Stephanie Says.. Take a walk inside my head

October 27, 2016

I’m All Right, But I’m Not Okay

Filed under: ah life,Glimpses of Me — srose @ 12:17 am

I’m All Right, But I’m Not Okay

I got hit by a car. It happened long enough ago now that it’s part of my history. I have curly hair. I always carry a book with me. I easily memorize songs. I got hit by a car. I didn’t realize just how MUCH it impacted me until later. Years later. Like, half a decade later.
See, when it happened, I was still teaching Sunday School. Not only that, but I was teaching two and three year olds. The FIRST THING I remember doing after coming back to myself is asking someone to go check on “my kids because they can’t wander around the church all by themselves.” Once that was taken care of, the logistics began. Where was I injured? How badly was I hurt? Whom should be called? Where should I be taken? Once in the hospital, the logistics continued. Who should see me? Where should they see me? When should they see me? Most of my support system at the time had not yet retired so THOSE details had to be worked out. Who should stay? Who should go back home? If work had to be done, who should do it? Some pins, some metal, some X-rays and some surgery later, I was out. Friends had to feed me, bathe me and wash my hair for a while, but I was fine. Wasn’t I?

Nobody told me how much it would still hurt. Nobody told me how shaken and scared it would leave me. Nobody told me I would cry.
*********************************************************************

I was turning a corner when I saw it. A sign. Announcing a class. A class that I loved. A class that I helped teach. A class that brought me joy. A class that was starting again. A class that had someone else’s name on it. Somebody somewhere had given “my babies” into other hands. Hands that weren’t mine.
And no one had told me.
I asked. I was answered. Somebody somewhere had told somebody somewhere else that I wasn’t teaching anymore.
Someone said that I had given up my classes.
Someone gave my kids away.
And nobody told me.
I went to my husband.
He checked with the people in charge.
It was true. Someone had said that I was no longer teaching.
But no one had asked me.
They just reassigned my classes.
I cried.
But there was nothing anyone could do.
Just like that, I wasn’t a teacher anymore.
Just like that, a part of my identity was taken away.
Years ago now, it was.
Nobody told me how much it would still hurt. Nobody told me how sad I would still be. Nobody told me I would cry.
******************************************
I was standing in the kitchen when he said it.
Married a decade and a half.
Finally ready.
Tiny fingers.
Tiny toes.
Black hair like her father.
Glasses like me.
I could see it.
More than that, I could FEEL it.
That tiny girl was real to me.
She moved.
She breathed.
She existed.
Until he said no.
The man I loved said no.
With one sentence, he destroyed my dearest dream.
No babies.
Ever.
Because we’re the wrong kind of people to be parents.
Years ago now.
This one still hurts. This one still burns.
Nobody told me I would still be bleeding. Nobody told me it would still cut so. Nobody told me I would cry.
*************************************
Clouds.
That’s what I call them.
Turning everything overcast.
Coloring everything gray.
I don’t always know when they are coming.
This time I could tell.
“Help me” I wrote.
“They are coming. It’s going to last and it’s going to be bad.”
“Befriend me. Help me. Love me.”
I wrote friends. I wrote acquaintances.
I wrote people from work and play.
I wrote people from church.
It came.
It was bad.
Nobody wrote back.
Months later, I walked into the foyer outside the sanctuary.
One of the women I had written gasped…
“Oh…oh…I forgot you.” she said.
Church is surgery.
Church is healing.
Church is relationship.
Church is family.
Nobody wrote back.
Nobody told me how scared that would make me. Nobody told me how much worse it would get.
Nobody told me I would cry.
************************************************************
Off and on since I was a teenager.
Therapist. Social worker. Counselor.
Call them what you will.
Sometimes I like the attention.
I’m an all about me girl for a while. They listen.
Or they pretend to.
But it was getting bad.
And I was getting scared.
And this time, I was scaring myself.
I told her it was dark up in there.
I told her it hurt.
She told me it was bi-polar.
She scared me.
I knew I was crazy.
I just didn’t wanna be insane.
This time, I could not get anyone to listen.
Second opinions, they said.
Prayer.
Meditation.
Pills.
This time, it wasn’t okay to hurt.
This time, it wasn’t okay to cry.
People scoffed.
Or disbelieved.
Or got angry.
Quirky they can handle.
Scary they cannot.
After all,
I’m not THAT bad.
I’ve never jumped off a roof.
I’ve never run off with a stranger.
I’ve never woken up in someone else’s house or wandered into someone else’s room.
Don’t listen, they said.
Journal.
Talk.
Exercise.
Pray.
This time. It wasn’t okay to hurt.
This time, they didn’t tell me I would cry.

But I do.
Everyone has broken dreams. Everyone.
Everyone hurts.
Everyone cries.
Everyone.
But no one told me there would be pain.
He fixed my legs.
He didn’t tell me it would hurt to walk.
He didn’t tell me I would still be scared.
He didn’t tell me I would gradually shrink so small that leaving the house is a very big deal.
He didn’t tell me that.

They took away my classes.
They didn’t tell me that they were taking away pieces of my identity.
No longer a teacher.
No longer “my kids”.
No classes.
Not anymore.
They didn’t tell me there would be no apology.
They didn’t tell me how much it would hurt.

No one told me that my marriage would involve the love of my life breaking my heart.
No one told me that everything I’d dreamed of would be shattered one night all over the kitchen floor.
No one told me that I’d lose who I am.
Not a teacher.
Not a mother.

No one told me that there is no one I can talk to.
Not about church.
Not about babies.
Not about marriage.
Not anymore.

It’s been too long.
I should be past it.
I should be over it.
I should be someone else by now.

But I’m not.
I’m me.
Non teacher.
Non walker.
Non mother.
Non friend.

“Don’t be afraid. It’s not like you are going to be hit again.”
“Maybe you are being protected from further heartache.”
“Maybe you AREN’T the kind of person who should be raising a child.”
“Now you can travel and live your life.”
“Oh…oh…I forgot about you.”
“Just pray. God will always be there.”

No one calls.
No one writes.
They did…I think.
In the first hazy days of grief, they did.
But no one told me that the grief would come in waves.
The grief hit again.

“Broken arm.”
“Broken leg.”
“No classes.”
“No apologies.”
“No babies.”
“I forgot about you.”
“P.T.S.D.”
“Bi Polar”

“This is something.” she told me “You will be living with for the rest of your life.”
She didn’t tell me that my life would get so dark that I didn’t want to be living.
She didn’t tell me that the crisis line would put me on hold.
She didn’t tell me that there are no identifying signs for when my brain is on fire.
She didn’t tell me.

No one told me that there would be no one to talk to.
No one told me that your husband making up his mind is not like losing a child.
No one told me that the grief would be real.
No one told me that it would hurt.
That it still hurts.
That sometimes that little girl with the black hair still calls to me.
And that with no miscarriage, no failed adoption, no actual pregnancy
There would be nothing I can do.
No one told me that.

No one told me that I would end up in the hospital.
That the drugs meant to help me would only make me worse.
No one told me how scared I would be.
And how few people there are who actually care.

No one told me that church would become enemy territory
That I would be walking into a building full of people who never reached out when written to
Who forgot I even existed.

No one told me about the three o’ clock in the mornings.
No one told me that my brain would hold me hostage.
That I would give anything in the world for an off switch.
No one told me how much I’ll have to fight.

I was hit by a car.
I was walking down a hallway.
I was standing in the kitchen.
I was typing a letter.
I was walking into church.
I was becoming someone else.
I was watching my dreams die.
I was given a diagnosis.

No one told me how much the last five years would hurt.
No one told me how great the pain would be.
No one told me I would have to fight.
No one told me how I would be scared.
No one told me I would cry.

May 7, 2016

From Facebook-Lottie Moon

Filed under: Uncategorized — srose @ 8:32 am

I would like to take a moment to talk about someone who impacted my life in ways she could not have foreseen. Charlotte Digges Moon was, among other things, a very interesting woman. She was called to be a missionary in China during a time when 1) Unmarried women were often actively discouraged, if not downright forbidden from serving as missionaries and 2) China was a land that very much distrusted people from any kind of “Westernized” society, often calling them “white devils”. “Miss Lottie” however, was persistent. She baked cookies which eventually drew the curious local children to her house long enough for her to tell them of Jesus and His love for them. These children told their parents, who, while not collectively becoming believers, listened to and began to get to know Lottie well enough that she became a respected figure in local society. And Lottie, in turn, felt burdened for her beloved adopted country. Letter after letter arrived to various Women’s Missionary Societies and assorted church leaders pleading, begging for prayer, for help, for money, for personnel, for support. She was a tiny woman (some say that she was not even five feet tall) but she had a mighty call and a mighty heart. Lottie Moon was eventually -well I don’t want to say “forced to leave China”- but she WAS put on a ship bound for the United States by concerned Missionary colleagues She died on this ship on Christmas Eve 1912, having starved herself to death. There was a shortage of food in the parts of China in which she ministered and “Miss Lottie” refused to eat while her friends went hungry. She so loved the people that the Lord had called her to that with famine all around her and decreased financial support and salary cuts happening in Mission Headquarters, Lottie sacrificed her food, her money, her health, all that she had to share with and love on those around her. As a result, she never made it back to the United States alive.

Lottie impacts me in two ways.
Firstly, she is an example of service and TRUE love and sacrifice. I love many people and things but I do not know that I would be willing to give up my family, my country, my health and even my life for them, even if the Lord should ask me to. I am not the most cheerfully obedient person. She also wrote letter after letter asking for prayer, money and support only to be overlooked, ignored or outright discouraged by the very people whom she represented. I do not know if I could be that strong in the face of such rejection…especially rejection from fellow Christians.

Secondly, I am not a consistently strong person. Lottie lived for years in China with little to no response. She was isolated by her language, her faith, her nationality, her gender and yet she continued serving in the ways that she felt her Lord was asking her to. I often say I love Jesus but I have to admit to letting fear, solitude and loneliness outweigh my acts of sacrifice and service.

Also, The Southern Baptists, the Denomination to which my family and I belong, long ago took Lottie’s strong suggestion that the holiday season be a time of extra giving in order to support those who witness and minister around the world to heart. The Lottie Moon Christmas Offering is one in which churches all across North America collect funds to be used by workers in various countries for supplies, medicines, educational materials and many many other tools which are used to spread the Gospel (the message of Jesus and His love). I have been personally touched by such generosity as my parents, brother and I lived for a time as missionaries in South America and the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering funds were used to pay the living expenses not only for ourselves, but for our friends, our fellow workers. This money did, does and will continue to do so for hundreds of families in hundreds of countries around the globe.

These and many other reasons are why Lottie is so special to me. She was stubborn and independent and (by some accounts) a bit of a prickly person, so we may not have gotten along very well had we ever met, but her example of love, of dedication, of lifelong conviction is one that will forever serve as an example of someone whom I wish….I strive to be more like.

Charlotte Digges Moon
Missionary
Letter Writer
Servant
1840-1912

From Facebook Fall 2014

Filed under: Glimpses of Me — srose @ 8:10 am

(This is something that’s been rolling through me lately. Just ignore and go on if it doesn’t apply to you. Thank you.)

I’d meet a man
And I’d follow him blindly
He’d snap his fingers
Me? I’d say “sure”.
(Little Shop of Horrors)

So.
Something happened.
Somebody’s hands were on you.
Somebody’s words are in you.
And you think that you have to follow.

Oh my darlings. Oh my darlings.
What you are being told.
What is now in your head
That is not truth.

Those words…
The ones people now call you?
The ones you call yourself?
Those ugly words that you treat as a joke,
As part of your armor,
As part of you?
Those words…
They aren’t who you are.
They aren’t ever who you are.

Listen.
Please listen.
Hands.
Lips.
Breath.
That isn’t who you are.

Someone touched you.
Someone touched you again.
Touches.
Touches aren’t who you are either.
Ever.

Touches don’t mean that you have to follow.
Touches don’t mean that you have to obey.
Touches don’t mean that you have to belong to the names…
The ones they call you
OR
The ones you call yourself.

That’s not
That’s not ever
Who you are.

There are things
Down in your soul
There are things

Books
Music
Dancing
Crayons
Water
Dresses
High Heels
Pencils
Paper
Sewing Machines
Dirt Roads
Backwoods
Puppies
Guitars
and Raindrops

You like to knit
You like to dance
You like to garden

That
The deep down
Inside
Soul Mending
Part of you

That
That
Is who you are

That
Not the things they say
Not the things you’ve done

Not the touches
Not the kisses
Not the words

You don’t have to.
Oh my darling…
You may be hurting
You may be searching
You may be believing

Those words
Ugly
Accusatory
or
Soft
and Honey Flavored

Oh my darling
My darling

It’s not the truth
Not really
Not ever

Those words
Harsh
or Pretty

Sour
or Sweet

They are not you
You don’t have to follow
You don’t ever have to follow

You don’t ever have to listen.

You don’t ever have to believe them.
Ever.

From Facebook 2014

Filed under: Uncategorized — srose @ 8:08 am

I was challenged to (without thinking too much about it) share the titles of ten books that have impacted or stayed with me in some way. Now, I rarely re visit books, so some of these have been read only once, and I’m sure I’m going to leave some out, but here we go…

I’m supposed to challenge other people to share theirs, but I’m sure all the readers I know have already been tagged, so just…reply if you want.

1. Just in Case You Ever Wonder
2. Redeeming Love
3. Little Women
4. Year of Wonders
5. Cheaper By the Dozen
6. Downtown
7. To Say Nothing of the Dog
8. Here Come the Brides
9. The Harry Potter Series-yes, I’m counting it as one
10. He Still Moves Stones

From Facebook August 2014

Filed under: Uncategorized — srose @ 8:08 am

True confession: Yes, I can be a hypocrite. I’ve clapped at things I didn’t really think were good. I’ve smiled at people who bug the fire out of me. I’ve said “I love you” when I was feeling anything but loving (or lovable). The older, I get, however, the more interested I am at trying to find, be and project my authentic self. I’m not quite “What you see is what you get”, but I’m working on it. If I’m happy, I’m generally singing, bouncing and dancing. If I’m excited, I clap my hands and jump up and down. If I’m hurt, I cry. And if I’m breaking down, well, you might not know the reasons, but you generally can tell that it is happening. I want to be as open as I can with everyone I can. I do, and have, lied, but that’s not who I want to be. I want to be…trusted. I want you to know…me. My husband, however, while never being less than whom he actually is, feels differently. He values friendships but doesn’t express a need to fold the entire world into some kind of embrace. You have to work with him, to put in time to get to know the man. So, when I asked him if he wanted to contribute a column to my blog, I guess I should not have been surprised when he declined. He has not, he declared to me, anything to say. He just isn’t interested in expressing an opinion on any of my topics. I do, however, have blanket permission to say anything I want ABOUT him. I’ll try not to reveal any secrets, and sometimes I wish he would take an opportunity to speak for himself, but, for now at least, he’s letting me speak for him. If only I could think of anything to say.

From Facebook August 2014

Filed under: Uncategorized — srose @ 7:59 am

Who cries at the Dixie Stampede? -I- cry at the Dixie Stampede. When they began talking about the literacy program going on here in the Pigeon Forge area and how Dolly and others strive to give each child sixty books by their fifth birthday (one a month from the time that they are born until the time that they turn five), I started tearing up. Ya’ll, I cannot TELL you what books have meant to me. I wasn’t an easy child. I didn’t express myself well and often found myself uninterested in whatever the kids around me were pursuing (balls…ugh!). I wasn’t friendless or anything, but I was a kid who NEEDED my books. I have grown some, but I have grown into a person who STILL needs her books. Linus. Security Blanket. Books and I have THAT kind of relationship. My brother, however, was NOT that kind of kid. He was a soccer ball chasing boy from the word go. He did not, in fact, like to read or even see the purpose behind it, though he DID like to look at the pictures. Homework was NOT his thing. He would rather be out running after some kind of ball or jamming with his band. Until -Indian In the Cupboard-. Something about that story transformed my brother from a kid who HAD to read a book into a kid who WANTED to read a book. He wasn’t fully hooked. He was, and remains, an outdoor kind of kid. But for that moment, he got it.
I can’t imagine a world in which kids don’t have a chance to “get it” for themselves. I just can’t.
I can’t remember beginning school. I can’t remember learning to string letters together in order to form words. I can’t remember sounding out my first story. But I can remember being caught. I can remember falling in love. Over and over again.
That is what I imagine Dolly wants for these children…the opportunity to fall in love, not with a person, not with a romance, but with an art.
And this art…this art takes so many forms. There are so many stories that have been told. There are so many stories yet to tell. There are so many, so many ways to tell them.
I’m hooked. I’m in love. There are little ones around me tonight about ready to fall.
Imagining that…seeing people passionate about making that happen?
That, my darlings is big.
That, my darlings…That made me cry.

From Facebook July 2014

Filed under: Uncategorized — srose @ 7:57 am

Seventeen years ago, I woke up before anyone else and ran around the house saying “I’m getting married! I’m getting married!” Over a decade and a half later, I look back at that twenty three year old and shake my head. Kenneth Sims and I seem so YOUNG to me now. We’ve been up…way up and we’ve been very very down.
Our first ten years of marriage saw several hospitalizations and funerals.
We almost didn’t make it through our first five years.
We’ve had raised voices and slamming doors. We’ve had weeks of barely speaking to each other. We’ve had nights when we tore out each others’ hearts and stomped each other to pieces.
But…but…
This man. This man.
This is the man who turned up the stove when the water heater went out so I wouldn’t freeze while washing my hair.
This is the man who carries our littlest cat on his shoulder because in her heart she wants to be a parrot.
This is the man who fixed my ponytails when I got hit by a car and couldn’t raise up my arms to do it myself.
He’s bought me gallons of bubbles just because I like to blow them.
He trusts me to work with the bank deposits, even though I don’t math. Ever.
He slides up beside me just to tell me a corny joke and shoot me a cheesy grin.
This is the man who encourages my solos, even though he can’t sing a note himself.
This is the man who takes off work early just to take me to see Johnny Depp’s latest movie…KNOWING that he’ll hate it, yet going anyway.
This is the man who took me to see Wicked, even though he hates hates hates musical theatre.
This is the man who introduced me to Styx and Foreigner and let me walk around singing “Crystal B-a-a-alllllll” until he wanted to tear his hair out.
This is the man who got me to sleep on the floor for a year, even though the concept sounded like something from a movie to me.
This is the man who taught me to play chess and even let me win a game or two.
This man…
I call him old because he can remember the Moon Landing.
I call him weird because of his sense of humor.
I shake my head and stomp my feet and wonder how in the WORLD we ever got together in the first place.
But I know…
I know…
I was seventeen years old and God put him in front of me. There he was…strange and smart and grown up at twenty eight.
It’s not been an easy seventeen years. It’s not always been good. It’s not always been peaceful. It’s not always been happy.
But I’ve always known…always believed…
That God put this man in front of me…
FOR me.
To be my love.
To be my husband.
To be my home.
Happy Anniversary, Kenneth Sims. You’re still strange. You’re still old. But I can’t…I can’t…I can’t ever imagine doing this
With anybody
Anybody
Anybody
Else

From Facebook May 2014

Filed under: Uncategorized — srose @ 7:56 am

Kenneth Sims decided that I needed to get out of the house, so he took me to see Godzilla. I liked it, but, more so than that, it reminded me of the following:
The Mister listens to a series of podcasts based around technology. When the tragedy at the Boston Marathon happened, one of the hosts, who lives in New England, got serious for a moment. He commented that for him one of the most striking images of the entire situation was that of the First Responders suppressing their natural instincts and running TOWARD potential danger when everyone else was scattering and running away.

The scenes of ruined streets and buildings in today’s movie reminded me of this.

So, I would like to take this opportunity to wholeheartedly thank you. Nurses, Doctors, EMTs, military personnel, firemen, police, National Guard, State Troopers. All of you who put yourself on the front lines. All of you who deal with the blood and guts and way down nastiness of life. All of you who put yourself between my family and anything that threatens our safety.
For the sleepless nights, I thank you.
For going without food, I thank you.
For stumbling into buildings with no light and little air, I thank you.
For caring about your community, I thank you.
For sewing up wounds, I thank you.
For fighting all kinds of evils, I thank you.
For running into the unknown, I thank you.
For not thinking of your own safety, I thank you.
For the voluntary separation from your family, I thank you.
For shouldering burdens so I don’t have to, I thank you.
For keeping secrets that I really don’t wanna know, I thank you.
For doing what has to be done so others don’t have to do it, I thank you.

Thank you for my safety.
Thank you for my freedom.
Thank you for my rights.
Thank you for my loved ones.
Thank you for my country.

Thank you for running INTO things while the rest of us are running OUT.

I am sorry I take you for granted.
You will never know how deeply blessed I am.

From Facebook May 2014

Filed under: Glimpses of Me — srose @ 7:54 am

I was skimming an article on dealing with troublesome people in one’s life when I came upon this (paraphrased) line “Have you ever considered that YOU are someone’s `difficult person’?”
Gulp.
If that is true, I’m sorry. I truly don’t mean to make your life any harder. I really don’t.
Gulp.

September 30, 2015

Come early morning (from Facebook)

Filed under: Marriage — srose @ 4:16 am

Kenneth Sims and I​ had a good talk tonight. He wasn’t happy because it was after midnight and he was sleepy. I wasn’t happy because we speak a different language and many of my analogies were falling….very very…pancake like (flat). But we discussed some goals and some yearnings and some strivings and some wishes. We’re not all fixed up/stitched up/skipping off hand in hand, but I got to express some things and so did he. The last few years have been hard. Thanks for loving us. Thanks for pulling for us. There are hurts. There are opinions and there are downright nastinesses, but I can be stubborn. And I’m as convinced now as I was then that God plunked this man right down in front of me to be in my life. Sometimes I don’t know WHY and sometimes I don’t know HOW we’re ever gonna make it through (it’s like seriously, dude??? SERIOUSLY?). And yes, I tell people I married him because he’s the first person who ever asked me, but that unshakable little CERTAINTY in my head, that THIS…THIS is my life…THIS is my town…THIS is my marriage…is there. It’s crazy. It’s mismatched. And sometimes it’s for the wrongest of reasons, but it is. He’s never gonna understand my emotions. I’m never going to understand his drive. And we’re never going to be one of those easy, fit together like puzzle pieces, hand in glove, Sunday drive kind of couples, but IT IS. It is hard. It is fighting. It is hurt silences. It is broken dreams. It is heartbreaking honesty. It is tears. It is neither of us winning. It is no one understanding. It is waiting for apologies that never come. It is working at cross purposes. It is tears and silences and spaces. But it’s also tonight. It’s also goals. It’s also thoughts. It’s also whispered wishes. It’s OH! I can do that! It’s openness and honesty and I’m afraid and you don’t have to be and not really knowing what’s going to happen but knowing that happen it will.
We don’t make sense. We know that. We don’t make sense to us either. And these past few years have been tough. They are going to get tougher. We know that too. And you, you looking at us, shaking your heads wondering how ON EARTH we ever got together are not going to understand. We don’t understand ourselves. But you know what? We don’t have to. Right now, we’re not looking for answers. Right now, we’re holding on. Right now we’re dug in. Right now we’re stubbornly tied in tight. You don’t understand. We don’t understand. And maybe we never will. But we’re here. Somehow, someway, we’re still here. It’s been hard. There have been tears and fears and fights and sleepless nights. But not this time. Not this early morning. This early morning, your prayers broke though. This early morning we actually talked. It’s not all okay. It’s not all settled. There are no neat little bows tying everything up. But things were said. And steps…halting steps…were taken. And we’re still here. And this time…this one time…right now…neither of us will go to sleep in tears.

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