Saturday, December 6, 2014

My thoughts on the divinity of gender roles

I love being a woman, and I love the community of women in my life. I think there is something special about being a woman. However, I'm not sure, but I would bet that much of the differences between the genders is due solely to socialization.  I must say that I do not believe that there are gender roles that God expects me to fill because I am a woman.

I believe that there is no slippery slope of allowing women to be ambitious and men to be nurturing without censure. I see no downside to allowing people the freedom to decide for themselves what is the right path, what brings them closer to a place of spirituality. The world is a changing place and new opportunities are creating new ways for us to shape our lives.  There is no right way to be  a parent or a provider.

The loving Heavenly Parents I believe in want all of their children to be treated equally, to have access to opportunities and the ability to make choices so that they may live fulfilling and happy lives. I believe that they care more about our treatment of their children (ourselves included, we have to be kinder to ourselves) and that their needs are met, then they do who is filling which role to meet them.

I find the gender issues in our culture to be harmful and believe they need to change. I understand that change is scary and fear is powerful. But I remind myself constantly that He said "Do not fear for I am with you."


Wednesday, December 3, 2014

End of the Semester thoughts

Going to grad school, being exhausted, and overwhelmed, having very limited time to spend with my husband and two small children, literally being unable to do much in the way of cooking, cleaning, etc because I just didn’t have the time, doubting myself every minute, pushing myself beyond sane limits…   was the best thing to happen to my marriage since infertility.

Does that sound awful?? Well, it's true!

And grad school almost didn’t happen. I was really scared going into this process. I was afraid grad school would tear us apart. I think it's one of those things that either makes or breaks you. My husband had never been the kind to step in and pick up slack, but I think that he never REALLY needed to before. (I'm too damn capable!) I also think that seeing me trying so hard and really needing his help opened up some new piece of him. I really felt like it could seriously damage our marriage.. but in the end I decided that it was too important for that to stop me

Infertility meant that I was married for 4 years instead of 1 before I became a mom, I got to mature more as a person and learn how to be a wife before I had to learn how to be a mother... and grad school so far has meant that we're becoming to be a team, not competing factions for limited resources. It's an amazing paradigm shift. I finally feel like an equal partner whose goals and aspirations are equally important.. I know I have support, and that I can trust my husband to do the 'mom' jobs.. he's damn capable too.

It's amazing what supportive equality can do for your sex life. ;)

Friday, September 5, 2014

What should I do when I grow up... or how can we help each other.

Today's post is basically me working out some thoughts... re: what I'm going to do when I grow up. It is also influenced by a surprisingly strong head cold and how crappy it is to be sick when you are the mom.



So, for my grad program, as previously mentioned, I am supposed to narrow in on what is 'my issue'. What is it that I am so passionate about that I want to get out into the world and try and change things.

I wrote at the end of the last post that I've been thinking women and education, maybe moms going back to school after kids, maybe mentoring young women so they take school more seriously and don't find themselves in the same place as the moms going back to school...  and while I do absolutely care about that, I'm worried that it might be that my focus is on that right now because I am going back to school right now.

And really, what gets me so excited about that has been finding and building communities of support.  Locating the people who need help, and finding ways we can help each other.  

I think my real issue is the lack of support and community for women. Yes, moms for sure, but I definitely want to include all women.  We all need each other. We've made great strides in the last 100 years benefiting women, but we've also lost that close support system of a big multi-generational family and the neighborhood they lived in for those generations.

I obviously don't want to go back to the men out in the fields, and the women at home washing clothes together.  It's a brave new world, and there are amazing possibilities ahead of us. But we still have a need for the strength that comes with that community.

The last two weeks have been some of the hardest for both myself and my sister.  I started grad school, she had a new baby.  She lives 5 hours away, and there was really nothing we could do for each other but listen. We both have a mountain of things on our plates, but if we could have put it all together, I believe we would have found that the help we could have offered each other would have added up to much more than our troubles combined.

I know so many of us are struggling. If you aren't right now, I'm sure you have in the past. But really, I bet in some way you ARE struggling.  I mean, life itself a struggle! It's all about growing and reaching and striving, and that shit is hard!  And just because it's a part of life, that doesn't mean we shouldn't find a way to help each other.  (*gets all philosophical here.. sorry)... Maybe that is part of why life is a struggle.. so we can realize that we need each other, and build the connections to make it through. I don't know if there is a why, but I do know that there is a need.

So, this is what I am passionate about. But is that something I can work on?  Is this a need I can work to address? And do I even really know what I am talking about? *IS* this a real need, or am I making a big deal out of nothing? Is this just a fact of life everyone figures out a way to deal with? And if it is a real need... what can I do about it? And more practically, as a person racking up student loans.. is this something I could get a job working on?




Currently contemplating a nonprofit that provides postpartum doula type services to moms so they can finally 'call in sick'.  Can't imagine why this specific need is at the forefront of my thoughts... Must go now, need to blow my nose, fix the kids a snack, refill my humidifier and find some slightly educational children's programming on the TV to ease the guilt of crawling back in bed.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Way too much stuff for one week... When overwhelm hits SLC.

I started grad school this week.  I've been feeling more and more anxious the last few weeks, and it all kind of culminated in a total breakdown today in a corner of the downtown city library.  Panic attack complete with ugly cry bawling, hoping the people studying nearby didn't see.  I am normally not an anxious person, I would usually leave that classification for the hubby.  The man worries about everything, it's honestly part of his plan for life. But over the summer there has been a steady build up in my head.  Wondering what on earth I am doing, and why I thought I could do it.  The last couple of weeks I've found myself in a fog, desperately trying to clear out space to think.

My first class was Monday.  My Tuesday class is the intro class with everyone else starting this semester. My Monday class had three other students, all of whom will graduate at the end of next semester.  The class is a subject I'm very interested in, but feel completely unprepared to tackle yet.  I emailed my director, and she replied that she is confident I can handle it.  Her confidence does not increase my own.. but I guess I'm staying in the class.  I finished my first day as a grad student feeling like a ton of bricks had been dropped on me from above.

Tuesday's intro class was less intimidating at the onset. We did a round of introductions, and while there were a lot of people who have experience in the nonprofit world, and out in the world in general, I didn't feel completely out of place.  We eventually broke into groups and mine discussed the factors affecting Utah, those that are increasing and decreasing in their influence and what the future may hold.  I felt like I could hold my own there and enjoyed interacting with the group.  And then, right before class ended the teacher, our program director, went over some of the syllabus and what we should be expecting in the next couple of weeks.  The major point being that in the next week or two we should all really define "our issue".  We are all there because we care about something and want to make a difference.  We need to really define what that is so that we can focus on it, not only in this class, but in all the classes we will have in the program.

Holy crap balls did this stress me out.  This whole journey I've been on for years has basically been to figure out what I should do with my life. And suddenly I'm supposed to have an answer in two weeks. Another night of uneasy overwhelm with hints of possibilities would follow.

I woke up Wednesday focused on the meeting I had that morning with the executive director of a local nonprofit who was looking for a part time office staff. I'd been recommended by an amazing friend, and the position seemed perfect. Low level of challenge skill wise, and not too highly paying, but rich in opportunity to learn and network.  It was a great meeting, and we both seemed pretty happy with the possible arrangement.  I arrived home, emailed over the requested resume, and in two hours had a job offer in my inbox.  I pulled up my calendar to get an idea of when I could tell them I would be available to work.. and ended up sitting there until after midnight.  Literally, the girls played games while I work, and I ordered dinner delivered.  I got out of the chair to answer the door for the delivery person, but I think that's about it.

I admit, I like to over plan. I love spreadsheets and itineraries and to do lists.  They give me a sense of control in this chaotic life. It usually make me feel better to have a plan to implement.  Whether it all goes that way in the end is irrelevant, I have a basic structure to go off of.  Well, not that day.  I was somehow working myself into a panic attack.  Trying to visualize this new life of grad school and a job, while still being a mother, a wife, (and yes, a person!) was turning out to be a very complicated puzzle.  The longer I worked at it, the later it got, the more tired I became and the more the idea of this hugely booked up life began to completely freak me out.

I tried to be reasonable, and talk myself down.  I emailed the director and let her know that I'd only be able to commit to 15 hours a week, hoping that when she'd said that she wanted someone from 15-20 hours, that meant she'd be ok with any number along that spectrum.  Exhausted and slightly half crazed, I went to bed sometime after 1am.

My alarm went off at 7am, and a complete zombie managed to drag herself out of bed, dress and feed two girls, gather their school supplies and drop them off at their schools.  I returned home to sink deeper into anxiety and the sense that life was just too hard to handle.  Hours later I managed to get myself out into the sunshine for some exercise, nutrition and to read some of the ton of pages I was assigned in my two classes.  It definitely helped.  And I managed to carry on somewhat normally for a while.

Saturday I realized that although I had not planned to do any school related work that day, (in laws were visiting), that I would be completely crazy not to try and spend at least sometime getting more of a handle on things. If only to try and reduce the size of the ever present anxiety cloud following me around! So, after some detours and distractions I finally found myself sitting at a table on the 4th floor of the downtown city library.  I had all my books, my computer, notebooks and pens and hand outs all spread before me, ready for me to really crack down and get some work done.  I pulled out one assignment, and as I looked it over my head began to hurt, my heart began to race and all of a sudden I couldn't breathe.  I had no idea what to do. I couldn't come up with what the first step would be, and could see no way I would be able to complete this assignment.  I closed my eyes, took deep breaths, and put the assignment away.  I reached for another one, and started going through a list of questions and trying to fill out a form.  Again, the headache amped up, the heart starting going crazy and I could no longer breathe.  I sat there for a while taking in my pile of school supplies, and realizing I had no idea what to do... and my ever present anxiety cloud became a full fledged storm that completely rolled over me.  I sat there shaking, completely lost.  I opened Facebook on my computer and posted a short paragraph in a private group I belong to.

"I can't do this. I can't go to graduate school. Whenever I try to work on things for class my head starts to pound and my heart races and I can't breathe. I can't do this. This was my dream and I can't do it. I thought I was spunky and special and could change the world. But I was wrong."

After putting my confession out into the world I started to cry.  Just small sniffles at first, then racking sobs.  I was sitting alone in a library bawling my heart out, hoping that no one around me would notice.
A combination of:
 1. the responses online of kind, wise, positive friends with more confidence in my abilities than I had, combating my insistence that they did not realize how incompetent and unprepared I was
2. packing up my thing and making it to the bathroom to calm down and clean up, and
3. an amazing person I'd never met in person before, who had the experience and kindness I needed, coming to share a treat and listen to me...
These all led to led to an emotionally exhausted and fragile but stable person who could eventually leave the library to meet her in laws for dinner.

I'm home now. The day is over. I survived. I feel drained, but, thankfully, some of the dread, anxiety and overwhelm came out with all the snot and tears.  And in the end I found that I had made one bit of real progress in my huge school to do list after all.  I was able to start defining what my cause is. The amazing people who stepped up to hear and support me in my crisis helped me to remember what it is I really am passionate about.  Community.  I picked this program, and it picked me, because of the work I have done and want to do in creating and strengthening community.

In looking at what I've been doing in my life, it's the women's education group that most excites me. I created the MofEd group because I wanted something like it and couldn't find one. And I love it. It's been such an asset, academically and emotionally, for not only myself. I believe it really filled a need. It grew so quickly, and there's so much love and support there. And it's because it's filled with amazing women who want to support each other. I firmly believe that women need each other, we are stronger together.

And so right now I believe what I want is to work with women and education. I love the idea of being involved in mentoring and providing communities of support and resources. I have a special place in my heart for women going back to school after a long absence (can't imagine why) and hope to also work with the youth to encourage girls to really investigate their options, to consider their futures from many angles and to take college more seriously. Did you know Utah has the lowest national average of women who graduate from college??

And now, with tired eyes, and a less heavy heart.. while still slightly unstable and overwhelmed, I find myself hopeful.. and am off to get some much need sleep.  Because tomorrow is a new day, and I have things to do.  Save the world, change the culture, ya know.. the norm.



Sunday, June 29, 2014

a letter to my mom

Sent my mother a letter today.. I'm tired of hiding such a big part of my life and who I am from her... I hope she can understand..

Mom,
I love you. I want to share something really important with you and I'm not sure how to say it.  I think it will hurt you and that's not something I want.  The crazy thing is, from my point of view, it's a good thing. I am happy. I feel lighter than I have in years. I have searched my soul and pondered all these things in my heart and have come to a place of peace. I know you have noticed it too, because you have told me how happy and fulfilled I seem. I feel like I am finally living true to what my conscience dictates and what the spirit guides. And yet, the spirit has directed my path away from the church. I know this will pain you, but I do not believe the LDS church is the right place for me. I tried to make it work, but have found too much I can't believe in and too much that is harmful to my spirit, and I just can't belong there at this time.

The last couple of years (well, really, my whole life, but especially the last couple of years) I have been on a journey, searching for what I really believe. Searching for truth and divinity and love. I did not come to this decision lightly. I have searched, pondered and prayed. I have wrestled with my demons and agonized over the right thing to do for myself and my family. And I will continue to do so. I believe in spirituality. I believe in loving one another and taking care of the least among us. I truly believe that a loving Heavenly Father cares more about my actions in those regards than in whether or not I belong to the right church.

I hope you will be able to see that I am still me. It's taken me a long time to realize that it's not only okay for me to make this decision, it's my obligation to myself, my girls and those around me to be true to myself and to follow the promptings I have felt.

I don't want to talk specifics about doctrine or debate issues of the gospel.  I'm not telling you this to start any fights or worry you.  I just didn't want to hide this huge aspect of my life from you. I love you very much, and want you to know what's going on with me. Again, I am happy, and feel good about where I am and how my life is going. Who knows what the future holds, as I said, my search for meaning and what is right will continue. But for now, this is my path. Thank you for loving me. I know that this letter won't change that, and that is an amazing gift.
Love always,
Danielle

Friday, June 13, 2014

shoe against the window

I'm having one of those, middle of the night, existential crisis moments.. the kind that, in my single college days, would have had me racing to the arms of the nice boy who loved me, who I did not love.. I'd throw a shoe at his window and he would come out on his porch, regardless of the hour. He would tell me all I need to hear, kiss me if I wanted, and I would use him to try to patch the hole in my soul, like trying to dam a river with duct tape.. and while I hated myself for using him, it felt like a necessary act of self-preservation, what else was I to do.
Now what do I do... The boy upstairs tonight would not understand, and would not tell me what I need to hear.. though he *would* kiss me if I wanted. I embody emotion, and I married logic.. can logic and emotion really be true companions? I tell myself we are the perfect compliment to each other.. but can that be true if we never understand each other? I've been working to patch that hole myself for years.. and while it's getting smaller, I still keep leaking out from time to time.. I still keep having to shove myself back together... and when that happens, and it's 1am, and the world is quiet and the words in my head are so loud... what do I do?
Maybe I should start drinking after all.

Monday, June 9, 2014

and so it begins..

Got an email today.  I've been accepted to a graduate program.  Just like that, and my life starts a new chapter.  Why does bad news feel like something you knew was bound to happen and good news feels surreal?  Must go pinch myself a couple times, and starting planning for fall. :)