angles. Welcome Lady heads to VIP table, opens makeup case holding 287 different kinds of lipstick and starts to preen. Music switches to generic guy band over the bar’s sound system.

Leah – HEY! The band must be taking a break. Or their amp blew. Either way, my ears are still ringing.
Joe – What is that lady doing? Getting ready for her closeup?
Leah – I love her lip gloss. So shiny!
Joe – Seriously. I like when I can hear things.

We decide to order food. We look for the doe-eyed waitress intern for the next 15 minutes with no luck. Suddenly, Welcome Lady comes over and proceeds to welcome us to their shindig and thank us for coming. After a whole 10 seconds of that, she goes into a prepared spiel about living a quiet lifestyle and learning how to celebrate our lives while employing her to coach us through our special journey. Her qualifications include about, oh, 8 years (practiced nonchalant eye roll right when she says 8 showing us JUST how much it doesn’t matter) of fitness modeling. We smile and nod. She moves on to the the next table.

Band starts up. Bar does not turn off background music.

Joe – DO YOU HEAR THAT? IT’S LIKE BATTLE OF THE BANDS!
Leah – THERE ARE TWO SONGS PLAYING!
Joe – WHERE IS THAT WAITRESS INTERN?
Leah – DO YOU THINK THAT INTERN IS EVER COMING BACK? DO YOU WANT TO LEAVE?

Cameraman is taking a white sheet and pinning it to the wall, covering a window and creating a backdrop. He sets up his tripod in the isle about a foot in front of our booth. He steadies his shot, then moves back a few inches. Again. Again.

Leah – IF WE DON’T LEAVE SOON WE WILL BE LOCKED IN FOREVER.
Joe – THAT MAN WANTS TO PUT US IN A CAGE. NO ONE PUTS MY BABY IN A CAGE.

We pantomime leaving with our fingers, then get up and walk out. The evening autumn air is chilled.

Joe – What was the name of that band?

Aaaaaaaaaaaaand Scene.