I spent a lot of time with my maternal grandmother when I was growing up and heard about her childhood and life before kids and marriage too, and remember many of her stories, that I hope don’t just die with me. I know that while my children will never meet her, nor have the same experiences I did, I am realizing now with our digital age, I have an opportunity like never before. I have a way to leave behind my stories, and the stories that were shared with me growing up. I can give to my children and nieces, my account of things, first hand, and in my own voice. They can get to know the me of now, at a later point. My kids can read about how I feel, what I think, my opinions, and observations before they were even around. It is really remarkable actually, to be able to represent yourself, without the filter of someone else recounting things, or offering their version or opinion on something. It is so unique I think, and thinking back to my own family, how neat would it be to have now. To hear their memories either as they happened or things that you would typically never know, because really conversation is becoming a dying art. I remember some of the best stories just came out of late night conversations with my grandmother, her telling me about her life, my mother’s life, and then us grandchildren. Later of course I would get various versions of some of these stories recounted by my grandmother, that my mother would give me her take on them, and often they matched up surprisingly closer than you would think, but just with a sprinkling of opinions varying the tale. It is thinking back to this, that I am hoping I can keep up blogging, and keep this record going, that I have a chance to put my thoughts, opinions, feelings and observations together, so that my voice is added to the chorus that my children and nieces, (who knows maybe a nephew or two in the future too!), can find perspective in my writing, and they too can come to the realization that we too had pasts, we also had a life, and a story and an opinion well before they were even thought about. That these experiences and histories shaped us as well as molded us into the parents, grandparents, and hopefully great grandparents we might someday become. I think knowing where you came from is just as important as figuring out where you are going. Often it is the past that dictates how we cope, manage, and navigate in the future. I hope that I am diligent enough to keep up with this little project so it might one day be a wonderful gift to my kids and theirs.
Nathan and I have been happily married since January 24, 2009. We lead a busy life and enjoy every minute of it, which I often pack with lots to do! Nathan works for the State of KY doing environmental work, I work in the events/tradeshow industry for a professionally managed NPO. In 2009 I also started my own business, Events by Julie Lewis. Kyle Daniel Lewis was born, June 4, 2013 and our daughter Kaylee Kathleen Lewis completed our family on March 15, 2017.
Monday, January 28, 2013
Middle of the night realization...or was that pregancy heartburn?
I know there was a distinct moment as a child, when I
realized that my parents were people before they were parents. I remember being
sort of shocked when they talked about their lives, before each other, before
marriage, and before kids, even when they were kids themselves. It was like a foreign
idea, that there was something before us, and that idea was just so weird! Now
of course it makes plenty of sense, and to hear stories about their upbringing,
or their lives it often still has a piece of disbelief in it for me.
I spent a lot of time with my maternal grandmother when I was growing up and heard about her childhood and life before kids and marriage too, and remember many of her stories, that I hope don’t just die with me. I know that while my children will never meet her, nor have the same experiences I did, I am realizing now with our digital age, I have an opportunity like never before. I have a way to leave behind my stories, and the stories that were shared with me growing up. I can give to my children and nieces, my account of things, first hand, and in my own voice. They can get to know the me of now, at a later point. My kids can read about how I feel, what I think, my opinions, and observations before they were even around. It is really remarkable actually, to be able to represent yourself, without the filter of someone else recounting things, or offering their version or opinion on something. It is so unique I think, and thinking back to my own family, how neat would it be to have now. To hear their memories either as they happened or things that you would typically never know, because really conversation is becoming a dying art. I remember some of the best stories just came out of late night conversations with my grandmother, her telling me about her life, my mother’s life, and then us grandchildren. Later of course I would get various versions of some of these stories recounted by my grandmother, that my mother would give me her take on them, and often they matched up surprisingly closer than you would think, but just with a sprinkling of opinions varying the tale. It is thinking back to this, that I am hoping I can keep up blogging, and keep this record going, that I have a chance to put my thoughts, opinions, feelings and observations together, so that my voice is added to the chorus that my children and nieces, (who knows maybe a nephew or two in the future too!), can find perspective in my writing, and they too can come to the realization that we too had pasts, we also had a life, and a story and an opinion well before they were even thought about. That these experiences and histories shaped us as well as molded us into the parents, grandparents, and hopefully great grandparents we might someday become. I think knowing where you came from is just as important as figuring out where you are going. Often it is the past that dictates how we cope, manage, and navigate in the future. I hope that I am diligent enough to keep up with this little project so it might one day be a wonderful gift to my kids and theirs.
I spent a lot of time with my maternal grandmother when I was growing up and heard about her childhood and life before kids and marriage too, and remember many of her stories, that I hope don’t just die with me. I know that while my children will never meet her, nor have the same experiences I did, I am realizing now with our digital age, I have an opportunity like never before. I have a way to leave behind my stories, and the stories that were shared with me growing up. I can give to my children and nieces, my account of things, first hand, and in my own voice. They can get to know the me of now, at a later point. My kids can read about how I feel, what I think, my opinions, and observations before they were even around. It is really remarkable actually, to be able to represent yourself, without the filter of someone else recounting things, or offering their version or opinion on something. It is so unique I think, and thinking back to my own family, how neat would it be to have now. To hear their memories either as they happened or things that you would typically never know, because really conversation is becoming a dying art. I remember some of the best stories just came out of late night conversations with my grandmother, her telling me about her life, my mother’s life, and then us grandchildren. Later of course I would get various versions of some of these stories recounted by my grandmother, that my mother would give me her take on them, and often they matched up surprisingly closer than you would think, but just with a sprinkling of opinions varying the tale. It is thinking back to this, that I am hoping I can keep up blogging, and keep this record going, that I have a chance to put my thoughts, opinions, feelings and observations together, so that my voice is added to the chorus that my children and nieces, (who knows maybe a nephew or two in the future too!), can find perspective in my writing, and they too can come to the realization that we too had pasts, we also had a life, and a story and an opinion well before they were even thought about. That these experiences and histories shaped us as well as molded us into the parents, grandparents, and hopefully great grandparents we might someday become. I think knowing where you came from is just as important as figuring out where you are going. Often it is the past that dictates how we cope, manage, and navigate in the future. I hope that I am diligent enough to keep up with this little project so it might one day be a wonderful gift to my kids and theirs.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Four more years!! and four more and four more and four more.....
Four years, usually only presidents seem to care about that
particular duration of time, but with today marking our four year wedding
anniversary I can't help but realize how quick that went for us and how slowly it
probably would go for a president!
I do have to say I have really enjoyed that we have had
these four years to be married and live our life together and really figure out
how to be a good partner, friend, and spouse to one another. We have had the
blessing of time and just enjoyed our life together, just us two, oh and the
dogs! J
It has been our small little family up until now, and we are looking forward to
starting the next chapter with the new addition in June. I know that
these past four years have enabled us to have the skills and communication to
continue our marriage outside of child rearing as well. It is reassuring that
we have done it now, so that when the time comes, and our children face their
own lives, and families, we have established what we want and the life we want
to enjoy, together, back as a married couple.
While I am beyond excited about our future family, and all the new love,
joy, challenges, and obstacles that presents, I am also picturing that horizon
where we have a life again of just us two, and our little piece of the pie that
these four years have represented. It does bring comfort to know that while we
leave this chapter behind us, it repeats itself again towards the end of the novel.
Happy Anniversary to a great partner in
life and in love, I am a lucky lucky girl.Wednesday, January 16, 2013
The fine line between a wedding and a funeral...
It has been wedding central it seems like lately on my evenings
and weekends, which has been great since having a baby is seriously almost as
expensive as their first year of college it seems! When I tell people that
weddings are my hobby or something I enjoy helping to plan and be a part of,
most people who have experienced the planning of a wedding look at me like I
have four eyes. If you have lived through your own wedding you now know how
different planning a wedding is than planning say a birthday party, or a Christmas
dinner. It is an event like no other, and often those who are virgin brides/wedding
planners don’t get what all the fuss is about, and why on earth anyone would
hire a wedding planner or coordinator is beyond them. Then you talk to them
post wedding. You hear of the stress, the frustration, the expense and then not
even having time to enjoy the day, which is usually immediately followed up
with, “If I had known then what I know now, I would have spent the little extra
to have someone there to manage that day at minimum”. Also many find out also
on the flip side that having someone in their court to navigate the very clique
waters of wedding vendors, that often the help in negotiations and planning can
actually save the bride more than the cost of the planner or coordinator.
Basically making the assistance free! Unfortunately it is often a realization
that only seems to happen after the wedding has happened, but some brides wise
up early on and get it from the beginning, either from seeing the benefits and
value happen first hand, or attending a really bad wedding. This I think is why I am kept busy enough with
just friends of friends, or referrals from weddings I have done that a future
bride has attended. They have firsthand experience to rely on to take that leap
of faith.
Now that I have that out of the way, here is the catalyst
behind this post. Each time I meet a bride, especially in the early stages
before their eyes get glassed over like a deer in a headlight with all the
to-do’s on their lists, I try to put the day in perspective for them, as I
think this is the greatest reason as to why a wedding day is so special and a
day like no other you will ever experience. (Of course besides the fact you are
committing your life to someone else!)
Your wedding day is the only time in your life where you
will be alive to witness all those that love and support you in one room for
one purpose, you. They will come from
near and far, they will be the oldest and youngest members of your family and
friends, all there to show that they love you, they encourage you, and they
believe in you and this person you are about to spend the rest of your life
with. If you really sit back and think of this, it is actually larger than the
wedding itself. It will unfortunately never be recreated again, even at your
funeral those same mix of people, will sadly not all be there to celebrate you
and your life. This is your one shot to really be present, really absorb, and
just take in all that you can to remember this day. That should be your sole
energy on your wedding day in my opinion. Yes the flowers are beautiful, your
makeup was flawless, you have photographs to pass on to your children and their
children, but as you head towards the end of your life, you will look back on
that day and remember all those around you and realize that it is about to
happen again, in a much more somber tone, and that unfortunately you won’t be
there to see it.
I often relay this to the brides I am lucky enough to help
plan or be a part of their special day as I think it is really forgotten in the
shuffle of all that happens in that short window of time. You concentrate on
the groom, on your future, on your marriage, and many other important things,
but really in my opinion this trumps all of those things, as without these
people in your life, none of the other elements or events would exist. While I
can see how some might think this is morbid and a dreary reality to think about
on what is to be one of the happiest days of your life, but for me I hope that
I can convey this and it is received as just something to deeply consider and
appreciate, that this day is larger than you, larger than that massive white
dress, and larger than the ring on your finger, it encompasses your life, and I
find that this is the reason I am addicted to weddings. I am lucky to get to
observe many weddings and the reactions of brides, grooms, family and friends,
with a very unbiased eye. My single most favorite moment is when the bride and
groom are at the front, reciting their vows, and everyone’s eyes are on that
couple. It is then that I scan the room, and see all the faces just in awe,
love and care for this couple vowing to share a life together for as long as
they live. It is really something
remarkable, and unfortunately the couple doesn’t experience, but it is that
moment that gives me chills, and makes me realize that that moment is why I
love to be a part of wedding days. It makes whatever work, stress, or
frustration just nothing to be concerned with. That all the effort, time and
cost is worth it. That this moment will never be recreated, and this same love
will never be felt again at this magnitude while these two are still alive.
Next time you are at a wedding, really look around the room, you will see what
I am talking about. You too will be addicted!
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Lance Armstrong and Ice Cream Cake
In 2002 I took up the hobby of cycling, both road and
mountain biking. It was at the time, due to someone else, that this became an
interest of mine, but none the less I adopted it whole heartedly. I commuted to
work on a bike, my weekends were biking, and I rarely used my car for probably
two years or more. I would grocery shop and pack my backpack with everything I
would need for a week, sometimes even condensing and recycling all the
prepackaging of foods and groceries before even leaving the bike rack of the grocery
store or farmers market to head home. I will admit it got me in great shape
without any additional effort, and I loved that I could actually experience the
day, outside, where now I commute in the dark and come home in the dark most
days. (That might be due to the ridiculous hours my job expects of me too.) I
was fit, tan, and full of fresh air and optimism. I had just started a new job in
the summer of 2004 at the University of Florida, and ironically my place of
employment was also big into cycling. We even had a team that road bike
together weekly, and even found me a place to shower before work after my
commute in. (It was like 12 miles or so, which now seems ridiculous, but then
it was such a short ride). While the shower area was near a necropsy room, and
that had it disadvantages, I considered myself a mild hobby cyclist and
regardless of what made me start, I really enjoyed it.
Each year I was always eager to watch the coverage of the
Tour de France and my boy Lance. After the 2002 race I got an I love Lance
sticker for my bike with a big red glittery heart on it. He was such an awesome
person, both with his philanthropy and attitude, and his commitment and grit.
While I have never been an uber fan of anyone, gushing over someone or any of
that non-sense, he was the first person that I think I really felt as a public
figure would be someone I would like to meet someday. He was someone that had
attributes that I admired and valued.
Ironically in October 2009 I had the experience that I had
thought about back in 2004, I met Lance Armstrong. He was the key note speaker
at a large convention I was working, and while it was a brief meeting, and I
did regret that I had no camera and did not want to be one of those people who
stalk a public figure for a photo, it was an amazing experience. Not too many
people can check off their bucket list that they met someone that they admired,
shook hands, had a few words, and then were able to really observe them up
close and personal. Since the event was
in Austin, in his hometown, he simply rode his bike to the venue, was in jeans
and a t-shirt, gave his talk, and hopped back on his bike to head home. It was
surreal. I just watched him interact
with a string of people all vying for autographs, photos, and trying to chat it
up with him. He is not much of a chatter it turns out, so probably a good thing
I didn’t get time to talk to him much might have been disappointed. He gave a
great talk to the 5000 or so people that were there. He was exactly as I had
pictured he would be, and also the same demeanor and personality I had
envisioned all those years. He was real, down to earth, approachable, and of
course fit. He spoke about his kids, his life, his philanthropy, and even
chicken nuggets. I left that encounter thinking
how cool that was, and how not that long before I think he had some small hand
in the course my life had taken thus far.
Let me explain.
Right after starting my new job at the University in the
summer of 2004, I was taking my normal route to work on my mountain bike. It
was sturdier, and I liked it better than my road bike for commuting to work on.
I kept my typical routine, of waking up, throwing on my cycling gear, packing
my suit, heels, breakfast, lunch, hair dryer and makeup and carried my bike with
its glittery I heart Lance sticker, down the three flights of stairs from my
apartment to hit the road to work. I rarely even brushed my teeth before
heading out since I got ready for the day once I got to work. I would literally
roll out of bed and within 5 minutes was on my bike. It was my daily routine.
This one particular day would change my life forever. I just
did not know it yet. I headed out and about a mile into my commute I had to
cross one of the largest intersections in Gainesville, now you would think, how
big can this be it is Gainesville, but it was about four or five lanes each
direction with the turn lanes. I waited for the light, and remember getting
past the cars at the red light, and I would always double check for people
running it, or trying to beat the green. This one day I missed a car, it was
plowing along in the right hand turn lane and was trying to make a right on red
without stopping, it was going about 35 I was later told. It was a young man
trying to get his girlfriend to class on time, he was in a hurry and just as I
saw him, his bumper was in my thigh and his side mirror was on the right side
of my ribcage. It was a blur after that. I remember being on my hands and knees
in the middle of the intersection and noticing my gloves were torn, and my
knees bleeding. I remember crawling on all fours to the corner to try to lie
against the cross walk pole. I remember sweating profusely, and being so so
hot. I remember the pain, the pain so deep inside of me that I thought I wasn’t
breathing still. Then ironically the realization that I am not going to make
that meeting I was due to take minutes for at 8am. Back to the pain, that was a
reality check. I remember hearing sirens, and people, I remember thinking I
didn’t wash my face, brush my teeth, and since I had on padded bike shorts, I
didn’t have on underwear. My mother always told me to wear clean underwear and
here I was getting loaded into an ambulance, sans panties. Looking back now it
is funny to realize what runs through your mind, and how trivial it all seems,
but at the time that is where my brain was going. Maybe to distract me, because
oh yes that pain, it was still there and maybe getting worse, it was hard to
tell, was it def con 4 pain or def con 5 pain, I had no idea, I just knew it
had to be bad for it to hurt like it did. Then I remember getting hotter and
hotter, and my logical side started in, was I bleeding on the inside and that
was why I was getting so hot? Was I dying? Why else would I be getting so so
hot? (I would later find out that it was July, in Florida, in a large steel box
of an ambulance, I had just been cycling at a pretty fast pace, oh yeah and the
air conditioning was out on the ambulance that day) I remember thinking oh man my
parents are going to go berserk; they didn’t like me biking to work to begin
with, so this was going to be the icing on the cake. I didn’t want to be the
one to call them that was for sure. I also made a pact with myself that I am
going to fake it, that whenever I see them, I can fake it. I can put on a
smile, and pretend I am just fine, just skinned my knees, and need some new
gloves. I could manage their fear, and worry, and make everything just fine.
They were at least a 4 hour drive away so I had time. I can get myself together
in four hours, maybe five since I was sure my dad was still at work and had to
come home first to get my mom before heading north. (I didn’t realize that I my
bike and helmet would sell me out here, while I went into the middle of the
intersection, my bike went under the tires of the car, and I landed on my head,
and slid, that my helmet had half of it dented in and scuffed, and my backpack
was scraped and torn and took the other brunt of my slide, lucky for my flesh!)
It is crazy to realize once again, what you think about when something like
this happens. It is so ironic.
They immediately put me in a CT machine to check for internal
injuries and assess the damage. I had on that crazy neck brace and was lying on
a board. I remember thinking, maybe the board is just really hard and that is
why my back hurts so badly. If I could just get on a more comfortable bed, then
surely I would feel a lot better. (Crazy was talking here.) What are these
people thinking leaving me strapped to this and so uncomfortable? At this point I was still alone, the person I
was dating at the time had not made it to the hospital, and I had told someone
my parents phone number to call as well as his number and my work number, since
once again I was worried about that meeting that needed minutes done for it.
I got out of the CT scan and they started an IV, and then
started the morphine. Oh the morphine, it was magic going in. It turned this
horrendous pain into a sprained ankle. I could breathe again, and with the pain
managed, my energy turned to fear. What had happened, what was wrong with me? I
had not died yet, so that was a good sign. I wasn’t hot anymore, that seemed
promising. Did they get ahold of my parents? I hope they told them I am alive
and talking and fine. I am sure my mother is a train wreck right now. I don’t
see my backpack anywhere so I can’t get to my cell phone to call anyone. Oh my
hands are still strapped down; I guess I couldn’t do anything anyways.
What seemed like forever a doctor came in, turns out he was
with me earlier, I just did not remember then with all the pain. He had taken a
look at my CT and while they needed to do further tests, that right now it
looks like I am the luckiest patient he had seen in a while. That my L1 and L2 vertebrates
were both fractured, they were hairline fractures that had just cracked right
inside the bone just a few millimeters from my spinal column of fluid. That had
the cracks gone deeper, or just a hair further in, I would have lifelong
mobility issues, and possible loss of use of my legs. Also since these cracks
circled the column of spinal fluid and had not dislocated a vertebrae I would
not need surgery in his opinion. That time to heal, a few versions of back
braces and physical therapy would be my recovery from this. In his words, I
dodged a bullet. That the helmet had taken the brunt of my head trauma and I
had a mild concussion, but since it was really a time vs. healing thing, that
in a few hours I could go home. Crazy right, you get hit by a car at 7am, break
your back, and voila you are home and in bed by the afternoon! They could coordinate my morphine dose so
that right when I left I could make it slowly up the three flights of stairs to
my apartment, but then I would be spending several weeks there in bed
recovering. It was surreal.
It was at this point I lost it. I started to cry, and the
realization of what had just happened became, well, real. I had heard my
parents had been notified and were on their way. The morphine, while killing the
pain, was making me nauseous, and all I wanted was to go home, start my day
over, and forget this had happened. My boyfriend at the time, used this opportunity,
to show me his true colors, and it was at this point I realized that he was not
the one for me. It seemed like all these realities colliding, was just too much
to handle. While it would be months
before all these epiphanies came to fruition, the seed was planted, and my life
course would change forever. A police
officer had brought my bike to the ER; he had put it in his trunk after the
accident. It was mangled, and dented, and my I heart Lance sticker, now
ironically, had a slash across its glittery heart. It was also forever changed.
From this point forward, I healed, I stopped biking nearly
as often, I moved on from that relationship, I changed my entire attitude about
life, my future, my dreams, and what I wanted to do with myself, I ended up
taking a new job after a year and half which eventually brought me to Kentucky,
to Nathan, and to our current life here.
What prompted me to blog about all of this, is a message,
that while it will never reach Lance Armstrong, it might be a good one for him
to hear now, that after something very catastrophic, you can change the course
your life is on, you can alter your future, and you can change your perception
on life, on your values, and what is really truly important to you at the end
of the day. I am deeply disappointed in his deception, and the extent to which
he misrepresented himself, however I can see that he can still do some good, he
can still right his wrongs, dictate a positive path forward, and instead of
shielding his less desirable attributes with the glow of a wonderful
organization, he can step back in, shift his morality and virtues back to where
they probably once were, and take back the reigns of his life. While that will
not be the easy path, it is probably the right path, and like we all know the
right path is often the more difficult journey to endure. From my life lesson I
have gained so much more than that little scar on my knee, which is all that
remains from that traumatic day. I became a risk taker in a much different level;
I became more outgoing, more compassionate, more patient, a better friend, a
better sibling and a better child. I grew that day more than I have grown the
almost 10 years since. Knowing how that day changed me, and how it increased my
adventurous spirit and drive, I think has a hand somewhere down the line that led
to a coin toss that made my decision to move to Kentucky. I appreciated things more than ever, and still
to this day, I feel like it puts things in perspective for me. When I look back
on that second that could have changed my life forever in the opposite direction,
I am so very lucky that I had the opportunity to head out on another trail, and
seek out a life with a fresh perspective.
In the days after the
accident I had a new appreciation for so many things. My sister to bathe me, my
dad to be my advocate, my mother to be my cook and care giver, my brother to be
my entertainment, and my friends to be that final loop of love and support that
got me back to a better version of myself. I remember the day after the
accident, my now sister in law, who was I think newly dating my brother at the
time, sent up an ice cream cake for me and all of my visitors. I mean what do
you do when all you have heard is your boyfriend’s sister has just been hit by
a car? (I still think this proves that ice cream is the fix for everything!) I
had a little piece with all of my family around me also having a slice, milling
about my bed. I remember looking around and thinking, this moment I do not want
to take for granted again. That the ice cream was so good, that I loved my
family and friends so much, that I would spend the rest of my life living with that
same appreciation for the things around me that I took for granted so much in
my life prior. That I had seen death and awful things up until that point, but
it took that moment with a slice of ice cream cake, to really see how sweet
life was, and how grateful I had so many more years to enjoy it with such a
different perspective. I hope Lance
Armstrong has this opportunity for a second time, and it won’t have to involve
cancer.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Observations from the pregger....
When I was younger, I was certain I was different. I always
walked to my own drum, had my own unique style, tastes, thoughts, and often
defied tradition. I enjoyed my own unique journey, friendships, travels, and
challenges. Some of course, like any point on life’s path, were good and some
were bad. Each of these elements has shaped who I am, what I believe, and how I
lead my life. It sets my priorities, my beliefs, and my passions. With being a
first time expecting mom, there is a whole new world that I realize awaits me.
I am certain that Nathan and I will love this child with the same ferocity and
unconditional support that we have both been lucky to experience from each of
our sets of parents. However, knowing a few pregnant friends and acquaintances
thus far in my life, I still feel I am different. Maybe every expecting mom
feels this way, and then after delivery they lose their sense and previous
opinions in the matter, but here is my small observation, at least for now.
So far I have noticed two things about how people interact
with you when they know you are expecting. First they all have advice,
criticism, opinions and their own experiences to offer up, and secondly, not a
single one has been the same. Which makes it ironic that everyone feels the
need to share, and sometimes overshare; as since nothing I have heard from
anyone has been the same from person to person (except a baby comes out at the
end of the story)! I think it is more of a cathartic thing for the storyteller
than really anything helpful for the expecting mom or dad, at least in my very inexperienced
opinion. Now of course family, close friends or others, who you might directly
ask a question or inquire about their experience, would probably be a welcome
conversation with any expecting parent. Even hearing about the journey that
those close to you made at this same junction in their lives, that is not what
I am thinking here. I am talking about random acquaintances, strangers in the
grocery store, people you have met once or twice, people you don’t normally
share uber personal details with, all that find out you are expecting and seem
to seek you out to tell you their tale of woe during pregnancy, labor and
delivery. It just seems silly to me,
going back to the reality that no two women’s experience has been the
same. The other piece to this new
experience that I do not feel I am aligning with the majority on here is that pregnancy
is not all consuming. I was an individual, an employee, a friend, a spouse, a
civic minded entity, and an entrepreneur before pregnancy, and plan to be all
of those things, and a mom, once it is all said and done. Being pregnant is a
status I am in for the next few months, which will culminate into the next
chapter of mine and my husband’s life, parenthood. It will not just cease and desist
my previous titles making me solely under the heading “pregnant”. It is not my every waking thought, every
meaningful action, nor my complete identity. In our home, of course, it is a huge topic of
our conversations, our planning, and our futures, but my day to day life goes
on. I have responsibilities, dreams, thoughts, and plans. All of these include
this little person we are gestating, but it is not the sole fulcrum in the
balancing act of life that goes on each day.I am still Julie, I am still planning on leaving this experience Julie, and while this experience is amazing, wonderful, and unexplainably marvelous, it is an experience. It is not my identity. I have many other aspirations, for myself, for this child, for my life, my marriage, my family. It is a temporary condition that I want to enjoy while it is mine to experience but that will not define who I am, and I hope that because of this I will be a better parent. That I won’t need to live through my child vicariously, that I will truly hope what is best for them and their life, their dreams, their aspirations, and their happiness. That I can accomplish those things for myself so that my future and the family Nathan and I build together can support our child to accomplish its goals and vision, rather than become my own entirely. Expecting, pregnancy, and babies, while obviously a huge part of my life right now, is not the only topic of conversation I can manage to have right now. I am pregnant, I didn’t have a hemispherectomy.
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