Saturday, September 17, 2011

What's the 'criterior' for getting through life's vicissitudes?

I’m working really hard to just stay behind on my homework. Blogging is getting the short shrift. So to make a long story short, I didn’t submit my paperwork properly for BYU’s accounting program and didn’t realize it until it was too late. They said I could take the senior classes this year instead but there would be no guarantee of getting into the junior core next year. And I would have to take Acc 301 (financial and managerial which I already took at UVU and got As in) and get nothing lower than an A-.

I said, “What if I get a B+?”

“Then you don’t get in. But UVU would probably accept all those senior classes and you could transfer back.”

That would have meant taking 5 classes this semester. I did that once before so I know the stress would be huge and I’d never see my kids. And I had already booked a flight to Missouri and wasn’t going to be around to straighten it out when someone was available at BYU to help me. I had to decide quickly and I’d like to think there was some divine intervention steering me. I was also going to lose my job if I went the BYU route. I think I kind of need it.

So I’m at UVU taking 12 credit hours: Corporate Finance which I really enjoy. I’m afraid it’s going to get much harder though before we’re through if my friends Jeff H., Mark D. and Shelia C. are correct; Intermediate Accounting—seems to come easy to me compared to normal people. Or maybe it’s because I’ve worked in the lab and have done the homework from financial and managerial many times over in the tutoring process; Marketing—it’s okay but not my favorite thing; and International Business. I like int’l bus. but my professor is from China so he’s hard to understand. He got a master’s degree at Harvard so he puts r’s on the end of words that don’t have them. Some examples of things he says are—“systerm” for system. Ooh, Word doesn’t like my spelling. “Criterior” for criteria, “wire me” for Wyoming, “quoter” for quota, etc. I get a little distracted from the topic at hand, writing down the funny things he says.

I also moved to Orem two days before the semester started (by the way, I don’t recommend this) about 4 blocks from my friend Kathy Benson—but I haven’t even called to tell her because it’s been so crazy busy. I guess I’m not that great of a friend. She’s working on a bachelor’s degree, too so she hasn’t noticed my delinquency. I’ll try to make it up to you when I graduate, Kathy and anyone else I’m neglecting. That would be Victoria, Ben, Ben’s little brother, Jack; Claudya, William; Tad and Aurora; and possibly some of their parents, my sons and daughters-in-law. Sorry, this is as fast as I can run, at the moment.

So life is good. I hesitate to mention anything of a religious or spiritual bent (I’ll leave that to my friend Sariyd.) Let me say that there is real unseen power. It operates in my life, even though I’m one small speck of humanity and this brings me joy. Hardship and pain make their appearance, too but I feel unspeakable gratitude for the good things.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

little lambs; moving

Taking a break from packing, cleaning, organizing, and more packing. We are moving to a house in Orem which will give us more space and a fenced backyard. But I had planned my trips to California and Missouri before I knew I was going to move and now I’m trying to get it all done as fast as possible because school starts for me on Monday and then it’s back to studying.

The kids had their first day of school today at their new schools. They missed the first day. A lady from the office walked us to Sam and Joy’s classrooms. Sam went into his class and I called after him to say I’d pick him up out front at the end of the day. The look on his face clearly said, “I am a lamb and my own mother has just brought me to the slaughter.” The office lady said, “Oh! He looks like he’s going to cry. He can come to the office and sit with me if he needs to any time during the day.” But I knew he wouldn’t need to because he is like me. We only have “pull yourself up by the boot straps” mode and “complete collapse” mode which just means cry your eyes out in private, then rejoin the world when you feel better. Asking for help from someone other than immediate family is tough, even mortifying and I haven’t mastered it yet.

Nathan was adamantly against moving, as any 8th grader would be. But his first day went well; he talked to new people and seems to like it, after all. He wants to go to the private school just down the road—Karl G. Maeser Academy because his friend Alex goes there. I told him if he gets good grades this year, I’ll look into it for next year.

Thanks, Spencer and Michelle, for letting us hang out with you last week and get to know sweet, little Aurora a little bit. Thanks to my other big kids for holding down the fort while I was gone. Melody did a lot but she needed her big brothers, too. I am so, so lucky. And I don’t mean “luck” in a random way. I am lucky that I have been so blessed.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Deserts, Mountains, Pleasanton

Pleasanton—my favorite place; 410 miles of I-80 in the Nevada desert, not so much. The trees in the Sierra Nevadas are beautiful, too. The kids were getting cranky so, to distract them, I asked them to see if they could tell which trees telephone poles are made out of. Joy said, “How can you tell? Do they have telephones on the side of them?” I thought she was joking until I remembered she’s from the cell-phone tower generation.

The drop in elevation out of the Sierras is pretty steep in relatively few miles and this is how the conversation went when we got down on the California side:
Sam: Mom, why is it so quiet all of a sudden?
Me: Maybe your ears are plugged. Swallow.
Sam: What?
Me: (louder) Maybe your ears are plugged. Swallow.
Sam: (very loudly) WHAT?
Me: (muttering under my breath but smiling) I give up. I’m right but he’ll never know it.

For 13 hours, Sam asked every 15 minutes how much longer or how many more miles to Grandpa’s house. Okay, I exaggerate a little. Really, he only asked about 3 times per hour. At one point, I answered, “Well, it’s only been 15 minutes since the last time you asked so the answer isn’t really different.” And he laughed like he was a little embarrassed. But he still couldn’t help but keep asking.

This morning, I jogged around the park on Black Avenue a couple of times, Joy and I collected a few seeds from Gpa’s flower garden and now we’re going to take BART to San Francisco and take the kids sightseeing.

Friday, July 22, 2011

If you've never been deeply hurt by someone else, don't bother reading this

Just some interesting, possibly life-changing stuff from a book I'm reading:

"People who score high on forgiveness as a personality trait are less likely to be depressed, anxious, hostile, narcissistic, or exploitative and are also less likely to become dependent on drugs or nicotine. They are more likely to be empathic. Combat veterans suffering from PTSD experience less depression and fewer symptoms of trauma if they are able to forgive themselves and others. 'High forgivers' (those who score high on forgiveness as a trait) show less reactivity in blood pressure and arterial pressure when asked about conflict with a parent or caregiver. In contrast, those who score low in forgiveness show high reactivity and poor recovery...

"In one study of thirty divorced or permanently separated mothers with young children, those who had forgiven their ex-husbands reported a greater sense of self-acceptance and purpose and lower levels of anxiety and depression. ... One 2001 study found that the impact of forgiveness was truly global: from age 18 onward, the extent to which people reported the tendency to be forgiving strongly buffered them against psychological stress.

"Just deciding to forgive someone doesn't work very well, according to studies. Far more effective is the process of invoking love, compassion, and empathy and practicing forgiveness exercises. ... A one-on-one forgiveness intervention conducted by Robert Enright was highly effective in helping women who had been molested increase their hope and decrease their anxiety and depression. After intervention, emotional health in a group of such women was just as good as or better than that of women who had not been molested. ... Says Robert Enright, "All of the incest survivors asked us, "Are you sure you want me in the study? I will not forgive this person,' and we said, 'Yes, we want you in the study.' Then they said, 'Well, my motivation for being here is to make myself better.'

" ... A forgiveness intervention with men whose partners had decided to have an abortion showed the same decrease in grief, anger, and anxiety." (Why Good Things Happen to Good People, Post & Neimark)

I ran every day this week except yesterday; instead, I swam for 1 1/2 hours. I keep moving the whole time, swimming laps or treading water. This morning I ran a mile at my fastest speed yet, about 5 mph avg. Still not very fast but an improvement. Now I am SO sore! I called my supervisor to come down and let me in the lab instead of climbing the stairs. I've lost 5 lbs this last month. Running has always been the only way for me to lose weight but I've been in denial, thinking I could do it some other way. Interestingly, since starting to feel runner's high, it's no longer drudgery to get on the treadmill.

Melody is in Oregon at her Aunt Nancy's, picking berries with her cousins. I miss her a lot. The kids are back from their dad's early--they just like to be home. My house was spotless the day before they returned. The next day, when I got home from work, a tornado had come through the front room and kitchen. See? It's not just my housekeeping ability--it's mostly kids.

Have a good day!

Friday, July 15, 2011

Runner's high but inundated with pics

I’ve been jogging pretty consistently for almost a month. I haven’t upped my distance much in that time but I’ve shaved about 3 minutes off my mile time. Tonight, I am feeling my first runner’s high. Wow. It’s been years since I’ve felt that. I’d like to become more familiar with it.

I’ve also been out of school for this last month and have been doing major cleaning and decluttering. The kids are wondering who I am and what I’ve done with their real mom who just reads textbooks all the time. Closets, bookshelves, the pantry, file cabinet, the laundry, and dresser drawers have all been shaved down and straightened. I think it’s partly a reflection of healing on my part. I feel true joy and can’t put my finger on exactly why. But I think that means it’s not contingent on anything external so it can’t be easily taken away from me.

I have hundreds of pictures only about half of which are in photo albums. Do you think it’s necessary to keep every one of them? A lot of them are pre-digital and not that great. I’m thinking of winnowing them down and keeping the best ones because if there are too many, it becomes overwhelming for any of us (my kids) to look at them. We already have 10 binders worth of photos in albums. Do we really want/need 20 or 30? And now that we have scanners, printers, and digital scrapbooks/photo albums, is it necessary to keep zillions of wallet size and smaller photos from all the kids photo shoots and school pics? I don’t want to go overboard with the decluttering but it is SO nice to have empty closet and cupboard space.

Nathan is up to 117 lbs. Last October before heart surgery, he weighed 89 lbs. We went swimming today and he is so much stronger. I expected to see changes but still, I am amazed at what I see and words cannot express how thankful I am for the technology that allowed him to be “normal”. Babies born with TAPVR 35 years ago usually died. Nathan should have died and the fact that he didn’t is a miracle. Even when he was born, the surgery wasn’t as refined, and therefore, successful as it is today.

I am very blessed.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Summer so far; Unrealistic movies--or is that redundant?

July 7, 2011

My son, Spencer is here visiting for a week. Michelle didn’t come bcs their baby is due in two weeks. It’s been fun to have him around although my house is a little boring, especially with the two youngest at their dad’s. Yesterday, Melody and I voted to see Larry Crowne; Spencer and Nathan voted for Transformers 3.

So we ended up at the action movie. It’s not really my kind of movie though the demographic they’re catering to loved it, I’m sure. I don’t want to like Shia Lebeouf but I guess nothing about being a jerk in real life precludes good acting ability. (Or does good acting translate to lots of money which generates jerkiness in real life? He seems to have a lot of company in Hollywood.) In any case, his facial expressions are really great in the movie. He has one very funny, terrifying scene with his car, flying through the air above the freeway and ending up back in the car. But the plot and stunts are ridiculously implausible and the “humanizing” of the machines (features making them old, young, bad guys, feeling pain, etc.) is so fake. But I’m sure that will appeal to kids. The battle scenes went on and on making for an almost 3 hour movie. Two hours would have been more than enough. My kids liked it—Nathan thought it was great.

I have no school now until late August and it’s SO nice to have no homework; no thick books to read two or three times in the next two months. I will hear sometime in July if I am accepted in to the accounting program at BYU. I got an A and an A- in the two prereqs I took Spring term so I’m planning on getting in. I’m still working, too but not very many hours. I will lose my job at the end of August since I’m not a student at UVU anymore.

The current plan is to clean out a closet or cabinet every day while I have time off and to exercise. I made some good progress at first but it’s been slow-going this week. My house is looking much better and less cluttered. I’ve been running, jump-roping without a rope, and skating. The treadmill is drudgery and I have to force myself to go get on it but skating is better, though hard, physically. Just reporting to keep myself accountable.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Lagoon

I took Nathan, Joy and Sam hiking on Tuesday. I meant to go to the Battle Creek canyon but mistakenly went to the Grove Creek canyon which we hiked anyway. I am so out of shape! So on Thurs, we tried again. Everyone but Sam wimped out on me; the two of us hiked to the waterfall at Battle Creek. It’s not very long and fairly easy—lots of moms and kids were hiking it. At 11 am, it was still cool and there’s lots of shade on that hike. The water’s running a lot higher than last year. But the last couple hundred yards are pretty steep and I was spent so I didn’t go right up to the top; before I could stop him, Sam scampered up farther and I couldn’t see him anymore. I didn’t know what was up there besides a roaring river and a 40 ft. cliff. I am guessing the trail ends there. Thirty seconds after he disappeared, I was wishing I had some big kids to send after him and worrying that he might fall in and come crashing down the waterfall. Thankfully, he came back down after a minute or two. Raising six boys is teaching me to just stay calm. And the view up there is SO gorgeous of the valley and Utah Lake below. We are so blessed to live in this beautiful place. Next time, I’ll take pictures. Driving back home (a whole three miles to our house), Sam said, “You are the best mom in the whole world!” because I took him hiking.

Yesterday, we went to Lagoon (Six Flags-Great America-type amusement park.) Melody didn’t go bcs she went w/Alicia last Sat. and w/K’Lani on Wed. Alden and Sinda came also with their two little kids and it was a lot of fun. Sinda’s never been there before and said they would just stay three hours or so. We were there for seven hrs. I’ve never seen anyone have more fun than Claudya had at the waterpark. And Sam took her on several kiddie rides while her parents went on a roller coaster. He’s so protective and solicitous with his nieces—I love to observe.

But the interesting part of the day was going to a Vietnamese noodle house in West Valley City for Pho (pronounced like foot without the t.) It’s a hole-in-the-wall place which reminds me of some of the places my parents took us to in Chinatown in Oakland and San Francisco when I was little. The food was good and we’ll definitely go there again. Nathan and Sam loved it. During the meal, Sinda said,”See, if you just listen carefully, you can tell the difference between Laotian and Vietnamese.” I had to laugh. I said, “If YOU listen closely, you can but I certainly can’t.” When I graduate, I hope to carve out time to study some foreign languages.