“On Growing Up”

Recently I cleaned out my closet. In that process I found some old journals. Some I had remembered, but one I had forgotten about it. It was from 2006-2007 and didn’t have a ton of entries, but enough to give me a good look inside my nineteen and twenty year old head. A head I’ve apparently lost touch with.

I have mythologized that period in my life to one where I “had it all together.” I was living alone at the time as my roommate had gotten married and moved out and Ace was off at college (and we were in rough patch in early ’06). I was very proud of myself at the time to have two jobs, being going to school, and have my own place with my own pets. I really did take on a lot pretty quick. I often look back on that time and wonder why I don’t have it so together now. Early in my marriage I would get upset with Ace and blame any and all disfunction on him. That was obviously the thing that had changed in my life.

Now that I’m reading this old journal its become clear to me that I struggled a lot in ’06 and ’07 as well. Its unfortunate to see how unnecessary some of that struggle was. I write a lot about my guilt around not praying enough and my “sin” which means making out with or fooling around with Ace.

My anger at the fact that I was indoctrinated to feel so horrible around that extremely normal, appropriate, safe, and consensual sexual behavior could be its own post.

My anger that my pastor emailed me to let me know he had a dream about me sinning and that he didn’t want me to turn away from God could also be its own post.

Today I’m going in another direction.

My therapist asked me the other day “What would 19 year old Allison think of 32 year old Allison?”

“Well she would be upset at the idea that I was going to hell.”

I was full on “fundie” at that point. I was about the deepest in it in 2006, right before bible college started opening me up to new ideas and theologies about God the next year.

I had a life plan that was totally different. Nineteen year old me was going to become ordained in the Assemblies of God. I was sure of it. I was going to grow our church’s Children’s Ministry and then eventually start a new church plant focused on family ministry.

I was going to get a big house in the suburbs and fill it with adopted children and have happy vanilla monogamous sex for the next several decades.

The last page in this journal is the one that rings most true to this day.

Frankly nineteen year old me would be utterly shocked at how much I’ve changed. Almost everything about my beliefs surrounding religion, politics, parenting, and health have drastically changed. I owe a lot of that to becoming more educated. It was a combination of what I learned in bible college and what Ace learned in bible college that helped me to start very slowly peeling away the layers of fundamentalism just shortly after this journal ended in mid 2007.

On top of that I’ve always loved learning and have continued to educate myself about any topic that seizes my interest. That habit has contributed significantly to my growth as an educated individual.

There are a few interesting things that stood out to me as similarities to my current self; my struggle at staying on task and building habits, struggling to stay organized and keep up with household tasks, being deeply emotional for no discernible reason, being deeply in love with Ace, being extremely passionate about what I view as my life’s mission, being confused about my relationships with friends, loving my parents but being frustrated with my relationship with them, and of course my tendency to process things via writing, both publicly and privately.

Deep under all the guilt and obsession that came with being a pentecostal fundamentalist evangelical Christian there is still me in there. I somehow survived my deep dive into what I would now classify as a cult mostly in tact.

Nineteen year old me wouldn’t think that though. She would think that who I am now has lost track of everything that really matters, that I had abandoned my God-given mission to share the gospel with the children of Illinois. She would be praying really hard for me. Or feeling guilty about not praying enough.

Luckily she’s not here anymore. I’m thirty-two now and still growing up. I’ll never be “grown up” becuase I’m never a static being. Who I am will constantly evolve and change based on what I experience and the way I interpret it . Who I am will change based on my physical location in the world and the people closest to me (both physically and relationally). You might even say that I’ve died and been resurrected as a more authentic version of myself.

I will never be “finished.” I will always be changing and I think thirty-two year old me will be happy with future me as long as I never stop growing up.

Together We are Stronger!

Like so many people out there, I hate asking for help.

There are times we must rely on our community though, and this is one of them.

I’ve stepped out to do something big and risky, and its taken much longer than expected. I’m starting a skatepark, it is happening. I have a partner who is loaning me the money to get the park started and fund it for the first few months.

We have the lease, but have no solid timeline on when we will be able to get in there and start building. The last update I received a week ago said the contractors were still waiting on a permit and thats why construction hadn’t begun yet. Once it begins they expect it will take 4-6 weeks to finish. I expect it to take at least 6-8 weeks.

The biggest lesson I’ve learned learned in this endeavor is that everything takes far longer than anyone admits. It drives me crazy.

I’m now finished earning the modest sum I was by doing some nannying this summer. I’m still doing deliveries, but summer is the slowest time of year for that market and even weekends can be incredibly slow.

I can’t give a commitment to any ongoing hour job, and I need several hours a week to work on the skatepark.

In short, I’m broke.

Some in my family believe I’m still sitting on a lot of money becuase I came into a trust at age 18.

I am incredibly blessed to be 31 and have no student loans becuase I used that money to pay for my own education as well as my husbands. The rest has gone into housing and helping us pay our bills in in hard times. Its gone. I have no savings now, only debt, and a good amount of it from this last year we’ve been paying our last few bills each month on credit cards in the hopes I would have an income soon. Our cards are maxed out.

I’m here asking you my friends and family, to help me pay my bills and buy my groceries so I can get though these next few lean months until the skatepark is open and I am able to start drawing a paycheck.

Any money given to the skatepark will be subjected to taxes whereas money gifted directly to me is tax free. The skatepark is well funded. I am not.

If you believe in what we are doing please help out by helping me pay my bills and keep food in my fridge while I work on this important endeavor!

TOGETHER WE ARE STRONGER!

paypal.me/AllisonJWaters

 

Thank you!

Fucking Hormones

Today I was caught off guard by a big shift in hormones.

I didn’t want to get out of bed, wanted to stay forever just cuddling with my dogs.

When I finally did get up, I forgot to take my meds which is abnormal (I did eventually take them). I got dressed and tried to fix my hair. I got frustrated and gave up. I feel uncomfortable becuase I don’t like the way my hair looks/feels today.

Eventually I ate breakfast. I sat on my computer for a while. Kids arrived. I sat in the living room with the kids for a while. They have all been happy playing since they got here.

I went back to my computer where I decided to look up every house I’ve ever lived in. Most of the look radically different now. Thank God there are not new pictures of our last home as it was hard enough to see it how we left it. That one was hardest to see, it’s where I raised my baby. His crib was in one of the pictures.

I’ve been feeling intensely sad and irritable today. Yesterday I felt great. I was full of energy and happy and got so much done. Today I just want to cry and go to sleep.

It took me several hours to think about checking where I was in my cycle. My period is due in a few days. At least it only took me a few hours this time.

Sometimes after days of feeling intensely sad/angry/depressed/overwhelmed Ace is the one to ask where I am. He noticed this pattern long before I did.

The upside to this being part of a cycle is that it will end. The downside is that it comes every damn month, but its not always so bad. Some months are pretty easy.

Others are horrible.

Horrible isn’t a strong enough word. In the past its at its worse I would experience meltdowns of epic preparations.

Today its not that bad. It hasn’t been that bad in years. But sometimes it lasts much longer. I recently found out that I have a fibroid. One of the symptoms is irregular menstrual cycles. Last month that meant that I was in this PMS-y state for a long time while wondering if I had somehow beaten the odds and gotten miraculously pregnant.

I’m hoping this month I have a normal cycle and and not an extra two weeks of waiting for relief.

I’ve been told that PMS isn’t real and that makes me frustrated as I’m living it. Its always been a hard thing for me and was especially painful when I was a teen. These days its the sensory and emotional side that gets me hard.

All my sensory challenges turn up to maximum at this point and it feeds the already hard to manage emotions. I really struggle and my preferred way to deal with it is to be alone, then I know I can’t say or do anything to hurt or upset anyone.

All my weird tics and stims get stronger too. I wiggle around and chew, chew, chew. Sometimes I hurt myself accidentally by chewing my mouth or nails too much. Sometimes I just feel the need to flop around like magicarp. But thats not exactly a normal and acceptable behavior. It just makes me feel better.

I feel isolated and misunderstood. And all this just comes out of nowhere like a fucking thunderstorm. Maybe if I had been paying attention I would have seen it coming, but that wouldn’t have prevented it.

Its just me in my own body and brain dealing with what I deal with every. single. month. When everything gets really hard. And things slow down. And I’m just here. Alone. Feeling broken.

Stuck

I feel like someone pressed the pause button on my life.

I’ve been working on the skatepark for over three years now, and multiple times have been close to signing a lease. Each time something has gone wrong.

I walked for so long with Oregon City landlords, trusting they would get things figured out. I pointed out all the problems from the beginning and was consistently dismissed by an old white man who reminded me of my grandfather. He had assumed he knew what he was doing becuase he’d done it before.

“The laws have changed” I repeated, “they are going to require surveys, and fire inspections, you will have to make these changes, it will take a lot of time and money.” He reassured me it would be fine and and I would be in the space soon.

Eventually it became clear I was correct, it was going to take several months of work and a lot of money. I walked away and told them to call me when the building was cleared for occupancy. I haven’t heard back.

I’m not sure the first time I went to the Milwakie space, but it was several months ago. This one is better. It is one big room, right about 5000 square feet. Its between a very similar family focused sports entertainment business, and a bottle drop facility. Neither will care that we are loud and both places attract lots of families. There is a coffee and ice cream shop in the parking lot. There is a pizza place in the same building. And best of all, its close to home.

But again, I’m being left hanging by the landlords who are dragging their feet. We’ve negotiated the lease, we got to a point we are all happy with. But we have yet to sign it. Its been weeks of hearing nothing.

This waiting is killing me. This lease is everything right now. Its so hard to know how much to work on the skatepark. I don’t want to put my time into this building only for them to drop us. I don’t want to start paying for things specific to this space until I’m sure its ours.

I’ve pushed my broker multiple times, she’s just as frustrated as I am. Or so she thinks.

For her this is just one deal, just one pay day. For me this is my life. My life on hold, my life with no income, my life just waiting. I want to do something. I can’t pick up anything new until I know how this chapter ends.

Its like I’m reading a book but the last chapter hasn’t been published yet, the author is just not sure how to end it. Except maybe I’m not reading it. I’m the protagonist, and they’ve left me at a climax with no resolution.

I’m not sure how to cope with this. Its like waiting to know if you’ve been accepted to the school with your dream program. Except there is a hard deadline for things like that. For this they can drag me along as long as they want. And they hold all the cards, while I’m here just waiting, hoping, dreaming, and stressing.

Again last night I was up for much of the night with this problem in my head. Should I be doing more? Should I be assuming  I will get this lease? Moving forward with plans and permits?

No. I did that before. It didn’t get us ahead enough to make any difference and wasted time and money in the process.

I have done some work, some big stuff. Reworked the business plan for our new financial situation and specific to this space.  I also talked to a prospective employee and she’s totally on board.

She’s an incredible person who I met pretty quickly after moving to Portland, at one of the only indoor skateparks around. She introduced me to Skate Like a Girl where we volunteered together and over the years we’ve gotten to know each other better.

Knowing she’s willing and excited not just to work for me, but take on a managerial role literally helps me sleep at night. Becuase I can’t do this alone. I need a team, and building that team is going to be one of the most crucial parts of this endeavor.

A few things are moving forward, but the biggest most important peice is just on hold and my whole life is on hold with it.

My Complicated Relationship with Autism

Today I was sent a message by a woman I don’t know claiming we were both “Autism Momma Bears.” This is a label I’ve never once claimed or identified with. I’ve never thought seriously about my son being autistic.

I’ve only thought seriously about me being autistic.

Many months ago, I took the “Aspie Quiz” and scored pretty high. I was in a period of deep self-discovery via research about the brain. I laughed it off.

I might be smart, and I might be anxious. I probably have ADHD, but not Aspergers I thought. I laughed and moved on with my life.

Months later an article came though  my life outlining how autism looked different in girls and woman. It was like someone was reading my mind.

I was freaked out by how accurately it described both my inner and external life.

It set of weeks of frantic research that have now turned into months.

I’m still researching. There is so much to know. I’ve read many books written about autism and written from the perspective of someone diagnosed.

I’ve learned that getting a good diagnosis as an adult woman can range from difficult to impossible.

I once worked up the courage to email someone who specializes in psychological testing, including autism, in adults. She first emailed me back to say she would be happy to help me though the whole process including getting as much covered by insurance as possible. But then she wrote me again to say she was too busy to take me on at the time.

I felt defeated and have not tried again to be tested.

Now I don’t have insurance and I’m waiting to hear if I will be covered by the State Medicaid, OHP. I have no idea what testing might be covered for an adult.

At this point, most days, I believe that there is a place on the spectrum for me. The things that make me think this include my sensory issues.

I get overwhelmed and often don’t realize it until I’m already panicking. Heat, light, small spaces, loud sounds, people touching me. I often don’t consciously realize how these things are affecting me until I feel like I need to move to another space or until I’m snapping at someone for something small. Its not them, its the overwhelming sensory input.

Sensory issues alone do not equal autism. The bigger issues are what really convince me.

When in an intense conflict with someone I love (primarily my partner) some weird things can happen. First, I lose my ability to talk. I can become completely non-verbal at times, and often semi-verbal. Sometimes I have words I want to say, but I can’t get them out, other times my mind goes totally blank. It shuts off. This has a name in autism, autistic shutdown, its a coping mechanism for times of extreme stress.

I remember this happening as a child as well. It would make me angry, both at myself, but also at the people putting me in the position. It usually happened when I was sent to see therapists. It was way too out of the ordinary and way too much pressure. I would close up completely and not talk.

When I’m stressed out in conflict I can sometimes move from shutdown to meltdown, where I want to hit myself (and sometimes do), and often sob or even scream uncontrollably.

These episodes are exceedingly rare these days, though a few do stand out in recent memory and I feel deep shame when I think about them.

There was a period in my life when I was under a lot of stress and had yet to learn any of the coping strategies I have now and would sometimes have these meltdowns very regularly. When I get too deep into a meltdown I become suicidal. I see the only way out as death.

These experiences of meltdowns with suicidal ideation (I’ve never made an attempt) are part of what drove me to seek therapy. Those moments as well as with anxiety.

In that same period of life where I was having meltdowns regularly I also started experiencing intense panic attacks. More than once in a short period I thought I was dying right there on the spot and that no one could save me.

These are among the worst experinces of my life. Anxiety alone does not make one autistic, but it is a hallmark of autism in girls and woman.

Often for autistic women a long road of misdiagnoses starts with a diagnoses of an anxiety disorder.

For the record, I have no official diagnoses from a psychologist. I’ve only seen a therapist. But I’m a smart person who’s done my research, I could fit under several diagnoses, SPD, ADHD, Generalized Anxiety…. ASD?

Intelligence, I hate talking about this one, because it makes you seem like you are just trying to sound better than other people. I don’t think anyone is valuable based on their capabilities or skills. But intelligence plays into all this.

“Giftedness” is another term I hate, but its the one we have. Its a term for people with high IQs, which granted, is a hard thing to measure and controversial way of measuring intelligence. Giftedness is another “diagnosis” that comes with its own flurry of traits. I have zero doubts that all three of us, myself, my son, and my husband, fall into this category. As do many in our immediate and extended families. In my mother’s family, its probably just about everybody. I don’t talk about it much becuase there is no point in talking about it.

Giftedness tends to come with heightened sensory awareness, sensitivity to justice issues, an ease of being able to learn new things, an ability to focus deeply on an area of interest, high levels of creativity, independent thinking, and in the case of a coexisting diagnosis, the ability to create coping mechanisms.

I remember the day I brought up ADHD with my therapist and she said, “I can see you do sometimes struggle to listen carefully to what people are saying, but you are smart and are able to make up for those challenges in other ways.”

I had never heard something so profound about my life before. Looking back on my childhood that could sum up just about everything. Some things, such as language, logic, and the natural sciences, came extremely easily to me. Other things; math, social skills, coordination, and paying attention, were extremely difficult, but I found ways on my own to scrape by.

I could pass classes with no understanding of the material becuase I knew the best ways to game the system, I also knew I wouldn’t actually ever need that skill, so why bother.

Other classes I had mastered before I walked in the door.

At the time I saw myself as average, becuase it all averaged it out. But when I got to college I excelled. It came as a slap in the face when I realized I was actually pretty smart, but no one had noticed or told me. Or if they had told me I wrote it off as something all kids were told.

Last week when my Mom told me I was smart, I believed her. Like everything else, I had to learn it for myself before I could believe someone else.

People who are gifted, autistic, and female often do not look a typical autistic person. There are autistic stereotypes and we don’t fall into those. You have to look closely to see us “stimming”, which I’ve now noticed I do almost constantly with my teeth. Its hard for me to sit completely still, sometimes painfully hard, my body needs to move, pretty much constantly. Its not as obvious as hand-flapping, but its always there.

Growing up I was called wiggly more times than I care to remember. That was the one way I was constantly compared to my cousin who was diagnosed with aspergers. We were both wiggly. They put us in the same bed on vacations so we could wiggle and kick each other all night and our younger sisters would be undisturbed.

I feel like this is getting long. I could go on. I’ve been thinking about this for months and months and watching myself, looking back on my day and the places that were hard and the way I reacted to things, noticing, taking notes, and most days I come to the conclusion that yes I do fit on the spectrum. But I have fears and reservations about coming out and saying it. The biggest being that I’m worried others will look at me and call me “too able.”

I’m verbal, in fact I consider language one of my strengths. I’m often self-employed (which is actually extremely common among autistic woman). I don’t have a lot of the visible struggles that so many autistic people do. This is the trouble with autism being a spectrum, and with that spectrum being wider than ever before. With each new DSM more people are included.

I’m worried because everyone diagnosed in my extended family is male. I’m worried my own family will dismiss me or worse.

But its time I wrote this becuase people are wondering why I post about autism on facebook so much. So here it is, am I autistic? Its complicated, but probably.

The Time I Thought I Killed My Best Friend

I used to be a total stoner.

It was a different time in my life, but not all that long ago. I would ingest cannabis in some form or another pretty much everyday. One of my favorite ways to use weed was my really cool vaporizer. After you used this device you were left with the brown withered remains of your flower called ABV or “Already Been Vaped.”

The ABV still has a lot of good THC in it, so I saved mine for several months in a small jar until I had enough to make some potent weed butter. Butter and ABV sat in a slow cooker in my laundry room all day and my whole house reeked of burnt weed.

The next day when the butter had been cooled and the weed strained out, I made some brownies. They were delicious and strong. You only needed to eat a little at a time so they lasted for weeks in a plastic box above the fridge that said in bold red letters “WARNING ADULTS ONLY.”

One evening I was sitting on the couch watching TV and enjoying one of my brownies, when I needed to pee. I was high, so when I went to the bathroom I absentmindedly left the rest of my brownie on the arm of the couch. It was on a plate, I’m not an animal.

After a quick pee I came back to the couch and stared at the plate, which was now empty, for a long time.

“Wasn’t there half a brownie there?” I thought. “Where the fuck did it go? I swear I didn’t finish it.”

Then I looked around the room at my five dogs. “It wasn’t one of you, was it? You would not actually eat chocolate with weed in it? Right?” They didn’t say anything.

Shit.

The 5 suspects (plus my totally adorable child).



I quickly googled “How much chocolate would make an 18lb dog sick” becuase my smallest dog was about 18 pounds. It seemed like it wasn’t enough chocolate to cause any serious problems. Even if my smallest dog ate the brownie the worst that could happen was some puking and diarrhea. Phew.

Next I googled “How much cannabis would make an 18lb dog sick?” Not so much info there. But it didn’t seem like anything really bad could happen with such a small amount.


I decided the best course of action was to keep watching TV and keep an eye on the dogs and see if anyone got sick. About 30 minutes later Josie, my smallest dog, started slowly tipping over as she sat on the couch. She had been sitting straight up and slowly, like ice cream, melted right into the couch.

It takes several hours for a dog to get sick from chocolate. My dog was high as fuck.

A recent selfie with Josie, my BFF.



I felt like total shit. I kept crying and saying “I double poisoned my dog!” as Josie would go through periods of trembling and then try to walk around and stumble. I was only partly convinced from the research that she would be fine in a few hours.

The problem is that edibles stay in your bloodstream for a while and there is little that can be done to speed up the process of being high, you just have to wait it out.

I brought her up on the couch next to me where I could hold her and keep her safe from falling, while she was still uncoordinated from being high. I spent the rest of the evening being high with my dog feeling terrified I had accidentally killed her, even though google said she would be fine. I kept watching her close for signs of danger and none ever appeared. Eventually we went to bed. Josie sleeping with me like always.

Josie in her favorite spot, under my blankets.

Josie has started sleeping with me the very first night we brought her home. She was the first dog my husband and I adopted after getting married. Ace was actually the one who pushed us to get a dog. He really couldn’t stand the idea of living without one. I was perfectly happy with our two cats. I was in school, and did not have the time to walk a dog several times a day.

Not long after Ace had moved in with me a doggy daycare opened near our home, and I became a lot more open to the idea of having a dog. A dog could go to there the three days I was at school all day and I wouldn’t’ have to leave her alone in our little townhouse.

I decided to start searching for a dog in early 2008, in hopes of having a puppy by Valentines day. Ace was set on having corgi named Josiah, after his college best friend. I thought that was a terrible name  for a dog (sorry Josiah) and asked what the female alternative would be, “Josie of course” he responded. I felt a lot better about that idea. I just couldn’t picture myself yelling “Josiah!” to call my dog. That is not a dog name.

One day while I was in class, instead of paying attention, I decided to browse petfinder and see if there were any adoptable corgis. Astoundingly I found a dog listed a chihuahua corgi mix named Josie. She was 6 months old and was expected to stay small, perfect for our small house. I called up the rescue and made an appointment to come see her right away.

The foster home was in the city, not too far from my sisters apartment, so I used that as an excuse to keep Ace from knowing why I was really driving into Chicago that afternoon, to visit Josie.

The foster home was dark inside. The lights weren’t turned on despite the fact that it was a cloudy day and little light was coming in the windows. It was sparsely furnished and you could tell lots of dogs lived there, by the baby gates, dog crates, dog hair on the floor, and of course, the barking. The foster mom, Sam, greeted my sister, also named Sam, and me at the door and invited us into a front room with no chairs while she went to get Josie. I waited anxiously in this lady’s house while dogs barked from the basement.

When she brought in the small fluffy pup, I couldn’t help but be wooed by her big brown eyes and curly yellow tail. I sat on the floor cross legged and Josie immediately came over and sat right in my lap. I don’t remember anything else after that except loving this dog, who was clearly not a corgi, to death. I didn’t want to leave her behind in that loud dirty house, but the rescue group had a policy of waiting at least 24 hours after you applied before handing over the animal.

I went home totally in love with that puppy. I wanted her. I couldn’t contain how excited I was all week and by Sunday morning Ace correctly guessed what I was scheming, “Oh my gosh we are getting a puppy aren’t we?” “Yes! Today!” I replied, “Let’s go!”

The two of us drove the long drive from the far suburbs to the city, back to the small dirty house were Josie was temporarily living. That house was a big upgrade from the crowded kill shelter in Kentucky where she had been dropped “For chewing furniture and peeing in the house.” Clearly her former family had no idea what a puppy was like. They will never know what they gave up.

When I met Josie again a few days after the first meeting it was even better. Now she was mine, well ours, and this time I wouldn’t have to leave her. We had picked up a little green collar and leash on the way to the city, and on the way home we took her on a crazy shopping spree at Petco. We bought her everything a dog could possibly need including a crate, a bed, toys, food, treats, dishes, and even steps so she could get up on our tall bed easily. She never used the steps. Turns out Josie is a talented jumper.

The first picture we took of Josie! This is the night we brought her home, with our good friend Kyle. (Look at that engagement photo of Ace and I in our innocent youth, just look at it).

 

 



That night she snuggled up in the crook of my knees in our big bed, and she’s slept there nearly every night since, for ten full years now. I had been on a mission to find a dog for Ace, but it turned out I got a dog for me. She immediately bonded to me when we first met and we’ve had something really special ever since. I didn’t know how much I needed Josie until I found her.

Recently, my four year old nephew said “Alli, I want Josie to come outside with me, but she only follows you!” and he’s right, she does only follow me. Her and I are usually found together wherever we are in the house.

There is a joke among my friends that you can know where I am by looking for Josie. She waits outside the bathroom door, outside my bedroom door, she follows me everywhere I let her, just short of getting in the shower. She prefers to stay dry and I let her lay on a towel just outside the tub. 

My first selfie with Josie! Taken feb 4th, 2008! We’re both just young pups



In addition to being incredibly sweet and loyal, Josie is very smart. She can learn tricks fast. I once taught her to “play” the piano in under an hour. Recently I taught her to roll over (you can in fact teach an old dog new tricks). Josie used to do agility and she loved it. We were a great team, and she excelled at it until we moved to Portland and stopped training. She has been the easiest of the six dogs we’ve had in the past ten years to train and she’s even helped trained all the new dogs. My sister jokes Josie is her niece, because my relationship with Josie is much more like that with another person than with a dog. “Josie is people” is often heard around our house.

She’s the pet we’ve had the longest and I know it’s cliche as fuck, but she’s my best friend. Every girl needs a dog, and I have Josie.

That night when I left my brownie on the couch I was terrified that I had fucked up so bad that I had killed my best friend and the best dog a girl could ever want. I had a hard time sleeping because I was so worried about her. She really has a piece of my heart. 

The day after the brownie incident Josie woke up and was back to her normal self, besides having diarrhea. I have never been so relieved, except maybe when I heard Mark’s first cries after he was born, but that’s another story. Josie has had a few brushes with death, but that brownie is the only one that was squarely my fault. I was the one who fucked up, and I don’t think I’ll ever forgive myself.

All of the Feels

It always happens that right after I tell my therapist how great I’m doing I have a shit storm of a week. This time I felt so confident in how life was going I didn’t even schedule another appointment!

My life is a roller coaster and this week has been riding though loops. I feel both amazing and terrible all at once. I’m feeling joyous, excited, motivated, energized, while also feeling terrified, shameful, sad, hurt, and anxious. I have all my plans and all my doubts all wrapped up into one little me.

I know a big part of it was going on thyroid medication.

I’ve spent the last two years basically feeling like crap all the time. Very low energy, slow metabolism, anxiety, depression, nonspecific pain, and just feeling down for no apparent reason. A few months ago my new doctor finally helped me find an explanation, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, a not uncommon disease, and especially not surprising considering my family history of autoimmune disease. I knew someday one of them would catch me. My thyroid function isn’t actually all that terrible (according to the labs), but being the sensitive person I am, just it being a little off has affected me in big ways. So my doctor put me on a very low dose of synthetic thyroid hormone.

After a few weeks of being on my new daily pill I started feeling amazing! I was calm and comfortable in my own skin. I was motivated and energized. I felt like a new me! But a few weeks later, as the hormone built up in my body, it was too much. I started having anxiety again, but it felt different, it was more like hyper active anxiety instead of depressive anxiety. For several nights I did not sleep well and the days in between were the worst, tired but unable to rest and full of anxious energy. I emailed my doctor and after talking to me she decided to discontinue the meds. I’ve only been off a few days and it takes time for the hormone level to come down, so hopefully in a few more days I’ll start to feel more “normal” again. Whatever that means. Then we will be starting a small dose of “natural” pig thyroid to see how I do on that.

At the same time as all this I’m changing my diet. I’m totally gluten-free at this point and working toward grain free, for the month of January I’m going to attempt to follow the autoimmune protocol. If nothing else I know that will help my blood sugar, gut issues, and overall health. Eating more veggies and less sugar is never a bad thing!

I don’t know what it is about telling my therapist that life is great that always proceeds a rough week. Maybe thats the cycle of life, life is always going to have ups and downs so inevitably a period of a few good weeks will be followed by lower or more difficult period.

I do feel like I need to go in less often regardless. I’ve learned so many tools and I’ve used them well this week. I know the things that help me and ground me. I’ve been doing yoga, skateboarding, reading, writing, breathing, and it helps! Talking to Ace has been really important as well, sometimes I just need to get my thoughts and feelings out into the world and he’s been a fantastic listening ear this past week (not to mention all the great sex).

I don’t feel like I’m done with therapy, its been huge in my personal growth and I never want to stop growing, but its nice to look at my life and see that some of these things are becoming habits. I can see better when I’m anxious and what I need to do to help myself though it. I feel more confident in my own skin and like I’m more often doing the best I can with what I have. Looking at my life and seeing growth is an important step sometimes and right now I’m taking a little breather from therapy and focusing on my physical health.

“I’m Going to be a Writer!”

The past few months have been an exercise in patience as I wait for a potential space for Stronger Skatepark to be ready for occupancy. As of this writing there is no date in sight, as the owners of the space are slowly jumping though legal hoops before the city will grant them the permits to begin construction on the ADA bathrooms they need to be approved for occupancy. Long story short, this space will not be available for several months.

In the meantime I found another potential home for the park in Milwakie. It is much closer to my home and needs far less work before we can move in. This space has kept me up at night again, fully renewing my passion for this project. I can’t sleep becuase I’m designing ramps in my head, thinking of the best way to make a 7500 square foot space both friendly to beginners while being big enough and fast enough to keep veterans like myself entertained during the long winter months.

Its been a full two and half years since I started working on Stronger. Its been over a year since I started looking for buildings. I honestly thought that getting funding would be the hardest part, but it hasn’t been. Finding a building has been exponentially more difficult. Strict occupancy rules and high fees in Portland have pushed me to neighboring cities, where empty large spaces are in short supply.

I wax and wane in my involvement in my own social media for the project, feeling like a failure as I have nothing to post. I’m still here working away at this, but it just hasn’t materialized yet. Having the support of my ramp designer and builder has been absolutely key to my not giving up. As I apologize for dragging him to yet another space, and asking him so many of the same questions again, “Would this space work?”, “Can we fit a mini ramp in here?”, “Would we need to put in our own flooring?” he reassures me, “Its fine, I don’t mind at all!” and “I think you are doing this the right way, taking your time to find the right space.”

It doesn’t feel right to me, I want results, I want a tangible skatepark. The one that fills the gap Portland still has; something larger than commonwealth, friendly to beginners, clean, safe, and close to town, a place to hold contests and other community building events, a place where the skate community can gather under one roof, a place that can bring us together. “Together we are Stronger” thats the whole idea. This has been needed in Portland since before I lived here, since Department of Skateboarding closed its doors in 2010.

Along with the frustration of the slowness of my vision to materialize is my frustration that I don’t have a career to be working at while I’m waiting. In the past I’ve been a children’s pastor, a nanny, I’ve worked in my families restaurant, I worked in a skatepark as a teen, I’ve worked with animals in several capacities, and currently I’m hustling in that new gig economy, primarily delivering food with Caviar.

To be honest, I don’t hate it, I actually like it. I spend hours driving while listening to podcasts and music. I’m introverted and often feel refreshed after a shift, spending five or more hours almost totally alone, with only a few short words to restaurant employees and customers. I’ve learned that usually customers don’t want to talk to me, and that is just fine. But its not paying the bills, the hours are limited, and I’m working almost exclusively when my child is not in school, evenings and weekends.

While driving I often find my mind wandering away from whatever podcast is playing and I start thinking. I can spend a lot of time thinking, planning, finding problems with my plans and ideas and refining them and suddenly realize I need to start my podcast over completely. Gui Raz has been droning on in the background for thirty minutes about art art and I didn’t catch a damn thing, I’ve been exploring every career possibility in my head.

After a lot of thinking and probably not enough research I’ve decided to try and develop my writing skills and look for some freelance writing jobs. Its a skill I already have, and one I feel very comfortable in. One of my earliest jobs was writing for a website, with weekly live call-ins to an internet radio show. I was 13 and it was 1999. Each week I would write about something related to skateboarding, usually a review of a product sent to me, or an overview of an event happening at my local skatepark. I would report on demos coming to town, contest results, new skateparks opening, and I got paid in lots and lots of free stuff. I loved it.

In high school, I was consistently praised for “my natural wiring voice” and in college I continued to excel at writing, without trying all that hard. Honestly, I’m excited about taking some time to refine my writing skills further. I’m hoping that I can attempt to develop these skills and make some money along the way and maybe some day have a real career I can lean on when my crazy passions aren’t panning out as hoped.

Again, long story short, if anyone knows any writing gigs that would fit my interests and passions (skateboarding, alternative education, spirituality, personal growth, small business) please send them my way, or throw my name out there. I’d appreciate it. I’m officially throwing my name out there!

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I wear glasses now, so you know I fit that writer stereotype. 

Safe in this World

There is a little girl, she’s scared, angry, alone.

She’s angry at the world, the world that took away her father. The world that says she needs to be different, needs to be more “like a girl”, needs to like pink, and dresses, and dolls.

She’s drawn to blue, and red, and sports and dinosaurs. She likes cars, and motorcycles, and construction equipment. Tonka trucks and tricycles make the best toys.

More than anything else, she is lost and alone, with feelings bigger than she thought were possible. Feelings that are too big for her and for anyone else. Feelings that make her family upset, feelings she must learn to control and hide, now.

There is no where safe in this world.

As she grows she becomes better at pretending everything is ok, while feelings of rage and despair bubble just out of view. Feelings that are still too big for her small body and worried soul. There is nowhere safe to take these feelings, so she continues to control them the best she can.

There are some places that help her feel right, but these things aren’t for girls. Sports. Big strong movements like pedaling a bicycle, throwing a ball with all her strength, kicking a bag or a board, pushing a skateboard. These things calm the storm that is always hiding just out of view, at least for a few sweet moments.

The girl is the only one at the school father’s day event attending with an uncle. The only one at the childhood support group with a dead parent. The only kid pulled from class to see a consoler.

She doesn’t care about dresses, or make up, or hair, or dolls. But she does start to care about boys. The boys she finds special don’t find her special back. They always prefer the girls with the cool clothes and the done up hair and make up and skirts. So she keeps doing the things that bring fleeting peace, until there is only one thing that matters. Skateboarding. It is all consuming. Nothing else matters. Not school, not family, not even kicking things, only skateboarding.

The girl starts to find people she can trust in this new world, but the boys she likes, still don’t like her back.

She finds a family that treats her as their own, a man she trusts like a father. Until one night, when he treats her like an object. She is frozen in fear as his hands move up her legs.

Again she is reminded, there is no one and no where safe in this world.

Years later, she has found another family that again treats her like she is a loved member of their own family, until she starts thinking too much, too differently. Once the difference is too much, it cannot be overcome. She is no longer worthy, becuase of the way that she is, the way she acts, the way she thinks. What was once acceptable is no longer.

Again she is reminded there is no one and no where safe in this world.

I want to hug that girl. I want to tell her, there are safe people, and you’ve already found one. He’s still learning how to be good at it, but he will learn, and he will be there. He can handle all of you, even the dark parts, even the sad parts, even the broken parts. He will be there by your side while you dig into the feelings left buried for all those, he’ll love you as the skeletons come out of the closet. He’ll help you make the family you’ve so often hoped for. The one that can handle and love you exactly as you are.

You, will get through this. There are safe people in this world. You will find them.

The Treehouse

The treehouse was at first an idea preposed by a friend of my son’s. One of several boys who spent many days of summer with me. They started building it on our anniversary. By building I mean they put a bunch of random pieces of wood up on our mulberry tree. I told them upfront that we were having a vow renewal under the tree that evening, and I would be taking down the wood and they would need to rebuild their fort at a later date. They were agreeable to that. Yet, in the days after they didn’t get back to the idea idea and the tree sat empty.

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July 21, 2017

But Mark has not let go of this idea for a tree house. He’s been talking about it regularly and has created plans. He told me very clearly that this was a project only for kids to work on. “No one who is 15 or older is allowed to help!”

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Mark’s tree house plans. At the top is a picture of a hammer, a nail with 14 next to it to indicate he will need 14 nails, a tool box and a diagram showing where the major elements will go. 

Recently Mark (nearly 7) and Vincent (8) began work on the treehouse again with occasional help from Isaac (4).

Mark has his own set of real tools he is allowed to use whenever he wants, he can use my tools with explicit permission and supervision. He’s used his own tools enough I don’t feel the need to closely supervise him. I trust he will be mostly safe. We’ve had a lot of lessons, including a time he cut himself with his own saw and learned why we are careful with the saw.

I respected his request for no adult help as long as he followed a few rules.

  1. Be smart with your tools, especially the saw.
  2. Don’t leave tools or nails or screws laying on the ground.
  3. I’m allowed to veto any design that I believe is unsafe for people or the tree.

Mark agreed to these terms and set to work. Its been very slow going, but he and his cousin are very persistent. A six and an eight year old attempting to put screws and nails though solid wood into other prices of sold wood with only a screwdriver and a small hammer is a slow process. They have sawed a few of the steps for the ladder and halfway attached one.

 

This is self directed education in action. These kids had no adult say to them “Hey how about you go build a tree house!” This was entirely their idea, their plan and their effort. How sweet will finishing that tree house be when they know they did it with own hands? What might they learn if they don’t finish? What will they learn if they do eventually ask for adult help?

All of these possibilities are fantastic life lessons. Right now I’m glad they are becoming more confident using tools, learning what works and what doesn’t work. I see them experimenting with how to set up the wood to saw it, how to get a screw started though a peice of wood. I see them working together (one day even with a four year old helper.) one person holding the first run of the ladder while another attempts to drive a nail in. They have already spent at least 8 solid hours in the yard over the course of three days working on this, retiring to the swimming pool when the afternoons get unbearably hot. But the next opportunity they are out there again working hard.

Give kids the tools they need and the freedom to use them and they will do great things all on their own.