Thursday 11 November 2010

bathroom toys


Hello my friend

I am still here but I know you and I have been dealing with all the stuff that life throws you in the last couple of months.

This post has been on my mind for a while....and whilst the photo is a bad one taken with my phone, the memories it conjures up are not.

These are the last of the bathroom toys that I cannot bear to throw out just yet.  On the rare occasion that Margot has a bath now instead of a shower, I will still hear her playing with them.  The noises she makes, the stories she tells, the songs she sings whilst taking a long bath, these bath toys are the last vestiges of toddlerdom left in my home  (other than for favourite soft toys).

Margot is the youngest of my three and at eight years of age, she still, thankfully, remains an innocent in many ways.

When I drop her off at school I consciously imprint on my memory bank the image of her , blonde haired, back pack carrying, sometimes murmuring away to herself as she walks in the school gate.

Because one thing is for sure- at 47 the years are truly whipping past at a tremendous rate.

Love

Mary

Friday 17 September 2010

Seeking serenity


Divine Ms. M and the gang:

Shouldn't that age-related equanimity thing be kicking in some time soon?  You know, that feeling of, "I've lived long enough that I can't be arsed to get upset about any of this stuff."

Maybe it happens at 87, not 47...

Love,
Ever the Work in Progress

Tuesday 14 September 2010

My friend, the camera


Mistress Mary, Quite Chin-Hairy ~

You and I have talked before about how photography has been our salvation during difficult times.  Sometimes I need a reminder to pick up my camera when things get rocky.  I did just that this morning and came up with this simple image that fills me with such peace and pleasure.  The sunlight on the little basket, my grandmother's dining chair (part of a set I gratefully received after her passing a month ago)...

I really like this quotation attributed to Dorothea Lange:

The camera is an instrument that teaches people to see without a camera.

I don't think I really was able to appreciate simple stuff like this little vignette twenty or even ten years ago.  You?

Love, Lynn

P.S.  The chin-hair thing wigs me out pretty badly, too.  Mine sprouts right out of a mole, perfectly witch-like.  Sigh.

Monday 13 September 2010

delayed grief and hairy chin



Dear Lynn

Terrible photo taken with phone camera - forgive me blogging gods!

So the psychologist called it delayed grief - and once it was named I began to feel better. Last year anger. This year grief.  Next year acceptance?

On to matters more prosaic - and very irritating, as I progress through my forties.  What on earth did I do wrong in a past life to deserve to be part of a circus as a bearded lady?  I was smooth skinned until the babies came along.  Other than for the scar on my chin earned whilst jumping in my sleeping bag down a slippery hall with the zip zipped up thus ensuring I could not use my hands to stop my fall when I tripped on a nail.  Whilst attending a Catholic school girl retreat outside Kingaroy in the depths of Queensland.  

Anyway the babies came along and the chin began sprouting hair.  Just the odd one at first.  Now it is an infestation.  Which requires regular waxing to keep it under control.

Oh the glamour.

I certainly did not foresee that 20 years ago, or ten or even five years ago.

It absolutely and completely dements me.

Love

Mary

Tuesday 7 September 2010

Pain



Dear Lynn

I have a few different posts in my head but what wants to come out is that this week is a bad one for me.

Two years ago - unbeknownst to me - the father of my children was away with another woman - and saying things to her that I thought he had only ever said to me.

Last year I was distracted by trips overseas from thinking about this week in time too much.

This year I am here.  And trying desperately not to turn this week into some kind of weird anniversary.

I never saw this in my future 20 years ago.  Nor ten, nor five years ago.

I have moved on from the obsessed by, needing to know details, wreck of a woman I was last year.

I just wasn't expecting to feel quite so agonised right now.  We continue to make plans for our future - and I am generally more realistic about life this time round.

I have rung my psychologist to get an urgent appointment.  I need to know that it is OK to forge a fresh life with someone I may never completely trust again.

Love

Mary

Saturday 4 September 2010

Jowls


Dear Mary,

I wasn't going to go posting out of turn AGAIN, and then I remembered that 47-year-olds LAUGH at rules and regulations.

Love, 
Lynn

P.S.  The two halves of my face totally don't match.

Friday 3 September 2010

Ten Years Ago I...


...had little if any silvery hair

...could still read small print without assistance

...could still drink coffee without getting nauseated and broken out

...had just experienced my first of many menstrual migraines

...was still breastfeeding a 2.5-year-old

...didn't know my Dad would soon manifest symptoms of Parkinson's Disease

...didn't know my aunt would die in a car accident

...didn't know I would be seized with the urge to have another child, post-40 and seven years after the first one

...wouldn't have believed you if you had said my secondborn would be even stronger-willed and higher maintenance than his brother

...couldn't imagine that in ten years I would be struggling with homeschooling burnout, extreme wanderlust and a crazy, crazy hormonal roller coaster ride.

(Are we having fun yet?)

Wednesday 1 September 2010

Hands

(Me giving my mother Reiki after she burned her thumb on a birthday candle the other night)

After spending hours at my dying grandmother's bedside recently, transfixed by her ziggedy-zaggedy arthritic fingers, I started paying more attention to my own hands.  Was that a bit of zig-zagging going on there in my left index finger, the one whose middle joint goes pop when I bend it?

I have given close to 10,000 massages and done a lot of power-weeding and secateur-squeezing in my day.  It's bound to take its toll eventually.  And yet, I bet I haven't done half the work with my hands that my grandma did with hers by the age of 47...

Morning Ritual



In this space called 47, Lynn and I want to present, as honestly as possible, what it is to be a woman in her late forties.

In that spirit I need to share my morning ritual. My day begins early with a cup of coffee and a cigarette.  Coffee drunk and cigarette smoked on our back verandah, sometimes in the most freezing of conditions.

I started smoking when I was 17. Gave it up for each of my pregnancies. Gave it up for good after Margot was born.  For seven years.

Last year, on the day when my world caved in on itself, I drove to a friend's place armed with a six pack of vodka coolers and a packet of cigarettes.  I only managed one cooler and two cigarettes that night.

However as the weeks went by and my misery deepened, the cigarettes became a part of my life again.  The slow drag in, the slow exhale out.  The assisted breathing. Ironic on so many levels.

I still smoke, despite my life being more settled.  Since I weaned myself off the anti depressants, I use the cigarettes to alleviate the familiar old nervy stomach.

Our children are not thrilled by my smoking.  I will give up.

Just not yet.

Monday 30 August 2010

Who am I?


I try not to be too consumed with matters of physical appearance; been there, done that.  Growing up in a family where looks were very important (especially to my father), I heaved a huge sigh of relief when I found a mate who said (and still says) things like, "I like you better fresh-faced," and "You're not fat."

So imagine my surprise when I began noticing (last year? or even before that?) that I don't quite look like myself any more, and that it kind of unsettles me.  Is it all aging, and irreversible?  Or is it just the emblem of a particularly rough five years of life?  Should I care?  Or should I view it as permission to finally break free and get on with finding other ways to feel worthy?

(Make-up job by my five-year-old, who also does some pretty happening hairstyling.)

Saturday Sport



Part of my reality of being 47, and potentially until I am 57, is attending Saturday sport.  How I love the summer holidays, with lazy, sleepy starts to our Saturdays! I have a few months to wait ...