Bought this on a whim a few weeks ago at @traderjoes and forgot about it until tonight. I decided to pair it with ground turkey, black beans, rotel and chili season for a “Taco-Mac.” Damn it was delicious. Split the mac with my fiancé so half the box was 7sp and the chili was 0sp.

I’m still reading “The Drama of the Gifted Child.” It’s only 125 pages, but it’s a tough read. This passage really spoke to me today and I thought it was appropriate to share.
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Dread.
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Yes, that perfectly sums up how I feeL towards my Mom. I never know who I’m going to get Dr. Jekyll or Mr. Hyde. The stress of even worrying about it makes it almost unbearable before I’m in the same room with her.
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This year I will be NY for Thanksgiving, but I do not plan to see my Mom. She has rescinded too many invitations over the last few years and I can’t let the dread of seeing her ruin my precious few days off in my favorite city.
I hope I can stay strong and not let guilt take over, this is in best interest of my self care.

Measuring Monday: Daddy

Tumblr has been my quiet safe space for 8 years. This has been a place to grieve and be vulnerable. Much of what I compiled below for this week’s Measuring Monday was already written and shared here over the years. Only now am I beginning to share my writing more publicly and I am thankful for the space and community here when I was less brave.

The world lost a great man 11 years ago yesterday. My world especially got a lot dimmer and for sure a lot less funny.

My Dad was awesome. He was born in Brooklyn and raised on Long Island in the same town I grew up in. He was the first in his family to attend and graduate college (with an Art degree) and after being a hippie in Southern California for a few wanderlust months he went back for a Masters in Education.

My Dad was an art teacher in a low income, minority school district and he LOVED IT. He spent his ENTIRE 33-year career in the district. After teaching for 20ish years he went on to administration. He was a middle school assistant principal for a number of years and then a high school assistant principal for a number of years. They wanted him to be principal, but he didn’t want to deal with politics.

When I was in first grade my Dad started a Saturday enrichment program for K-12 students, he ran the program for 12 years. Some of my favorite childhood memories were from that program. My Dad also piloted a night school program within the school district so people could get their HS diplomas. My Dad was a pretty big deal in the K-12 Education world. Even after he retired he couldn’t stay away. The last year of his life he was teaching in an education certificate program at a Dallas Community College. My Dad was great at what he did.

We shared a love of many, many things, especially musicals. RENT was one of our favorites and after he died “Seasons of Love” took on a new meaning. I’m measuring those years within my “dash” (it’s a great poem if you are not familiar, look it up) in daylights – in sunsets – in midnights – in cups of coffee – in inches – in miles – in laughter – in strife and more.  Back in January 2010, a friend of mine challenged me to measure my year in cups of coffee, which lead to measuring my miles, my body, my health and the rest is history. I get a lot of joy and satisfaction in measuring my life. It makes life seem a little more permanent and a little less fleeting at times.

The last 3-4 years of his life I pretty much talked to my Dad every day, even multiple times a day. Since he was retired he was available to talk whenever. I generally would call him when I was walking to and from class in grad school. Even if it was just a few minutes we’d have a great chat. I can honestly say we were best friends. There are still times when I wish I had my Dad to call.

Our last day was a fabulous Daddy-Daughter day – we were dorks and really called them that. Little did I know that a week later he would be taken from me. I was living in North Texas at the time, 5 months into my first job out of grad school and I was going through a rocky patch. My Dad lived 2.5 hours away in Dallas and wanted to come up for the day to cheer me up. Plus my he was having gastric bypass surgery that Thursday and I really wanted to see him before then.

Part of the reason I moved to Texas was to be closer to my Dad. My parents got divorced after my freshman year of high school and he stayed local, but once I went to college we never lived in the same state. I was in Connecticut and he was in New York or Florida or Texas. I saw my Dad so much in those 5 months we both lived in Texas it was wonderful, some of our best times. I had a lot of ups and downs with my Dad, but our last few months were so much fun.

That last time we hung out I drove up to Oklahoma so we could go to the casino and play some slot machines. Well on the 20-mile drive to Oklahoma I get pulled over on a Sunday afternoon for doing 77 in a 70. I honestly wasn’t aware of my speed because it was an open road and because my Dad and I were singing along to the Aida soundtrack on the top of our lungs. I was so upset about the ticket, but my Dad comforted me and made me feel better, he always did. After the casino, we came back to my apartment, rearranged furniture, and just hung out.

I didn’t want him to leave. I had a sinking feeling about everything. That was the day he told me he was getting gastric bypass over a lap band. I wasn’t a fan of his decision to have either surgery, particularly not gastric bypass. He was 6’2 and 300-325 pounds MAYBE. He has lost 100 pounds through diet and exercise when I was in high school and he kept it off for 8 years before quickly gaining it back after he retired. I was disappointed that he was resorting to surgery. He had been talking about lap band for 6 months and talked to many doctors, went to consults etc. Then within a week of his surgery, his doctor talks him into gastric bypass.

His surgery was Thursday, a week before Thanksgiving. 3 days later that Sunday morning, November 18, 2017, my phone rings at 6:30am. I knew before I answered the phone that he was dead. He was still in the hospital and he essentially bled out internally. A blood transfusion and proper care could have saved his life. I was 2.5 hours away in North Texas not having been fully informed or able to fully comprehend post-op complications and too naive to realize I needed to come down. No twentysomething really thinks their Dad is going to die. I had just spent the prior Sunday with him and was scheduled to come down to Dallas Tuesday for the night before flying to NY for Thanksgiving.

I was devastated, I still am. My whole entire world forever changed. Everything about that day and the weeks and months that followed, including a failed wrongful death lawsuit due to the Texas good old boys club, was a nightmare. I sometimes wish I could “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” much of it.

He was 58, I was 24, and my sister was not quite 22. None of us were ready for him to be gone forever. My sister and I had already lost him once in 1998 when my parents separated and he moved out. To quote a friend who wrote about her Dad on his one year anniversary “I feel both lucky to have had my dad for so many years and angry that he was taken from me when I and he were too young. If I know anything better today than I did last year, it is exactly how complicated and messy life and death and grief are.”

My story is a complicated one on many levels. It’s a lot to bear, especially around the Holidays. Family drama and a Mother that I have a terrible relationship with makes things extra hard. There is no winning with her ever, my Dad was one of the few who really understood. I miss having him on my team. The sad reality is the 11 years that he’s been gone have also led to the 11 worst years in my relationship with my mom. A relationship that was rocky to begin with due to her alcoholism and emotional abuse.

The complications of life and death and grief were something I wasn’t expecting and it really causes tremendous pain. However, out of tragedy, I was finally able to find the motivation to get healthy and fit. I did the work, no shortcuts, no fad diets, and most importantly no surgery.

To quote a message from another friend years ago, about losing her mom, “Sometimes it takes the death of a loved one to wake us up. I consider that a lasting gift from my parent.” I found such comfort and hope in those words. My Daddy didn’t need that surgery and didn’t need to die. Sadly he did, but I refuse to let my weight control my life. I also couldn’t have his death be in vain. So in 2010, I started running, I took charge of my health. I also started fundraising for Accelerate Brain Cancer Cure (ABC2) since most people who have lost loved ones find solace in charity work and there wasn’t a community for my loss out there. So I adopted David Cook’s charity of choice since watching American Idol during those dark months that followed helped me get through each week.

And here I am 11 years later and in the best shape of my life thus far. I thank my Dad for that lasting gift no matter how painful it’s been. I only wish he was here to see me now and the wonderful all-around person I am today.

I’ll leave you with this. One quote I remember my Dad telling to me in a time of struggle in my life was, “Plant your own garden instead of waiting for someone to bring you flowers.” That quote has meant so much to me over the years. YOU only have one life and YOU need to make the most of out of, right now.

Love you Daddy.

RDJ 4/25/49-11/18/07

One of my fondest and last memories with my Dad was singing along in the car to this Aida show-stopping number!
There are so many songs that he loved or that remind me of him. If have have a chance listen to a few of these today…
Aida – Strongest Suit
My Fair Lady – On The Street Where You Live
Lion King Broadway – He Lives in You
Rent – Without You
Taylor Dane – Tell It To My Heart
Fine Young Cannibals – She Drives Me Crazy
Rick Astley – Together Forever
Michael Sembello – Maniac
Kool and the Gang – Ladies Night

I remember Sunday, November 18, 2007 like yesterday. You don’t forget the day your world changes forever. I was already broken before that day, but the trauma and ptsd of losing you has had a bigger ripple than I could have imagined as a naive 24 year old.

I hate November 18.

I especially hate when it’s a Sunday.

I hate that you died at 58.

I hate that it shattered me and I’m still picking up the pieces.

I hate that you’re not here.

I hate how so many people in my life never knew you.

I hate how much I miss you still.

I hate that I have to write a post like this for people to remember you or think of you.

I hate how surprised I am that I still get so sad on this day.

Timehop reminded me that 4 years ago I presented at a regional conference with colleagues about the importance of fitness and making time for it.
Not that @MeasuringLife isn’t a quiet side project just for me anymore I’m excited for the chance to do more workshops and education session!

This has been my #sidehustle extra income since September with adjunct teaching @roverdotcom @airbnb! Red is money made and the pencil is money pending!
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I’ve also just linked cards this month on @doshapp @getupsideapp and have a @thredup bag coming to sell some clothes that I’m too skinny for! Let me know if you want a referral code for the apps so we can both make a few extra bucks!
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The money generation game is real. I have dreams that don’t involve a “traditional stable job” so knowing that I could supplement income so easily has been really exciting!

Measuring Monday on a Friday: College Jobs

Ok here is part two of this past Monday’s free-write. More about my grad school years and beyond in the future. 

In college I was granted work study money, I want to say to the tune of $1,800/semester or something and I was determined earn to each every dollar. Weeks into my freshman year I got a work study job working in the Associate Dean of Liberal Arts office for about 10/hr week. My workstation was in a fishbowl of an office space, but I was facing a busy hallway and often got to see friends (or crushes) and people watch.  Again I loved this job and kept it for quite a while. My favorite task was signing the Associate Dean’s name on letters to admitted students, I perfected my Jean Blue signature, it was beautiful, although to my disappointment nothing like her real one. I actually still doodle her name from time to time! While working for the Associate Dean I sometimes covered the admin’s desk upstairs over lunch. She was the admin of a few Liberal Arts departments and her desk was stationed in a hallway full of professors from Political Science, Languages, Theatre. I loved working upstairs, the professors were great and this workstation had a COMPUTER. That meant I could get paid to play Snood and talk on AOL Instant Messenger. I ended up working 15-20/hours a week in the College of Liberal Arts through my Sophomore year.

Then prior to my Junior year I met the new Campus Fitness Center Director and we hit it off, I think I gave her a tour of campus or something. I ended up picking up a work study shift at the Rec Center at the front desk for about 8/hours a week which meant I needed to cut back my Liberal Arts hours because I was only allowed to work my work study job for 20 hours/week. Then by October of my Junior year I got selected as a mid-year replacement for a Resident Assistant position which meant I needed to cut back on work study hours yet again since as an RA we were only allowed work 10/hours a week outside of work. I ended up keeping the Fitness Center job, again I loved the people watching and opportunity to be social with other employees.

My senior year I returned as a RA, but I wasn’t granted work study money because of being an RA which gave me free room and board (valued at $10K/year). I think my Financial Aid packaged changed the year before, but because I was a mid-year hire I was still able to have a small amount of work study dollars which I spread across the rest of fall and then spring when I was at the Rec Center or maybe the Rec Center paid me wages as opposed to work study? As a college administrator now myself, I know more about there different budget lines then I did when I was a student. The free room and board as an RA was great (thank you ~$20K of loans I didn’t have to take out), but I needed spending money so the summer before Senior year I went to the ol’ Career Center and looked through the “babysitting book.” I ended up babysitting for a family with little boy who was 9 months old at the time 2x a week from 9am-2pm in their beautiful home about 20 minutes from campus. Again, I loved this job. The family was great, I adored the little boy, they always had great food in the fridge, and there was a drive through Dunkin’ Donuts right by their house. I always grabbed a iced coffee prior to getting there and sipped it all day. Plus I was getting paid CASH.

If you think I couldn’t squeeze anymore college years employment in think again. My first two college summers I supplemented my income by doing office work at both my Dad and Aunt’s offices. Lots of filing, mailing, opening mail and copying. The real game changer was the 4 summers working for the new student Orientation office at my undergrad. 2 of the summers were short stints as just a volunteer Orientation Leader, but the other 2 summers had me working all summer as an Orientation Intern with the extra perk of free on campus housing all summer too. I started my last summer intern year the day after I graduated from college and worked until I had to leave for grad school.

Skinny Jeans!!! Old Navy size 12. I tried these on in store last week and ordered then online. When they came in the mail yesterday and I held up the pants I was like there is no way these pants are going to fit, but here they are!