Modified Diet

What I’d like to write about today is far too incendiary. I wouldn’t want anyone to stroke out or have a nervous breakdown. So I’ll simply say this; cake is delicious. My relationship with cake has been complicated, this is true. I’ve spent a great deal of time trying to figure out the nuances of my connection with this particular baked good. Cake is enticing and has a lot to offer. The taste, texture and aroma of a good cake can overpower a person who has been deprived of sweets for many years.

Sometimes cake tells you what it thinks you want to hear. For instance, you won’t gain a pound if you eat the whole damned cake. Everyone knows that’s a pipe dream! You’ll gain a shit ton of weight if you eat more than a slice, day after day after day. I understood this, but shoveled it down whole anyways. I ate the entire cake instead of being honest with myself; I can only handle a slice at a time. I packed on pounds I couldn’t afford and carried around that weight for too long.

But what is life without cake? Is it an either or situation? Every problem has a solution and there is indeed an antidote to this complex equation.

I don’t have to cut cake out of my diet entirely. My relationship with cake can change if we’re both willing to redefine the parameters. I’ve done my part by establishing boundaries, setting limits and controlling how much I eat. Cake, in turn, has changed up its ingredients and produced a new variation that’s organic and unassuming. It scraped off the rich sugary icing and no longer overwhelms the senses. As an added bonus, cake finally recognizes its value and won’t let just anyone take a bite.

I now have a more honest relationship with cake and am happy to once again partake of a slice on this new modified diet.

*this is a work of fiction; any resemblance to actual individuals or events is purely coincidental

 

Control

It’s quiet in here. I’ve been in constant motion, surrounded by people every day for almost a month. Now? Everyone is gone and I could sleep for a week. Some people don’t like to be alone but I’ve never been one of them. Oh, I have lonely moments now and then, but for the most part, I enjoy my own company. That’s when I get to create a whole other universe where I control everyone and everything. In my stories I can be the person I always wanted to be, eat whatever I want and never gain an ounce, live in my dream house, travel to far off places, explore different professions, create the ideal man, choose my motherhood status, bring my mother and brother back to life. Where I exist in an alternate reality, one in which I’m pulling all the strings for hours at a stretch.

After reading those words some may conclude I’m not a happy person, but they’d be wrong. I am happy most days. I’m a silver lining kind of gal, the cup is half full. I’m an optimist, a dreamer. Even when things are shitty, I know the feeling or situation will pass. It always does. Generally speaking, I don’t let other people bring me down. I may get pissed off for a spell, but I stopped caring what other people think about me a long time ago. I have nothing left to prove to anyone but myself.

I firmly believe whatever we put out into the world, is what we receive. If the past fifty-one years have taught me anything, it’s that. Spread hate, hate comes back to you. Spread love, you get love in return. I have a lot of love in my life, so I must be doing something right. My friends are my family. This isn’t to impugn my blood relatives, they are good people, but would we hang out together if not connected by DNA? Maybe? Maybe not? My friends, however, we cheer each other on and lift each other up when life gets hard. If I hit a bump in the road, all I have to do is send out the SOS and my people, my chosen family, are there for me. It helps that I’m a good judge of character and don’t allow fake people into my orbit.

Other people aren’t as fortunate. I feel sorry for good folks who allow toxic people into their lives. For whatever reason, they don’t know the difference and have been made to feel like they deserve less than loyalty and kindness. It’s unfortunate when they’re blind to the bad intentions of others. My bullshit-o-meter is finely tuned and for that I say ‘thank you, god!’ What’s glaringly obvious to me isn’t necessarily apparent to others. But bad apples eventually fall to the ground and it brings a smile to my face when good people shake the rotten fruit from their branches.

What makes a person toxic? How did they get that way? Some may argue they had shitty childhoods or were abused by people who were supposed to love them and I can see that. I understand how that could make a person unpleasant. But we all have within ourselves the ability to overcome the circumstances of our childhood and/or unkind, even abusive, lovers. It isn’t easy, but it’s possible if one is willing to put in the work.

I think toxic adults (people in the 40+ bracket) are fueled by one thing: jealousy. They want what others have instead of appreciating what’s within their reach. Toxic people are never satisfied and feed off others’ misery. If they can’t be happy then no one else should experience joy. It’s the poor-me syndrome. Grown-ups whining and wincing, gossiping and sniping, when they should be in intensive therapy. Or at the very least, doing some serious self-reflection.

I’ve taught my kids that jealousy is a wasted emotion. It makes people bitter, resentful and cruel. To those who feel the need to tear others down, I share one piece of advice; life is long (knock wood) and in the end the only person you’re competing against is yourself. Choose love and acceptance. You’ll be a happier, more contented person.

Happiness doesn’t guarantee a life of ease, even for a cockeyed optimist like me. Grief has long tentacles and tightens its’ grip more often than I’d like (to put it mildly). There have been many days over the past year I’ve had to push myself to do the simplest things, like get out of bed and go to work, brush my hair and teeth, make dinner, wash the dishes, do the laundry. Vacuum. Dust (that’s the hardest for some reason). Grade the papers. Simply being present for the people in my life is a struggle on those occasions. Grief empties the vessel and drains my energy.

Yet even on those dark days, I believe better days are ahead, that this too shall pass.

There’s very little in this world we have total control over. I can’t control the weather or fix the state of our broken democracy. I can’t control other people’s behavior or words. I can’t make people fall in or out of love. I can’t control the aging process, wrinkles, menopause…the whole nine. But I can control what happens in my books. I can play ‘god’ and create characters who reflect the attributes of people in my life or aspects of my own personality. I can unleash the demons inside and change the trajectory of the story with the tap, tap, tap of my keyboard. It helps to know there’s always a place where I call the shots, even if it’s an imaginary world I’ve created out of thin air. A world that only comes to life for others once I’ve purged the story from my being, start to finish, in the form of a book.

Lemonade

I don’t believe in playing by the rules. That’s not entirely true…but sometimes the rules are stupid. For instance, did you know it's illegal for a store to sell toothpaste and a toothbrush to the same customer on a Sunday in the city of Providence? That’s not only a rule, it’s a law! Who the hell sat down and decided that a person shouldn’t be able to buy multiple oral hygiene products on a Sunday? Is this to shame people who had a one-night-stand a few hours earlier? No booty calls allowed in Providence! If you do, your punishment is…stinky breath?

It's ridiculous.

There are a lot of stupid societal rules such as children should live with their mother if/when the parents’ divorce. Why the mother? Are fathers unable to properly care for their offspring? Why do people assume that fathers automatically get their children every other weekend and for dinner on Wednesdays in a custody agreement? This setup is perfectly acceptable to society at large if you have a dick. Men aren’t judged for seeing their kids eight days a month. But if you’re a mother whose children aren’t under your constant care? People assume there must be something either psychologically or morally wrong with you. They conclude some court decided the children would be better off without you.

For the record, I have joint custody of my kids and a court gave me primary placement a million years ago (that’s for the judgmental buttinskis out there).

The same rules don’t apply to men and women and that’s spectacularly unfair. When my parents divorced back in the 80s, my brother and I lived with my father during our last few years of high school. People assumed the worst about my mom as well, especially back then! How could a mother leave her kids? The answer is, she didn’t. Looking back, my mother was just as present in our lives when she moved out as when she lived in the family home. Parenthood is about love and acceptance and she lavished us with both, despite having a different address.

The circumstances which led to my children living with their father during the week had nothing to do with my fitness as a mother and everything to do with employment and geography.

I’m a history teacher. You know…the dime-a-dozen variety educator, who, if you have a few years’ experience under your belt, is basically unemployable. Why hire an experienced history teacher (who took several years off to raise her children), over a new graduate a school can pay half as much? It took me two+ years to find a full-time, permanent, teaching gig after ten years of on the clock motherhood. The hitch? The job was on Block Island.

I know. Poor me, having to live and work on beautiful Block Island year round. Your heart is bleeding for me. But I had an extraordinarily difficult decision to make. Do I take my children out of one of the top three school districts in the state and bring them to a K-12 school with a sum total of 150 students, thirteen miles off the coast of mainland Rhode Island? A school that has virtually no after-school activities except sports (and my kids aren’t athletic)? What would they do for extracurricular activities that wouldn’t eventually devolve into an alcohol and/or drug problem?

It was a sucky position to be in, but I needed a job. So, my ex-husband and I had a serious sit down and decided it would be in the girls best interest to stay put, continue their orchestra, dance and theater activities, while I tried the island on for size.

(Painful, gut-wrenching) decision made.

I knew pretty quickly my new school wasn’t the right fit for my kids, but it was a good fit for me and there were no other jobs out there. So we’ve made it work. I can’t say it’s always been easy, but it is what it is. It’s an imperfect situation, but we’ve ‘made lemonade.’ I can’t always be physically present for concerts or back-to-school nights (why do they hold those mid-week?) but just as my mother did before me, I’ve made sure my children know they’re loved and accepted and if they need me, I’m just a phone call or boat ride away.

Since the pandemic, opportunities for history teachers have opened up on the mainland. Two years ago I told my girls I’d look for another job and move back to civilization and their visceral reaction to that news shocked me. My girls were emphatic. No! Absolutely not! We love Block Island! This is our home, you can’t leave!

So I stayed, because that’s what my daughters wanted.

Stupid rules are made to be broken. What’s best for my children isn’t necessarily what’s best for me. That doesn’t make me an unfit mother, it makes me a selfless one. I’m not tooting my own horn or placing myself on a pedestal by making that statement. Believe me, I would have preferred to live with my kids full time, but the gods had a different plan for us.

And now they’re almost adults, on the verge of leaving the nest. I can say with a great deal of pride, my children have grown into kind, sensitive humans. They see both sides of a situation and know nothing is black and white. They have empathy and curiosity. They value honesty and integrity. They dismiss those who are petty and narrow-minded. These are not virtues they absorbed from their father by osmosis (he’s not intimately acquainted with virtue as a concept). No, my daughters learned those values from me.

The moral of the story is this; when the rules are fucking archaic and stupid…make your own.

 

Between the Lines

People fascinate me. I mean this sincerely. I think reaching fifty and watching my twin pass away has given me a new perspective. Life is short. Don’t waste time worrying about things you can’t control. If someone is being shitty, call them out on it. Don’t be afraid to tell it like it is. Some might say I’ve never exhibited fear in that department, but that’s not true. I’ve kept a lot to myself over the years. Too much really. That’s why I write novels, so I can purge what I’ve repressed.

But back to my fascination with humans. The last two posts I’ve written had absolutely nothing to do with one another. There’s not even a thread connecting them (unless you want to count two different groups of women who need to find a hobby) and yet people see what they want to see. They interpret my words in whatever way suits them. And…I’m okay with that.

The written word is a powerful tool, or weapon in some cases. I’ve always known that. Words start revolutions. In 1776, Thomas Paine poured a significant amount of fuel onto the bonfire of discontent in the American colonies with his pamphlet, Common Sense. BOOM! A powder keg moment in history! And here we are, almost two hundred and fifty years later, a country in our own right, independent of British rule. But Paine was very pointed and direct in his famous pamphlet. He wasn’t in the least bit discreet. He used names, he laid out a game plan. America doesn’t need Britain. Break free of the chains that shackle us to the mother country. Monarchy is tyranny. America should be an independent nation. Fight for your freedom, America! And the patriots lit the torch and kicked some ass in the name of freedom.

I’m more subtle. When I write something a reader may identify with, I like to give them space to connect their own dots. In doing so they invariably read between the lines (inaccurately for the most part) and create a narrative that fits into their version of reality. I prefer it that way. In every book I write, I leave the physical characteristics of one significant character up to the reader’s imagination. I purposely don’t describe their hair or eye color, height or build. Later, when I ask readers to describe the character to me, I’m amused by how completely different each person sees them. They’re basing the character’s looks on people they know, who exhibit similar behaviors. In their mind’s eye, they see the person the character reminds them of in real life.

It's the same with song lyrics. Lewis Capaldi wrote a song (I thought was) about a guy whose girlfriend broke up with him because he either treated her like shit or didn’t recognize the pain he’d put her through. I knew the song was about regret. “Was there something I could have said to make it all stop hurting. It kills me how your mind could make you feel so worthless. So before you go…” I felt those lyrics and am not ashamed to admit I’ve shed a few tears listening to this tune. Turns out? This ‘love’ song is actually about his aunt who committed suicide. Really? I thought for sure I understood his lyrics, they seemed pretty straight forward, but I was reading between the lines. He did write about regret, but I interpreted his words through the lens of my own experiences. I’ve been made to feel worthless by certain people at certain points, so of course the song was about me! Or the universal experience of loss. Take your pick.

Regarding my last two posts, I’ve kept ‘silent’ about certain events in my life that have no connection to the ‘other words’ I published yesterday. The first was written with restraint because I choose not to discuss the details of the situation. I was feeling helpless and writing those words was an expression of my vulnerability. Yesterday’s post? The one about how annoying and immature a group of older women can be? I wrote that missive with abandon, sharing examples of adolescent behavior, not giving a fuck if the intended audience read my post. Actually, that’s not true. Hoping the ladies read it (they did by the way).

Two different posts. Two completely separate situations in my life. Many interpretations and assumptions being made. Again, I’m okay with that. If I wasn’t, I wouldn’t continue writing these entries.

I’d rather my words not be used as a weapon. I prefer to use words as an expression. But I’ll use them as both when the occasion calls for it. I read something about writers a while back. I don’t remember the exact words but it basically said, be careful, my book isn’t finished yet. Meaning, if you’re an asshole, I’ll create a character based on you and I won’t be kind. I haven’t made good on the threat…or have I? Hmmm…a story for another day.

My bottom line is this: you are free to read between the lines of anything I write. You can connect invisible dots and create an entirely new, make believe storyline. I’m putting it out there, so have at it. But if you write a diatribe full of nonsense in the comment section of my post? I’ll delete it.

I hope you have a lovely day.

Sincerely, Jayne