altarflame: (After the kiss)
[personal profile] altarflame
I responded to a voicemail this afternoon, to call back someone who wanted a reference for our nanny. We've slashed her hours pretty intensely (she comes on Sundays for a 5 hour block so G and I can go out together, and is open to other things that come up rarely on an as needed basis) so she needed some supplemental stuff.

I ended up talking on the phone with the referral woman for over an hour, about personal stuff, once we got the referral part out of the way. She is in counseling, too, for ptsd - she and her children watched her husband be brutally murdered several months back. She wants to homeschool but doesn't know how, but her 7 year old is one of those rare autistic kids with a genius IQ that is floundering in public school, and by the end of the conversation - she's calling me back for homeschool resources, we're getting Aaron and her son together, we've compared notes on trying to find an attorney and on helping kids who are having a hard time with therapy...she referenced things like Dateline NBC doing a special on their family and after we hung up I found the whole story with some quick googling. She'd never heard of emdr for reprocessing but was very interested. She lost an infant way back in the day, too.

She was completely weirded out three quarters of the way through our conversation, by how much she was telling me. I tried to reassure her I'm used to it and people always just sort of walk up to me and start telling me things.




Grant wants to travel, by himself. He's always had a passion to see things he's never seen before, to be in nature...it's how he relates to God best and, well, it's been the biggest thing between us for a few days in a row.

Because I don't want him to go off on his own for days and nights at a time. We've always done things together, I can't even imagine suggesting going off on my own without him. I can't even sleep at night without him in the bed...especially now. We have five young kids that we attachment parent and homeschool, and to me it seems sort of ludicrous to even think that could be an option. I've always valued, SO MUCH, that he is not a man that is going to accept a position with business trips or deployments because family comes first.

He's brought up how as much as we go on trips as a family, it's very limiting to have all the kids with us, and it costs so much more to do it as a group of 7 that it's just not possible to do very often. To that I was thinking, yeah, and feeding us all is a pain in the ass, too - dinner would be so much easier if I just went out and got myself something and then came back when it was bedtime. I mean, really.

And yet...

Grant hasn't gone to counseling, or been swimming at the Y, over the past year. He doesn't have nearly as many real life friends as me, or the online support network that I do. He doesn't write or draw to get things out. He did get a shed and a lot of equipment to do woodworking, with the settlement, and that is good for him, but like my outlets, it's very hit or miss with when we actually have the opportunities to get our creative energy out...

He had to take care of the kids as I recovered and has had to be there for me as I fall apart.

So I'm starting to try to consider this as, maybe this is what HE needs.

Because, honestly, up until now I've just been very hurt, thinking how I can't imagine wanting to go hundreds of miles away from him for days at a time. When I fantasize about getting published, I imagine all of us getting on a plane, or signing things by fax. Yeah, I'm clingy - whatever. He knew I couldn't trust anything or take anything for granted when we fell in love ;) He claims to love me as damaged goods, so it's not like it's any surprise now.

Anyway...I'm working my mental way around to being able to accept him traveling and tell him I'm cool with it. But I have to keep working, or else I'll tell him that and then resent the hell out of him excitedly counting down the days, feel jealous of whatever locale he picks, and then listen bitterly as he tells me what a great time he had, feeling all defensive and overly vulnerable about how much I missed him.

Great mother, sure, Christian keeping the faith through good times and bad, I can do that - but Grant gets one seriously high maintenance mess for a wife. I like to think the lavish meals and fabulous sex offset the long hours he listens and rubs my back as I cry and rant about the jumbled crap in my head.

Honestly I think he has it pretty good and we're both really happy...I'm just emotionally exhausted from going round and round about this - both mentally and out loud with him. We don't fight or yell, we sit and talk calmly and cry and make jokes and break the tension and lay there holding each other talking about why it's hard and have sex and then think of something new to start the cycle over.

For reference: he wants to go set up a tent at the base of some mountains and hike through them and push his body, and rock climb and explore wilderness and take pictures with the fancy camera he's never really gotten to use. He's not at all interested in, like, dining or man made attractions or whatever. Basically, he wants to do things I'm not really physically capable of at the moment, anyway. Which is mostly cool in that it reassures my EXTREMELY jealous and possessive nature that he's aching for solitude, but also sort of awful in that I hate feeling left out or left behind because I "can't" do anything... Like when we went to Bush Gardens and even though I would've been all about the roller coasters a few years ago, now I'm just getting used to life without constant adrenaline from worry and panic again and like things calm. Like how we always wanted to sky dive, and now he's getting impatient to do it right as I'm feeling like I'm not ready yet. He tells me, "it's not like I can only do it once, we can still do it together someday, too", and then I'm torn in half between something like that is NOT the same the SECOND time around, I hate this crap and my desire to not hold him back and have him resenting me.

...This is a long while later. But I'm sitting here now, thinking, and. Come on. The man didn't want cats, or bunnies, but now he's stopping by a pet store after a long work day to pick up a nesting box for baby rabbits. He's building me a chicken coop in our suburban backyard. He's designated Mondays as mine and from now on I get a six hour block during each one to go out by myself...this past one was devoted to swimming, 2 hours of counseling and writing at Atlanta Bread.

The more I think about everything over the years, the more I genuinely want to make a sacrifice for his happiness. Like just thinking of making him happy, makes me happy.

I swear one day he'll have taught me how to love.




Ananda, Aaron and I have devoted a lot of time today to learning all about rabbit pregnancies, baby bunny care, etc. Some of it is really interesting - for instance, countless humans have "rescued" totally healthy newborn rabbits from their "neglectful" mothers out of sheer ignorance. Because it is apparently normal for the mom to only nurse them once or twice a day, when people aren't watching (i.e., late at night and at the crack of dawn). And, they don't hang out in the nest with them - they sit on top of the nesting box or outside of it all day, because in the wild they've got to guard the babies from predators, not entertain them. Likewise unknowing people often sell babies at 4-5 weeks old because they're at peak cuteness then, being ultra tiny yet fully fluffy. BUT, that is the age they're starting solids and are very prone to intestinal disease if not getting the protective elements in mother's milk, too. It's common for commercial breeders to lose half of every litter to this sort of flim flam, whereas if they just left the babies with mom for a full 8 weeks while they made a slow transition to all solid food, it could be almost totally avoided.

We've also had to have a lot of "bucking up" to deal with how one or more is often born dead in a litter, or dies in the first few days of life. I need them to be prepared for that; especially Aaron. And a lot of instruction about scent and keeping our hands off her kits so she keeps caring for them. We put a bunch of nesting materials (strips of old towels, cotton balls, extra hay, etc) in her pen today, for her to drag to the nesting box at her leisure and whim. And moved Shadow to the kids' room with a small litter box and nighttime pen, where he can move freely throughout the day.

I was really surprised to learn, many months back, that rabbits can be litter trained. But it's really effective. Our bunnies are in one of those tall fence style portable playpens with no bottom, on an area rug. We fill a box with hay, then two days later the hay is gone and it's full of poop, and we dump it and add hay again. The rug's been in there for 6 months or more and still vaccums clean and has only a smell of hay about it, that febreezes out pretty well.

Our nanny has a "house rabbit", meaning it roams the house freely like a dog with a litter box, food and water set out. Shadow will be a "room bunny", but shut up at night when A and A's door is open, because I don't think a house bunny would be safe for long with Jake and Elise.

Watching them interact with the cats is awesome: Peter, Aaron's terrified and mostly grown cat, is of course terrified of the rabbits. Chrysanthemum gets along great with Shadow, but chases and pounces on and hunts Hoppy because Hoppy is afraid of her and will run. The best is when Shadow and Chrysanthemum are both curious about the same thing - it's a tiger striped, fluffy kitten with her paws up on something and her head cocked to one side, and a sleak black bunny the same size as her standing on back feet with front paws in the air, sniffing the air and craning forward to see.




I have so much cleaning to do in the morning. Then my friend Kristin is coming over in the afternoon, to measure my kitchen and talk about this mosaic tile I've commissioned her for. It keeps getting so late. I don't want to get up before noon lately if I can help it, but that is rarely an option.

Date: 2009-01-16 01:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] theneolistickid.livejournal.com
I love you and really appreciate how much you do for me. I totally understand that it's hard for you and I'm willing to compromise in some ways. I'm sorry that I keep pushing this thing...

Date: 2009-01-16 02:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ariellejuliana.livejournal.com
I think Grant's request is pretty reasonable, and would probably be really good for him. I understand why it would be hard for you - it would be for me too. But I also think that your thinking about giving him what he needs like he tries so hard to do for you, is good thinking. We don't always understand what our spouses need, but in selflessly loving we can choose to give it anyway.

I think coming up with reasonable limits together would be a good thing, i.e. a time limit for being away from the family, not doing things that you really worry about being unsafe (without being too paranoid), things like that. Paul and I know that he will probably have to go away every so often in his profession (he's a Classicist, so he'll have to go to conferences, and eventually will probably go to Greece or Italy for periods of time), but we know that there is a upper limit on the amount of time he would go away, where it would just be a given that the kids and I would come too, somehow. He's already cancelled a potential trip to Germany, because I would be eight months pregnant, and he wasn't comfortable being away then.

I think going out and hiking in the mountains by himself sounds like a GREAT way to recover from such a stressful couple of years. Maybe plan enough ahead to get some extra help while he's gone?

Date: 2009-01-16 06:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emfish.livejournal.com
I agree with this comment. Ever since we had kids, my husband and I have learned to value our separate "me time." The times where we are together are the meat and bones, the backbone of our relationship, if you will. But the me time, that's the icing on the cake. I used to go through the hurt stage, I thought that the best time in the world for him should be when he was with me & our babies. I couldn't fathom how he could be happier doing something on his own. And then I realized that it wasn't a fair comparison. I was projecting. When I get some alone time, I really enjoy it- why shouldn't he be able to do the same? It doesn't mean that he prefers that to being with us, it just makes him happy. Recently, he had a chance to go away on a 7-day Outward Bound expedition. It's very similar to what Grant wants to do- this was a bare-bones supplies hiking and climbing expedition- sleeping under tarps, days of solitude, writing in journals, etc. I missed him dearly, and guess what? He missed me too (of course). He came home happy & fulfilled, but also with a greater appreciation of life and family in general. It was great to see him so relaxed and happy- and the welcome home sex was AMAZING! Anyway, I know you know all of this, and it sounds like you're working through it. I just wanted to throw my two-cents in. I hope it all works out for you!

Date: 2009-01-19 05:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altarflame.livejournal.com
Well, ok, this is part of the problem: I DO enjoy time to myself for a few hours in the afternoon, but I seriously can't stand to be by myself overnight. Even when I imagine spending the night with one of my best girl friends (which I did in high school and had such a blast), just me and her talking and watching movies and eating crap...*shrug* It doesn't do it for me. Even in the fantasy I want to come home and be with Grant. I really can't imagine wanting to be away from him for days at a time, and don't think I'd like it at all. Let alone here in the house feeling creeped about every little noise with just the kids in their beds. So, there isn't that "fair is fair" thing, you know? I've used that for, like, him going out to the movies or whatever with guy friends or out to take pictures by himself, but this is really different because there isn't any sort of parallel with stuff I'd like to do as well.

I hope that he'll come home happier; I'm afraid he'll come home sorely depressed about getting back to the daily grind and wishing he could do it more often. Hopefully not ;)

The whole Outward Bound thing sounds interesting. He and I are settling on a 3 day 2 night sort of thing - I'm not sure if he'd prefer a group sort of thing like what you mentioned or not. He is a solitary sort of person, I dunno. Maybe?

Date: 2009-01-19 05:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altarflame.livejournal.com
Thank you very much for this comment. I'm sorry I didn't say so sooner. It was good for me, though :)

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