Hey you . . .

I write to find peace for the hamster on the wheel that runs busily through my frantic chaotic and stress-filled days.

I write to find some still.

I write to say “this is so” even if it is only so for a moment.

I write to write …

Welcome to my space … I hope you find what you’re searching for, or at the very least … enjoy what you find.

I'm a featured blogger on Mamapedia Voices

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Thursday
10Sep2009

Closer to the End Than the Beginning

For whatever reason, I have never forgotten it.  It was such a simple moment.  

A daily ritual took place for the 5 or 6 months that we spent working together in the maze of cubicles that was the Joint Operations Group - the post physical training presto chang-o that followed a morning run or group soccer game and preceded the routine monotony of headquarters work.  

It was one of Michelle’s first days at the unit, fresh in as an on the job trainee in between serials of her Basic Intelligence Officer Course.  I had long hair then.  I quickly scooped it back in a ponytail.  Wrapped a scrunchy around it.  Gracefully spread my hair around the scrunchy and secured the donut shaped beauty to my head with another elastic.

“Waiiiiit a minute.  Did you really just make that bun without a bobby pin?” she asked.  Fascinated, she followed with a “You must show me how you did that?” 

She was cute and fit … and young.  As a Mom fresh back from maternity leave, I felt threatened, insecure, and dated around her energy and spunkiness.  There really was no jockeying to be done, but I still felt jockeyed by her mere presence.  Suddenly acutely aware that I was no longer the young one.  Despite the fact that her hair had been freshly lobbed off and streaked in a mode characteristic of her spunk, she studied that bun technique like an astute apprentice.  It struck me hard in that moment that she was hungry to learn in every facet of life with every fiber of her being.  She was a total Martha.

Her intense drive to master all things domestic and professional reminded me of someone I knew well.  Someone taking her own early steps on a path of self-destruction - addicted to proving through doing, completely ignorant of the costs and consequences of striving for perfection. I did not know where I was headed then, but on the other side of it all I recognize how the only direction off that path was to “get real” - a humbling experience that required taking down the mask of perfection and exposing some open wounds to the cold harsh air of judgement … and a lot of therapy and counseling ensued.  My marriage didn’t make it.  My career setback slightly.  There was suffering, but thankfully, I survived and life gradually got better and more manageable.  Truthfully, I did not know her well enough - perhaps the straps of her mask were secured too tightly, reinforced by worry.

Anxiety.

Pressure.

Fear.

Solitude.

Exhaustion …

mental illness …

life.   

I could not and would not have predicted that Michelle’s struggles would lead her to the choices made in those final moments of her life when she might have realized she was closer to the end than the beginning.  And while deeply saddened and struck, I cannot say that I am surprised.  From the time of the first notice of her death through to the decisive reports on the cause, I absolutely wanted to believe there was some other explanation.  An accident.  Misfortune.  A bizarre undetectable medical condition.  In late 2007 we exchanged phone calls and emails.  I had heard she had had a blood clot - a condition more common to the elderly and one that I assumed we had shared as I experienced a blood clot during my pregnancy.  “The doctors couldn’t figure out what went wrong” … “inconclusive” she said … “a bunch of things went wrong all at once” … “Just one of those crazy things.”  Too private and guarded, she did not share the real deal of what actually happened during her inaugural overseas tour in 2006.  Hindsight leaves me too biased to judge whether something was detectably amiss in her gracious warm and compassionate responses throughout that exchange - I am left with what is surely a common theme among those who knew her - “I wish I had paid closer attention.”

There was an intensity about Michelle.  It was softened by her warmth, grace, and generous spirit.  She seemingly engineered her death with the same dogged determination with which she ran her life.  Perhaps it is her spunky intensity that resulted in this strong imprint on my memory, but I think of her often and wonder how she could have known she was done.  

I wish her peace and resolve to pay closer attention.

Wednesday
09Sep2009

Adieu . . .

I bid you.

My faithful high-maintenance gadget companion.

You no longer need me …

and I am oh so happy to let you go.

So so SO happy.

Buh-bye.

Adieu adieu adieu!

Friday
04Sep2009

Sesame seeds and raisins

 

I thought I had outsmarted the squirrels with my clever use of wire to hang the bird feeder.

Moments after I snapped this shot, the little dude did about 20 chin-ups with the front paws (do squirrels have paws or legs?) and 20 dips with the back.

Then he had a good upside down stretch.

Scratched his tummy.

And I’m sure I heard him burp.

Then he dropped, had a scrap with the squirrel dudes collecting what had dropped on the ground, and proceeded to run a marathon around my yard and on my roof.

Squirrels.

Who knew they could be so entertaining.

Wednesday
02Sep2009

First Days . . .

We argued over breakfast and teeth-brushing.

You did need rushing.

But moreso, I knew it was because I was already missing you.

Missing the easy-peasy days of our last few weeks of summer.

Missing your giggles.

Missing the sound of lego creations being built.

And then you were off.

The quiet welcomed me.

I could hear the birds.  Their sometimes steady chirp.  The occasional sing-song call.

The pitter patter of some squirrels on the roof.

A lawn being mowed.

The quiet whirr of traffic.

The cracking of the basket where Oreo stretches in her sleep.

The quiet … the splendid quiet welcomed me.

Tuesday
25Aug2009

Sun has finally caught up with the moon ...

I finally had some moments to cobble together the best moments of our trip to Australia.  The video is long (4 mins), but goes by quickly, just as our time on our trip went by too quickly.  If you have slower internet, you may want to right-click-download.  The songs are by the band Rabbit from The Rabbit! EP. “Together” followed by “Sun and Moon”.  Enjoy!

Sun and the Moon and the Australia Between from Norma Jean Barrett on Vimeo.

The adventure began more than 10 years ago.  In a fortunate turn of events after being originally passed over, I was selected for an exchange position at the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra, ACT.  I made fast friends with Clare - an old soul and a natural mother hen, she took me under her wing and showed me the finest and funnest Australia has to offer.  She is timeless, as is our friendship, and for that I am grateful.

“Australia is somewhere I have always wanted to go,” said my Mom on a warmish day in NB.  An avid traveller when we lived in Lahr, West Germany many years ago, she and Dad took a few decades break to see me and my brother through school and to finance our expensive sports and hobbies.  This made Australia the perfect time to get her traveling shoes worn down again.

A passionate wanderer, there is nothing that I would love to pass along more to Z than the belief that the world is a small vibrant beautiful and fascinating place begging to be explored.  This was by far his biggest adventure yet.  I look forward to many more with him.

Our Interary (photo’s in the video follow this order)

Day 1-4: “Clare and Brendan Get Hitched” - McLaren Vale, South Australia

Day 5-6: “Rocks and Roo’s” - Kangaroo Island, South Australia

Day 7: “The Great DS Charger Hunt” - Adelaide, South Australia

Day 8-9: “Spasational” - O’Reilly’s Rainforest Retreat, Queensland

Day 10-12: “Wet and Wild” - Surfer’s Paradise, Queensland

Day 13-16: “Crikey! Look at the beautiful mountains” - Caloundra, Queensland

Day 17-18: “Fast fun” - Sydney, New South Wales