Backyard Florida

Do you ever see wild animals?

My husband and I live by a nature preserve, so we’re lucky enough to see lots of wildlife. We’ve been witness to a black panther, lots of Sandhill Cranes, gators, and so on. We’ve even seen a handful of wildfires. Yesterday, we found a Roseate Spoonbill right in our backyard.

The Roseate Spoonbill is the only spoonbill bird found in the Americas. While they are not considered endangered in their other native areas, they are very rare in Florida and therefore a protected species here. They used to be hunted for their beautiful pink feathers, so now we are very lucky if we get to see one outside of a zoo setting. This is my fourth wild sighting in my life, though most locals don’t come across them even that many times.

Christmas Craft

I’ve been in an air dry clay phase this year, so I handmade my friend a set of ornaments for her and her family.

She loved them! And I’m quite happy with how they turned out. They were so small and detailed that I had to paint them with the tip of a mechanical pencil, but I liked the tediousness of that. I prepped them with gesso and sealed with Mod Podge.

Merry Christmas and happy crafting. 🎄

Night Owls

Are you more of a night or morning person?

The earth stills after a long day of clatter and movement. There is anticipation in a sunrise, yes, and how exciting that can be…but there is relief in a sunset. The dark is a blanket. A reward, whether you’ve earned one that day or not. The noise is coming to a close and your shoulders can sag. There will be time for worry and rushing around tomorrow.

A sunset, I think, is God’s gift to us everyday. An explosion of color to remind us that life isn’t as mundane as we’d like to believe. There is magic, when you look for it. I see a sunset as both an end to the day and a precursor for life. A celebration of life. A reminder to slow down, no matter where you are or what the day behind you looked like. Something to look forward to, like a promise. Every. Single. Day.

My husband and I often tell stories about a magical society split into two. Impractical, sure. Divisive, unfortunately. But an answer to living in a society designed for only half of its people. Night people can simply choose to be night people, in this world. Night people have night jobs and night hobbies and the streets are safe because they are busy. Maybe that would take away some of the magic – the calm- but I was built for it either way. The morning, as beautiful as it can be, gives me a sense of unease. I wake up early, groggy and grumpy for hours. Sick, even. Unable to eat. By the time I’m full of life, the sun is setting once again. Bed will beckon soon because life demands it that way. Everyday I fight against my natural rhythm and the obnoxious sun for the sake of participating in the world we have built. No one talks about how overwhelming sunlight can be when you’re bustling around.

How much simpler life could be, I wonder, if every day wasn’t a fight against that rhythm, a cup of coffee in hand just to survive. How much more pleasant we could all be if we learned to appreciate one another for what comes naturally, rather than fight about which way is superior. If we could appreciate and make room for what we are all good at/built for, rather than pushing one another into one uniform way of life just because it’s what we’ve been doing for a while.

I’m so glad that there are sunrise people. Early risers. Sunset people. Middle-of-the-night people. Middle-of-the-day people. How beautiful it is that we are so varied, fulfilling and appreciating each part of our existence.

One Year of Wesley

Since my husband and I bought a house together, we have gone to the same Dunkin every Saturday morning. As was the tradition with his father to go to Tim Hortons every Saturday, now we carry that on in the wake of his passing. It’s sacred to us both.

Every Saturday, we pick up our order and sit in the parking lot to talk, watch YouTube, and enjoy our morning together. It’s an unwinding from the week and a way to ensure we always get quality time together, just us.

In the parking lot is a gym, a Publix, and a tiny pet store with a chalkboard sitting outside advertising which puppy breeds they had for adoption that week. I always looked as we drove past, out of curiosity. It was almost always the same list: yorkie, toy poodle, shih tzu, chihuahua.

I always imagined myself with a big dog. Something fluffy and sweet and protective. I liked the idea of a pug, but I’d heard how unethical it is to breed them so I wrote off the only small dog I ever wanted. I had no real plans to get any other pet, considering our two cats already felt like a handful. Our life felt complete as it was. But my husband and I suddenly started coming across articles and videos about how sweet, gentle, and intelligent Cavalier King Charles’ are. How they’re often used as emotional support/service dogs and are fiercely loyal, but still friendly. I liked the sound of that, despite having no plans to actually get one anytime soon. We both shoved the idea to the back of our minds. We’re too busy, we thought.

The next Saturday, as we drove past the pet store, I noticed that written in curly light blue letters on the chalkboard was “Cavalier King Charles.” Without thinking, I pulled over. My husband, who was always more of the “We should get a dog,” person out of the two of us said “We’ll just look.” I asked, “What if there’s a dog in there that’s perfect?” He laughed, saying there’s no such thing as perfect, but we still went in together determined not to walk out with a dog. Just looking. As my parents later said, “Famous last words.”

I just knew. Immediately, I knew we were supposed to be there.

There were several spaniels all together in that room, and for a moment I wondered “How could you possibly pick one? They’re all just puppies.” But then my husband pointed to a teeny puppy being smushed beneath a much more lively, bouncy, wild puppy and said “I like that one.”

My husband picked him up and his eyes welled with tears. He tried to act tough, but I think he was remembering my question then. “What if we find one that’s perfect?” I held that sleepy, sweet puppy and didn’t let go of him until we were all in our car, together.

We sat in the car with our Dunkin, going back and forth on what to call him until I suggested Wesley, and we knew it was a perfect fit. Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher, as my husband formally named him. Just Wesley, to everyone else. We still watch Star Trek together and point out Wesley Crusher, determined to teach our pup to recognize his namesake.

He just turned one, and I’ve been reflecting on how lucky we are to have found him at just the right time! That Dunkin closed the next Saturday, so we didn’t drive by the pet store again for months. It was meant to be, right then and there.

Very thankful for the addition to our weekly Dunkin hangout. 💕

Unedited Poem #3

When you feel like you’re merely tolerated, but you can’t stop yourself from trying. Just in case.

Nov. 29, 2024

I stood stock-still, staring at myself in the bathroom mirror as a wave of pain came and went. 10 seconds, I counted. Only 10. A small miracle, I decided, as the memories of the last time I felt that deep burning in my stomach flashed in the back of my mind. A constant reminder that I’m a ticking time bomb. A constant reminder to be ready at all times, even though there’s no preparing for it. There’s no relief.

Will I survive the next time? Will I be carried out of my home in the hands of an EMT who will scroll on his phone in the ambulance as my eyelids flutter with my failing efforts to stay conscious? Will I once again dig my nails in my poor husband’s skin and beg for death?

How many times do I have to scream, until someone hears me?

Doctors have to hear it all day – the complaints, valid or not. Exaggerated or not. But I don’t ask for help. I don’t like to be a bother. My pain tolerance is high and my disdain for strangers prodding at me keeps me away from their prying hands…it took the little strength I had left, the loss of my pride, the primal desperation to survive despite my verbal pleas otherwise, to ask for help. But my quality of life is rapidly depleting and I have no more answers than the day I started asking questions. I can’t survive hearing “That’s normal,” ever again.

I wonder if I’ll still hear it as I’m lying on my deathbed. I wonder how long I can wait, helpless, for someone to listen long enough to fix me before I’m too far gone. I wonder if I’ll ever be healthy enough to manage normal things like keeping a tidy house and maintaining hobbies and having children. I wonder if it’s too late. I wonder when the constant pain, sickness, and exhaustion will drive me to insanity.

It’s been over a year of loss. My friends, family, my health. It’s been a painful, awful, lonely time in spite of the small joys in between. A lifetime of confusion and endless effort. I’ve thrown my hands to the sky and asked God, “What have I done so wrong?” with no reply. I still have faith, after everything. I still do, because I have so little else left. So I keep trying, despite myself. I take what I can get where I can get it and pray through the tears.

I pray to know what healthy feels like, I pray for a world that makes more sense, I pray for a more empathetic world, I pray to become the kind of person people want to keep around, I pray for those I have lost. I pray, because I need someone to hear me. Because it’s all there’s left to do.

Medical Mistrust

There’s an episode of Golden Girls in which Dorothy goes to her doctor to figure out why she’s been sick. After coming up short, her doctor suggests that maybe she’s simply lonely. Maybe she’s sad because she’s divorced. Maybe her social life isn’t full enough. She says that she’s so exhausted she sometimes cannot speak, but this makes no difference to him. He reluctantly shoves her off to someone else who does the same. He belittles her, tells her she is simply getting old, and suggests trying out a new hair color or going on a cruise. He shames her for coming to him at all, comparing her symptoms to the outwardly extreme conditions of his other patients, like not being able to walk or swallow or breathe. 

Dorothy eventually gets an answer and she gets to throw it in the face of the doctor who disregarded her. It’s a satisfying end to an all-too-relatable series of events. 

I’ve been exhausted for as long as I can remember. I get days or hours here and there where I experience what I assume to be normal life for most people, but it always sends me into a depressive spiral because instead of enjoying those fleeting moments, I am all to aware of what life could be like and it’s so beautiful that I don’t know how to handle it. Everything is constantly drenched in a sort of fog, and those few lucid moments are like being awake for the first time. I know it will fade. The fog will keep coming back.

I was told that I needed to go to bed earlier, to get off my phone 30 minutes before laying down, to pray. I’ve always been addled with nightmares in the times where I can manage to sleep. I was told that life is hard and it’ll only get harder. Life was hard because I was quiet. I needed to socialize more. Join a club. Toughen up. Children were starving in Africa. Eat better. Practice gratefulness. Exercise more. I starved myself of nothing but leaves and bananas and peanut butter, then exercised every spare second I had. I worked on a farm. I volunteered at church. I worked with children. I worked at a library. I was a photographer. I went to a Christian college and studied English, like I’d always wanted. I couldn’t have anything wrong with me because I was so active. I looked so healthy. I was doing everything right. Worry less. Focus on myself more. Rest. Life was hard because I was in a new grade level, a new school, I was getting bullied, I started a job, I started college, I got a boyfriend, I got new friends, I started another job, and so on. It was normal, I was told. I would naturally adjust. 

I never did. I got depressed, and somewhere along the way they put me on birth control. It was supposed to fix everything. Level me out. I subsequently turned into a suicidal zombie. I went from living in a fog, to being completely checked out of life.

I always mentioned my exhaustion to my doctors. I mentioned my most debilitating and consistent symptoms in hopes that it would eventually amount to some sort of a conclusion. I was typically met with a dismissive reply or told to try another brand of birth control pill. I wasn’t asked questions. I was too young to have anything truly wrong with me, so surely it was simply a phase I’d grow out of. It was just a bout of depression. But I’m 27 now, and though things have improved since refusing any more birth control, I am still living in that familiar fog. I still have lucid moments that make me cry. I have a steadily growing list of medical issues that I can’t bring myself to resolve because I have no trust that I will truly be heard. I believe, because it’s the only experience I’ve known, that I’ll be given the same generic advice that’s spouted to everyone else. Advice that I could, and did, get out of self-help books and Youtube.

I’m angry at all the years I spent half asleep. The youth I’ll never truly get to live because I was so busy trying to feel alive. To feel anything at all. The present and the future in which I may very well be stuck with no more clarity than I received up to the point I stopped asking for help. 

I’m still exhausted, so I’ll be told to go to bed earlier and think happy thoughts to avoid the nightmares. I eat well and I’m active and still can’t lose weight, but have I tried cutting out dairy? Gluten? Red meat? Drink more water. I have a long list of foods that I can’t eat without getting sick, so maybe I just shouldn’t eat those things. My hair is falling out, so I should wash it less. Or more. Or cut it shorter. I’ve miscarried, but that’s normal. It’s time to move on. I was assaulted and therefore panic every time I go to the gynecologist, but I need to woman up. They’ll once again ask the room, “What’s wrong with her?” The walls will close in on me and I’ll forget how to breathe and I will leave prematurely. I live in daily fear of the next time a cyst ruptures, because I blacked out from the pain last time even though they’re “not supposed to hurt that bad.” Because I clawed at my husband and begged for help that wouldn’t come. Because I’ll just be told to take Tylenol next time, as if I can predict it. As if that does me any good. 

It’s normal. Don’t worry, they’ll say. Everything is normal. Take birth control and come back in 6 weeks.

I don’t know when I will try again. Soon, I keep saying. Soon, because all I have are theories and fears and pain and I’m so, so tired. Soon, because I’m nearing the deciding age for having children. Soon, because I have a family I love and want to be around for. Soon, because I have no alternative. I know there is medical trauma awaiting me, and I don’t use that term lightly…but I’m terrified that I’ll subject myself to it just for it all to be in vain. That I won’t be heard or my theories will be wrong and that will be that. But I want to enjoy every second of my damn good life. I don’t want to be in constant fear. I don’t want to be too tired to do the things I love. I want to feel alive and be healthy enough to have kids. I want a body that doesn’t fail me at every turn and I want answers to a root cause rather than a temporary, surface-level reprieve. 

Despite my experiences, I believe in nuance in everything. I don’t see all doctors as super villains to fear. I had one positive experience that keeps me from completely giving up. Doctors are obviously people, like everyone else. I don’t think every patient is a saint. I don’t even think I am an easy patient. My problems are complicated, I cry easily, I struggle to communicate, and I’m jaded. What I see is a profession filled with people so exhausted and jaded themselves, they can’t turn on the humanity when it’s needed. They can’t afford to care, because caring either hurts or wears them out further. I also believe there are doctors who choose the profession to be on a constant power trip, or they do the work so long that they get cocky. I believe there are good doctors, good patients, bad doctors, bad patients, and a whole lot of complicated in-betweens. 

While I have empathy for the in-between and pray for better working conditions for the good, what I can advocate for is what I know and what I know is that medical mistrust is rampant. I know several people with medical trauma that was either wholly induced by or at least not helped by the people who were supposed to care for them. People who were supposed to either have answers or help find them. I’m absolutely not the worst case of this. It’s not just me. It’s not just fear. It’s a lack of trust in a world that has completely thrown empathy and consideration to the wayside.

When my mother-in-law was diagnosed with cancer last year, it was not like the movies portray it. She didn’t go to her annual check-up or have a sudden medical emergency and get told by a watery-eyed doctor that she has cancer. She had to fight for answers for precious months while she literally wasted away. While she got thin, lost all energy, and became forgetful. She was fading before our eyes and her doctor refused to take her seriously. Her doctor treated her like a nuisance. The hospital turned her away. She didn’t get to have a Dorothy moment. No one apologized when she was diagnosed. She simply started her treatment just in time to save her life. 

Dorothy said it best:

“I came to you sick – sick and scared. And you dismissed me. You didn’t have the answer. Instead of saying, ‘I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s wrong with you,’ you made me feel crazy, like I had made it all up. You dismissed me. You made me feel like a child, a fool, a neurotic who was wasting your precious time. Is that your caring profession? Is that healing? No one deserves that kind of treatment, Dr. Budd, no one. Had I been a man, I might have been taken a little more seriously and not told to go to a hairdresser. […] I don’t know where you doctors lose your humanity, but you lose it. If all of you at the start of your career could get very sick and scared for a while, you’d probably learn more from that than anything else. You’d better start listening to your patients. They need to be heard. They need caring, they need compassion. They need attending to. Someday, Dr. Budd, you’re gonna be on the other side of the table, and as angry as I am, and as angry as I always will be, I still wish you a better doctor than you were to me.”

Photos From Epcot’s Flower & Garden Festival 2024

Epcot has always been my sister’s favorite Disney park, and though I didn’t understand that as a child (boring!), it grew on me over the years. Now it’s my favorite too. Even through all of its recent changes, I still see her there. I’ve gone without her more times than I can count in adulthood, and yet she’s always been there somehow. With me. In memory, yes, but in some bigger spiritual way too.

Going together as adults was so different than all those years ago, but just as fulfilling. We talked about our lives, the good and the bad, between excited bouts of “Look at that plant!” because we both have homes now. We both have gardens, and though I’m still learning how to care for a whole yard without it overwhelming me, her garden is her therapy. It shows in its abundant, meticulous beauty. It shows when her eyes light up and her voice lifts a whole octave at the mere sight of a flower she’s never seen before. I share that excitement because it is exciting, but more so because it is her excitement. And that’s a beautiful thing to see.

A butterfly among flowers.
Spot the lizard!
A dragon made mostly of succulents and moss.
This is my favorite view every year.

A Plummet Toward The Forgiving Ground

Learning lessons, expectations, 
Inevitability of your own design.
I’m left to rot inside
This tower of my making, stretching to the pale blue sky.
A place I call home just because it’s the only place left
Within a whole world gone to ruin
In the aftermath of spectacular underachieving.

I fear
I’m overdone;
I fear.
I’ve overstayed
A welcome I believed had no time limit.

Faceless friends, taken at face value.
Taken from my wrathful claws.
My merit in question.
Pull me behind you, I dare.
Tease and cull
The side character
In a sordid tale
Told by the heroes
Who walked - who cheered - before war was won.

I fought dragons
For everyone else
And I returned to scorched lands.

I ran,
Never for the sake of bravery, but for the sake of someone I loved.
Something made of gold.
I love, I love, I love
Until it forgets me.
Until I become a feather caught in the wind,
No one left to catch me.

I found myself shouting into a void,
Then sprouted wings out of sheer necessity.

I’d have chased after me, if I were her.
I’d have waited
Those precious moments.

But I believe in the childlike stories
Everyone else moved on from.
I whispered in the dirt, hope and other antics;
The kind of love that gives back. Fights. Stays a while.

For so long I played a fool holding a dying thing, praying it would take any other shape.
I nestled into my pillows each night
Content in the dreams I could conjure.
I sat lonely at my window,
Praying long after I was told that no one could hear it.
Becoming blasphemous enough to worship at a makeshift alter
Exposed in my most desperate hour. I knew it’d wreck my eternity,
So I told her I’d never let her go,
And all I have left is truth.

The silence that followed was poison in my wine.
Her chalice sat untouched as I swayed to her steady rhythm.
I swayed,
And I forgot,
And I remembered the emptiness I liked to alter.
My stories were small. My dreams were simple.
I still thought them interesting.

But I held her hand while she held a mirror;
A maiden in distress masquerading as a well-weathered knight
Holding me hostage
So long as I was convenient enough to play pretend with.

I jumped
When I no longer served her purpose.
I jumped
Because I had to find my new home.

Dregs of innocent desire dug my grave as I tucked in my wings.
Vines bound my ankles to earth on impact.
I tasted dirt again
And every desire rose to the surface
As I begged for new life.
So I transcend solemnity,
All because I wanted to be real.
To be permanent.
To be chosen.