Headfuck

I haven’t felt like writing the last few days, which is unusual for me.

Amy has been back at school after the holidays and Isaac has responded to the routine change by becoming increasingly rigid with his wants and needs, whining lots, screaming lots and being generally very high maintenance. Not to mention the middle of the night wakings, where he insists that it’s morning and he needs to watch cartoons on the couch.

Last night he was screaming at 3am because I wouldn’t do what he wanted. That was fun.

I’ve been faffing around on twitter, and throwing in a little bit of facebook here and there, but aside from having my ire raised by Mamamia, all I’ve felt like doing is curling up in bed with a book, or crappy TV.

A lingering virus I thought. Exhaustion maybe. Pregnancy, probably.

And then I realised that the last time I was this pregnant, my grandmother was dying. I was spending a lot of time in and out of hospital appointments with her, radiology and oncology and waiting rooms. Coffee and cake while we learned to read CT scan reports and afternoons spent at her house while we discussed the probability of her death.

On Sunday, she will have been dead for three years. I will be 30 weeks pregnant with a baby she will never meet. My daughter barely remembers her and my son does not remember her at all. I am left with my memories and the remembered feel of her very soft, very dead hands.

Parenthood and grief are remarkably similar when it comes to time passing. The days are long; the years are short and at this stage, I am left looking back over the last three years and wondering where the time went.

We lost the first year in a haze of shock and pain, grief and angry abusive family. We sold her house, portioned up her possessions and struggled through. Some bridges will never be mended, some words never forgotten. That is what I remember of the first year.

Where does the time go?

I thought I was doing okay, but apparently I am not and it’s okay to say that.

Grief is grief is grief and missing someone does not go away, which is both fortunate and unfortunate.

It’s hard to miss someone this much, Internet. So very hard.

 

 

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And the rain just keeps coming

by Veronica on May 4, 2012

in Grief, Headfuck

It’s been raining for days.

Not that I’m complaining; not when the tanks are filling up and there are puddles covering the paddock, making the ducks happy. Not when the garden is thriving and the grass has gone a pretty green colour, as the raindrops sparkle in the light. Not when the sky is darkly dramatic and interesting to watch.

Still, it has been raining for days and being a country girl, it feels like it should be an auspicious start to May and the middle of Autumn, the season of hot soups and hot water bottle nights.

The trees have dropped their leaves and stand bare naked, inhabited by crows in the early morning light as we drive Amy to school. Birds nests stand out in stark relief against the sky as I wonder about stopping and photographing them, before the rain falls down ever harder and I huddle inside my jacket in the slightly steamy warmth of the car.

And it continues to rain.

I dream of my grandmother nearly every night and wake up with a headache and scratchy eyes, damp patches on my pillow. I watch her die, again and again, before dreaming that she is alive and all is well again.

I replay old scenarios in my head, the post death fallout that I was subjected to and wonder that it has the power to hurt me all over again.

Anne Lamott tweets:

If people wanted you to write warmly about them, they should’ve behaved better.

And I hold onto that when I contemplate writing essays about things that hurt, in an attempt to lance the wounds that fester. Yes, I’m angry with you. I’m still angry with you – all of you.

In the middle of all of this, the fetus continues to grow, while I wait for the end of winter. Her birth will herald the coming of my spring and I cannot wait.

In the meantime, it continues to rain.

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Let’s talk about body love and obsession

by Veronica on April 21, 2012

in Headfuck

Through highschool, I was slim, with pert breasts and long legs. I couldn’t see these things – all I could see were the stretch marks on my hips and breasts, the dark hair that grew on my legs and the fact that my arms were freakishly long, with a tendency to wave around when I spoke excitedly. Not to mention the standard teenage pimples and that I thought I was horribly ugly.

I was also smart and opinionated, with dark hair and eyes – not something that the boys in my school were lusting after. When you’re fourteen, your body image is tied up in what people think of you, and what you see in the mirror is not your reality.

Like I overheard one boy saying “Nice enough body, but a shame about the face.”

Being a teenager is not designed to make you feel good about yourself.

The one thing I had going for me though, was that I didn’t gain weight. Somehow, inside my head, that became the most important thing about me. Of course, I had Ehlers Danlos Syndrome (undiagnosed) and a tendency to vomit up rich food with little warning, so that probably helped.

Through high-school, I had a steady boyfriend who found me attractive, but I thought he was lying. It’s a hard time for girls, at the cusp of everything and having relatively little confidence in themselves.

Once I finished school, with all of my self-esteem issues firmly intact, I met Nathan. Lovely, adoring Nathan, who thought I was gorgeous and didn’t see any of my supposed flaws. I thought he was blind. He thought he was incredibly lucky to be having sex with me. Win/win.

It was later, after I got pregnant with Amy and was so terribly sick, that my body issues began to surface again. The fact that I lost all of my baby weight within a week of giving birth to her was apparently an admirable trait to everyone else and I was determined to stay as slim as I could.

Amy made this job easier by screaming lots and effectively making sure that the first twelve months of her life included no sleep, long long walks and minimal food. My weight was one of the few things I had control over. I dropped down to 53kg – which on my 173cm frame, made me look like a skeleton.

I wasn’t healthy, but MAN, I was skinny and that’s what people noticed – even Nathan noticed, although he wasn’t admiring, so much as worried that I wasn’t eating enough. He was right – but what did he know? Skinny was the new beautiful.

After Isaac was born, it took a little longer to lose the baby weight and when he was a few months old, a family member commented on how great I was looking. She thought I looked amazing, whereas I thought I needed to lose weight. Incidentally, Nathan thought I looked just fine. I lost the weight anyway – losing weight has never been hard for me. It’s that pesky crappy digestive system you know.

Late last year, I finally gained some weight. A combination of grief, well managed nausea and an excellent diet bumped my weight back up to the healthy range. All I could see was that my clothes weren’t fitting right and that I was softer all over.

Complaining to Nathan did no good – with the extra weight I was carrying, all he wanted to do was take my clothes off and take me to bed. That’s how we managed pregnancy #3.

I thought I was soft. He thought I was sexier than I’d ever been.

I had an epiphany at that point. I’d always been able to see that curves were sexy on other women, but not on me – never on me. My goal was to be as slim as possible, all of the time. I didn’t even realise this – my drive to be slimmer was subconscious.

It’s been hard to admit to myself, that yes, there was always that subconscious desire to lose weight. It never stopped me eating what I wanted, or made me throw up, but it was there, under the surface. My self-worth and body love were always tied up in how flat my stomach was. I didn’t actively think about this, or talk about it ever, but it was there. The subtle food choices, the exercise, the glaring at my stomach in the shower.

When I miscarried pregnancy #3, I realised that being slimmer had never made me happier. That slimmer had, in fact, made me more miserable, and that slimmer was all about control, not about how I looked.

I was nearly 7kg over my “ideal weight” according to my subconscious when I fell pregnant with this baby. Morning sickness made me lose 5kg really quickly and it was both a physical and mental battle to stop myself falling below 60kg. I managed it, but only because I was actively aware of my brain trying to sabotage my body.

I’ve never spoken about this and it’s only recently that I’ve admitted this to myself. Writing this out has been hard. When “slimmer” is what is thrust at you, over and over again, it is easy to internalise “slimmer is beautiful” and hard to learn that confidence is beauty, not body mass index.

This pregnancy has been good for me. It’s scary to watch myself gain weight, but I’m proud that I actually am and that I’m feeling relatively good about the whole thing. It helps that I’ve always found the curves of pregnancy sexy, even on myself. It’s post-pregnancy I struggle with.

I learned some things about myself recently. One is that I am happier and healthier when I weigh more. That I heal faster and I bounce back from illness faster.

Another is that curves are sexy. Even when they’re on me. That while my breasts sag after breastfeeding two babies, my husband really doesn’t care. He just wants me to go to bed with him, especially if there is no likelihood of my hipbones leaving bruises on him.

I learned that my brain will play tricks on me and that it is very easy to become obsessed with numbers. How far I walked on the eliptical, what my weight is today, how many calories does this lunch contain. I also learned that I can ignore these things, eat my favourite cheeses and not feel guilty about adding cream to my fruit.

I learned that what I look like inside my head, is not how other people see me anyway, and my version of weight gain will make some women hate me. I never said my subconscious was sensible, or rational.

And finally, I learned that it is most important that I love myself first. That how much I weigh has nothing to do with how fun I am to be around, and that no one likes it when I am skeletal and sick, least of all me.

Body love. It’s important, and it’s also really really tough.

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Real life just makes me tired

by Veronica on February 8, 2012

in Headfuck

I write here, a lot. In fact, WordPress tells me that I have published 1061 (now 1062) posts here in the last four and a half years. Hundreds of thousands of words, hundreds upon hundreds of stories.

But some things are not my story to tell and so I walk away from the computer, tired with real life and unable to sink into storytelling like I otherwise might.

There’s things going on at the moment, family things, and while I could blog them if I get permission (and may, yet), it’s Nathan’s story, not mine.

I’m tired, Internet. I’m tired of dramas and pitchforks rabblerabblerabble and feeling like everything I mention online requires weighty substance. I’m sick of justifying why I’m not blogging about charity X Y and Z, or why I’m not donating time, or making more noise, or Doing Good Works.

Can’t I just write stories, without feeling the pressure to give them a moral resolution.

(Yes, yes I can and I will burn my guilt on the pyre of your pitchforky flames)

And in the scheme of things, are our Internet rabblerabblerabble’s terribly important?

Tired.

Out of energy.

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My blog is not about you, or what you want.

by Veronica on January 28, 2012

in Headfuck, Soapbox

In the last couple of months, I’ve seen a few posts about the tracks that haven’t sat terribly well with me. Bloggers trying to justify why they’re not reading a certain other blog, or why they’re not commenting, or not driven to subscribe.

And I’m here to say:

My blog is not about you, or what you want.

No, it really really isn’t. It REALLY isn’t.

I write my blog because it makes me happy. I’ve slowly developed a like-minded community here, who enjoy what I write and have followed me along in this journey. Frankly, this is awesome and this is what I want.

But if you think I am weeping at night, wondering why you are not reading my blog, then, I’m sorry, but you’re sorely mistaken.

If my blog doesn’t do it for you, then move on. Don’t whinge about what I need to change (or what any blogger needs to change) in order to get you as a reader. Find someone else who is more your cup of tea instead.

I know that a lot of topics turn a lot of people off. For the record, no one is holding a gun to your head and making you read.

People blog for a lot of different reasons. I blog for connection. I want to connect with those people who read my words and get something out of it. If I write a post about the hell of PCOS periods, or the miserableness of watching a pregnancy slide down my legs in the shower, then I am writing those words for myself.

However, I am also writing them for the people out there who have felt those same emotions, or who find the post later and are so grateful that someone else knows how it feels.

I’m not writing for the candy-floss readers, who want my blog to be funny and lighthearted all the time. My blog reflects my real life, not the life I wish I was living.

There are topics out there that turn a lot of people off. Poo seems to be the latest DON’T YOU DARE WRITE ABOUT IT.

I’m here to tell you that if shit is a big part of your kids life, then shit will make it onto the blog.

And I’ll admit – I am sensitive in this case. Isaac’s bowel issues have gone from moderately annoying, to severe and impacting on our lives and I am at the end of my tether.

You can’t decide what I can and can’t write about, just to fit it in with your pretty sensibilities.

You can make the decision to only read what you want to read and not be an arse about it though.

I love my readers and my community here, but I will never be writing about pop culture and the pretty shiny things in life. I have one kid who scales the cupboards and steals my chocolate while screaming like a banshee, and another kid who can’t chew properly, can’t poo and won’t eat most food, while I spend a lot of the day downing anti-nausea drugs and trying not to puke, dislocate or miscarry.

THAT is my real life. THAT is what is happening here on a daily basis.

And if you don’t want to see that reflected in my writing, then I’m not sure this blog is for you.

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