• Home
  • Blog
  • About
    • Comments Policy
  • Contact
  • Archives
Subscribe

FEAR Realized

Getting over giving up.

You are here: Home / Archives for relating
  • Categories

  • Latest Tweets

    • Home Movies

      Girl, Put Your Records On

      [more home movies]

    • Book Club Store

      [Shop for more selections here!]
    • Latest iPlays

      [follow the iPlay archives here]
    • Subscribe via feed or e-mail

    Do Not Try This At Home

    November 23, 2009 by NaysWay · Leave a Comment 

    A friend of mine, and former colleague, visited our offices here in Cleveland recently. She’d left over two years ago for love, an Arts degree, and New York City. She came back with a baby. Sweet Georgia Brown, that baby. PUDGUM CITY, I wanted to squeeze every roll of that baby, she was so stinkin’ cute.

    She stopped by my office and we chatted a while. She’s in the early stages of her 40′s, so she started the role of motherhood later than most (a.k.a. later than me, 24, *cough*). One of the questions that came up in our conversation was how different it was to just begin mothering at 40 compared to the 20′s or even the 30′s. Being that I have a few years experience under my belt, I honestly don’t see one kid as work and I told her as much. Now before anyone gets their panties in a bunch, let me just say I’m not belittling mothers of singular babies at all. I was a singular baby and I know raising a child, no matter how many you have, is work. But…

    She continued by asking if she should ever consider having another; that having one seemed like enough especially at her age. I totally understood where she was coming from. I’m not her age yet, but I remembered looking at Mooter for a long time after she was born and thinking alright, that was nice. I can go to sleep now. I also told her that, while that feeling lingers for a while, you wake up one morning and while going through your shopping list, you all of a sudden write down “have another baby” like it belongs there because you’re not thinking and your hormones up and snatched your pen out of your hand and did the writing for you because that’s what they do. And you’re all, how did THAT get there, but then you go to the grocery store and a baby is all you can think about because that first one is getting older and losing that new baby smell, and you think, hey, that wasn’t so bad and I can probably do that again and, before you know it, you’re in the aisle for home pregnancy tests “just in case” and you don’t know how you got there.

    Yes. It happens just like that.

    So I think about all these things. And I weigh them in my brain, letting them marinate, swooshing them around until I let them fall out of my mouth. Because giving a friend advice about things that could ultimately change their lives forever is not something you want to play around with, and it’s not something you talk about casually. And, after a few moments, this is what I told her:

    Don’t do it.

    I don’t know why I told her that. That’s not what it sounded like swooshing around in the old medulla oblongata. And I went home with that answer, trying to understand why I said it. Then I thought of this:

    Do Not Try This At Home

    Because that started off as this:

    Do Not Try This At Home

    And this:

    Do Not Try This At Home

    And this:

    Do Not Try This At Home

    And they were fine. But, like I said, this:

    Do Not Try This At Home

    Turned into this:

    Do Not Try This At Home

    And I don’t quite remember how it happened. Did you see it? Because in the time it took you to scroll from the picture of calm before they were rolling around on the floor ready to kill each other, was how long it took.

    And you can say that they’re kids, and all kids fight. And they’re siblings, and all siblings fight. And I would tell you that I totally get all these things you’re saying, but you’re leaving out one crucial element: they’re girls. Wait. I don’t think I said that right… THEY’RE. GIRLS. Do you understand now? No? OK, let me try it another way. They are girls. That will grow up. Into women. WOMEN! WITH HORMONES! AND MENSTRUAL CYCLES. AND HORMONES. And did I mention THE HORMONES.

    And, wouldn’t you know it, my friend and her one kid? That one kid is a girl.

    Oh. Sorry.

    A GIRL!!!!!!

    No, I have no idea why I told her that.

    Filed under loving · Tagged with booger, mooter, realizing, relating

    One Moment…

    September 11, 2009 by NaysWay · 8 Comments 

    In one moment…

    I was seven months pregnant, admiring my round, itchy belly.
    I was wondering what motherhood would be like.
    I was finalizing birth plans and baby names and onesies and diapers.
    I was sitting in a cubicle, not yet wondering what it all meant, but almost there.

    I was getting a phone call from BFam.

    One plane hit.
    Maybe it was an accident.
    I’m at my dad’s.
    I just dropped him off from the grocery store and we heard it on the radio.
    Yeah, we’re watching now.
    I don’t know. We can’t see anything. It’s just smoke.
    Wait…
    Oh my God.
    Oh my God, Nay, another plane. Another plane hit.
    This…
    This is not an accident.
    Oh my God.

    In one moment…

    I was wishing I could take it all back.
    I was wishing I wasn’t sitting here.
    I was rubbing my round, itchy belly wondering what it all meant.
    I was more afraid than I’d ever been.
    I was laid off, a result of the terrorists.
    I was jobless and pregnant.
    I was in labor.
    I was a mother.

    I was grateful.

    However you live 9/11 today, take one moment.

    Remember.

    Be grateful.

    Filed under etc · Tagged with being, relating

    FEAR No. 041 – Storm Warning

    September 1, 2009 by NaysWay · 5 Comments 

    Storm warning, feels like a heavy rain
    Winds on the coast tonight
    We may get tossed tonight
    –Bonnie Raitt, Storm Warning (Longing In Their Hearts, 1994)

    Storm Warning1

    I don’t ever remember being afraid of storms as a kid. I liked the noise of the announcing thunder, the flash of brilliant lightening streaking the sky, the roll of impending doom in the dark clouds. It seemed as though heaven were having a conversation and I had a front row seat. Sometimes, heaven would get loud and I’d jump a few feet from the ground. But it was thrilling nonetheless.

    Read more

    Filed under Blog · Tagged with being, realizing, relating

    Fancy Clothes

    August 20, 2009 by NaysWay · 4 Comments 

    And then? This one time?...

    Living in Ohio, we are very rarely met with racism. Wait. Maybe I should clarify…

    Living in CLEVELAND, we are very rarely met with racism. It gets bad the further you venture into Southern Ohio or, as BFam and I like to call it, John Deere country. I had to leave Ohio to experience my first racial slur. I don’t think BFam has had his yet. Now that I think of it, I haven’t had to bail him out of jail anywhere lately so, no. He hasn’t had one.

    Read more

    Filed under Blog · Tagged with mooter, photography, relating

    FEAR No. 039 – Scared of Lonely

    August 17, 2009 by NaysWay · 9 Comments 

    Lonely1

    Hard working Average Joe’s are suckers. I should know. I come from a long line of them, and I am one. We work behind our respective desks, in our respective factories, pushing our respective numbers, wearing our respective white and blue collars. And what do we have to show for it? Debt. Sub-par health coverage. A life wasted and gone. But at least we made an honest living. And for what?

    Read more

    Filed under Blog · Tagged with realizing, relating

    « Previous Page — Next Page »


    • Favorite Posts







    PostsComments · Log in
    Copyright © 2010 FEAR Realized · Find FEAR:

    Return to top of page