The Last Name Thing: Part I

The other day my mother called me by my full name and tacked Josh’s last name on as if it were my real last name. She was not so much looking for a reaction as trying to state things the way that she thought they should be. I shrugged it off with a smiling “isn’t it funny that my mother does not know my name?!”

What is more funny is that the only pressure that I get about the last name issue comes from women who should not care.

There is my mother, the woman who surprised others by not identifying as Mrs. Husband’s Full Name. And then there is Josh’s sister, the one who unhesitatingly dropped her family’s name in favor of her husband’s family’s name, and may or may not know what my legal last name actually is.

Of all the things my mother taught me, I do not recall her ever mentioning the last name thing… until one of my sisters got married without changing her name. Then my mother corrected my sister’s name the same way that she does to me. But that is hardly the didactic strategy used for most issues in my childhood.

My mother adored her father. Her parents were apparently saints compared to my father’s parents. My mother was the youngest of sisters, but presumably gave no thought to the fact that her late father’s name would die out with him as she replaced it with her husband’s father’s name.

Josh’s sister equally adores her family and her father, and does not feel the same about her in-laws. Yet there was no sign that she ever thought of doing anything other than dropping her family’s name upon marriage. Her son’s name has no connection to her birth family, but is doubly connected to her husband’s family.

Somehow though, this sister-in-law is the only one other than my mother who will make comments. You know, comments about how her brothers need to hurry up and have sons so that the family name does not die out. I love my sister-in-law (she really is fabulous), but we are not quite close enough for me to laugh at her and point to the fact that she is the only one with a son, and she chose through naming to connect him to her husband’s family as opposed to her own. What if we never have children and Josh’s (unmarried) brother “only” has girls? What if we make choices differently from her and do not choose to use names as a way of connecting children to their father’s family? All lovely theories of naming aside, reality could ultimately declare that this sister was the only one who actually had a choice about her family’s name dying out, and she already chose to go with the local naming convention rather than what she actually cares about.

When one of my older sisters (who did change her name) found out that I was not taking Josh’s last name, she told me that she regretted ever changing her name. She changed her name because it was expected, and presumably was a little happy to sever a small connection with our family. But those are not especially good reasons to change one’s name.

The truth, the terrible truth, is that I don’t really care about names or what anyone does with them. I can still see the downsides of various choices and the harmful symbolic significance of the way that most people approach the question, but I just don’t care. I feel old.

Before my very young brother got married, several people in my family were sitting around, and a few of my sisters and I were talking to his fiancée about wedding plans and such. We asked, in the most neutral way possible, if there would be any changes to names. My mother got preemptively defensive of my future sister-in-law’s plans to change her name to my brother’s, but my married sister (who did not change her name) and I could not have cared less about the couple’s actual decision. We told our brother’s fiancée with a wink that we agree that we have a fabulous last name, so of course she should want to take it.


Why I Stopped Taking Prometrium

The end of the end came when I said something snarky on Twitter. Snarkiness is common for me. Also common is what happened next: someone took my playful jabs at Prometrium (and the inconsistency of unequivocally opposing the pill for hormonal therapy, while utilizing Prometrium) seriously. She started questioning my questioning, and I started questioning why on earth I was doing something so stupid.

I just heard a presentation by a nurse who argued that it is foolish to utilize the pill as treatment for conditions such as endometriosis, because it is an off-label use (rather than what the pill was designed for) and because it increases the likelihood of several types of cancer. Interestingly enough, this is also the case for Prometrium.

NFP-promoters tell me that I must ignore what doctors say about the pill and instead focus just on what the pill manufacturer says.  But somehow everyone expects me to listen to my doctor when my doctor tells me to ignore the warnings of the manufacturer of Prometrium.

In any case, it is all very mockable. So, after I took my little yellow pill I took to Twitter and mocked–mostly myself.

I was shocked by the childlike faith of my interlocutor. She believed that this drug was really different with a trust that was beautiful. I wish I had a doctor whom I could trust as perfectly as she trusts hers.

And then I realized the absurdity of the situation: I did not trust blindly, and I knew the distinct lack of evidence for the superiority of this drug, so why on earth was I taking Prometrium?

I was taking it because, short of going back on the pill, it was the only thing I had to take.

I ignored the fact that it showed no sign of helping. It never raised my BBT, changed my bleeding, or extended my luteal phase. Instead, it not only recreated my experience of being on the pill, it added in headaches and insomnia along with the expected subsequent increase in fatigue. In short, it took what would typically be my “good” 10 days of the month, and made them feel a whole lot more like the “bad” days.

I was motivated to take Prometrium by fear. Progesterone supplementation is presented by a certain group as something of a cure-all. Many say (without evidence) that you need to take it faithfully in order to see results, that if you don’t take it you will miscarry. They promise that if you take it you will not need to take the pill, and the implication is that if you fail to take the “good” medicine (Prometrium) then it is your own fault when you have to turn back to the “bad” (the pill).

Fear is powerful, but it is not conducive to making the wisest decisions. There is no evidence that Prometrium helps me, not even in something as simple as improving my hormone levels after a low-quality ovulatory event. Perhaps other forms of progesterone supplementation would help, but that is not what I was doing. And I knew that what I was doing was stupid.

So I stopped. And it was clearly the right choice for me. In each of the two cycles since then I have gotten over a week of happy days, days where I feel, and it feels good.

I am very thankful for the insights of people with whom I disagree online. So often they make me realize how stupid I am for behaving in a way which would only make sense if I  did agree with them!


Coping Skills of the Dragon-Wife

A year and a half ago I was going over the pros and cons of a new ObGyn practice with Josh. I told him about some blog posts that I had read that had been negative about a particular practice. I also told him that there were other things that made me question whether the bloggers were entirely balanced in their views.

Josh responded that being the doctor for women with hormonal imbalances was pretty much the worst job he could imagine. Unfortunately, I don’t have the exact quote since I did not think it appropriate to blog at the time.

More’s the pity, as I think it might be the perfect way to describe what I imagine it is like to be married to me.

These days I am a fire breathing dragon who often lacks the energy to get flames out far enough to burn anything other than myself. When Josh comes running to see the charred remains of his wife, he frequently suffers from severe smoke inhalation. Such is life, right?

Recently–when not busy wishing life these days weren’t so dreadfully long–I have been thinking about what we are doing right. Yeah, I said “right.” Humor me here, okay?

Josh has a terrible memory. That is perhaps 80% of why we are married: he can’t remember all the reasons we should not be.

One of my more boring cyclical symptoms is absolutely incredible memory failure. I am sure that it is a tremendous problem. But I am not so certain that Josh does not ever appreciate my lack of memory- just a little.

So I do my best to pull a reverse Prince Rilian and inform/remind Josh of what he is about to deal with again before I go completely crazy. It does not really work in the way I intend it to. I’m not sure whether Josh spent too much time reading The Chronicles of Narnia as a child, or is just terrified of my wrath if he ignores what I say in any given moment, but he never actually follows my warning and completely ignores my ravings. I still try though, not only because I hold on to the hope that one day he will believe me, but also because it does help when trying to repair the damage after it is over and I remind him that we both knew I was insane.

In fact, this tactic really only works when it comes in the form of data on paper.

One of the helpful things that came out of seriously seeking help was the Symptom Chart (read that with an ominous tone). I could never remember all of my issues in order to explain them to the doctor, so Josh started a symptom chart. It looks a lot like this one, except customized just for me, because I’m special like that.

The major unintended benefit of the chart is that it means that each night Josh is getting a  pretty stinking comprehensive update on my physical state that I wouldn’t otherwise share with him. Seriously, no one wants to hear all that. Yet. Yet it can be incredibly helpful for him to be clued in when the way that I am acting does not reflect what I feel. I attempt to not be a complete pain all of the time, but that doesn’t mean that it isn’t helpful for Josh to have an extra clue when I have just stolen someone else’s brave face for the day.

Perhaps even more helpful is the fact that even though I am making up all of the stuff  for Josh to chart (seriously, how am I supposed to know whether my feelings of anxiety were a “2″ today or whether I am misremembering my morning?!) it still ends up revealing trends. This enables Josh to point out things that should be obvious–like when Prometrium is giving me headaches and I never realized it.

Josh undoubtedly has numerous secret strategies for dealing with me, but I can’t share them with you because I don’t know them. I will, however, tell you mine as long as you promise not to tell Josh.

Josh gets most frustrated by the fact that when I am upset I tend to feel like everything is wrong. Because it is, duh! Ehem, anyway. I frustrate Josh when I see everything wrong with life and have an extensive list of everything that needs to be remedied. Add in the fact that I have great skill with going through these times at precisely the point when his work is extra demanding, etc. etc. and it is a great way to make it incredibly difficult for Josh to hold everything together enough to help me.

So–at least on days where my brain sort of functions–I choose one area at a time to ask Josh to help me improve. Sure, I may need for us to improve our finances, save our neighborhood, plan our funerals, become Saints, and many more tremendously important tasks, but telling Josh all of that at once is nothing more than a good way to overwhelm him into doing nothing. Instead I try to figure out which single thing is most essential to developing everything that I want, and talk to Josh about that. And sometimes that one thing is just encouraging Josh to take more time to take care of himself (so that he’ll have more energy to fix everything for me later,of course!).

I realize that I have many other techniques for coping, but they are mostly the results of decisions made long ago with no thought for this day. Who knew, sharing a religion with your spouse is a really good idea?! So there is that. And my plans for future improvements involve convincing Josh that the Chinese are right: he is lucky to get to live with a dragon!


Married Money

The other day my father went grocery shopping with me at Aldi. As we headed out the door he asked whether I had an agreement with Josh that I would not spend more than a certain amount without checking with him first. I said that I did not, and my father laughed and said that perhaps it was a good thing he had asked me when Josh was not around!

He then explained that he was thinking about it because one of my sisters has such an agreement with her husband, and her neighbors all have similar arrangements.

I said that while I can see why such arrangements would work for others, they don’t make sense to me in my life because I am most likely to spend money in frequent, smaller chunks. Also, it would probably really annoy Josh if I asked him about every $100.00 purchase.

My dad responded that he was not talking about $100.00. Each of the women in my sister’s neighborhood had limits in the $300-$500 range. It was my turn to laugh, as I asserted that $500 for those women is the equivalent of $100 for me given our relative economic circumstances.

Josh says that he wouldn’t care if I bought a $500 blender without consulting him.

We talked more about finances later, and as I was about ready to spew my idealistic views, I stopped myself. I told my father that I realized that I was in no position to speak. While we have struggled with finances due to straight up lack of income, I have no idea what it is like to struggle with a husband who is self-centered financially.

It makes sense that I have a lot of lofty ideals about money, and that I still firmly believe that fighting about money indicates a lack of love, honor, and desire to share a future together.

But this just means that I am unqualified to talk about money for normal people, because to others money is just money, right?

I later realized that for any expensive purchase I could think of, the issue with buying without consulting with Josh would be that I would need his input on the actual item. Large purchases generally require months of planning and saving and rehashing value. How on earth am I supposed to just buy something without consulting Josh on the item itself rather than just the price tag?

This is not to say that I have not had to change my ways with money since getting married. I have, but that is a story for another day.

What is the meaning of money in your world? Do you think that married couples should have a rule about a dollar amount over which they will consult the other before making a purchase?

 


I am thankful 1/6/13

For my heating pad! I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. Whoops, I’ve said exactly that before!  I’m pretty sure that if I had a tag cloud that my heating pad would be the largest word(s). So blogworthy, I’m telling you!

For those of you who have failed to read my every post, Josh gave me my amazing heating pad as an early Christmas gift the first year we were married (celebrating 5 years of heating pad love, baby!) and I used it pretty much every day until I lost it. Why yes, I do write the most captivating posts, thanks for realizing it!

For the existence of Christmas trees. We got a Christmas tree for the first time this year. In the past we have either not been able to afford one, or not been able to justify it to ourselves. But we got one this year, and it is simply wonderful. So wonderful, in fact, that I’ve declared that we will keep it up for the entire Christmas season rather than taking it down today as planned. And you probably thought that people who celebrated Christmas until Epiphany were bad! Speaking of which…

For Epiphany. Today has to be one of the most under-appreciated awesome liturgical days of the year. Or perhaps I just have a special attachment to it because I like stars and light.

For Josh’s longstinkingsuffering. Six years ago on Epiphany I called him up and said that we could get engaged. Yes, called. Yes, said we could “get engaged” rather than actually promising that I would marry him. Yes, I am a jerk. Yes, I “am” rather than “was” because with such great results, do you think that I’ve switched tactics?

For tea. Specifically mint tea. So incredibly comforting.

For my sisters. You know how I said that I needed to get my hair fixed? Well one of my sisters who hasn’t even seen my dreadful hair (aside from perhaps a few pictures?) sent me a Groupon for a cut, color, and conditioning treatment. I had not figured out how I was actually going to take care of the situation without dying of horror at the potential cost, so once again a sister saved my life. Or at least the day.

 


Games of Violence

I am not comfortable with violent games.

I am not comfortable with violence, and gamification does not change much for me.

But I am also increasingly uncomfortable with declaring violent video games categorically evil. To do so I would need some consistent standard. Is it the depiction of blood which is a problem? Certainly not. How about violence as a whole? No… So maybe killing in particular? That can’t be.

It is even more difficult to make absolute statements because there is such variety among games, even in the clearly violent category. Halo 1 feels the same as playing paintball, but I know that other games exist that would make me want to destroy them all and send their creators’ straight to years of counseling.

My 5-year-old nephew wanted me to watch him play games this Christmas, so I got an up-close look at a first-person shooter game which made me cringe.

Later as I took pictures of him and Josh playing a different game, my nephew excitedly told me about how they were knocking out the bad guys so that the police could come get them.

A few hours later I watched them play outside. They chased each other around with sticks and alternated turns declaring that they had killed each other.

To me it is clear that there is everything right with them wrestling and running around outside killing each other. On the other extreme, I would not currently choose to allow my 5-year-old to play first-person shooter games at all. What’s up with that?

Part of my hesitance for judging video games categorically comes from the fact that I know that I do not know enough about them, and it is all too easy to judge that which we do not understand. Is it wrong to act as if killing is a game? Perhaps. But if that is the case, then it must also be wrong to act as if promiscuity is something to laugh off.

Hours after watching my nephew play his violent games, some of us watched my youngest teen sister-in-law play Just Dance. I spoke with another of Josh’s sisters about the fact that we never would have been allowed to play these games back in the day, they clearly promote promiscuity and materialism just as much as the other games promote violence. And yet I am quite comfortable laughing at how strict our parents were, because I am familiar with these dancing games, and I don’t think that they are going to make my young sister-in-law grow up to struggle with sex or princess greed.

So perhaps my discomfort with violent video games comes from the fact that they are strange to me more than any honest moral qualms.

It is also a factor that some of the best, most gentle men I know (including Josh) play games that I dislike.

I do not dismiss real ethical issues just because Josh thinks differently. If I know that something is wrong I will throw a good ol’ fit until it has been made right. And if people in your life are playing games that you know are harmful, then I suggest that you do what you need to do to correct the situation. Don’t whine to your friends, address the person with the problem!

But it remains that Josh and I are different people who experience entertainment differently, and I trust his judgement until there is real evidence that I need to question it. I am unwilling to declare that something is wrong, merely because I do not like it.

Perhaps someday we will have consistently strict standards for all games. Perhaps we will cut our children off from their cousins because we will not want them to be a part of that putrid world. I’m pretty good at the whole airs of superiority thing, so such a future seems possible (pun unintended, thanks Google for cluing me into gaming terms).

For now though, I just toss my hands in the air and admit that I do not know. Something is rotten in the state of Video Games, but I am not prepared to determine what is right and wrong about it because it is not my country. I have no idea how to communicate with the locals, and so I’ll have to let someone else figure it all out for me.

What do you think of violent video games?

Do you play video games such as Halo? Do you play paintball? Do you watch violent movies like The Hobbit?


On Gliders

I grew up with a glider. We did not always have a baby around, but there was always the glider in the space between the kitchen and the dining area.

Thus it was perfectly normal that I bought a glider the month before I got married. It was worn in a well-cared-for sort of way, and the woman who sold it to me from her small, smoke-free home told me about using it for her three children. It accounted for $25 of about $300 that we spent to furnish our first apartment.

When the time came to move, we gave the glider to my parents along with the rest of the furniture that we could not quickly re-sell. They put the glider in the corner in the kitchen by the stairs, the same place we had a glider for years in my childhood before it finally stopped working completely.

This Thanksgiving I walked into my parents’ kitchen to see Josh holding my grumpy two-month-old nephew in that same glider. My family is full of baby-snatchers who all think that a minute is quite enough time for anyone else to hold the youngest member of the family. But no one attempted to take my nephew from Josh.

The previous evening my brother and sister-in-law had gone to run an errand and left my nephew in the care of the rest of the family. I did not notice that his parents were gone until others were having difficulty soothing him because all he wanted was food.

The sister holding the crying baby gladly handed him over to me. I knew that I might be able to appease him, but it would be difficult since I was wearing a shirt with a normal neckline and this squirmy child is infuriated by the feeling of skin without food. So I did the obvious thing and passed the baby on to Josh. He quieted instantly. Josh kept the baby calm and quiet, if not entirely happy, for the next half hour and amazed my baby-snatching family into leaving the grumpy child in his arms whenever the child’s mother needs a bit longer for a break.

That is how I found Josh holding the baby in the glider on Thanksgiving, uninterrupted despite the number of baby-snatchers milling about.

And I remembered.

And I realized once again that it is awesome in the truest sense of the world to live so intimately with someone who loves and cares and gives so fully.

Josh acted as if it was the most normal thing in the world that our first apartment be furnished with an old glider rather than a cozy man-chair. When I told him that I had ordered a glider as the newest baby’s gift rather than sending a gift card (for less) as agreed, he asked only if it was the glider that I had previously picked out. I explained that it was, since the new mother was the first of her friends to have a child, and had not decided that she wanted a glider at all until after she started breastfeeding.

Now that we have been married for 4.5 years and we have normal furniture and no children, it seems odd to me that I would buy a glider before we were even married. But it makes perfect sense that I know what glider to order for someone else. Not only do the majority of my friends have children, it seems that all of the blogs I started reading when we were planning weddings at the same time are now full of posts on things like how the glider they bought for the second child is so much better than the one they suffered through with the first. So, yeah. I know a lot more about gliders now, and it is surprisingly normal.

Yet what remains absolutely astonishing is that I share my life with someone who lives so perfectly in whatever state of furniture we find ourselves. I think, perhaps, that I may even learn to do so as well. Eventually.

For now I am hoping to find a used rocking chair in which to drink my evening tea. That would totally rock, right?


Aborting Honesty with Language

When I was a teenager I would confuse some people and infuriate others by insisting that we should use medically correct terminology when discussing miscarriages. I still think it would be best if everyone were somehow automatically on the same page with precise language, but this is never going to happen.

I eventually grew up enough to realize this, and so I never use the term “abortion” to refer to a spontaneous miscarriage, even if it might be technically correct. It is technically correct, but it is also inappropriate because it does not communicate truth.

Unfortunately many people who share my views on the sanctity of life do not share my concern for communicating truth with our words. The term “abortifacient” is tossed around loosely when people want to condemn the use of the pill intended as a contraceptive, even though these same people would deem the word grossly inappropriate when discussing anything else which might inadvertently allow for conception without supporting the pregnancy to term (NSAIDs, breastfeeding, etc.).

This abuse of language is dishonest, and it hurts not only those with whom we seek to communicate, but our very selves. When we misuse language and select terms based on what we wish to prove rather than appropriateness for describing a particular situation, we  end up shaping our own thinking. Eventually we lose the ability to logically consider facts because we have skewed our minds with twisted words.


January Goals

January’s theme? Me, me, meeeeee! Or–more pretentiously–save myself, then save the world. 

Walk 100 miles. Or run. Mostly don’t get hurt. 

Go to a museum. With Josh.

Fix my hair. Literally. My natural color is light brown (very dark blonde at the end of the summer). Right before Thanksgiving I decided to take advantage of the fact that I wasn’t working and experiment with a dark color I knew wouldn’t look good but would be fun. Well, now it is time for the fun to be over, and I might just need to shell out real $$ for my hair for the first time in my life.

Post daily. Yes, this is your warning to unsubscribe. But it might not be too bad if I decide to spread the “daily” out over multiple blogs.

Automate finances for the year. We did this last year just for giving, and it was perfect. We ended up giving much more than we would have otherwise since it was sort of like another payroll tax. Only consistent with our goals and not randomly determined by the government in an illogical fashion. I happen to like playing with money and constantly checking Mint. Josh would rather never think about it though, so automation it is!

Write two letters. You know, the sort that require a stamp.

Meet with spiritual director and become a Saint. Or at least do what I am told.


2013 Goals Turned Resolutions

There have been times when I struggled with goals because I did not have the resources to implement change. This year I struggle with resolutions because I have a very fuzzy brain which has lost grasp of the concept of time.

I cannot seem to understand what a year means. 2013 promises the most stability since I left my parents’ home in 2003, but I don’t trust the promises of strangers, and I don’t know 2013 at all.

So it is difficult to set goals when I can’t even grasp the concept of what the goals will fit into.

I started my list with the usual sorts of things about walking/running 1,000 miles, but I realize that I have time, 12 months in fact, to work on the precise lists I so love.

I turned to Twitter yesterday for suggestions and moaned every time someone offered me a general resolution rather than a specific goal. But then something happened today. I realized once again how very wrong it is for me to do anything other than run after joy, embrace grace, and cling to thankfulness until it dies in my arms. And I hear that thankfulness can be mighty tough when you get close to it, so this could be a lifelong task.

I have so much to be grateful for that it is a sin against my very self to pretend that there is time for me to be anything less than utterly in awe of the terrifying beauty that is life.

I don’t always have a choice. Some days I feel miserable regardless of what I want to think, regardless of what I decide to focus on. Some days there is nothing that I can do other than to wait for tomorrow.

But some days are not every day. As our good friend Edmond Dantes said: all human wisdom is summed up in the two words “wait” and “hope.” So on the worst days I will wait, and on the best days I will hope and give thanks.

Here’s to 2013!


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