Stress Level Midnight

What is bringing me joy this morning is having the perfect blog post title pop into my head as I was in non-stop motion this morning — if you know me and and have my same sense of humor then you’ll get that this real life drama feels like a poorly written, unintentional comedy. Those who don’t get the reference should go watch The Office immediately.

I started writing this yesterday on our 3rd day of remote schooling. This week has been a blur of activity as the kids were home, but I had to go to work at school. I can’t remember who I’ve told what to, but schools here are closed for 4 weeks and all kids are restricted from campus, but staff still has to go work to get this remote learning thing off the ground, so I’ve been busy with the tech team sorting and getting tech items into the hands of those families at school who need them. We had 2 distribution evenings where parents came to pick up the ipads or computers that their elementary students usually use in class so they can continue working from home.

Evening tech distribution — iPads for all

So I’ve been at school in the morning and the evenings and the kids have been like feral animals at home. That’s probably not a fair assessment, since I think they’ve all been getting their schoolwork done, but between church and work demands, I’ve not had any time to supervise them other than through text or yelling at them over the phone.

This week there has been lots of yelling, lots of apologizing, and lots of texting to 3rd parties to tattle on each other in a Round Robin of blame. As soon as one blowup is resolved, another one erupts — all centered around what they are allowed to do when not in class. I want them to look around and see what needs to be done; they think freedom from class means freedom from responsibility and a free for all on TV and games.

When your college age son calls to ask what’s going on because son number 2 has been ranting to him via text about how unreasonable mom is being . . . meanwhile I’m messaging Josh to tell him how I’m not going to make it through the next month if his boys can’t stop thinking only of themselves and having fun, and I’m pretty sure one of the Aunties had to step in to smooth things over via text . . . it’s not been a stellar week all around.

Thankfully I don’t have to work today, day 4 of this made for TV movie. We started with apologies and a promise to work harder to understand each other and I did see that wet towels were picked up off of the floor and the bathroom wasn’t left as if a tsunami had swept through it, so that’s real progress.

Right now I’m waiting to see if we can meet for church tomorrow or if the government has cancelled all gatherings. All public events have been cancelled for March and April (as of last night’s announcement) and rumors are spreading that we might continue with remote learning until the end of the year. I’m not worried, just worn out as things are changing by the day.

Outbreak

We’ve been on spring break this past week — said sarcastically because it started at the end of February and that’s not even close to spring, but whatever. We haven’t gone anywhere or done much of anything except get off schedule, staying up too late and Josh working too many hours, but it’s been relaxing (for us, not Josh) at least.

We’d already gotten word that when we headed back to school on Sunday that all extra curricular activities had been cancelled through mid-March. No sports practices or games, no swimming, no use of the gym . . . basically go to school and go home to prevent the spread of the Corona virus, aka COVID19 or whatever it is that we are calling it today. However, those measures didn’t seem logical (sit in class all day with 20 other kids, but avoid track practice?) so we were guessing that more restrictions were on the way.

And yesterday it was declared that all schools have been closed for the next 4 weeks. Nurseries all the way up through universities — throughout UAE. The entire country. True to form, the government announced that spring break would suddenly start 2 weeks early, last for 2 weeks and then students would be “remote learning” for the next 2 weeks. (our school is on a different schedule for spring break this year).

For us that means school at home for the next 4 weeks. If you could have seen the celebrating that went on at our house when they found the announcement on Twitter . . . forget Christmas, this was the biggest holiday of the year.

We don’t know what “remote learning” will look like in practice or how successful it will be. The plan is for them to log in online to each class at the same time they’d be meeting at school and check in, meet virtually, submit assignments online, etc.

I know the expectations for High School because I was working on editing the remote learning plan the week before we went on break in anticipation of this happening at some point in the future, but elementary school? No idea what they will do and how they will continue learning. Am I worried? Nope. Not about the virus and not about a lack of contact hours/loss of continuity/failure to be able to get into Harvard as a result of this. But there are a lot of parents who are, unfortunately. There’s a division between those who feel this is a whole bunch of overreaction and is going to ruin their child’s academic future and those who are “Safety first! We should all stay home for the next month and not leave the house so we stop the spread of germs. This is a matter of life and death.”

Since teachers aren’t barred from campus (yet) and the school is scrambling to create a digital education plan on the fly, I get to go into work on Sunday and hear the plan for the upcoming month at an all-Staff meeting. I’m pretty sure that “my job” will be supervising my kids and their online learning from home, since there’s not really a way to be a distance librarian.

So far church is still meeting, though AWANA is cancelled, but it’s possible that at some point they may close facilities to try to keep people at home. I’m not quite understanding the panic over this, but I’m not complaining as I’m happy to have a month that is light on events and activities and encouragement to stay at home. That’s my jam.

I am not anxious

As a writer, I have a lot of notebooks because sometimes I get an idea and start scribbling. Like in the waiting room at an appointment or in the car (not while I’m driving of course!) or a thought pops into my head and I jot something down to expand on later. I usually have one by my bed, one in my purse, and others scattered around the house. Not because I’m organized, but because that’s just where they land.

Well, a few weeks ago I had this revelation and started furiously writing (and my writing is so chicken scratch that only I’d be able to decipher it — no beautifully penned journals for me) and now I can’t find it. I’ve looked through all the notebooks I can find at the moment and the recent notes on my phone and it’s not in any of those places. Oh well, I’ll just reconstruct it from memory. Extreme editing.

I read/follow this theologian (I was resisting calling her a “woman theologian” because we should all be theologians, but for context, it helps to understand that she is a woman in her late 20s early 30s) and she was teaching on the subject of anxiety and how to fight it spiritually.

She said she had a lot of experience with anxiety and to bolster her claims she shared that her husband lost his job when she was 7 months pregnant and she didn’t know what they would do and how she has battled a reoccurring autoimmune disease, and fear that it would get worse . . . and more, but you get the idea.

And I suddenly had a jolt and laughed out loud like, “of course you’d be anxious over those things!! Those are real life stressors that anyone would find tough to deal with. And then the dawning realization that my anxiety was not normal and that is what makes it mental illness, not just anxiety.

So when I was paralyzed by fear because I found a swelling on my arm that looked like a bug bite or sting and my mind decided that it must be something I was allergic to and I was certain my throat was going to close up at any moment — not normal.

Or when I seriously considered walking up and down 37 stories with a baby on my hip all weekend to avoid getting in an elevator — not normal. Taking my pregnant self on a solo 2 day train trip across 10 states to avoid getting on an airplane — completely abnormal.

Being unable to walk to the corner of our street because I was afraid I might suddenly pass out and collapse from some unknown physical weakness — nutcase central. Throwing up in the bushes before getting in the car to go to church on Sunday mornings because I was petrified to leave the house — crazy town. Begging my husband to come home from work in the middle of the day because I was scared to be alone with the kids for some reason that I couldn’t put my finger on — total loony.

I’ve always known it wasn’t normal, and it’s why I take medication now and talk about it to whoever cares or is curious, but I it dawned on me that when I say anxiety and a normal person says anxiety, we mean completely different things. My anxiety was all consuming and full of intrusive thoughts and what ifs like “what if I couldn’t control my body and suddenly swerved this car off the side of the road and over the cliff?”

I forgot that when normal people say they are anxious they generally mean about things that we all agree would be stress inducing — like having a child with special needs or a husband who is an addict. Whereas in my case, I was panicked that I had to ride as a passenger in the car for 30 minutes and it felt like the world was going to close in on me and I couldn’t breathe. Not normal at all.

So yeah, I laughed when she shared that she was anxious about her husband losing his job because that fear sounds perfectly reasonable to me. And like it says in Philippians, do not be anxious and take those requests to God for the peace of God, which transcends all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. And I tried, but it didn’t work for me because I wasn’t anxious, I was sick.

Medically, what I ended up being diagnosed with was panic disorder with agoraphobia, but because it started small it seemed like anxiety that had just grown out of control. Looking back there were signs that I was sick from as early as 1st grade, when I spent the entire year hiding from the crossing guards, afraid that they were going to come and catch me and get me in trouble because I crossed the street one time when they weren’t there. Or as an 8 year old, waking up in February and sitting in the bathroom by myself in the middle of the night, crying because I was panicked about swim lessons in August. And lots more, but you get the idea. Irrational, consuming fears.

So I need to find a new phrase to describe what I am/was because saying “I struggled with anxiety” is definitely not it when that’s the term normal people use to describe their experience with worry. And as a Christian, when you’re told “do not be anxious about anything,” and you don’t have peace, it causes you to question your faith and think there’s something wrong with you spiritually as well as physically. Thankfully, I’m confident that I did all I could spiritually and also thank God that medically I was able to be healed/fixed/cured/still a work in progress.

And on an unrelated, but related note. That I’m able to go to CrossFit and do strength training is a miracle considering that I couldn’t run or do any type of physical exertion for a long time because of my mental illness. Exercise creates the same physical response as a panic attack — fast heart rate, breathlessness, sweating and feeling pushed to your limit — and it took a long time to get to a place where I could experience those things and not think I was dying.

So I’m proud of what my body can do now and appreciate it on 2 levels. Not only does it make my body strong, but it’s exercising my mind and reminding it that my limit is further than I think it is and fatigue isn’t weakness or something to be afraid of.

Knee freezing

After all my weeks of early to bed and early to rise and feeling great, this past week has been terrible. We’ve had events every night and been getting home after 9 and by the time I’m asleep it’s past 11. Thankfully spring break starts this weekend (who has spring break in February?!) so I’m hoping to get back on track.

I’m in the car waiting while Carter has his 3rd appointment to get his knee warts checked/frozen off. The knee warts were the only thing standing between him and Navy in August. I’m hoping he stays whole between now and his next physical in June when he enlists.

I went from work to the gym, then straight to school to pick Carter up for his apt, then back to school to drop him off for practice (he’s coaching powder puff football) then I can finally go home — explaining why the photo of me looks like I need a nap (And because I’m not getting all my extra sleep at night).

I’ve been thinking about summer this week as temperatures here have started soaring. Last week it was freezing (in the low 70s) and this week I think we’ve been in the 90s. Sweaty season has begun.

My travel plans at the moment are to land in San Francisco and take Carter to do his Navy enlistment. Hopefully he’ll be wart free by then and fit for duty. Then depending on his boot camp date I plan to travel north with either 2 or 3 kids and explore Northern CA, Oregon, and Idaho. The plan is to have only a bare bones plan and not do too many long driving days, but to take our time and explore without rushing.

Since we already know that UAE isn’t our forever home (As a non-citizen, you can only live in UAE if you have an employment visa), I’ve been thinking about places where we might want to live eventually. Even though CA is expensive, we haven’t ruled it out completely, since it’s home. But before we commit to anything, I want to check out a few more places that might give us what we want for less $$$. Off the top of our heads we would consider Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Colorado, Arizona, and Texas (maybe). A distant runner up could be Tennessee, but it loses points for not being in the West (same with Texas).

So I’m starting from CA and working outward — I figure if I explore OR and ID I’ll get a good feel for the region and either look further or cross it off the list. Colorado would be #2 after CA, but it’s expensive these days and further away. We’ll look at Arizona eventually if if the north is too cold.

Of course with the way the Corona virus is spreading, come July we’ll be holed up with our masks on in a Motel 6 in Eureka, CA hoping that we’re not going to be taking part in a real life The Walking Dead.

Update: The doctor said Carter’s knees are all clear and he doesn’t need any more treatments. But about 5 minutes ago he discovered that he’s grown again, surpassing his dad, so needs to put on more weight to make the Navy minimum weight requirement. Only 4 lbs to go to hit 150. (at 6’2″)

excellence defined

I woke up at 5-something this morning and lazily lounged in bed until sometime after 6 when I got up, dressed, had some coffee, and a short look over my bible (Galatians 5 and Joshua 12). Then I woke up the kids at 6:45 as I headed out the door to the gym. How did that happen? I guess that’s what the body does when it has enough sleep.

I don’t know if the boys feel that our early to bed experiment has paid off, but it has been life changing for me. Sure, it’s annoying to start yawning at 9:30, but overall shutting down before 10 has been a big WIN.

The cross country weekend was a success — we were proud of how much effort our boys and the entire team put forth in their races. On day one, both Caleb and Carter had photo finishes at the line. Carter’s man came from behind and Carter held him off by using his long stride to get over the line first.

And Caleb came from behind, stepped around the other runner who was trying to block him with his body and arm and managed to lean in and plant over the line at the last second. And then his foot slipped on the grass and they tumbled over the line. A coach from another school said it was one of the best efforts she’s seen at the end of a race.

Hard work pays off! They were very happy with bronze and only a few points away from silver. None of our runners finished in the top 5, but they all finished close together and managed to gather more points than those teams that had both fast and slow runners. I love seeing my boys compete together and will really miss this part of Cross Country next year.

It’s 9:30 and my bedtime alarm just went off so I’m signing off. Trying to keep a good thing going and maintain this new habit!