
It’s five am on Sunday morning. The kitchen is quiet and cold, but I have my monkee hoodie, my mug of coffee, and inspiration to keep me warm. It’ll be one of those days when mommy’s tired and cranky by three - it always is when I get up so early to write. But to me, this precious writing time is worth any price my husband and children have to pay for it.
I know I haven’t written to you about my personal life lately, and that’s a conscious decision. My vision for Momastery is that it’s about Life, not just my little life. I have learned that there is a difference. This might be one of the most important things I’ve ever learned.
Writing about Life instead of my life is a spiritual discipline for me. Remembering and exploring the difference between the two . . . stepping outside of my personal circumstances each morning and writing to and about all of us helps me maintain perspective about the ups and downs in my little life. It reminds me that Life is much too important to take my little life too seriously. It helps me remember that even when my world has stopped spinning, the world hasn’t. It reminds me – G, even when your little life is on hold, Life goes on. Join in.
I do this every morning because when my life here is done, I don’t want to discover that I was so concerned about dropping a stitch in my little square, I never stepped back to soak in the beauty of the entire quilt.
Even so - I know that you’d like an update on our little family. Here goes.
Last April we sold our home, abandoned our suburban lives, and moved to a teeny town on the Chesapeake Bay. I was feeling overwhelmed by the pace required to keep up with our lives. I dreamt of fewer school and social obligations and more family time and slower days, wide open spaces and sunsets on the water. So we sold our home and rented a beautiful old Victorian house on Main Street in a gorgeous old fishing town. It was glorious. We decided to stay there forever and raise our kids on the water. I love the water.
Here is what I learned.
The bay is beautiful, but not as lovely as Manal. The morning sound of the birds on the bay comfort me, but Adrianne’s ridiculous laugh comforts me even more. Watching my kids splash in the bay is wonderful, but not nearly as wonderful as watching them play with their Aunt Christy. There is no substitute for girlfriends. God made some beautiful things – and the Chesapeake Bay is one of them - but I’m pretty sure women were His best work. I was lonely without mine.
I have always been confused about friendship. I have never felt good at it. All of its keeping in touch and actually answering the phone and navigating group dynamics and remembering birthdays and showing up at things and returning emails seemed like overwhelming pressure. I have a reclusive side, which makes it challenging to maintain friendships.
Even so, I have managed to keep a small group of “best friends” from college. They take such incredible care of each other. They make friendship look so natural, so effortless. And I always felt loved by them but also a few steps removed. I couldn’t do it the way they did it. Couldn’t be all in like they are with each other. I always kept one foot out. Partly because I have a very hard time feeling part of any group. Groups are so hard. But also because everything they relied on from each other…advice, help, a shoulder to cry on, shopping partners . . . I get from my Sister. I am ashamed to say it, but I never really thought I needed them. But after a few months in my new town it became clear that it was going to be very, very hard to make friends. And impossible to replace the ones I already had. Marriage and parenting become extra hard without friends with whom to discuss how wonderful and hard they are.
So Craig and I started talking about what this all meant for us. It’s a journey, our marriage. We try one thing, then try another. We see what works and what doesn’t. We get to know each other better with each new try, and then we fix things for each other and try not to lose our patience. We try to be tireless with each others’ hearts. Craig is an expert at these things. I am learning.
In the end, we decided to move back. Back to Northern Virginia. Back to the burbs. Back to our friends. Mostly because it became clear that I needed to. As a recovering alcoholic and bulimic, true loneliness is dangerous territory for me. I don’t know how it works, but being plugged in to others is one of the keys to my sobriety. And there was one lonely night in our teeny little town when I glanced at the wine bottle on top of the fridge - just for a couple seconds too long. That scared the bejesus out of me. And sweet Craig knows…if I go down…the whole fam damily goes down. So listen, here is what we did.
We bought a house in one of those planned communities in which I swore I’d never live. Where the HOA spray paints the grass green and the backyards and closets are about the same size. I know. Big change. But listen.
I live within a mile of Gena, Casey, Manal, and Megan. We can walk to each other’s houses and our little ones are all in school together. And when Craig calls and says he’s going to be late, I call my girls and say come over right away. And our million collective littles run around my house and we mamas talk and drink Diet Coke out of wine glasses because Manal’s mom told her it tastes better that way. It really does. And we make nine frozen pizzas and I burn most of them and Gena looks at me in the middle of the chaos and says, I can’t believe this. I can’t believe how lucky we are. 15 years. We’re mamas together.
And I look at Gena - and all of these Genas flash before me.
I see her in a sparkly gown that she wore to a dance her freshman year in college. And then I see her in a black graduation gown, holding her diploma. And then I see her walking down the aisle in a gorgeous wedding gown. And finally I see her in the blue hospital gown she wore when she had her first child, Tyler.
And I think, we are growing up together . . . kind of like sisters do. We’re friends. And I know we’re friends because I need you. I don’t understand why. I’m just grateful that I do.
And I turn to watch Gena’s little girls chasing mine through our house in their Snow White dresses and I think….Yep. I found my Water. I found my Small Town. My water and my small town are my friends. And I’m all in. It's like The Alchemist. Sometimes you have to go away to discover that you left everything you needed Back Home. But the journey was necessary.
And is our new (old) life here perfect?
Hells no.
But here’s what I’ve learned, finally. I am not going to be perfectly happy anywhere.
If I live by the water, I will miss the burbs. If I live in the mountains, I will miss the water. If I live in the burbs, I will miss the mountains. If I watch House Hunters International, I will miss Costa Rica. And I’ve never even been to Costa Rica.
The point is that I have done the experiment, I have moved six times in eight years, to very different places…chasing peace and joy. And I stiiiiiill haven’t fooooound what I’m looking fooooor. I am a slow learner. But I do eventually learn. So listen- I am finally ready to accept that there is no geographic location that offers perfect joy and peace. Because, like Bubba says: Wherever you go, There you are. That’s the problem. Not where you are, but that you are. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me seven times…..
There is a scripture that says “quit wearing out your shoes.” And I think I finally know what that means. One of the keys to happiness is accepting that this side of Life, I’m never going to be perfectly happy where I am. So I might as well get busy loving the people around me. I’m going to quit deciding whether they are the right people for me and I’m just gonna take a deep breath and start loving my neighbors. I’m going to take care of my friends. I’m going to find peace in the ‘burbs. I’m going to quit chasing happiness and sit still long enough to see it right in front of me.
Now here’s the important part of all of this. I’ve been thinking a lot about what these discoveries in my little life mean about Life. What does do my discoveries about friendship mean for all of us?
Because I am starting to know you Lovies pretty well. So I know that some of you are reading and nodding and thinking about your own close girlfriends and feeling grateful for them. But I also know that there are many, many others reading and feeling sad because they don’t have close girlfriends. Because they’ve been hurt or ignored or left out by women. I have been, too. I know how that feels.
I’m reading a book right now called The Twisted Sisterhood about all the ways that females hurt each other. It’s making me sad and frustrated and inspired. I want us to all take better care of each other. We ladies need to learn how to love each other better through this tough life. And I’d like to talk about how. What better use of our time here than to explore ways to make more women feel welcome and loved and safe?
How do you feel about female relationships? Do you have them? Do you want them? Are they satisfying? Are you afraid of them because you’ve been hurt? All of the above?
Love You. Take Care of Each Other.
G
You would miss Costa Rica. You are too funny.
ReplyDeleteI never knew you lived in NoVa - we have a teeny tiny townhouse there that we plan to return to once we're done overseas. As far as I know, though, the grass there is not spray-painted.
Because we're in the Foreign Service, we move every 2-3 years. And girlfriends become critical. There are lonely crazy days overseas when you have to call a friend and vent. Every time we move, I have to scope out the scene and stalk the people who look most promising. We just moved to the middle east (Jordan) a few months ago, and I'm finally finding my tribe. But I'm still missing my old friends from Beijing, because some things only they will understand.
I think you're a smart woman, to know you need to be close to your friends in order to keep your balance.
I've just discovered your blog and I can't even begin to tell you how much it speaks to me. Thank you for writing and sharing and letting us become a part of your life. :)
ReplyDeleteMy blog is private but you are welcome to "come on in!" if you want...jlschardt@yahoo.com
Happy Sunday!
Love it!
ReplyDeleteJen Z
Love it!
ReplyDeleteJen Z
I can count on one hand -- without the thumb -- the number of genuine friends I have in my life. I wouldn't trade them for anything. But I hear you on friendship maintenance. I'm in the military, my husband was in the military, and I'm from a military family -- it takes real work to keep in touch with the ones I continue to need in my life. Thank God for Facebook reminders, otherwise I'd forget my own birthday, much less everyone else's daily happenings.
ReplyDeleteI just got word from my Senior Chief that I'll likely be moving to DC -- if you'd ever like to catch a cup of coffee (AKA, Sweet Elixir of Life), I'm still totally down. Of course, my options are DC, Afghanistan or Japan, so we'll see.
Much Love,
-Sharyn
Very insightful, Glennon. I was so envious of your move to the Bay and all that you talked about. My Bay is Western NC. That's where I am from and my heart has a strong desire to go back to the Blue Ridge Mtns. That feeling I get when I first peak over a hill on I-40 and get the first glimpse of their splendor takes my breath - every time. Yet, I wonder if I would truly be happy going back there. Because just as my heart longs for that serenity, I also know that childhood memories can be haunting. As for my life in the burbs, well, it is the rush of soccer practice, the trying to fit in with a group of women who seem to have all the friends they want or need. It is hard. Women can be tough. I have found a couple of friends that I cherish, but we all have children and soccer, and church, and basketball, and boy scouts and such you get the picture. It is hard to find time. Speaking of hard, one of my "hardest ones" is crying right now, so I must go and put my mommy hat back on.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your insight and your honesty.
Tricia
quit chasing happiness and sit long enough to see what is in front of me...yes, there is nothing like friendship. I know the Lord has placed friends in my life that have helped me get thru life. I am grateful...great post!
ReplyDeleteSo I guess it is true the grass is greener on the other side if they spray paint it, lol! I really enjoyed this post. Very thought provoking. You see I never really had girlfriends (except for one who is like a sister) until I move up to No. Va. I have learned so much and the one thing I realized is how much I missed out on in college and even high school by not reaching out and making the effort and making those connections. And there are times I wonder if life would be better if we lived back "home", but you know reading this really helped to remind me that that this is home!! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteSomewhere in this here post are the lyrics for a good country song, without the pickup and the dog. You know, bout havin it all right in front of you all the time. See earlier Christmas letter re/end of football game circa 1990.
ReplyDeleteBubba
I heard what you were saying about not having friends. I have 5 sisters, and they're the ones I go to (along with my 3 sisters-in-law) if I need to talk to somebody. I have "friends" at work, but if I change schools, they go by the wayside. We went to my 30th high school reunion last summer, and I felt so disconnected from all of the classmates. I didn't keep up with any of them, and, sadly, I was too worried about getting my "MRS" degree to make close friendships and stick with them. I feel more comfortable with guys than I do females...they're more "real" and won't stab you in the back. And, they talk football. :)
ReplyDeleteWe moved back to my hometown after living away for 20 years...I was ready to move home to be close to my siblings and my parents (who aren't getting any younger). Good move on my part, but I do miss the few friends I made in SC. They were the closest things I've ever had to close girlfriends.
Thank you for that post...I thought maybe something was wrong with me. So good to know I'm not the only one out there!
Oops...should've proofread before I posted my comment! When I said, "I didn't keep up with any of them, and, sadly, I was too worried about getting my "MRS" degree to make close friendships and stick with them", I was talking about college, not high school! :D
ReplyDeleteI've never really had a healthy, trusting, lasting friendship with anyone other than my parents or boyfriend. I had one female friend through middle and high school, but I couldn't trust her and I couldn't count on her, she often broke promises and gossiped about the secret things I told her. I've never had the kind of friendship you talk about. It does sound wonderful, though.
ReplyDeleteMy life has everything else going for it -- I'm happy healthy, I have a wonderful family and amazing boyfriend, I'm doing great in school and my future has never looked brighter. I have lots of acquaintances and people seem to like me well enough, and honestly I'm happier now than I've ever been. But sometimes I have to break down crying in my boyfriend's arms because I simply don't have anyone to talk to besides him and my parents. I'm trying, though... hopefully I'll find someone and I'll finally understand how great it is. For now, though, I do have an amazing relationship with my parents and I can talk to them about anything, so they are my best friends.
Ariel...I hear you.
ReplyDeleteLove, G
I have four people who I would ask to be part of my wedding party if I were to ever get married. Three of them are male.
ReplyDeleteI have one amazingly wonderful best friend and we refer to each other as bestie/sister/love-bug/wife. Our pasts are so very similar in that even though there is an 8 year difference we have this incredibly amazing bond that we know will never break.
As a rule I don't befriend girls easily. When meting them I will be cordial and polite however I will not go out of my way to get to know them. I think it stems from the meanness of girls in middle and high school (and I was that girl that was always picked on - as in every. single. day.)
Sometimes I wish I had more girlfriends - but at the same time I love the relationship I have with my best friend and am so glad that we will have each other to be able to chat with at the nursing home when we are in our 80's
Ariel, honey, we all cry with and for you, because we've all been there at one time or another. But I can confidently say that the only being who will NEVER, NEVER let you down (and this includes parents and boyfriend), is Jesus.
ReplyDeleteGulp. I do have kids, and I know I will let them down, just as they do all the time. I can't tell you how many times I've let my husband down, and he me. Girlfriends? Sheesh, I'd need a bucket for all those times.
But Jesus is my sufficiency and He is always more than ENOUGH! A true Valentine.
And, the more time I spend with Jesus -- praising Him, reading His Word, loving Him, the more I see the potential sisters out there through His eyes, and the more accepting I am of who they are. And in that journey, I have learned to reach out and trust more people who have the power to hurt me deeply...because that's exactly how He treats us.
I get it, G. I totally get it. I remember back to when my first marriage was failing badly and I was so so lonely because I had my one best friend and three little babies and, well, babies take up a lot of time so I was mostly lonely and sad, but then I met some of the most amazing women. Adrianne and Tree. They were smart and funny and they understood just how hard it was to think about doing what I knew I had to do. I'd never really thought about leaning on anyone in my life, but I leaned so very hard on both of them and eventually we got past that and they got to lean on me some and now we all just lean together. When I was a single girl I met more wonderful girls ...some were great and some weren't great but what I learned was that the great friendships were totally worth the time spent cultivating and taking care of. I know I'm faulty in many areas of my life, but I make sure to keep up with my girlfriends.
ReplyDeleteYears later when I got trapped into marriage (kidding...I liked it), I made sure I found a man who won't mind when it's just a bunch of girls and kids and him hanging around. I call our girl nights estrogenfest or a gathering of the sister wives. We drink wine in our wine glasses...it tastes better that way. We have fun and our kids run amok...perfect happiness. Oh also at some point in the night when we hang out, there's a lady gaga/ke$ha/black eye peas/ dance party in the kitchen or out on the back deck with little kids and mamas and even teenagers who usually have to warm up to our craziness but always end up dancing with us.
women rock!
Glennon, you are really brave, moving so many times in such a short period. I did that in college, but not since marrying and spawning my little weirdos. I live in Baltimore, where Staying Put is a way of life, because of that I've been blessed to amass an embarrassing amount of fabulous girlfriends - some I met only months ago, some I've known for 38 years. It's really astonishing, though it can also be tricky, since not all of my girlfriends get along as famously with each other as I do with each of them. Maybe I've got multiple personalities. My point (do I have one?) is that I don't know what I would do if for some reason I had to pick up and move Far Away, where I wouldn't have access to my Girls on a daily basis. They keep me sane, grounded, laughing, connected, and enlightened.
ReplyDeleteSomething just occurred to me, about what others have said about moving to a new place where people seem to not welcome newcomers easily. I have a handful of transplanted friends from out of state or out of the country, and I wonder if one day they will relocate again, and I will lose them. Maybe that fear makes some Townies less open to new friendships? Maybe they are so used to the Constant nature of their relationships that they are afraid to risk an eventual sad goodbye? Or maybe they feel less-than-worldly, with little to share with newcomers? At one dinner party with some of our transplant friends, I remember feeling terribly provincial in comparison to their world travels and amazing life experiences. Fortunately, it was all in my head, and I decided to go with Awe instead of Resentment, but still, maybe not everyone would feel comfortable in that situation. I'm just sayin, maybe it's hard for the Townies too. We all have our own bags of crap that we carry around; once in a while it pays to peek in someone else's bag and realize we're not so very different.
Glennon, I've told you before that I am jealous of your friendships and girlfriends. My life is void of them at the moment. I just don't have anyone other than my family and husband to hang out with outside of work. However, I am not at a point in my life where I feel like I really need them... I kind of feel like they need me. I don't mean to sound boastful, but my sisters and closest girlfriends (one at work and two hundreds of miles away in DC & NYC) always have drama in their lives that they need to vent to me. Perhaps I'm just a better friend at a distance.
ReplyDeleteWhat I mean by my comment on this post is I am so happy you have a place to turn for support that helps you. Regardless of who it is we all get "by with a little help from our friends." Momastery has become that support group for me. Thank you for taking the time for us regardless of the impact on your family... though they are more important so I'm fine if they take preference every once in a while.
Amma-
ReplyDeleteI love you, Lady.
Love,
G
I agree with Krystal. Women rock. Not all of them, but a whole lot of them certainly do. When my marriage fell apart last year, my girlfriends showed me so much love that I thought I might burst. That showering of love felt just as good (maybe even better) as falling in love with my ratbastard husband all those years ago.
ReplyDeleteKrystal. I want to attend an estrogenfest at your house. Sooooon soon soon. I miss your face.
Female relationships don't have to be complicated and difficult. I think, to a certain extent, that if you think your relationsihps with your girlfriends are tricky and hard and complicated then you are probably right. And if you think your relationsips with your girlfriends are fueling and sustaining and special then you are also probably right.
ReplyDeleteNot that it's always that simple but I do believe that our attitudes about people and things and situations can influence a heck of a lot.
I loved this, Glennon. I'm having some good times and some hard times w/ friendships right now. Just last night I was with my dear college friends for a wonderful night together and I told them about your blog. What a great post to send to my cherished friends of 20+ years!
ReplyDeleteOh G!!! Thank you! I have been struggling and struggling with friendships lately. I have WONDERFUL girlfriends from college who I only get to see once or twice a year which is not nearly enough. We keep in touch via email, phone and facebook but I need them more than that. I long for the familiarity that comes with friendships of 20 years and am struggling now with my newer friendships because I am finding myself disappointed and hurt over and over. I am a sensitive soul who finds female relationships very complicated. Because I long for the feeling of belonging and comfort that I have with my girlfriends from college, I have tired to replicate that here only to be disappointed and hurt. I am far from the perfect friend but I have been bullied by far too many women to tolerate it which often puts me on the outs because I won't tolerate it and speak up. All it takes is one negative in a group of positives to leave me feeling vulnerable and insecure. I have recently been iced out by a friend for no real reason which hurts and confuses me. I mean really, I am 38 years old and feel like I am in the movie Mean Girls. I so want to have those close girlfriends that I can call and have them drop everything and be there at the drop of a hat. I need it but I don't have it. I thought I did before I was recently iced out and now am at a point where I am trying to figure out if it is needed. Do I need a group or can I just enjoy and embrace the women who aren't part of a group but are amazing women I love to be with? Maybe despite spending my entire life wanting to be part of a group of friends, maybe I need to accept it isn't going to happen again. WOW! This was wordy, huh?
ReplyDeleteAndie
"There is no substitute for girlfriends." It's just SO true. Your post today is one of my favorite. I couldn't live without my girlfriends. And I am getting ready to move from away from Ireland to an unknown city somewhere in the US and make a new life in the states with my husband. I am so excited and so terrified. I will be saying goodbye to some amazing women, including my sister who is staying in Dublin. My girlfriends have always been my life support and I have the same fear in the pit of my stomach that I did when I walked into middle school....what if I don't make any friends? Reading your post though has reminded me that you don't have to be physically present to feel the love and support of women. Your column proves that to all of us all of the time. Thank you!!
ReplyDeleteLove to all Monkees xxx
Kathleen
G - what a beautiful post. I've been extremely blessed to have an amazing group of girlfriends from both HS and college. However, it wasn't until I got sick a couple of years ago that I knew just how lucky I was.... I woke up in the hospital with a beautiful bouquet of flowers and a card letting me know that I was "14 strong" on that day. That card now sits on my desk at work because I often need to be reminded of my strength when I'm there. I know that DC is not where we will be forever, but being here has allowed me to share in the daily lives of several of these women in ways that I just wasn't able to when I was in Austin. These beautiful women love me because of my weaknesses - not in spite of them.
ReplyDeleteI love this post. I am totally there with you about a support system and I love Northern Virginia. When I hear people complain about traffic, growth etc. I don't care. I am a patient person (mostly) and I LOVE all the access I have to things. And the people. The support. I LOVE the water, but I could not live there with little ones. I think the time you spent there was enough to catch your breath. Plus, VA is great, you can go to the mountains, the beach, almost anywhere within hours. I have no doubt that you and Craig will invest in a little vacation home near the water. I think that is a must!
ReplyDeleteI agree that friends/girlfriends are so key to our own cirlce of life. My two best friends were (you will see why I say were... (and are) awesome. They said I brought the neighborhood together when I moved in. Everyone was "neighborly" but they didn't hang out. I got them all to hang out. We.had.a.blast. and so did the kids. The 3 of us were inseperable, kids and all. Cookouts, porch sits always, parties, pool, vacations. The kids were best friends. We had about 12 little ones running around our court. My dear friend Susan died. I lost a piece of my heart. Kids moved in with their dad, life moved on. Neighbors moved on from our townhomes to bigger houses. My other friend moved to NC hoping for a better life, bigger home, better pay, more affordable than No VA. They have since moved back and I am so excited to hopefully grown old together. Everywhere is pretty much the same as here, just different problems. While they were gone, I went into a depression. Again, a piece of my heart was gone. I'm am not a traveler and we could not afford to drive 7 hours to see them. Then I got breast cancer. Without my husband and my wonderful mom and dad/brothers/sis inlaws and Adrianne I would have been very lost. But still, nothing replaced those two women. I was still not healed yet from "losing" them and didn't care to pursue new friendships, sometimes they are just too hard. I had no strength and had to battle my own demons (cancer). I craved people to come sit with me and watch movies and help me drink my Ensure. Although I had love and support something was missing. I have an open door policy in my house. That's what we used to do. Susan ALWAYS had time for a cup of coffee and chat, Gwen always had time for company when time allowed with 3 kids (!!! yikes, two is enough for me) and she would clean as we talked,laughed, had a cocktail or I helped her. I love to organize/clean so I would help her declutter when she was overwhelmed. (I LOVE that stuff by the way - organizing people). Anyway, after losing those two dear friends, I kind of gave up on friendships. I focused on me. I lost the desire to organize cookouts, etc. It just was not in me. My one friend is back and I am so estatic but I am letting them settle in to their new apartment. I realize everyone has busy lives and it can't always be "play". BUT I WANT TO PLAY!!! Adrianne taught me about schedules and boundries. (Me, I hate schedules, I am TOTALLY spontaneous). But I love her and she is SUCH a good mom and those beautiful dollies as she calls them, are so well adjusted because of her persiverance (did I spel that right?). Who care. Anyway. She taught me retraint. I love her and she is wonderful, is a good listener and is SO wise and knows just what to say. I know if I need her she is always there -AND she is. I just don't want to impede on others lives. I'm coming out of my shell which is so not me (to be in a shell that is). (Plus I get so frigging tired - I have FMS and Chronic fatigue). (continued below because my post said it was too long....)
(continued from above) Anyway, I beleive in the strength of friends Glennon, and that is SO important with your little ones so you don't go crazy.... and being there and I have that. I also just recently found out that my 21 year old daughter is having a baby. I am 50, have grown children and was not ready for this. I'm done with kids (LOL). But then I realized it is not about me. He is a great guy, makes good money and is up to the job of becoming a father. I need friends more than ever but also have my husband to lean on. And Adrianne had some encouraging, non judgemental words that are helping me get through.
ReplyDeleteWe can do hard things. Love all you Monkees and your stories. Thank you Glennon. I'm glad you are back here because I can't wait to see you sometime. I'm gonna cry now so I better get off to work. Sisterhood.
Hugs.
G - I opened my mouth, and your words came out.
ReplyDeleteI have always wondered if there were any women out there that felt like I do. On the outside; not "good" at being a girlfriend. Being anxious and nervous and careful about making girlfriends. Being infinitely more comfortable with boys--cause they're simple and straightforward. Feeling like I'm missing the shopping gene, the salon gene, the girlhood bonding gene. Missing the "thing" that makes it easy and relaxing to hang with other women, versus walking on eggshells and wary.
It's nice to know I'm not alone.
I also moved away from NOVA and found out the hard way--you can never escape yourself. Six years later, it's finally sinking in. :-) And I'm finally trying to step into female friendships with a blank slate instead of a loaded agenda...
I have a hard time trusting anyone. I have one best friend but she lives in Green Bay and I miss her so much.
ReplyDeleteWhen it comes down to it, the only one I can really count on is God.
Notice the time of my post. I WAS LATE FOR WORK GLENNON. This was such an important post to make.
ReplyDeleteKrystal - we had estrogen fests and testosterone fests ALL THE TIME. My house used to be just like yours (minus the pool damnit) but we do have a floating deck! I miss those days. Door was always open when it could be. Kids had plenty to do and they MISS all of that. They still talk about it. They loved it and they loved their "other mommies".
Good morning, Glennon. Your post on the difficulty and necessity of friendships inspired me to sit down and write about my own experiences with friendships and my worries about how they will change when I have a baby. Thanks for the inspiration. http://princessmax.blogspot.com/2011/02/baby-brigade.html
ReplyDeleteFriendships are hard but so worth it. I have several good friends, but I feel like they each know a piece of me and not the whole shebang. I often wish I had a sister because I don't have that one really close friend who knows it all.
ReplyDeleteI am going through a roaming period right now and your post has reminded me that happiness is right in front of me. I need to quit roaming and slow down to focus on how lucky I have.
I love you, Terri H.
ReplyDeleteWe have a wall hanging that my Dad gave us that says, "We may not have it all together, but together we have it all". We are scraping by on 40% of the income we used to have with a child with severe health issues in a 700 sq ft apartment but we have an insane number of people who love and care for us. That saying basically sums up why we are not in the poorhouse or the loony bin :-) I'm so glad you're back with your people...it's where the home is.
ReplyDeleteall of you, thank you.
ReplyDeleteterri.
joy to the world, terri. we are having a baby! a baby, a baby!
i have always liked the quote, "a baby is God's opinion that the world should go on."
i guess no matter how confused we are about what we're doing down here...God has decided that Life, and in particular, your family, should go on. he must want you and your daughter and your family to Go On. i bet it's because, you are good and true and tough and you are healing. this new baby is going to help you heal more deeply. i know it. it's a good, good thing, this baby. i hope she's a Sister. sorry, but i do.
you let us monkees know what your dolly and your dolly's dolly need. we're ready. we freaking love babies, and we love you.
love,
g
it is very sad that there are books a-plenty on the joys of sisterhood and equally as many of the not-so joys of it.
ReplyDeletefemale friendships... or friendships in general... it's complicated. the best way to describe it for me is to say that i do not call too many people friends, but i do try my very best to be a good friend to many.
i am eternally grateful for the few lovely ladies that i have bonded with at one time or another and continue to do so. even if the friendship has been fleeting; i absolutely love the sisters Life has handed me. (especially my little sister and best friend in the whole world)
and yeah, i miss costa rica every time i watch house hunters international too. and that little run down flat in that historic part of town in that country in eastern europe that i don't own but i would totally make into an awesome shabby chic estrogen-fest dwelling.
oh and g, i love your little life's lessons because they always shed light on my little life too.
thanks
terri h. you are my super hero :)
ReplyDeleteI am not great at friendship. College was the time that was easiest for me and there are still about 3 or 4 friends that I especially cherish from that time. I don't see them often, but it just feels so easy and right when I do.
ReplyDeleteI got married and moved across the country just a few years after school. My husband really has been my best friend for the last 14 years, which is great. He is smart and funny and loving, and mostly understanding. When I was teaching (High School), I didn't really have much time to make friends with my colleagues. They were lovely people, but we were all working really hard in our own classrooms, so it wasn't the kind of place where there was much personal connection.
I've been home mostly for the last 9 years, which has been both good and bad. The truth is, it's easier to stay on my own and manage my kids. I'm just not someone who connects easily with the other moms at the park or preschool or afterschool pickup. I really need another person to make the move that gets me from cordial to friendly.
My husband and I were really close with another couple, and spent nearly every Saturday night together for 2 years. It was great and our kids all really loved each other (including having the sibling-like disagreements). But, this being the SF Bay Area, our friends left to be closer to family and be in a place where it is more affordable. We just haven't done well at filling this void. Really bonding with a small group is great, but it made me lazy. So, that's my resolution for the new year-- to reconnect with old friends and reach out to new ones. It's February and I'm not much past the contemplation phase. But that's better than where I was before.
Glennon, this is a great topic. Merci beaucoup. Thanks for sharing how you and Craig are learning and trying to figure things out. I am fairly confident we all are doing the same thing all the way up to the end, but it seems as though lots of people do not want to admit it. The candor is, as usual, refreshing.
ReplyDeleteFamilies and the ties that bind..... When we have positive, supportive families, we can experience precious, personal relationships and support from the ties we share. Often though, those relationships and the positives we experience from them seem expected. We tend to feel obligatory in helping our mom, brother, sister. Obviously, yes, we choose to help our mom, brother or sister, but for most of us, a tad bit more pressure and expectation are present when it is "family." On the flip, we can tend to feel entitled to receive that same help from our mom, brother, or sister. It can just be so much easier to be loyal to family.
Friends on the other hand do not HAVE to be at your house to pick you up off the floor from heartache, grief, sickness, or fear. Friends do not have to run over when we are lonely, joyful, or simply in need of an estrogen fest. Friends CHOOSE every time. Therein lies the rub. There is no guarantee. The pendulum can swing both ways. We can be rejected by our friends and we can be chosen by our friends, seemingly so much more easily than family. Friends can reject us by not including us in certain things or in simply not choosing to show up when we need them. We can label the negative pendulum swing 50 different ways, but at the end of the day, in our heart of hearts, it often boils down to feelings of good ol' fashioned rejection and it hurts. Like Hell. That rejection, or fear of rejection can permeate so much of female relationships...our hesitancy, our fear, our not totally real self showing up, etc. So, it can be complicated. But, as I said, the pendulum swings both ways, my friends. There is and can be great and pure Beauty in female friendships (as testified in many above posts); A friend who chooses to show up. They return that email, or phone call, they listen, they accept us and we feel chosen and loved and it is glorious. When we are chosen for a friendship, without the ties of family, gosh. It really is the best feeling.
It is heart warming and affirming to hear stories from Terri, Glennon, Adrianne, etc about friendships that have given joy, joy, joy. And it saddens me to hear some other stories because I have been on both ends of this pendulum. What has taken me about 28 years to finally BELIEVE and not just say because I heard Oprah and Dr. Phil saying it, is that, if someone rejects me, or hurts me, or is bullying me, it often really says so much more about THEM than it does about ME.
My husband's last deployment brought out some of the most rewarding relationships (some even from this blog!) I have had in over 12 years. In the midst of fear, loneliness, and exhaustion, I felt fulfilled in a way I hadn't been in years. I was starving for it and now that I have experienced it again, I am trying to put these relationships as a priority. I do not want to go without them again. There are a handful of women whom I Love. truly. We all chose week after week to support, love, laugh, cry and encourage one another. We fed each other, shared wine, children, texts, hospital visits, and took turns having meltdowns.
I have often been afraid to engage in female relationships. Fear of that rejection or betrayal.
But now I am trying to remember, "Fear makes strangers of people who would be friends." Shirley Maclaine
Miss Molly
WELL HOT DAMN, MOLLY!
ReplyDeleteamazing.
amazing indeed! That was beautiful, molly, and so so true.
ReplyDeleteSo cool. Family is beautiful because they have to show up, and friends are beautiful because they don't.
ReplyDeleteWhile reading this post I couldn't help but think of my very best friend ever. 10 years have passed and we went from years of being inseparable to hardly speaking at all. I don't think either of us could explain how it happened. Although life took us in different directions, I've never forgotton her friendship and how much she meant to me and have never had another friend like her. In fact, as soon as I was done reading Momastery this morning my phone rang and it was her - amazing I know, but she was always completely in tune with me. Thank you Glennon for reminding me how important girlfriends are. I'm so excited to see her this week when she helps me welcome my second son to this world!
ReplyDeleteMolly, that is so beautiful!
ReplyDeleteBy the way... I just made a friend.
Her name is Shannon, and she is always smiling and she makes me laugh and laugh and laugh. I met her in one of my classes and we had talked a bit, but not much. Glennon, thank you for this post. After I spent a while feeling sorry for myself for being friendless (because you have to spend a little time wallowing in self-pity), I decided that if I want friends I should probably start by being friendly to people in front of my face. So I invited Shannon over for dinner, along with two male friends, and we made a dinner party of it.
I haven't smiled for so long and laughed so hard in months, or maybe years. Seriously, I didn't stop smiling from about 5pm to 11pm. My cheek muscles are aching because I was smiling so hard. Even the terrible mountain of dirty dishes in my sink can't make me stop grinning, I had so much fun. And all I did was reach out to people right in front of me... Thanks for writing this, you really made me think, and thinking made me act. We're going shopping on Friday. Then next week we're having another dinner party, but this time it's all dessert: I'm making crepes, and she's making truffles. Here's hoping this is the start of something.
This is exactly what I needed to read today. I am living my dream, although not perfect. I need to stop running, stay still for awhile and just BE. Pray for God's plan, meanwhile enjoy the ride, thanks Glennon, for getting up early on a Sunday am.
ReplyDeletesigh
ReplyDeleteI have to say, this post has been very hard for me to read and/or comment on. Making friends is very difficult for me. Last year, I began to make some intentional moves towards gals I thought could be good friends. 2 of them left me - literally - moved away "to get away from it all." I know this is a hard area of the country to live in and remain true to yourself. But it still hurts to be left and I find myself feeling very unsympathetic to people who blame all their woes on living in NoVa. It's irritating. (in the desire to not be a jerk, I generally don't say these things to anyone but my husband...so please forgive me...)
As I survey the people I'd like to be closer to now, I find myself thinking, when are they going to leave? Is it worth my time? Is it worth my heart? Can I handle giving myself to someone who will leave me?
I don't know. the answer for now is maybe.
(and, just so you know I am pretty good friends with Jesus, and while He is awesome, I think he wants me to have girlfriends too.)
I am just so happy for you. I haven't seen them face-to-face in years but I can still feel the energy, the fun, the excitement, the bond ;), that comes with being around Gena, Casey, Manal, you. part of the posse. And Adrianne! Just 'know' her through momastery, but same feelings. You are so lucky to be wrapped in their friendship.
ReplyDeleteFriendship is hard. I think it waxes and wanes for me. My every-day friend and neighbor moved away 18 mo ago. Didn't realize she was such the glue that held many of us together. I miss her, her husband, her kids so badly it hurts. And life HAS changed - less impromptu dinners, movie-nights, being invited to friend's houses, wine in the driveway. It sucks.
Several of us, including me, got jobs - just part-time, but it changed who I see and when.
Like Anna See, going through a little bit of a hard time right now.
I have tons of friends, but I still feel lonely. It was so easy when there was playgroup and preschool, harder now that it's work and sports with people I don't really know well.
Then, something lovely happened. My other every-day friend, Kristin, had a little friend ESP on Sunday and restored my faith that someone really knows and gets me. I just have to hang on, put myself out there, invite my friends in, be the one to have the wine in the driveway... Have a little faith ~
girl. this is beautiful. and i couldn't agree with you more. i love your new life and new home and your girls all around you. it suits you the best i think. yay for girls!
ReplyDeleteGreat post...great thoughts...great touch on my favorite book by Coelho. Thanks for waking up early to write.
ReplyDeleteThere is a line I constantly refer back to...in order to make sure I have my priorities in the proper places.
"It's not having what you want, it's wanting what you've got"
(and thus, I admit to listening to Sheryl Crow)
So happy to hear an update from you! Thank you for taking the time to share stories from your little life. It is through those personal stories that I am able to see connections and understand my little life a bit more. That, in turn, allows me to contemplate, view, wonder, be in awe of, etc. LIFE.
ReplyDeleteMolly,
ReplyDeleteBrought tears to my eyes. You are right in all that you said! Loved it and you, of course!!
Andie
Thank you Glennon and Chimmy and Adrianne!! I'll need support, channeled from you all, through me - to my daughter....Sweet Adrianne is hosting her baby shower. Now, there is friendship. She is not only carrying her own load - and she is making time for not only me - but my daughter.
ReplyDeleteLove you Adrianne! (Nikki did say yes, with a big smile on her face!)
Haven't read in months. Just got caught up. You are so awesomely (word?) honest. I'm glad I'm back...
ReplyDeleteI wish I had "girls". I used to, back a few years ago, but our kids got older and went in different directions, our differences in parenting grew, and now what I used to call "my village" is just memories, and not altogether good ones. I've never been good at making friends, and yet I really need to be around people at least some of the time. I find I volunteer to be a part of something, and then I get oversubscribed and overwhelmed and it sort of defeats the purpose!
ReplyDeleteI related to so much in this post, as well as your post about depression. I really appreciate you sharing your thoughts and feelings...it has helped me realize that I am not so odd or alone in the feelings that I have from time to time.
Adrienne
I don't blog. I've never even read a blog...until yours. You must be an amazing woman and friend. I love how what you write speaks to me and to my heart. I think that this blog, along with my garden, will be my new therapy. Which I need b/c I have 3 little boys...4 if you count my husband....
ReplyDeleteI discovered you yesterday via a new friend's posting on facebook and got hooked. What perfect timing as I had a brief mental breakdown last night...you know, as most mothers probably do, those times when your imagination gets the best of you. I woke my husband up inthe middle of the night to make him promise to tell my boys how much I loved them EVERY DAY...if i happened to die. Morbid, I know, but I was crushed. I also had to message my sister to make her promise to enfold my boys into her family too....I am feeling better now though....it was just a brief mental break that sometimes happens when you are so strong the rest of the time...I guess something's got to give occasionally.
ANYWAY *sigh* Thank you for being who you are, and writing this blog....
Thank you
Rock ON.
ReplyDelete