Friday, March 1, 2013

The Power of Surrender

I've been thinking about my experiences in the 12 step program I work as part of my quest for peace, joy and security. As horrible as it was to discover that a 12 step program applied to my personal life because of choices my now ex-husband made, I can't tell you how many times I've been filled with gratitude that I have access to the power of the twelve steps. I've caught myself almost saying to a friend or two something like, "I wish you could attend these meetings with me, they are so powerful...if only one of your loved ones had an addiction!" What?!

Nothing will ever make losing a loved one to addiction OK. But S-Anon sure helps the hurt, and has put me on a path of self-discovery and healing I'm not sure I would have found any other way. I've decided to share some of my 12 step journey with you, and with my children, eventually, as they grow and perhaps begin exploring this space. This is an essay I wrote about a year ago for a friend who was writing an amazing book about recovery. I hope something within it speaks to you.


Surrender

I came into S-Anon on a God-strike. I told myself He wasn’t connecting with me, that He had totally dropped me. In truth, it was the other way around.

Either way, the idea of surrendering my well-being to God was just short of repulsive. It actually turned my stomach to knots to consider letting Him be in charge. Several women in my groups taught me a really specific surrender process: “On your knees, in the box, on the phone.”  I didn’t think I needed that kind of structure. I’d figure out my OWN way, I told myself.

Finally, after several weeks of hitting brick walls in my recovery, and a good straight-talk challenge from one of my S-Anon sisters (as I have come to think of them), I finally decided to try the actual recommended process.

Over the next few days, I began to fill an old tin can with scraps of paper proclaiming all the things I wanted to surrender to God. Prayer became an actual mode of communication, rather than an evening ritual, and I listened to my sponsor’s voicemail message more times than I care to recall. Most importantly, though, I began to sense a new resilience in my serenity. I no longer needed to run to the phone at every disturbing thought or event that came up. I no longer felt like I was living for my next counseling session or S-Anon meeting. I began to realize that God can and will actually take care of me.

One really poignant example of this was at my first church attendance after my husband had disclosed the extent of his addiction to me. Before my husband’s addiction had come to light, I considered us one of the “pillar families” of our congregation. A strong, solid family that others could look to for inspiration. I blush at my pride and my total ignorance to the truth now.

As I prepared for church that day, I felt like every one would be able to tell the crisis we were in the moment my children and I entered the building. I felt so much shame at my situation, and a deep sense of loss of belonging. I felt like I no longer fit into the religious family crowd that I had previously considered myself a part of. Just before I left, I knelt beside my bed and cried to my Father in Heaven about my apprehensions. I asked him to help me to surrender other people’s reactions to me, my family, and my situation. I wrote my note, dropped it into my tin can, and left a quick message on my sponsor’s phone. Then it was out the door, to face my fear.


The way God picked up my heartache and shame and helped me to feel loved and acceptable to Him was nothing short of miraculous. I sat in those church pews and listened as a woman twice my age spoke of raising her children alone, working hard at it, being exhausted, but still finding joy in her children and her situation. She is recently remarried, and beamed with the joy of finding a man with whom she could share her soul. This spoke so much hope to me, helped me to see that God can help me to be happy in whatever circumstances I find myself in, and that this marriage is not my only shot at finding real love. In a lesson on families later in the meeting, the teacher spent probably half her time in an extensive introduction of the topic during which she helped to make it absolutely clear that no matter what our family situations, we are acceptable and loved by God. That we need not mirror the ideal, but rather look to the ideal as a pattern for our lives and goals. It was exactly what I needed to hear. In my culture, those messages of accepting what is not perfect in families sometimes get lost in the vigor to put forth to the world what a strong family looks like.

Those two messages chased the fear and shame from my heart and I was able to sit tall and proud in my place, knowing that I am standing for truth in my family, and doing my best to show my children what a healthy parent looks like. I left church that day, knowing that God knows and loves me. That He helped prepare those speakers to teach what would soothe His daughter’s broken heart, and that He prepared my heart to hear what it needed to hear as well.

This surrender thing is the key to recovery. Before I was inviting God to play an active role in my recovery by surrendering what hurts to Him, all the stuff I was doing, all the counseling, and reading, and attending meetings were just a new tool I had found to manage my situation myself.

Now that God is involved, I am beginning to feel real progress, real peace, and sustainable serenity. Without God, the 12 steps are hollow. It has been my experience that the most effective way to invite God into those 12 steps is through the Surrender Process: “On your knees, in the box (or tin can, as it were), on the phone.” Don’t cheat yourself of the most powerful recovery tool available; do this. It makes all the difference.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

A beautiful new 'first' in parenting.


For the first time EVER, Rudy is old enough to recognize that me getting up in the middle of the night to nurse him is not just 'to be expected and taken for granted'. After the 3rd visit to his room to try to help him feel more comfortable and get to sleep during a coughing bout, I was saying goodnight and Rudy said to me,
"Goodnight, I love you too....And Mommy?"
"Yes?" I said, waiting to hear another request.
"Thank you."
"You're welcome." I whispered with a kiss, and treasured those words of gratitude all the way back to my bed and into the morning.


Thursday, February 14, 2013

Valentine's Day 2013

Valentine's Day. I was happy to find that divorce did NOT spoil one of my favorite holidays for me. Probably because it's never been about having a wildly romantic day for me. It's about being with people you love, celebrating the beauty of the relationships you have, and taking a moment to just grin with the thought of all the LOVE that's swirling around in the world.

I made the Rudy and Julia progressive Valentines this year, and I think I'll turn that one into a tradition. I had fun thinking of specific things that I love about my children, and Rudy and Julia had fun finding new links to their chains and seeing my love for them grow every day. In fact, Rudy said, next year, instead of doing 10 things you love about us, lets do 1,000 things, OK? Ha! I'm thinking we'll stick with ten. ;)

Rudy's preschool hosted a Valentine's Dance for their students. The kids were invited to dress up for the event, and taught proper dance ettiquite in circle time just before the dance began. ("Could I have this dance, please?" Yes, thank you! or No, thank you.)  The ladies from the beauty salon next door came in and did the girls' hair in beautiful braids and ribbons, and made the boys' hair 'cool'. What an awesome community I live in!

It was great fun to see the kids trying on a new social setting for size. During each of the 3 or 4 songs played, there was at least one kid who was upset/overwhelmed with the social demands of being at a dance, but the teachers and parents did a great job soothing and supporting those kids as they learned to master some new skills. Boy do I wish I would have got that kind of training in preschool. Maybe I wouldn't have ducked out into the hall for visit to the loo, or to get a drink of water, or to get some 'fresh air' every time a couples dance was played at the church dances I went to as a teen. :) I sure love Rudy's preschool. They have been such a light in his life, and mine and Julia's even.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Bonsai Hair Styling

I've decided to start a new style sensation: BONSAI HAIR STYLING. Perfect for all those little girls out there who just haven't been endowed with luscious locks of hair just yet.

Julia has been pining-seriously PINING- for her turn to get her hair cut. She sees Rudy and me get our hair cut every couple of months and it's just been killing her that it's been 2 whole YEARS and she has had not a single hair on her head trimmed.

So, today after baths, I pulled out my fabric scissors and trimmed the wisps of hair that were sort of dangling past her hair line in the back of her head. I collected all the hair I'd cut with one little pinch of my fingers, and deposited it on the most handy bit of white background I could find so I could take a quick picture of Julia's first hairs cut.


It turned out to be the back of my stamp book, which is bonsai themed. "How appropriate," I thought, and snapped the picture. I wish I had a picture of my lovely little girl sporting her first ever hair cut, but my camera batteries went dead. Bed time needed to march steadily on, so you'll just have to imagine how she looks missing about 20 one inch strands of hair from the back of her head. 

That's right: 
just as adorable as always. ;)

Friday, January 18, 2013

The Ice Cave Adventure


A while back, Rudy and I discovered this instruction page on the Boy's Life website. We decided right then and there that as soon as we got some decent snow to work with, we'd be building ourselves a snow cave and sleeping inside it. Our anticipation grew as winter progressed. At last, the grand weekend arrived: enough snow, enough time, and even Aunt Keala staying the weekend, giving us freedom to keep working even after Julia was ready to tap out.

Two days, oodles of wet gloves and even more cups of hot chocolate later, we had created our first ever Quinzee. Not quite like the info page, but close. We are both quite pleased with the way it turned out for our first snow shelter ever constructed. Even though the forcast was for 2 digits below zero that night, Rudy and I decided to give our shelter a go. We bundled up, brought out all the spare bedding we could fit in our little cave, and armed ourselves with hot chocolate in a thermos. We also agreed that if we weren't warm and toasty, then it would be perfectly acceptable and 'in the plan' for us to relocate our Mommy-Rudy snow campout date into my bedroom.

We lastet 60 glorious minutes out there before deciding that we just weren't going to make it to the warm and toasty level of comfort in the snow cave. Neither of us were dreadfully frigid, but we didn't want to wait for that to happen, just to be safe. (Sleeping while fighting hypothermia is ALWAYS a losing battle.) So, we trucked back in, received a hero's welcome from my parents, shed our massive amounts of clothing, and tucked into my bed.

Sleeping with a 5 year old AND a cat in a twin bed (Rufus refused to relinquish his claim on the bed, despite all the accidental pokes and pushes he received as we tried to settle ourselves.) made for a long night and a short sleep but it was fun, none the less.

Rudy and I had an epic weekend together, living out a dream we'd held for maybe a month or two. And that, most definitely, was worth the 'moving through jello' feeling of exhaustion the next day. :)

Brand New TP User


Ladies and gentlemen, the Splendiferous Drummonds are happy to announce that every last one of us are turned on to TP! That's right, no more crinkly, stinkly diapers for us. We are all bona fide, true blue toilet users. (Can I get a yee HAW!?)

Julia and I embarked on the Big Switch over Christmas break, when I'd be home more and not have to feel so guilty about leaving my parents with a wet (or worse) time bomb to babysit. It also helped that Julia's lovely cousin, Michaela stayed a few days with her family here, and Julia got to see Michaela (who is not quite 1 year older than her) use the toilet with style and constancy that were truly enviable.

I bought Julia training underwear (those thick cotton cuties) ;) just like Michaela's, put a no dipes unless sleeping rule on the table, and went at it. For the first few days, it was all about cleaning up messes. I *almost* caved and considered offering chocolate chip rewards for bottom on the toilet time, but resisted. (Hey, I had just participated in a Food Revolution meeting in which we were strategizing how to convince teachers that kids really, truly do NOT need food rewards to motivate positive behavior. How could I preach one thing, and do another?*)

*OK OK, I have to confess that we are still weaning off of chocolate chips first thing in the morning if the kids follow their sleep rules the night before....but that came into being BEFORE I learned how much better life can be without tying food to things not relating to nutrition.

ANYWAY...I persevered, telling myself that that this messy part of the learning process was, indeed, PART OF THE LEARNING PROCESS, and that Julia was learning important things, even if her behavior didn't quite show that yet.  I wanted to stick to my guns about making learning to use the toilet all about mastering an important self care skill. We did lots of talking about listening to our bodies, and giving them what they need, etc. I found myself making unusual statements like "Hey, Julia, guess what my body's telling me? It's telling me it has some peeps to get rid of, and I am going to listen to it! Wanna come with me?"

Finally, about 4 days into it, we got our first 'catch'. Julia caught her peeps in the potty instead of in her underwear. HooRAY! After that break through, things moved along at a marvelous pace, and today we are footloose and diaper free. (Except for bed and nap times. She's probably ready for that too, I just need to get a second water proof cover for her bed so we can make middle of the night changes if needed.)

So, there you have it, the latest, greatest Drummond family news. Huzzah! :)

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

A Divorce Story


I felt really strongly about creating a divorce story for my children, almost like a birth story. 
Sometimes this divorce feels like a beautiful rebirth. Sometimes it feels like a brutal murder. It just depends on where my head and heart are each day. 

I'm getting to feel more and more at peace about it, though, and I'm coming to accept our new normal. With that acceptance comes a greater ability to communicate with my children about the divorce in a positive way.  

This is a story I hope we will be able to come back to again and again. Something we can hold onto as questions and concerns rise up for my kids through the years. A bit of North Star for orienting ourselves to the major change that happened for our family in 2012.

Dear Rudy and Julia,

This is the story of how our family changed when you were 4 and 1. But let's start with how our family began in the first place.

A long time ago, soon after I came home from my mission, and WAY before either of you were born, I met the most marvelous man. We did things together. We talked and talked. We laughed and cried. We fell in love.

When Daddy and I decided to get married we were SO excited. We had big plans about how our family was going to be. On our honeymoon, we named ourselves the SPLENDIFEROUS DRUMMONDS. We knew great things lay ahead of us, and we were excited to experience them together. One of the most exciting things we looked forward to was becoming parents.

Being a parent is a big job, so we wanted to be sure we were ready. Finally, after 3 years Heavenly Father gave us you, Rudy, and we were so happy to have you in our family. 3 years later, He blessed us with you, Julia, and this time, three of us were so happy to welcome you: Daddy and I, and Rudy, a proud big brother. Our family had grown, we had two wonderful children, and we loved being your parents.
(Photography by the beautiful and talented Keala Jarvis)
But things weren't working so well in Daddy’s own life anymore. He had run into some tough traps that were making it harder and harder for him to be the kind of husband and daddy he wanted to be. Daddy and I worked hard together to try to help him start making better choices, but he just wasn’t ready to change yet. He still had lots of things to sort out in his life, and we both knew that all that stuff was hurting our family.

Daddy loves us too much to keep us in a place that hurts, so he let us go, and agreed that a divorce was the best thing for our family. He was so sad that he couldn’t get better faster, and so sorry that he had gotten stuck in such a hurtful trap. It was a hard decision, because it meant that Daddy wouldn't be living with us anymore, and that I wouldn't get to be his wife, and he wouldn't get to be my husband anymore. 

At first I was really scared about it, but Heavenly Father helped me to know that divorce was the best thing for all of us. Sad as divorce is, the Holy Ghost helped me to remember that Jesus would comfort all of us: Daddy, me, and both of you, Rudy and Julia. He reminded me that Jesus is powerful enough to save us all, and that no matter how hard and sad divorce is, Jesus would never leave us alone. He has been, and always will be there for each of us as we heal and recover from the divorce. Knowing that Jesus would guide us through helped the divorce not hurt as much. But it still hurts a lot, sometimes, doesn't it?

Sometimes I am so sad that things didn't turn out the way that Daddy and I had dreamed they would. Sometimes I see that you both are sad, too. That's OK. Divorce is sad. But it doesn't have to be sad all the time, does it?

Sometimes we have tons of fun together, in our new family, with Oma and Opa, and Sam, or with just the three of us. Sometimes, it's exciting to live in the mountains, and see so much beauty every day.

 But other times, the beauty is hard to see, because we still miss the way things used to be. And that's OK. Missing our life when Daddy was living with us is OK. As more time passes, our hurts will heal, bit by bit. And Jesus and Heavenly Father will be with us the whole time. They will help us to feel love, and peace, and joy. And so will our other family members who love us. Can you think of some people that love you? I bet you can think of tons of people...let's see if we can even fit them on both your hands.

Now our family looks different than it did before, but it is still SPLENDIFEROUS. Lots of great things still lay ahead of us. I will still look forward to every day I get to be your mom, forever and ever. And Daddy will keep working to be the daddy he wants to be for you. I know Jesus will help Daddy when he is ready. We'll each have hard days, but that's OK, because we are the Drummonds, and Drummonds can do HARD THINGS!



I love you both.

love, 
Mommy
December 12 2012